Grambs v. United States

23 Ct. Cl. 420, 1888 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 18, 1800 WL 1529
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJune 18, 1888
DocketNo. 15204
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 23 Ct. Cl. 420 (Grambs v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grambs v. United States, 23 Ct. Cl. 420, 1888 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 18, 1800 WL 1529 (cc 1888).

Opinion

Richardson, Ch. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The claimant entered the Naval Academy as a cadet-midshipman, and belonged to the class which finished its six years’ course in 1884, whose official designation was changed to naval cadet, and who otherwise became subject to the provisions of the Act of August 5, 1882 (22 Stat. L., ch. 391, p. 285), which are as follows:

“All the undergraduates of the Naval Academy shall hereafter be designated and called ‘ naval cadets.’
[425]*425“And from those who successfully complete the six years’ course appointments shall hereafter be madé as it is necessary to fill vacancies in the lower grades of the line and Engineer Corps of the Navy and of the Marine Corps.
“•And provided further, That no greater number of appointments into these grades shall be made each year than shall equal the number of vacancies which has occurred in the same grades during the preceding year; such appointments to be made from the graduates of the year, at the conclusion of their six years’ course, in the order of merit, as determined by the-Academic Board of the Naval Academy.
“The assignment to the various corps to be made by the Secretary of the Navy upon the recommendation of the Academic Board.
“But nothing herein contained shall reduce the number of appointments from such graduates below ten in each year, nor deprive of such appointment any graduate who may complete the six years’ course during the year 1882.
“And if there be a surplus of graduates, those who do not receive such appointment shall be given a certificate of graduation, an honorable discharge, and one year’s sea pay, as now provided by law for cadet-midshipmen; and so much of section 1521 of the Bevised Statutes as is inconsistent herewith is hereby repealed.”

After graduation he received from the Secretary of the Navy the following certificate and notice:

“ Naw Depaetment,

Washington, June 26,1884,

Sie : Having successfully completed your six years’ course at the United States Naval Academy, and having been given a certificate of graduation by the Academic Board, but not being required to fill any vacancy in the naval service happening during the year preceding, your graduation, you are hereby honorably discharged from the 80th of June, 1884, with one year’s sea pay, as prescribed by law for cadet-midshipmen, in accordance with the provisions of the act of Congress approved August 5, 1882.”

He was paid one year’s sea pay, mentioned in the certificate, and his undergraduate pay up to the time of graduation. His name was dropped from theNavy Begister, aDdhehasperformed no further service and has received no further pay.

Hi's claim now is that by the determination of the Academic Board as to the order of merit of those entitled to a competitive examination he was of those who by statute had a right to be appointed to one of the vacancies then existing in the-[426]*426lower grades of the line and Engineer Corps of the Navy and of the Marine Corps; that his certificate of discharge received from the Secretary of the Navy was founded on error, was void and of no force, and that he is still an officer of the Navy, and entitled to pay as such.

There were twenty-five vacancies to be filled; sixteen in the line, five in the Engineer Corps, and four in the Marine Corps.

The examining board received for competitive examination and examined not only the naval cadets of the graduating class of that year 1884, but also the members of the class of cadet-engineers who completed their two years’ sea service at the same time, but who had graduated at the Academy in 1882.

This was in pursuance of the interpretation of the statute held by the Navy Department, that cadet-engineers who at the time of the passage of the act were serving their two years’ course at sea, after having completed their four years’ course at the Academy in 1881 and 1882, were “ undergraduates at the Naval Academy,” and so were made naval cadets,” and became subject to the provisions of the act as to examination, promotion, and discharge.

That interpretation was controverted in Leopold’s Gase (18 O. Cls. B., 546), and we there held that cadet-engineers thus serving their two years’ course at sea were not undergraduates, and therefore were not made naval cadets by that act. The same question was subsequently raised, and decided in the same way, in Redgraves's Case and Perkins’s Case (20 C. Cls. R., 226, 438). The decisions in those cases were affirmed by the Supreme Court on appeal. (116 U. S. R., 474, 483).

The cadet engineers who completed their two years’ course at sea in 1884 were therefore not of the “ naval cadets” from whom appointments were to be made in the order of merit, as determined by the Academic Board, and should not have been allowed to compete with the claimant and other naval cadets for appointment to the vacant places.

Omitting cadet-engineers from the competitive examination, and excluding one naval cadet who was dropped, the claimant stood No. 20 in order of merit, and so was entitled to be appointed to one of the twenty-five vacant places.

Even if the five vacancies in the lowest grade of the Engineer Corps should have been omitted from those to be competed for by the naval cadets, as exclusively reserved by former laws to [427]*427■be filled by cadet-engineers, a construction of the law which, we do not adopt, there still remained twenty vacancies in the lowest grade of the line and the Marine Corps, to which cadet-engineers had not by any such laws a right to be appointed, and the claimant, being twenty in order of merit, was entitled to be appointed to one of those places.

Thus, in any view of the case which we can take, the Secretary of the Navy was required by law to give to the claimant a certificate of appointment and an assignment to one of the various corps in which vacancies existed upon the recommendation of the Academic Board.

The Secretary gave him a certificate of discharge in lieu of one of appointment, under an interpretation of the statute which this court and the Supreme Court subsequently decided to be erroneous.

The question then arises, How did this leave the claimant? It is contended that, as the certificate of discharge was unwarranted, he remained in the office of naval cadet and still continues to hold that office. He claims the emoluments of a naval cadet since the expiration of the time to which he was paid by the one year’s sea pay in advance received with his certificate of discharge, or the pay of the office to which he was entitled by law to have been appointed.

We can not concur in these views. In our opinion the term ■of office of naval cadets, as did that of cadet midshipmen, expires with the completion of six year’s course, when, if not appointed to another aud different office, they ipso faqto cease to be officers in the Navy.

The Revised Statutes provide as follows:

“ Sec. 1512. The students at the Naval Academy shall be styled cadet-midshipmen.
“ Sec. 1513.

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Related

Austill v. United States
58 Ct. Cl. 232 (Court of Claims, 1923)
Morey v. United States
35 Ct. Cl. 603 (Court of Claims, 1900)
Crenshaw v. United States
24 Ct. Cl. 57 (Court of Claims, 1889)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 Ct. Cl. 420, 1888 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 18, 1800 WL 1529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grambs-v-united-states-cc-1888.