In re Accounts of Shipping Commissioner

85 F. 683, 22 Blatchf. 148, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2642

This text of 85 F. 683 (In re Accounts of Shipping Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Accounts of Shipping Commissioner, 85 F. 683, 22 Blatchf. 148, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2642 (circtsdny 1884).

Opinion

WALLACE, Circuit Judge.

The immediate question presented by the report of the master, and the motion made on behalf of the shipping commissioner to confirm the report, is whether the salaries paid by the shipping commissioner to his deputies for the year 1882 were reasonable. Having filed his account of the receipts and expenses of his office for the year 1882, an order was made, pursuant to the established mode of procedure since the year 1876, by which the account was referred to a master for an examination and report to the court, upon notice to the United States attorney. Pursuant to-that order, Mr. Gutman, the masier, in February, 1883, filed his report, showing that the receipts of the office for the year 1882 were-$22,531.50, and the expenses for (he year were $22,531.50. Among the items of expenses in that account were three, of $3,648 each, paid by the shipping commissioner to his three sons, for their salaries as deputy shipping commissioners. Upon the motion to confirm that report, objection avhs made by the United States attorney that the salaries paid by the shipping commissioner to his deputies Avere excessive. Thereupon, and on the 2d of October, 1883, this court made an order referring hack the report to the master, and directing him to take such proof as might be produced by the shipping commissioner and by the United States attorney, and report explicitly upon the reasonableness of these salaries. Although, since 1875, the accounts of the shipping commissioner have been returned annually, have been passed by a master, and on several [684]*684occasions have been objected to by the United States attorney, and considered upon such objections by my predecessors in office, this is the first instance in which those accounts have been challenged by opposing proofs on the part of the United States attorney. There is no statute which makes it the duty of the district attorney to scrutinize or challenge these accounts, and it is doubtful if he has any authority in the premises, except such as is conferred upon him permissively by the order of the court; and for this reason, probably, the predecessors of the present United States attorney deemed it beyond their province to controvert the correctness of the accounts, beyond criticising items which seemed objectionable upon their face. The last occasion when the accounts were specially investigated was in 1878, when objections were filed by the United States attorney to the accounts for the year 1877. It then appeared that the commissioner had paid to each of his three sons, for their services as deputies during that year, a salary at the rate of $3,800 per annum,.two of them being paid for the whole year, and one of them for six months. Judge Blatchford, in considering the objections, and passing upon the account (16 Blatchf. 92, Fed. Ops. No. 12,793), examined with particularity the financial history of the office from its inception, and considered the principles and items of the accounts, and, referring to the question of salaries paid by the commissioner to his sons, used the following language in his opinion:

“As to the allegation that, on the deposition of the shipping commissioner, the master should have reported that the salaries, at the rate of 83,800 a year, paid to the three deputy commissioners, F. O. Duncan, G. F. Duncan, and C. D. Duncan, were entirely too large for the work performed hy them, there is nothing to show that any such point was taken by the district attorney before the master. Nor was any evidence introduced before the master by the district attorney to show that the salaries of the deputies were too large for the work performed by them. No witness expresses an-opinion to that effect, nor was the shipping commissioner asked whetha' he could not have obtained competent persons to discharge the duties so performed for a less compensation, nor was any evidence given that he could. The arrangement made is testified to have had the sanction of each of my predecessors, Judges Woodruff and Johnson. The three deputies named were deputies from the beginning. The arrangement was one which sanctioned a salary of 84,000 to each of them, if the fees of the office would pay it. It has never exceeded that sum. The commissioner and the deputies had a right to rely on the arrangement until it should be shown, on notice and hearing, that the salaries ought to be reduced. These observations cover the above-named accounts. I do not intend to say, however, that the salaries of the deputies and of the subordinates ought not. to be reduced, and their number fixed for the future, nor do I intend to say that they ought.”

As the objections to the accounts are now presented, am relieved from any embarrassment arising from the decisions of my predecessors, inasmuch as they were called upon to consider such objections when there was no evidence to controvert the case made by the commissioner himself, and practically only his side of the controversy was exhibited. These decisions, while authoritative, and, perhaps, conclusive as an auditing of past accounts, do not'stand in the way of considering de novo the question of the reasonableness ;'o£ the-salaries .paid in 1882, unless, as stated in the opinion of Judge Blatchford, “the commissioner and the deputies had a right to. rely [685]*685on (lie arrangement [in the past] until it should be shown, on notice and hearing, that the salaries ought to.be reduced.”

The proofs taken before (be master are voluminous, and embrace a wide range of investigation, notwithstanding the strenuous efforts on the part of the commissioner to narrow the field of investigation. It was quite impossible, however, to coniine the proofs to the value of Hie deputies’ services in 1882. Whether it was necessary that these deputies should be employed for that year, and what, was a fair compensation for their services then, were questions which could not. well he resolved without a comparison of the business and duties of the office in previous years, and the relative value of the services then and now. This led to an inquiry into the nature and extent of their services in the past, and, finally, to an extended examination into the business of the office generally, and into the duties of the commissioner, and of the deputies and the various subordinates, during the whole period of its existence. This examination has been sufficiently comprehensive and thorough to possess the court, not only with the material facts respecting the primary subject, but also concerning the past administration of the office, which it is very much to be regretted were not brought to the attention of my predecessors. It will not be profitable to attempt a recapitulation of the evidence. It is due to the shipping commissioner, however, to state that witnesses of high respectability and intelligence have commended his administration of the office; generally, and approved as reasonable the salaries which he lias paid his sons. The reasons why I cannot concur in their opinion, and must disapprove the fineiings of the master, may be briefly stated, and re;st upon a few salient, but controlling, considerations. ,

The duties of the shipping commissioner are not intricate or arduous, but they are useful and various, and reepnire good judgment and executive capacity. He; is the responsible head of the offieie, and is charged with the supervision of its manifold ope;ratiems, and incurs some financial risks, because he is obliged to pay the; expenses of maintaining the office and of conelucting its business, including rent and the pay of employes, out of the reetefipts of the office. He; must rely exclusively upon the fees of the eeffice to meet the expenses as well as his own salary.

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Related

In re Accounts of the Shipping Com'r of Port of New York
21 F. Cas. 1318 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York, 1879)

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85 F. 683, 22 Blatchf. 148, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-accounts-of-shipping-commissioner-circtsdny-1884.