Jones v. United States

4 Ct. Cl. 197
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedDecember 15, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 4 Ct. Cl. 197 (Jones 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
Jones v. United States, 4 Ct. Cl. 197 (cc 1868).

Opinion

Nott, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an action brought to recover $1,760 11 for pay as a 1st lieutenant in the 5th United States cavalry, from the 19th November, 1863, to the 5th March, 1865.

In October, 1863, the claimant was taken prisoner by the enemy near Elk Kun, Virginia, under these circumstances, as detailed by Brevet Captain Robert H. Montgomery, adjutant of the 5th United States cavalry, and aide-de-camp of the commanding general of the department of Washington: »

“ On the morning of the 29th October, 1863, Lieutenant Jones, the claimant, left the picket guard and went to the headquarters of the reserve for instructions from the commanding officer, Captain Leib. He returned and told me that he had received orders to send a patrol to his front to patrol the distance of five miles outside of the lines. As soon as the patrol had left for that duty — consisting of six men and a non-commissioned officer — he ordered me to mount my horse and accompany him from the reserve out to the line of videttes. Upon reaching the first vidette upon the main road, he stopped to give the vidette some instructions, I think, and gave me orders to visit the videttes on the left and see if they were properly instructed. This order he countermanded immediately, and ordered me to proceed down the road and ascertain the cause of firing in the front. This order I proceeded to obey, and was joined by Lieutenant Jones before I proceeded far, who accompanied me until we arrived in sight of the patrol, and finding that they were traveling along undisturbed,'he then turned [202]*202about to join Ms command, and directed me to return with. Mm. While on tbe return, and within a short distance from the videttes, we were surprised and captured by a party of guerillas. We were taken to the headquarters of General Young, (rebel,) and from there to Richmond Libby prison. The claimant remained in rebel prisons with me from October 29th, 1863, the day we were captured, until the 1st of March, 1865, when we arrived within the federal lines.”

And Captain Montgomery adds, somewhat in the character of an expert:

“I was with the claimant when he was captured, and in my opinion he was not guilty of any failure or neglect of duty, though he may have been guilty of an indiscretion in this: that he might have sent me to see the cause of the firing as Ms next junior officer, and permitted me to be captured and avoided capture himself.”

The claimant, as has been said, was a prisoner of war from the 29th October, 1863, to the 1st March, 1865. When exchanged and returned to Annapolis he found that on the 19th November, 1863, he had' been dismissed the service. He found also that his pay was stopped from that date, and that after sixteen months of captivity in rebel prisons he was left without either position* or pay.

Lieutenant Jones promptly demanded a court of inquiry, and in a communication addressed to the Adjutant General on the 13th March, 1865, he says:

■ “I stand before the world as an insubordinate officer and unworthy soldier, while I know myself innocent and can prove it. I ask that I may be ordered before a court of inquiry with a view to have a hearing as to the extent of my criminality, and to rescue rny character from what I call infamy. This application would have been made long since, but I have been an inmate of southern prisons for 16 months, and did not know that I was dismissed until my arrival in this city last week.”

The application was refused.

When we inquire for what cause this officer was thus harshly treated, we findit detailed in a subsequent report of the officer commanding the detachment, viz: that he “left his squadron ” and, went outside of the videttes without an escort or orderly, and without the knowledge or consent” of the officer commanding the detachment.

[203]*203By tbe Act 3d March, 1865, (13 Stat. L., 489,) Congress checked these arbitrary and despotic acts of the military authorities and secured to every officer thus dismissed a court of inquiry if it should be demanded, and expressly providing that if it was not convened within six months the order of dismissal should be void. But at the time Lieutenant Jones was dismissed no such law existed, and the right to a court of inquiry hung upon the discretion of the Secretary of War. Lieutenant' Jones therefore 'does not contest the legality of his removal, but seeks to recover his pay while a prisoner, secured to him, as he thinks, by a previous act of Congress.

That statute is the Act 30th March, 1814, (3 Stat. L., 114, sec. 14,) and is in these words:

“Every officer, &c., See,., in the service of the United States, who has been, or may be, captured by the enemy, shall be entitled to receive dv/ring his captivity, notwithstanding the expiration of his term of service, the same pay, subsistence, and allowance to which he may be entitled whilst in the actual'service of the United States.”

Under it the Second Comptroller has decided that—

“ The War Department has power to dismiss an officer while in captivity, but under the act of March 30,1814, his pay, &c., during his captivity is to be allowed him, notwithstanding the expiration of his term of service.” (Digest, Opinion Second Comptroller, p. 115.).

And we see no reason to question the correctness of the decision. The act of Congress is as explicit and imperative as words can make it: “who has been or maybe captured by the enemy, shall be entitled toreceive, during his captivity, notwithstanding the expiration of his term of service,” is language too plain to be perverted or misunderstood. The contrary would be to hold that an executive department could annul and defy an act of Congress at its pleasure.

Against this construction of the statute the counsel for the defendants has urged with force that the case of “ Lieutenant Jones does not come within any of the statutes or orders cited in the claimant’s brief. His ‘term of service’ did not‘expire’ in the sense in which these terms are there used. If these laws applied to such a case as this, any unworthy officer or soldier might permit himself to be captured, remain with the enemy [204]*204tbrougb a long war, and then return (baying- been dismissed from the service) and claim Ms pay.”

If this were so, we should indeed hesitate to give effect to what appears to us the obvious meaning of the law, and further reflect upon its construction. But it is not so. The Articles of War provide ample authority for forfeiting the pay of such a delinquent; and if this officer were guilty of so grave an offense he could have been convicted and punished in the manner which the law prescribes, and not in a manner which the law forbids. Punishment without trial establishes no guilt, and the victim who invokes the investigation of a lawful tribunal and is refused, should not be made to suffer the penalty only awarded by the law to those who are lawfully convicted.

The counsel for the defendants have also urged that “if the court were now sitting as a court-martial on Mr. Jones’s case, it could not fail to confirm the order of the President. This court is sitting neither to pass upon the rulings of an executive department, nor to try military offenders for military offences. It is evident that the claimant did not violate his duty deliberately nor intentionally.

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Related

Bell v. United States
366 U.S. 393 (Supreme Court, 1961)
Kaufman v. State
6 Ill. Ct. Cl. 355 (Court of Claims of Illinois, 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
4 Ct. Cl. 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-united-states-cc-1868.