Merriam v. Clinch

17 F. Cas. 68, 6 Blatchf. 5, 1867 U.S. App. LEXIS 770
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedDecember 14, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 17 F. Cas. 68 (Merriam v. Clinch) 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
Merriam v. Clinch, 17 F. Cas. 68, 6 Blatchf. 5, 1867 U.S. App. LEXIS 770 (circtsdny 1867).

Opinion

BLATQHFORD, District Judge.

The question involved in this case arises under the 22d section of the act of March 2, 1799 (1 Stat. 644). That section provides, that “every collector, * * * in cases of occasional and necessary absence and of sickness, and not otherwise, may * * * exercise and perform” his “functions, powers, and duties, by deputy, duly constituted” under his hand and seal, “for whom, in the execution of his trust,” he “shall be answerable;” and “that, in case of the disability or death of a collector, the duties and authorities vested in him shall devolve on his deputy, if any there be, at the time of such disability or death, for whose conduct the estate of such disabled or deceased collector shall be liable.” The section provides for two classes of cases in which the collector is unable to discharge himself the duties of his office. The first class is where the collector is necessarily occasionally absent, or is sick. The second class is where the collector is disabled or dead. In the first class of cases, the collector does not cease to exercise or perform the functions, powers, or duties of his office. On the contrary, by the express language of the section, he continues to exercise and perform such functions, powers, and duties, but he exercises and performs them by his deputy. Such deputy must be duly constituted such deputy under the hand and seal of the collector, and the collect- or is made answerable for the execution, by such deputy, of his trust. In the second class of eases, that is, the disability or death of the collector, the duties and authorities vested in him devolve on his deputy, if there be one at the time of such disability or death, that is, on the deputy whom the section thus authorizes him to constitute; and the estate of such disabled or deceased collector is made liable for the conduct of such deputy. In the second class of cases, if there be a deputy, the collector does not continue to exercise and perform the functions, powers, and duties of the office by the deputy, but the duties and authorities before vested in the collector devolve on the deputy; and, in such second class of cases, if there be no deputy, then, by a provision in the same section, the duties and authorities before, vested in the collector devolve on the naval officer of the same district, if any there be. and. if there be no naval officer, then on the surveyor of the port, if any there be, and, if there be none, then on the surveyor of the nearest port in the district. The section also provides, that the authorities of the person empowered to act in the stead of a disabled or dead collector shall continue until a successor to such collector shall be duly appointed and ready to enter upon the execution of his office If, under this section, there is no person empowered to act in the stead of the disabled or dead collector, then the duties and authorities before vested in the collector do not devolve on any one.

Now, where a deputy, constituted under this law, acts for the collector, in cases of occasional and necessary absence and of sickness, the collector still acts, but acts by the deputy, and is entitled to all the perquisites and emoluments of the office, as fully, while so acting by deputy, as if he did not so act by deputy. But, when the collector' is dis[70]*70abled or dies, then the duties and authorities vested in him devolve on the deputy thus constituted. The collector, in such case, •whether he be disabled or dead, does not exercise or perform his functions, powers, and duties, by such deputy, nor does he act by such deputy, nor is he entitled to the perquisites and emoluments of the office, which he would have been entitled to, if he had not become disabled or had not died. The duties and authorities of the office devolve on such deputy, if there be one, and, if there be none, then on the other officers successively, who are designated in the section. The word “authorities” is broad enough to include the emoluments of the office. The “duties” of the office include the obligations which the officer owes to superior authority and to the public. The “authorities” of the office are the powers and prerogatives with which, the office is clothed, connected with the discharge of his duties, including, not only such powers as are necessary to enable him to discharge his duties properly, but the right and the power to demand and receive the emoluments attached by law to the office.

These views accord with settled principles. The constitution of the United States (article 2, § 6) provides, that “in case of the removal of the president from office, or of his death, resignation, or inability to discharge the powers and duties of the said office, the same shall devolve on the vice president.” The provision, in this section of the constitution, that the powers and duties of the office of president shall devolve on the vice president, is identical, in legal effect, with the provision, in the 22d section of the act of 1799, that the authorities and duties vested in the collector . shall devolve on his deputy. Three times, since the adoption of the constitution, the president has died, and, under the provision referred to, the powers and duties of the office of president have devolved upon the •vice president. All branches of the government have, under such circumstances, recognized the vice president as holding the office of president, as authorized to assume its title, and as entitled to its emoluments. The vice president holds the office of president until a successor to the deceased president comes to assume the office, at the expiration of the term for which the deceased president and the vice president were elected. The deputy, under section 22 of the act of 1799, holds the office of collector, until a successor to the disabled or deceased collector is duly appointed, and ready to enter upon the execution of his office. It has never been supposed that, under the provision of the constitution, the vice president, in acting as president, acted as the servant, or agent, or locum tenens of the deceased president, or in any other capacity than as holding the office of president fully, for the time being, by virtue of express authority emanating from the United States. So, in the case of the collector, the deputy, in acting as collector, after the death of the collector, who constituted him such deputy, does not act as the servant or agent of the deceased collector, but holds the office of collector fully, for the time being, by virtue of express authority emanating from the United States. The fact that, in the one case, the constitution itself designates the person on whom the powers and duties of the office shall devolve, and that, in the other case, the collector is authorized, before his decease, to designate such person, makes no difference in the principle. The person so legally designated becomes, when he assumes the powers and duties so devolved upon him, the direct agent of the government, and not the agent or servant of any individual who may have designated him.

It is, also, a well established principle, that no officer is entitled to the emoluments of an office for any longer period than the period during which he holds the office. And the legislation of congress is to this effect. The purport of the statutory provisions on the subject of the compensation of public officers — Act March 3, 1839, § 3 (5 Stat. 349); Act Aug. 23. 1842, § 2 (5 Stat. 510); Act Aug. 20, 1842, § 12 (5 Stat. 525); Act Sept. 30, 1850, § 1 (9 Stat. 542, 543) — is, that no person is entitled to receive the emoluments of an office which he does not hold. Opinion of Attorney General Crittenden, 5 Op. Attys. Gen. 768.

In the present case. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
17 F. Cas. 68, 6 Blatchf. 5, 1867 U.S. App. LEXIS 770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merriam-v-clinch-circtsdny-1867.