Sweet v. United States

34 Ct. Cl. 377, 1899 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 34, 1800 WL 2156
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedApril 10, 1899
DocketNo. 20813
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 34 Ct. Cl. 377 (Sweet 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
Sweet v. United States, 34 Ct. Cl. 377, 1899 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 34, 1800 WL 2156 (cc 1899).

Opinion

Weldon, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is a proceeding to recover an alleged balance due the claimant as register of the land office at Grand Island, Nebr., accruing between the 24th of April, 1890, and the 30th of June, 1891. It is.alleged that the whole of the earnings to which the claimant was entitled between said dates amounts to the sum of $3,203.05, and that he has only been paid the sum of $2,913.84, leaving a balance due’ him of $289.21, and for that amount he demands a judgment. The difference between what is claimed to be due the petitioner and the amount paid to him originates from the mode adopted by the accounting officers in determining the compensation to which he was entitled.

If the compensation is to be on the basis of a calendar year, as contended by the claimant, he is entitled to the amount for which he brings suit; but if upon the theory of law that his compensation is to be on the basis of each quarter in the fiscal year, as contended by the defendants, he is not entitled to recover and the petition should be dismissed.

The earnings of the claimant as register from April 24,1890, to June 30, 1890, as shown by the facts, amounted to the sum of $849.64, and he was paid from the appropriation for salaries and commissions of registers and receivers for the fiscal year ending June 30,1890, the sum of $560.44, which was the pro rata for the period of his service during said fiscal year of the maximum compensation to which he was entitled.

The earnings of the claimant as register for his first year of service, commencing April 24,1890, and closing on the 24th of April, 1891, were $2,868.32, of which amount the claimant was paid all but $289.21.

The accounts of the claimant as register were computed and settled in the Treasury Department according to the fiscal year.

[383]*383The statutes specifically applicable to the issue involved in the controversy are as follows:

Section 2237, Eevised Statutes:

“Every register and receiver shall be allowed an annual salary of five hundred dollars.”

Section 2240, Eevised Statutes:

“The compensation of registers and receivers, including salary, fees, and commissions, shall in no case exceed in the aggregate three thousand dolíais a year each; and no register or receiver shall receive for any one quarter or fractional quarter more than a pro rata allowance of such maximum.”

Section 2241, Eevised Statutes:

“Whenever the amount of compensation received at any land office exceeds the maximum allowed,by law to any register or receiver the excess shall be paid into the Treasury as other public moneys.”

Section 2243, Eevised Statutes:

“ The compensation of registers and receivers, both for salary and commissions, shall commence and be calculated from the time they respectively enter on the discharge of their duties.”

Again: Section 456, Eevised Statutes (first edition), was:

“All returns relative to the public lands shall be made to the Commissioner of the General Land Office, and he shall have power to audit and settle all accounts relative to the public lands.” * * *

The difficulty originates from the compensation growing out of the allowance of fees and commissions, it being a varying quantity; the salary being a fixed sum, and therefore uniform, would not vary in the different quarters of the fiscal year.

The compensation of the claimant is not determined by law except as to-the amount of salary, and the limitation that the compensation shall not exceed in the aggregate $3,000 a year.

If the compensation of the claimant is to be fixed on the basis of a calendar year, commencing at the date of his appointment, and he not having received during that period from salary, fees, and commissions a sum equal to $3,000, he is entitled to recover the amount deducted from the quarter ending on the 1st of July, 1890; but if his compensation is to be fixed on the basis or at the rate of $3,000, to be estimated in quarters ending on the 30th of June in each year, then the deduction made was proper and he is not entitled to recover.

[384]*384The claimant bases his right to recover on the construction of the statute of April 20, 1818, chapter 118 (3 Stat. L., 466), given by the Supreme Court in the case of The United States v. Diclcson (18 Peters, 141).

In that case the defendant was a receiver of public money at a land office in Mississippi, entering upon his duties as such on the 22d day of November, 1833, and serving until July 26, 1836. The salary at that time was as it is at present, with a compensation of commissions of $2,500 per year if the receipts of the office at the rate 1 per cent amounted to that sum during the year, making the sum of $3,000 as the aggregate compensation for a year’s service.

The United States attempted to limit the commission and salary of the defendant to the fiscal year from January 1 to December 31, and denied his right to more than a portion of the commissions on the money received by him, limiting the same to the proportion of the year he was in office.

The court in substance held that the receiver was entitled to calculate his yearly commission on the amount of the public money received by him during the year, commencing from his appointment, instead of calculating it by the fiscal year; and that he had a right to charge the yearly maximum of commissions for the fractional portion of the year which he served.

This decision was made in the construction of the act of April 20,1818 (3 Stat. L., 466), in which no mention is made of quarters either of the fiscal or calendar year. It is to be noted that up to the year 1842 no distinction was made between the calendar and fiscal year, the fiscal being the same as the calendar.

In the act of 1818 [supra) no division being made of time into quarters, the court held that the receipt of more than a maximum of commission, counting by quarters, during the fraction of the year ending in July gave the defendant the right to retain such maximum, although he did not serve the entire year from November, 1835, to November, 1836. The amount which he received from November, 1835, to July, 1836, was not in excess of $3,000.

The act of February 2,1859 (11 Stat. L., 373), provided as follows:

“That the act entitled ‘An act for changing the compensation of receivers and registers of the land offices,’ approved [385]*385April twentieth, eighteen hundred and eighteen, shall be so construed by the proper accounting officers of the Government as to restrict the aggregate amount allowed as compensation for the registers’ and receivers’ commissions on moneys received at any land office in any one calendar year to the sum of twenty-five hundred dollars each, and that the registers and receivers shall not receive for any one quarter or fractional quarter more than a pro rata allowance of said maximum of twenty-five hundred dollars. Their compensation, both for salary and commissions, to commence and be calculated from the time they enter on the discharge of their duties.”

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Related

Phillips v. United States
47 Ct. Cl. 288 (Court of Claims, 1912)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 Ct. Cl. 377, 1899 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 34, 1800 WL 2156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sweet-v-united-states-cc-1899.