The United States, in Error v. Walter Jones, Administrator of Benjamin G. Orr

33 U.S. 375, 8 L. Ed. 979, 8 Pet. 375, 1834 U.S. LEXIS 596
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 19, 1834
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 33 U.S. 375 (The United States, in Error v. Walter Jones, Administrator of Benjamin G. Orr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The United States, in Error v. Walter Jones, Administrator of Benjamin G. Orr, 33 U.S. 375, 8 L. Ed. 979, 8 Pet. 375, 1834 U.S. LEXIS 596 (1834).

Opinion

*380 Mr Justice M’Lean

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case is brought into this court by a writ of error to the circuit court for the District of Columbia.

The action was commenced against B. G. Orr, in his life time, to recover from him a sum of money which remained in his hands as a balance of moneys that had been advanced to him on an army contract. Issue being joined, the causé was-submitted to a jury; and the exceptions taken by the plaintiffs, to the ruling of the court on the trial, present the points for consideration.

“ The attorney for the United States produced and read to the jury the contract or articles of agreement between George . Graham, acting secretary of war, &c. and the said B. G. Orr, dated 21st November 1816, and the bond of said Orr and his sureties, A. M’Cormick and W. O’Neale, of the same date, with the condition thereof, being the same contract and bond above set out, &c. The attorney of the United States then produced and read to the jury the account stated by the accounting officers of the treasury, against the said Orr; and claimed to recover in this .action the balance, of three thousand six hundred and fifty-four dollars and forty-six cents, in the said account stated.”

To certain items contained in this account the defendant’s counsel objected ; but no objections were made to four items charged for treasury warrants issued, to Orr, amounting to the sum of twenty-eight thousand five hundred dollars.

The first charge excepted to, was made as follows: “ Feb *381 ruary 19th 1818, for warrant 1680, favour of Richard Smith, dated 27th December 1817, and 11th February 1818, twenty thousand dollars.” And on 11th April of the same year, another charge was made, “ for warrant No. 1904, for the payment of his two drafts, favour of Alexander M’Cormick, dated 11th and 17th March 1818, for ten thousand dollars.” And on the 14th May of the same year a charge was made “ for warrant No. 2038, being in part for a bill of exchange in favour of Richard Smith, for twenty thousand dollars, — twelve thousand eight hundred and thirty-two dollars and seventy-eight cents.” And one other warrant was charged June 22d, “ for a bill of exchange in favour of Richard Smith, dated June 22d 1810, four thousand dollars; and also a warrant to Richard Smith, per order, for eight thousand dollars.

These items the court instructed the jury, were not sufficiently proved, by being charged in the account and certified under the act of congress.

This instruction, the attorney-general insists, was errroneous; and that these items should have been admitted as proved, on the same principle as the four items to which no objection was made. That, if the government shall be required to produce the authority on which the warrants were issued to Richard Smith and Alexander M’Cormick, on the same principle, the original warrants issued in the name of Orr, and on-which his receipts for the moneys are indorsed, should be proved. That it is as likely that some one may have fraudulently obtained these warrants from the treasury, by personating Orr, as that the bills of exchange or orders, on which the warrants were issued to his agents, were forgeries.

The officers of the treasury may. well certify facts which come under their official notice, but they cannot certify that which does not come within their own knowledge.

In the case of the United States v. Buford, 3 Peters 12, the court say, that “ an account stated at the treasury department, which does not arise, in the ordinary mode of doing business in that department, can derive no additional validity from being certified under the act of congress. Such a statement can only be regarded as establishing items for moneys disbursed, through the ordinary channels of the department, where the transactions are shown by its books.”

*382 The issuing of the warrants to Orr was an official act, “ in the ordinary mode of doing business in the department,” and the fact is proved by being certified as the act of congress requires.

But the execution of bills of exchange and orders for money on the treasury, though they may be “ connected with the settlement of - an account,” cannot be officially known to the accounting officers. In such cases, however, provision has been made by law, by which such instruments are made evidence, without proof of the hand writing of the drawer.

In the second section of the act of 3d March 1797, it is provided, that “ all copies of bonds, contracts, or other papers, relating to, or connected with the settlement of any account between the United States and an individual, when certified by the register to be true copies of the original on file, and authenticated under the seal of the department, may be annexed to the transcripts, and shall have equal validity, and be entitled to the same degree of credit, which would be due to the original papers, if produced and authenticated in court.”

Under this provision, had copies of the bills of exchange and orders, on which the above items were paid to Smith and M’Cormick, been duly certified and annexed to the transcript, the same effect must have been given to them by the circuit court, as if the-originals had been produced and proved. And every transcript of accounts from the treasury, which contains items of payments made to others, on the authority of the person charged, should have annexed to it, a duly certified copy of the instrument which authorised such -payments. And so in every case, where the government endeavours, by suit, to hold an individual liable for the acts of his agent; the agency on which the act of the government was founded, should be made to appear, by a duly certified copy of the power.

The defendant would be at liberty to impeach the evidence thus certified, and, under peculiar circumstances of alleged fraud, a court might require the production of the original instrument. This, however-, would depend upon the exercise of the discretion of the court, and could, only be enforced by a continuance of the cause until the original should be produced.

The following item was also objected to by the defendant’s counsel. “To accounts transferred from he books of the sec *383 ond auditor for this sum, standing to his debit, under said contract on the books of the second auditor, transferred to his debit on those of this office, forty-five thousand dollars.”

This item was properly, rejected by the circuit court. The act of congress, in making a “ transcript from the books and proceedings of the treasury” evidence, does not mean the statement of an account in gross, but a statement of the items, both of the debits and credits, as they were acted upon by the accounting officers of the. department. On the trial, the defendant shall be allowed no credit on vouchers, which have not been rejected by the treasury , officers, unless it was not in his power to have produced them; and how could a proper effect be given to this provision, if the credits be charged in gross % The defendant is unquestionably entitled to a detailed statement of the items which compose his account.

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33 U.S. 375, 8 L. Ed. 979, 8 Pet. 375, 1834 U.S. LEXIS 596, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-united-states-in-error-v-walter-jones-administrator-of-benjamin-g-scotus-1834.