United States ex rel. Trask v. Wanamaker

21 D.C. 119
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 24, 1892
DocketNo. 33,047
StatusPublished

This text of 21 D.C. 119 (United States ex rel. Trask v. Wanamaker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States ex rel. Trask v. Wanamaker, 21 D.C. 119 (D.C. 1892).

Opinion

Mr. Justice James

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This is a petition for a writ of mandamus. The relator’s petition states substantially the following case:

She became postmaster at Emporia, Kansas, on October 1, 1864, and so continued to and including June 30, 1870. During the whole of the biennial term ending June 30, 1866, the returns of the office paid to the United States amounted to $1,567.98, the commissions on which, under the act of [120]*120June 22, 1854, if allowed, would have amounted to $863.99. The salary allowed for the seven quarters of this period, during which the relator was postmaster, was $580.

During the biennial term ending June 30, 1868, the returns of the office amounted to $2,230.73, besides $73 box rents, commissions upon which, under the said act of 1854, if allowed, would amount to $1,270.37, while relator was paid a salary, for the same period, of $800.

For the biennial term ending June 30, 1870, the returns of the office amounted to $6,312.53, besides $230 box rents, upon which commissions under said act of 1854, if allowed, would amount to $3,139.33; while'the relator was paid a salary, for the same biennial term, of $1,580. *

The petitioner thereupon claims that it became the duty of the Postmaster General, under section 8 of the act of June Í2, 1866, to readjust said salary at the end of each biennial term, because the same was ten per cent, less than it would have been in commissions under said act of 1854, and to allow the difference between the salary paid and said commissions.

The relator further sets forth that, on June 9, 1883, and February 17, 1884, the Postmasters General of those dates issued orders in which they construed the statutes relating to readjustment of salaries; that they caused to be entered upon the forms described in those orders, the sum of $1,-567.98, as the amount of the postal receipts at the relator’s postoffice during the biennial term ending June 30, 1866, and the salary of said office, for the whole of said term, computed on the basis of the act of 1854, as $863.99, and the relator’s proportion thereof, for seven quarters of that term, as $755.99: that they caused to be entered on said forms the sum of $2,230.73, as the amount of relator’s postal receipts for the biennial term ending June 30, 1868, and the sum of $1,270.37, 'as relator’s salary for the same term; and the sum of $6,312.53 as the amount of relator’s postal receipts for the biennial term ending June 30, 1870, and the sum of $3,139.83, as the salary of .the relator for the same [121]*121term; also that the Postmaster General prepared and transmitted to the Committee on Post Offices and Post Roads a statement of the total amount of the relator’s readjusted salary, due and unpaid, for the whole time between October i, 1864, and June 30, 1870, showing the amount so due the relator to be $2,175.57, .but afterwards withdrew that statement, and an error therein was corrected, and an entry was made showing the correct amount due the relator to be $2,206.19.

The relator states that the Postmaster- General has refused to report to the auditor for the Post Office Department, for credit in the relator’s account, the amount found due upon said statement, and concludes with the following prayer:

“The relator therefore prays that a writ of mandamus may issue from this honorable court addressed to John Wanamaker, Postmaster General, commanding him to report to the Auditor of the Treasury for the Post Office Department, that upon an examination of the relator’s quarterly returns as postmaster at Emporia, Kansas, during her terms of service between October 1, 1864, and June 30, 1870, and a recomputation of her salary as required by section 8 of the act of June 12, 1886, and the act of March 3, 1883, it is found that the additional salary $2,206.19 is due her, of which she is entitled to be credited in her account.”

To this petition the respondent demurred. The case was certified to this court, to be heard here in the first instance, and a rule to show cause was issued.

In order to determine the validity of the relator’s claim, we must consider the acts of June 22, 1854, of July 1, 1864, of June 12, 1866, and of March 3, 1883.

The act of June 22, 1854, provided that postmasters should be compensated by commissions -on the amount of postal receipts at their respective postoffices, varying in percentage to the extent .of the receipts. The act of July 1, 1864, established five classes of postmasters. To the first class were assigned those whose salaries, as determined by the rule laid down in another part of the act, should be not [122]*122less than $3,000 nor more than $4,000; to the second those whose salaries should be not less than $2,000 nor more than $3,000; to the third, those whose salaries should be not less than $1,000 nor more than $2,000; to the fourth, those whose salaries should be not less -than $100 nor more than $1,000; and to the fifth, those whose salaries should be less than $100. The rule by which the salary of a particular postmaster should be determined was provided as follows: “To offices of the first, second, and third classes shall be assigned salaries, in even hundreds of dollars,. as near as practically in amount the same as, but not exceeding the- average compensation of the postmasters thereof for the two years next preceding; and the offices of the fourth class shall be assigned severally salaries, in even tens of dollars, as near as practicable in amount the same as, but not exceeding, such average compensation for the two years next preceding,” etc.

The time,when the salary system shall take effect was provided by the 3d section of the act as follows: “Salaries of the first, second and third classes should be adjusted to take effect on the first day of July, 1864, and of the fourth and fifth classes at the same time, or at the commencement of a quarter as nearly as practicable thereafter.”

The next preceding section (2) provided the readjustment of salaries in the following words:

“ The Postmaster General shall review once in two years and in special cases, upon satisfactory representation, as much oftener as he may deem expedient, and readjust, on the basis of the preceding section (namely, Sec. 1) the salary assigned by him to any office; but any change made in such salary shall not take effect until the first day of the quarter next follotving such order, and all orders made' assigning or changing salaries shall be made in writing and in his journal and notified to the Auditor of the Post 'Office Department.”

The effect of sections .2 and .3 was that the biennial terms should date from July 1, 1864. By this reference to “the basis of the preceding section,” (namely, section 2) it was required that the readjusted salary should be “ as .near as [123]*123practicable in amount the Same as, but not exceeding,” the average compensation, by commission on postal receipts, for the two years next preceding the order of readjustment. For example, in case of readjustment of the salary which had been allowed for the term ending June 30, 1866, the postal receipts for that term would be the basis of computation, and then the salary so ascertained would, as provided by section 2, apply to the term ending June 30, 1868.

We come now to the statute on which chiefly the relator’s claim is founded by her.

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Related

UNITED STATES Ex Rel. TRASK v. WANAMAKER
147 U.S. 149 (Supreme Court, 1893)

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21 D.C. 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-ex-rel-trask-v-wanamaker-dc-1892.