United States v. Clark

96 U.S. 37, 24 L. Ed. 696, 1877 U.S. LEXIS 1624
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 25, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 96 U.S. 37 (United States v. Clark) 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
United States v. Clark, 96 U.S. 37, 24 L. Ed. 696, 1877 U.S. LEXIS 1624 (1878).

Opinions

[38]*38Mr. Justice Miller

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is' an appeal from the Court of Claims, and very few.' cases involving no' larger sum of money have given us more trouble. It was'before us at the last term, and is reported. .94 U. S. 73. Upon an examination of the record, after the case had been submitted to us, it was discovered that on an essential fact in issue the Court of Claims had made no finding, but had sent us the evidence on that point. The judgment was therefore reversed, on the ground that there was no sufficient finding of the facts on which to render a judgment, and the cause was remitted to that court for further proceedings.

The Court of Claims has now found, with sufficient distinctness, the existence of the fact requiredbut it still sends to us, with the record, the evidence on which it so found. It is this which produces the embarrassment, as we shall presently see..

The suit is brought by Clark, under, the act of May 9, 1866 (14 Stat. 44, Rev. Stat., sects. 1059, 1062), which authorizes the Court of Claims to hear and determine the claim of any disburs- . ing officer for relief from responsibility on account of capture or other loss of funds while in the line of his duty, and for which such officer was and is held' responsible; and, in case- the loss has been found to be without fault or negligence on the part of such officer, to make a decree setting forth the amount thereof, which shall be allowed as a credit by the accounting officers of the treasury in' the settlement of his accounts.

The Court of Claims finds that the claimant lost by robbery, while in the line of his duty as assistant-paymaster in the army, at Frailklin, Texas, on the sixth day of'April, 1865, a package of government funds; that the package was in his official safe at his quarters, and the loss was without fault or neglect on his part. The fifth finding of the court, and the one which was made to Supply the defect found in the case when it was here before, is as follows: “ The package of government funds which the claimant lost by robbery, as above stated, contained the sum of *15,979.87.”

If this were all, there would be no difficulty in holding that these findings sufficiently established all that is necessary to support the decree in'favor of the claimant for a cre.dit of that sum in his account with the government. But the Court of [39]*39Claims has mingled with, and made a part of its finding of facts, and sent here as part of the ■ record, the proceedings of a court-martial which tried and convicted Thomas Boylan and Louis Morales of committing the robbery by which the money was lost. It sufficiently appears that the only evidence, on which the Court of Claims made its fifth finding, namely, the amount of the money which was in the government package so lost, was the record of the court-martial, and that claimant there testified to the amount of the loss. • Also, that he was of good character, personally and officially; had always kept regular and exact accounts of the funds in his official custody; made due returns in regard to- them, and properly accounted therefor. And that he immediately reported to his superior officer that the funds in that safe were $15,979.87, which was the amount of the loss appearing in his official reports, and charged against him as a deficiency on the final revision and settlement of his accounts by the accounting officers of the treasury.

It is clear that upon this testimony alone the Court of Claims fixed the sum lost by claimant. We are asked' by the counsel for the government to hold that 'it is not competent evidence to establish that fact.

It is. manifest that, before we can do this, we must also hold that where that court has found in due form, and presented to us one of those ultimate facts which it is required to find, and whiclj is necessary to its judgment, and has at the same time presented as part of its finding all the evidence on which that fact was found, we can look at both finding's , to see whether that evidence was competent proof of that fact. ' This is pre- ■ cisely what was done in Moore v. United States, 91 U. S. 270.

Counsel for the United States insist that a party in the Court of Claims has a right to bring before this court for review any and every ruling, of the Court of Claims upon the admission or the rejection of evidence, and also its weight and effect upon the case. The question thus presented is one of much perplexity,. and involves the right to a bill of exceptions in a court which sits without a-jury, where the evidence is all in writing, and whose judgments, we have, by our rules, sought to make final as to all the facts in the case.

We do not propose, here to enter this field, of inquiry further [40]*40than this case requires. And we think it does require us not to weigh the evidence, nor to decide whether the court below was bound to note the exception prayed by counsel, or even to include in their findings the matters of evidence we have above stated. But we are of. opinion- that when that court has presented, as part of their findings, what they show to be all'the testimony on which they base one of the essential, ultimate facts, which they have also found, and on which their judgment rests., we must, if that testimony is not competent evidence of that fact, reverse the judgment for that reason. For here is, in the ■very findings of the court, made to support its judgment, the evidence that in law that judgment is wrong. And this not on the weight or balance of testimony, nor on any partial view of whether a particular piece of testimony is admissible, but whether, upon the whole of the testimony as presented by the court itself, there is any evidence to support its verdict; that is,. its finding of the ultimate fact in question.

Entering upon the' inquiry, whether there is here any evidence on which the court could have found the amount of the loss by the robbery, it seems too plain for argument that the record of the court-martial is wholly incompetent.

1. Clark was no party to that proceeding, and is not, therefore, bound by its findings; and, by a well-known rule, there is no mutuality, and, therefore, it cannot bind the United States. 2. The amount of the robbery was in- no way an essential issue m the trial of the robbers. 3. And it 'may well be-doubted whether a criminal proceeding in a military court can be used to establish any collateral fact in a civil proceeding in another court.

Nor can the evidence of-a witness in that case be competent to establish a faet in another case, without some reason, such as his death or insanity since it was given. We will recur to this point presently.

Was the good character-of the claimant, the regularity of his accounts, and the prompt report of the loss and its amount, Competent evidence to establish that amount ? The only thing in all this which could have any tendency to prove the sum lost is the report of its loss.' This is but the testimony of the party claimant, and testimony not under oath. If he is inco'm [41]*41petent as a witness, this less direct mode- of testifying must also be excluded. If he is competent, and had been introduced on the stand, this fact might be used as corroborative evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 U.S. 37, 24 L. Ed. 696, 1877 U.S. LEXIS 1624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-clark-scotus-1878.