United States v. Heller

1 F. Supp. 1, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1646
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedAugust 18, 1932
Docket4356
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1 F. Supp. 1 (United States v. Heller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Heller, 1 F. Supp. 1, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1646 (D. Md. 1932).

Opinion

CHESNUT, District Judge.

The suit in this ease is by the United States of America against Capt. E. J. Heller, and the Maryland Casualty Company, which is the surety on his official bond, and the testimony shows that Capt. Heller, who has been in the military service of the government, in various capacities, for th'e last thirty-six years, was, in 1924, appointed a disbursing officer for the government, stationed in France, in the matter of the liquidation of various obligations that the United States had incurred there in connection with the war, known as the World War, in 1917 and 1918. Now Capt. Heller’s duties of office, as recited in the bond, which is given by the Maryland Casualty Company as his surety, was that he should carefully discharge the duties to which he was assigned, and faithfully expend all public moneys and honestly account for the same and for all public property which shall or may come into his hands without fraud or delay. And the effect of the bond was that, if he did that, then the bond was to be discharged from any further obligation.

He continued to be the disbursing officer of the government in France until, I think, March 31, 1928, and his accounts of receipts of money and disbursements of money were embraced in monthly accounts current which were forwarded in due course to the Comptroller General’s Office, and a summary of his accounts shows that during the period of approximately four years that he was in France he handled for the government $1,-997,643.40. His disposition of all that money was approved by the Comptroller General, with the exception of three separate items amounting, in the aggregate, to $18,051.50, and it is the contention of the government in this case that that amount of money which was disallowed from the payments that Capt. Heller had made, disallowed by the Comptroller General, should be paid ba'ck by Capt. Heller. Of course, the bond is in the maximum penalty of $10,000, so that the government, suing on the bond, would not be able to recover in this ease more than the amount of the bond, and interest on the sum from the time it was due. That question becomes immaterial, in view of the fact that I find that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover at all. The government says that these three items of $18,051.50 were improperly paid out by Capt. Heller, and therefore he did not faithfully pay over the moneys of the United States which came into his hands. Under the law, it is clearly the duty of the office of the Comptroller General to question items paid out by disbursing officers which, on the face of the papers which accompany the payments, seem to be irregular or contrary to law, and it is because the Comptroller General’s Office thought that the payment in this case amounting to the $18,000 was irregular and not justified by law that it refused to approve the accounts to that extent, and, under the statute (see 31 USCA § 72), the Comptroller General is charged with the duty of seeing that there is some formal investigation, at least, in regard to the propriety of those items — hence this suit — and, of course, it is the duty of the court in a case of this kind to apply the testimony to the pleadings in the ease and see whether the government has made out its case, and .that requires some little analysis of the testimony with regard to these three separate transactions.

Now, I will take them up in the order of their .financial importance: The first transaction concerns the payment by Capt. Heller of $16,300 some time, I think, early in 1928 (on the express order of the War Department), for the purchase of caskets for the reburial of soldiers of the United States who had died in action, or died in service in France in the World War, and who had been buried in France, and whose burials, somewhat hurriedly at the time, were to be revised so that the cemeteries should present a more dignified and symmetrical and beautiful, if it is possible to use that word in this connection, appearance, as a sentiment to our soldiers who had died for their country. Now the government says that Capt. Heller should not have made that payment of $16,-300, and they point to the fact, the alleged fact, that the contract under which the pay *3 ment was made was irregular, or not authorized, and that the War Department in making this contract, and in ordering Capt. Heller to pay out the money, acted illegally — at least, that was the prima facie objection that was made by the Comptroller General’s Office. The facts are within a fairly narrow compass, and they are that shortly after the war the government found that it had a large surplus of caskets which it had bought for interment purposes of soldiers. At that time it was not thought they would be needed— they were declared surplus material — and in due course they were sold to a concern known as the Lincoln Surplus Company, and that company, apparently, did not carry through the purchase, but undertook to assign the contract, and the War Department permitted the assignment, or acquiesced in it, and joined in making a new contract to a new purchaser known as one Hering, and Hering bought some 2,190, I think, caskets from the government at $4 apiece, and then later on Hering took delivery of 550 of those caskets, for which he paid $4 each, plus the cost to him of the carrying charges across the Atlantic Ocean to the United States, which amounted to about another $4 per casket, and, when the first consignment of caskets arrived, he accepted and paid for it, but found, due to their exposed condition to the weather, some of them had deteriorated, and in shipment they were further damaged, and he made a complaint about it, and asked to have the tipie of delivery of the other remaining caskets extended so that he could have certain repairs made to them in France; Well, for one reason or another, the time was extended, and in January, I think, of 1928, the situation was that Hering was still the purchaser, on paper at least, of these caskets, and the government was considering whether it should revise its policy about reburial of soldiers. In this connection you will remember that Capt. Heller’s recommendation, through Col. Van Dyne, who was in charge of cemeteries or graveyards in France-for America, was that the ordinary reburial boxes used by the French for the burial or reburial of their soldiers were adequate, the price of them comparatively small, a few dollars per box, but the American Legion, when it learned of this- proposed action by the War Department, claimed that was not suitable and inconsistent with the dignity of the treatment of the remains of American soldiers. The War Department, in yielding to that recommendation of the American Legion, decided to change its policy, and to therefore acquire caskets of the regular form and size for remains of the various soldiers who were to be reburied. That made quite a change in the situation in regard to the caskets. They were no longer surplus material, but they were very much needed by the government for the purpose of immediate use in order to save the accumulation of further expense in keeping the forces of the United States in France which were necessary for the purpose of the reburial, and the War Department, apparently, as has been explained to you in the testimony of Major General Cheatham, advertised for bids for caskets, and they were unable to obtain offers except here in America at the rate of $30 a casket, and that would have entailed, of course, considerable delay in getting the caskets to Europe and the transportation charges.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 F. Supp. 1, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-heller-mdd-1932.