United States v. Jones

26 F. Cas. 638, 1 Brock. 285

This text of 26 F. Cas. 638 (United States v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Jones, 26 F. Cas. 638, 1 Brock. 285 (circtdva 1814).

Opinion

MARSHALL, Circuit Justice.

There are some incidental points in this ease, which, though not relied ttpon. it may be proper to dispose of, in the first instance, for the purpose of simplifying the question. The deputy of John Shore, having continued to act as his deputy, until the judgment was rendered in the district court, the rights of John Shore are considered as preserving the same validity, as if he had been at that time in life, retaining his office and performing its duties. The rights of Joseph Jones, could not commence, until he became the officer. The judgment of the district court, [640]*640having been brought into the circuit court, not by appeal, but by writ of error, and having been affirmed, the rights of all tfie parties under it, remain the same as if the writ of error had never been sued out. The contest, then, in this case is, between the representatives of the person who was collector when the penalty was incurred, and who remained the collector, until the judgment was rendered; and the person who is collector, when the distribution of the penalty is to be made. This question depends in a great degree, on the true construction of the act, “to regulate the collection of duties on imports and tonnage,” passed the 2d day of March, 1799 (1 Story’s Laws, 573-664, inclusive [1 Stat. 627]), since this penalty is to be distributed according to the rules prescribed in that act In construing it, the attention of the court has been directed to the phraseology of the 89th section, and it has been contended, very truly, that the word “collector,” throughout that section, applies to the collector for the time being, only. Yet, this construction must be sustained, rather by the necessary meaning, than by the grammatical arrangement' of the sentence; rather by the life, than by the dead letter of the law. “The collector, within whose district the seizure shall be made,” &c. It would seem, if we examine this sentence, witfiout considering the nature of the duty intended to be performed, that the person who commenced the duty, must end it. “The said collector,” &c., that is, the collector who instituted the suit, &c. But when we look to this duty, the contrary construction is at once adopted. The duty is entirely official, not in any degree personal, and must be performed by the tenant of the office. But suppose the collector who receives the money, dies before payment and distribution. This duty must necessarily be performed by his executors, not by the collector for the time being. The 91st section distributes the fines, forfeitures, and penalties, imposed by the act. It declares that “one moiety shall be for the use of the United States, and be paid into the treasury thereof, by the collector receiving the same: the other moiety shall be divided between, and* paid in equal proportions to, the collector, and naval officer of the district, and surveyor of the port, wherein the same shall have been incurred, or to such of the said officers as there may be in the said district.” Were this clause to be construed, without reference to the object of the legislature, it will readily be admitted, that the officer for the time being, and the officer at the moment of distribution, is the person designated by the law. But no legislative act. no instrument of any description, is construed without regard to the object and intent of its framers, as manifested by itself. Language is too imperfect to admit of such a rule. The same words, in different connex-ion have a different import. The intention, therefore, must be regarded; and to find that intention, whatever relates to the subject must be inspected.

If the moiety of this penalty be a gratuity to the officer of the district, or a donation to the office, then there is nothing to control that construction, which the words most naturally import. If it be not a gratuity, but a compensation for service, or a stimulus to those who are to perform the service, and on whom the stimulus is to operate, and if such officers will come Within the description of the law, they are the persons designated by the law. The attempt to prove that this is not a mere donation to the officers, would be a waste of words and of time. If it be a compensation for services, or a stimulus for the performance of services, it must be bestowed on those who have performed, or who are expected to perform, the services which the law intends to remunerate. Penalties are imposed for the purpose, not of enriching the treasury, but of enforcing the execution of laws, and the legislature, is, therefore, uniformly liberal in its compensation out of penalties, to those who have contributed to the punishment of offenders, and, through that medium, to the enforcement of the law. Any thing like a rateable portion, therefore, of reward to service, is not to be expected; but the kind ef service for which the reward is intended, must be looked for and discovered when the reward is claimed by different persons. The same inquiry must be made, if we consider the reward as a stimulus to the officer.

On the part of Mr. Jones, it is contended that, in the view of the legislature, the whole transaction, from its commencement, to its final termination; from the commission of the act, on which the penalty is to accrue, to the receipt of the money, is to be considered as one entire thing, consisting of different parts, deemed equal by the legislature; and that the compensation is bestowed on the person who happens to perform the concluding part of the service, that is. to receive the money, or who is then in office. This construction, which is admitted to be rather favoured by the words of the distributing clause of the section, is said to be equally consistent with the intent and spirit of the law; since the service is equally meritorious with any other that is performed, and since this construction will, equally with any other, stimulate the officer to exertion.

On the part of Mr. Shore, it is contended, that the duties intended to be stimulated and rewarded, terminate with the judgment, if not before, and that the receipt of the money has no connexion with the right to a distributive share of it.

In arguing the merits of the claimants, it has been contended, that no service is to be performed,' previous to the judgment, of such importance as to give the officers of that period a superior claim to their successors, or to justify an opinion, that the [641]*641legislature intended the reward to stimulate those services, which were to be performed anterior to that period, rather than such as might afterwards become necessary for the collection of the money. In support of this proposition, the argument has been confined to the very case before the court; to an embargo bond. But it is to be recollected, that this is only one of many cases, to which the same principle of distribution applies. The act of 1799, which gives the principle, ere-ates a great number of penalties and forfeitures, and adapts their distribution to the nature of those penalties and forfeitures, and to the services which are to be rendered for their detection and punishment. The act of 1809 (act to interdict commercial intercourse, 2 Story’s Laws, 1120, § 18 [2 Stat. 550]), then, adopts the rule of distribution prescribed in the act of 1799. Perhaps the persons favoured by that rule, may be most certainly discerned by looking something further into the nature of the service to be perforated by those who, under that act, might claim reward. These penalties are imposed, some for acts of omission, others for acts of commission. In cases of omission. the labour of the officer is not considerable, but is perhaps essential to the security of the revenue.

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Bluebook (online)
26 F. Cas. 638, 1 Brock. 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-jones-circtdva-1814.