United States v. Stone

106 U.S. 525, 1 S. Ct. 287, 27 L. Ed. 163, 1882 U.S. LEXIS 1572
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 18, 1882
Docket97
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 106 U.S. 525 (United States v. Stone) 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. Stone, 106 U.S. 525, 1 S. Ct. 287, 27 L. Ed. 163, 1882 U.S. LEXIS 1572 (1882).

Opinion

Me. Justice Matthews

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was brought by the United States against Benjamin B. Emory and his sureties, upon his official bond, as collector of internal revenue for the Third District of Mississippi. The bond, dated March 29, 1870, is in the penal sum of $50,000, and reciting that' he had been appointed and had received a commission' as such collector, dated Dec. 29, 1869, is conditioned that “ he shall truly and faithfully execute and discharge all the duties of the said office according- to law, and shall justly and- faithfully account for and pay over to the United States, in compliance with the orders and regulations of the Secretary of the Treasury, all public moneys which may come into his hands or possession,” &c. The breach alleged is, that he failed to account for and pay over the sum of $57,497.84 of public moneys which had come into his possession as such collector.

The defendants pleaded nil debet, and gave notice of special matter to, be given in evidence under that plea, among others, that “ the alleged liability for - which this suit is brought arose, if at all, under a bond given by said Emory, as such collector, in October, 1869, and not under the bond on which this suit was brought,” &c. They also pleaded payment before suit brought, and an argumentative plea of non est factum, to which a demurrer was sustained. Subsequently they filed an additional plea traversing the alleged breach of the condition of the bond.

Before the trial, the district attorney moved to strike out the defendants’ plea o.f nil debet, with the notice of special matter attached, and an"order sustaining that motion appears from the record to have been made; although,, from a bill of exceptions taken at the time, it is stated that the motion was sustained only so far as the notice was concerned, and overruled as to the plea.

*527 There was a verdict in' favor of the United States for $10,003.52, and a judgment \yas rendered thereon.

Writs of error were sued out by both parties, and are now prosecuted to reverse that judgment, for errors alleged to have been committed by the court in its rulings on the trial, duly excepted’to by the parties respectively, and brought upon the record by bills of exception.

They will be considered in their order, beginning with those assigned by the defendants below.

1. There was no error, as alleged* in striking out the notice of the special matter, to be given in. evidence, under the plea of nil debet. It was proper to strike it out, because it was matter which denied the plaintiffs whole cause of action, which, consequently,' it was bound to meet with its own evidence in the first instance, and which, therefore, the defendants traversed by the plea of nil debet, and the plea denying the alleged breach of the condition of the bond. Any evidence which would have been competent under the notice would have been equally so without.it; and, in point of fact, all the evidence offered on the part of the defendants, which was competent under the notice, was admitted under the pleas.

2. The first bill of exceptions taken by the defendants states that “ the said plaintiff offered to read to the jury certain transcripts from the books of the Treasury Department at Washington City, and certified transcripts of papers on file in said department, touching the official conduct of Benjamin- B. Emory as late internal revenue collector for the Third District of. Mississippi, which said transcripts are dated respectively-, as shown by the certificates of the Secretary of the Treasury. And to these transcripts the defendants had filed written ex-ceptions, and objected to their introduction as evidence, for the reasons assigned in said exceptions.” The court overruled the objection and permitted the transcripts to be read in evidence, to which reading the defendants excepted; and it is,flow assigned for error. ,.

In another part of the record there is this statement: “ The following are transcripts from the books of the Treasury Department at Washington and of papers on file, which are referred to in the bills of exceptions taken and filed in tV" -ause.’ *528 Then follows forty-seven printed pages of-matter, consisting of certified statements of account from the books of the Treasury Department, and copies of numerous papers ,on file, apparently relating to the accounts of this collector. But it is impossible to know, with. accuracy, from the record, which of these were .offered in evidence by the plaintiff and to which the objection was intended to apply ; for it appears from another bill of exceptions, — and there were six in all, — which' was taken by the plaintiff, that some' of these transcripts from the books of the Treasury Department were offered-by the defendants themselves, and admitted in evidence, against the objection of the district attorney, — a ruling we are called upon to consider hereafter.,. as.it¡is alleged as error on the part of the United States, under the writ of error which- it prosecute^. It is only by subtracting these from the entire mass that we can infer to what .the defendants objected. . '

The exceptións .filed to these transcripts, referred to in the bill of exceptions and • found elsewhere in the record, are as follows: —

“ 1st, The certificates are not such a's the law requires..
“ 2d, The transcripts are incomplete, and do not set out the entries on the books of the. department, and are not transcripts from the books, but summaries of what the officers suppose the books contain.
“ 3d, The reports and receipts of Emory, as collector for assessments-, and other papers, connected with the settlement of his accounts by the department, are not.set out in said transcripts.
“ 4th, Emory’s monthly and quarterly reports are not set out in said transcripts.
“ 5th, Emory’s receipts for assessments are not set out in said transcripts,
“ 6th, Facts are set out in said transcript which did not come before the department, which were not in the course of its business, and of which its transcript is no evidence.
“ 7th, Said transcripts are partial, imperfect, and do not present the whole record statement in regard to said Emory’s accounts as late collector as aforesaid.”

The particulars in which the transcripts in question are sup *529 posed to be open to these exceptions are not pointed out to us, either by anything in the record' or in argument by counsel, and there is nothing upori their face which suggests them to us. The papers in question seem to be in the usual form of such statements, and purport to be copies from the books of the Treasury Department of the accounts between the collector and the United States, containing the usual items, and showing the appropriate balance between the debits and credits. If there is anything in them illegal, insufficient, or incomplete, we have not been able to discover it. United States v. Gaussen, 19 Wall.

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Bluebook (online)
106 U.S. 525, 1 S. Ct. 287, 27 L. Ed. 163, 1882 U.S. LEXIS 1572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-stone-scotus-1882.