Wallcae Bros. v. Douglass

9 S.E. 453, 103 N.C. 19
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 9 S.E. 453 (Wallcae Bros. v. Douglass) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wallcae Bros. v. Douglass, 9 S.E. 453, 103 N.C. 19 (N.C. 1889).

Opinions

(SHEPHERD, J., dissented as to the disposition made of the case.) The plaintiffs allege, in substance, in their complaint that on 4 December, 1879, and for several years next before that time, the defendant was Marshal of the United States in the Western District (20) of North Carolina; that W. J. Patterson, J. T. Patterson, Jr., and S. P. Graham, during a part of that time had been, and at the time specified were, his deputy marshals, and as such deputies had respectively earned fees for large amounts, and by their respective agreements with the defendant as such Marshal they became and were respectively to have two-thirds of the fees by him so earned; that large sums of money were so due to each of said deputies, and the said W. J. Patterson drew his order upon the defendant, and the following is a copy thereof:

"$325. 16 November, 1881.

"Pay to the order of W. J. Patterson three hundred and twenty-five dollars, value received, and charge the same to the account of

W. J. PATTERSON.

"To R. M. DOUGLASS, U.S. Marshal."

"Accepted; payable when I receive funds to the use of W. J. Patterson. "R. M. DOUGLASS, U.S. Marshal."

And the said J. T. Patterson, Jr., likewise drew his order upon the defendant, and the following is a copy thereof:

"$200. 4 December, 1879.

"Pay to the order of myself two hundred dollars, value received, and charge the same to the account of

"J. T. PATTERSON, JR., D. M.

"To R. M. DOUGLASS, U.S. Marshal." *Page 36

Which has the following written across the face thereof:

"Accepted; payable when I receive funds to the use of J. T. Patterson, Jr. "R. M. DOUGLASS, U.S. Marshal."

That said drafts were accepted by the defendants as stated, and (21) recited at the end of each.

And the said S. P. Graham assigned to the plaintiffs, of the fees so due to him, the sum of $98.82, and such assignment was recognized and "accepted" by the defendant, to be paid when he should receive funds to the use of the said Graham as deputy; that the plaintiffs became the owners of the said drafts by proper endorsements; that the claims of the said deputies against the defendant for fees have been audited in the Treasury Department of the United States, and "funds to the use of" said deputies repectively [respectively] mentioned, sufficient to pay the said amounts, had been received by the defendant as Marshal; that he, nevertheless, refused upon demand to pay the money so due the plaintiffs, and they demand judgment for the same and for costs.

The defendant failed to file an answer to the complaint and, upon motion of the plaintiffs, judgment by default and inquiry was entered against him. Thereupon, by consent of parties, it was, by proper order, referred to a referee, "to hear the testimony, take and state an account, and report to this court," etc.

Afterwards the referee made report favorable to the plaintiffs.

In the course of taking the account the plaintiffs put in evidence copies of certain accounts stated and audited between the defendant as Marshal and the United States, purporting to be certified by the Register of the Treasury, for the purpose of proving that the defendant had been allowed and had received the fees earned by his deputies named as alleged. The defendant objected to the admission of these copies, stating numerous grounds of objection to them, and their competency and sufficiency as evidence. The referee, without deciding that they were or were not competent, received them in evidence, and considered them in connection with other evidence in deducting his conclusions of facts and making his report filed.

(22) At a subsequent term of the court the report so made was set aside, and it was re-referred to the same referee, with instructions to retake and restate the account required, and particularly for the present purpose, the court directed as follows:

"6. For the purpose of enabling the commissioner to find these facts, the case is reopened for further evidence on both sides. And that the commissioner will make his report under this order to the next term of this court, in which report he will pass upon and report whether he *Page 37 allows or overrules the exceptions to the evidence made by either plaintiffs or defendant. And the judgment signed in this case at this term of the court is hereby set aside and vacated.

"All exceptions of defendant, not as to the merits of the controversy, are overruled."

The referee proceeded to execute the order of re-reference, and made report, from which it appears that at a time and place specified he "proceeded to reopen the cause, when and where further testimony was introduced by the parties; and after due consideration of the testimony heretofore introduced, together with the evidence produced at this time," he drew conclusions of fact and conclusions of law arising thereupon. But he did not "pass upon and report whether he allows or overrules the exceptions to the evidence" (the copies of accounts stated and audited between the defendant and the United States, objected to as above stated); he retook and restated the account, and made report thereof, to which the defendant filed numerous exceptions. Only the first and fifteenth of them need be reported here, and the following is a copy of them:

"1. Defendant excepts to said report for the reason that said referee fails to pass upon the competency and relevancy of certain alleged transcripts from the Treasury Department, Register's office, Washington, D.C., offered in evidence by plaintiffs and objected to by defendant (Nos. 4, 5 and 6, on pages 2, 3 and 4 of testimony (23) taken in October, 1887), as he was required to do by the order of Connor, J., recommitting this case to said referee.

"15. That it is contrary to the laws and regulations of the United States Government to sell and assign such claims as those sued on by the plaintiffs, and they are not entitled to recover on that account."

The court overruled all the exceptions, confirmed the report, and gave judgment for the plaintiffs; and the defendant, having excepted, appealed to this Court. No statutory provision of the United States brought to our attention, or of which we have knowledge, gives or secures to deputy marshals any claim against the Government for, or any interest in, fees or compensation are prescribed by statute for deputies. Neither fees nor compensation are prescribed by statute for them, nor are they recognized or treated as entitled to the same as of legal right or as creditors of the Government. The fees they earn are, *Page 38 certainly, ordinarily for and belong to the Marshal. In the nature of their employment and duties they act in his name and place, and the fees they earn are due to him and are charged in his name. They are little more than his agents or servants, invested with some measure of his authority conferred by law, and they are recognized by the law only to determine their rights and liabilities and the right and liabilities and duties of third parties arising out of what they do or fail to do as deputies. Their claims for compensation are against the Marshal, accordingly as he and they agree upon the measure of it and how and when it shall become due and payable.

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Bluebook (online)
9 S.E. 453, 103 N.C. 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallcae-bros-v-douglass-nc-1889.