9 F. Cas. 589 | S.D.N.Y. | 1869
In this case, an order of reference was made to a commissioner, in August, 1868, to ascertain and report who is the informer in this case, entitled to share, as such, in the sum of $21,558.44, now in the registry of this court for distribution. The contest has proceeded before the commissioner between one Mieh-ener and one Payne, and a large mass of testimony has been taken before him on the part of those parties respectively, each of them claiming, as against the other, that he is entitled as informer. The United States do not seem, by the minutes of testimony taken by the commissioner, to have been represented before him on the reference, and the witnesses produced by each claimant were cross-examined only on the part of the other claimant, and not on the part of the United States. It was, therefore, very naturally and properly assumed by the commissioner, that the United States regarded the one or the other of the claimants, at all events, as entitled to share, as informer, in the funds, and that his duty was limited to the inquiry, as matter of fact, into the question as to who, within the language of the 179th section of the act of June 30, 1804 (13 Stat. 305), as amended by the 9th section of the act of July 13. 1866 (14 Stat. 145), first informed of the cause, matter or thing whereby the forfeiture in this case was incurred. That forfeiture is one incurred under the internal revenue acts of the United States. The commissioner has reported that Mieh-ener was the sole informer in this case. Payne has filed five exceptions to this report: (1) Because Miehener is found to be the sole informer; (2) because Miehener is found to be an informer; (3) because Payne is not found to be the informer; (4) because Payne is not found to be the sole informer; (5) because certain testimony offered by-Payne before the commissioner was excluded by him. The questions arising on these exceptions have been argued before the court by the counsel for Miehener and Payne respectively, the United States not being represented. The counsel for Payne, however, \n fact argued on the part of the United States, by contending, that, independently of the question of Payne’s rights as informer, Miehener could not, in any event, share as Informer, even though he should be found to be, as matter of fact, the person who, within the 170th section of the act of 1864, first Informed of the cause, matter or thing whereby the forfeiture was incurred.
I have examined the evidence in this case with care, and am of opinion that Payne was not the person who, within the 179th section, first informed of the cause, matter or thing whereby the forfeiture in this case was incurred; and that Miehener was the person, and the only person, who, as against Payne and all other persons, except the United States, first informed of such cause, matter or thing. I also think that the commissioner properly excluded the evidence named in the fifth exception. As respects Payne, therefore, and the exceptions taken by him, all of them are disallowed. But I think that Miehener, although in fact the first informer, as against Payne and all other persons, is not entitled, as informer, to any share in the moneys to be distributed in this case. If I were inclined to a different opinion, I should, under the circumstances of this case, give an opportunity to the United States to be heard on the question, through their attorney', but that now becomes unnecessary.
It appears, that, during the whole period covered by the acts of Miehener. on which he relies as constituting him informer, he was a revenue inspector at Philadelphia, appointed by the secretary of the treasury under the authority of the 5th section of the act of June 30, 1864; and that it was a part of his official duty to make the investigations and do the acts on which he relies. The property seized was forfeited and condemned for violations of the internal revenue laws, committed in New York by the firm of Alexander Ross & Co., in the manufacture and sale of tobacco. The researches and investigations made by Miehener at Philadelphia, which place was his post of duty, were in reference to sales of articles made of tobacco by Ross & Co to customers of theirs at Philadelphia. Such duties were
There must, therefore, be a distribution of the money in court in this case, without any reference to the claims of either Payne or Miehener, as informer.