delivered the opinion of the court.
The question presented for determination in this case is, whether the general pardon 'and amnesty granted by President Johnson, by proclamation, on the 25th of December, 1868, will entitle one receiving their benefits to the proceeds of his property, previously condemned and sold' under the confiscation act of 1862, after such proceeds have been paid into the treasury.
The proclamation of the President extended unconditionally and without reservation a full. pardon and amnesty for the offence of treason against the United States, or of giving aid and comfort ,io their enemies, to all persons wjio had directly or indirectly participated in the rebellion, with a restoration of all rights, privileges, and immunities under the Constitution and the laws made in pursuance thereof. Some distinction has been made, or attempted to be made, between pardon and amnesty. It is sometimes said that the latter operates as an extinction of the offence of which it is the object, causing it to be forgotten, so far as the public interests are concerned, whilst-the former only operates to remove the penalties of' the offence. This distinction is not, however, recognized in our law-. The Constitution does not use the word “ amnesty; ” and,
The rights, privileges, and immunities under the Constitution and laws which the proclamation restored to parties embraced by its terms, are such as all citizens possess and enjoy. That instrument does not declare that any subjects of property are restored with reference to which such rights, privileges, and immunities might be invoked; nor can its language be thus construed without it manifest perversioto nf its sense.
The effect of a pardon upon the condition and rights of its recipient have been the subject of frequent consideration by this court; and principles have been settled which will solve the question presented for our determination in the case at bar.
Ex parte
Garland,
Where, however, property condemned, or its proceeds, have not thus vested, but remain under control of the Executive, or of. officers subject to his orders, or are in the custody of the judicial tribunals, the property will be restored or its proceeds delivered to the original owner, upon his full pardon. The property and the proceeds are not considered as so absolutely vesting in third parties or in the United States as to be unaffected by the pardon until they have passed out of the jurisdiction of. the officer or tribunal. The .proceeds have thus passed when pdjd over to the individual entitled to them, in the one' case, or .áre covered into the treasury,' in the other.
The views here expressed have been applied in practice, it
The same views were, to some extent, applied in the recent case of
Osborn
v.
United
States,
supra,
where proceeds of property, confiscated under the act of July 17, 1862, for the. alleged treason of the claimant, remaining in the registry, were
An attempt is made by counsel to give some expressions used in the opinion of the court a wider meaning, so as to support the claim here presented; but the language will not sustain the- conclusion sought. There was no consideration of the effect of the pardon upon the proceeds of the forfeited property when paid into the treasury, but only of its effect upon those proceeds whilst under the control of the court in its registry. Any language which seemingly admits of a broader interpretation- must be restricted to the facts of the case. There was no intention of expressing any opinion that a pardon could do away with the constitutional requirement as to money in • the treasury ; whilst there, it is the property of the United States.
There is another view of this case, which must lead to an affirmance of the judgment of the Court of Claims. The jurisdiction of that court is limited to claims founded upon a law of Congress, or upon a regulation of an executive department, or upon a contract, express or implied, with the government. The claim here presented rests upon a supposed implied contract to pay to the claimant the money received as the proceeds of the. forfeited property. To constitute such a contract, there must have been some consideration moving to the United States ;■ or.-they must have received the money, charged with a duty tc
