after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.
The first aijd second assignments'of error proceed upon the ground that, notwithstanding the order of dismissal of June 19,
In discussing-the questions of law involved in this.position, counsel' for the claimant starts with these propositions: that the order of dismissal, issued from the Navy Department under the official signature of Secretary Welles was without authority of law; that the President alone, at that time, was invested with power to summarily dismiss -from the service a commissioned officer of the Marine Corps; and that, since the order in question simply purported to be the act of the Secretary, and did not purport to be the act of the1 President, or to have been issued in pursuance of any previous direction by him given, the presumption cannot be indulged' that the dismissal of Lieuten- . ant McElrath was by order of the President.
These propositions open üp a very broad field of inquiry as to what exceptions there are to the general rule that the direction of the President is. to- be presumed in all instructions and orders issuing from the proper department concerning, executive business, -notwithstanding they may contain no express statement of any direction from him as to the matters'to which such instructions' or- orders refer. There are, undoubtedly, official, acts which the Constitution and laws require to be performed by the President personally, and the performance of which may not be delegated to heads of departments, or to other officers in the executive branch of the government. It is equally true that, as to the vast multiplicity of matters involved in the administration of the executive business of the government, ibis physically impossible for the President to give them his personal supervision. Of necessity he must, as to such matters, discharge his duty through' the instrumentality or by the agency of others. Whether a particular act belongs to one or the other of these classes may sometimes be very difficult to determine,. and we shall not attempt now to lay down any general rule upon the subject. Nor shall we extend this opinion by any consideration of the question whether the particular order,
But we are here met with the suggestion that' a vacancy did not exist, and Lieutenant Haycock’s right to the office did not attach until he -received his commission on the thirteenth day of July, 1866, on which day, and from the first moment of that day, — as is claimed upon the authority of
United States
v.
Lapeyre
(
It results that neither when Lieutenant Haycock was nominated to and confirmed by the Senate, nor .when he was commissioned in place of McElrath, was the sentence of a court-martial, or any commutation _ thereof, required as a con
It also necessarily follows, from what has been said, that the orders which issued from the Navy Department under the signature of Secretary Robeson, in 1873 and 1874,- even if issued by direction of the President, were inoperative for the purpose of reinstating the appellant in his position as a first lieutenant in the Marine Corps. The position to which it was attempted to restore him had, as we have seen, been previously’ filled by constitutional appointment, and by the laws then.in force 'the incumbent could neither be displaced nor dismissed, except ■ “ upon and in pursuance of the sentence of a court-martial to that effect, or in commutation thereof.” ' The attempted restoration was ineffectual for the additional and equally conclusive reason,'that the complement of .first lieutenants in the Marine Corps was at that time full. The order assuming to restore him was, of course, for the reasons already given, equally inoperative’to entitle him to, pay and allowances for any portion of the period covered by the account settled by the officers of the treasury. The requisition upon the Secretary of the Treasury by the Secretary of the Navy was, consequently, without warrant of law. During the period for which' the appellant was allowed half-pay he was not an officer in the service, and the allowance to him of pay, after the appointment of his successor, was illegal.
We come now to inquire whether the Court of Claims erred in awarding judgment against the appellant for the amount-paid to him out of the treasury of the United States upon the settlement of his accounts.
Upon this branch of the case counsel for the claimant contends that so much of ihe act of March 3, 1863, as invests the Court of Claims with power to render judgment in favor of the United States against a claimant’, is in violation of the Seventh Amendment of the national Constitution, which provides that in suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right -of trial by jury shall- be preserved.
That section, referring to the trial of causes in which the
The remaining objection against the judgment in favor of the government upon its counter-claim deserves notice at our hands. It is, in substance, this: That the Secretary of the Navy the Second Comptroller, and the Fourth Auditor having ex 'mined the claim of Lieutenant McElrath, and, with full knowledge of all the facts, decided that he was legally .entitled- to hálf-pay and allowances for the period in question, the amount paid him cannot be reclaimed because of thé subsequent discovery that, in point of law, he was not an officer in
Had the appellant rested upon the settlement of his account by the proper officers,of tbe government, his right to invoke the general rule,.to which we have referred, would have been entitled to more consideration than it can now. receive. Upon receiving the amount awarded to him by the representatives of the government, he distinctly announced his purpose not to abide by their settlement of his accounts; but, in disregard thereof,-to demand an additional sum upon the basis of full pay and allowances from June 20, 1866, to July 10, Í.873.
This suit itself invites the court to go behind that settlement, to re-examine all the questions arising out of the appellant’s claim for full pay and allowances, and to correct the error which he insists was committed to his prejudice by the accounting officers of the government. The government, declining1 to plead the settlement of 1874 in bar of the suit, meets him upon his own chosen ground, and, -insisting that its officers, misapprehending the law, paid to him out of the treasury money to which he was not legally entitled, asks, as we think it may rightfully do, judgment for the amount thus improperly paid to him.
Judgment affirmed.
