88 F. 970 | N.D. Fla. | 1898
The respective parties, by their attorneys, have filed a stipulation covering all the facts relied on in the case, leaving only to the court such questions of law as have not already been passed upon on the demurrer.
“It shall be tbe duty of the marshal, his deputy, or other officer, who may arrest a person charged with any crime or offense, to take the defendant before ■ the commissioner or the nearest judicial officer having jurisdiction under existing laws, for a hearing, commitment, or taking bail for trial, and the officer or magistrate issuing the warrant shall attach thereto a certified copy of the complaint; and upon the arrest of the accused, the return of the warrant, with a copy of the complaint attached, shall confer jurisdiction upon such officer as fully as if the complaint had originally been made before him, and no mileage shall be allowed any officer violating "the provisions hereof.”
This act, in words and effect, only applies to money thereby set aside for certain expenses of tbe government, but does not place any general restriction upon tbe commissioners and marshals, but refers to tbe allowance of their fees at tbe treasury department out of this appropriation. Tbe concluding phrase means, of course, “And no mileage [out of tbe money hereby appropriated] shall be allowed any officer violating the provisions hereof.” It is usual and customary, where the witnesses are more convenient to the commissioner who issued the warrant, to take the prisoner before him, and especially where no copy of the affidavit is attached; thus-saving the government large sums yearly in mileage of four witnesses or less, as the case might be; and, as there is no general restriction- on the marshal, it lies in his discretion, especially where no bad faith, or inordinate desire to increase his fees, is shown. In U. S. v. Ewing, 140 U. S. 148, 11 Sup. Ct. 745, the court says:
“The cases of U. S. v. Dickson, 16 Pet. 141, and Minis v. U. S., Id. 423, are cited in support of this view. The limitation and effect of provisos in enacting clauses of a statute are considered in these cases, and the rule declared, in the first of them, ‘that where the enacting clause is general in its language and objects, and a proviso is afterwards introduced, that proviso is construed strictly, and takes no case out of the enacting clause which does not fall fairly within its terms.’ In the case of Minis v. U. S. it is said by Mr. Justice Story (page 445): ‘It would be somewhat unusual to find ingrafted upon an act making special and temporary appropriations any provision which was to have a general and permanent application to all future appropriations.*973 Nor ought such an intention on the part of the legislature be presumed, unless it is expressed in the most clear and positive terms, and wherever the language admits of no oilier reasonable interpretation. The office of a proviso. generally, is either to except something from the enacting clause, .or to qualify or restrain its generality, or to exclude some possible ground of misinterpretation of it, as extending to cases not intended by the legislature to be brought into its purview. A general rule, applicable to all future cases, would most naturally be expected to find its proper place in some distinct and independent enactment.’ * * * In the case under consideration, if the proviso had been simply that commissioners should not be entitled to any docket foe, we should have had little doubt that it would be held as applying only to the ¡550.000 appropriated in the bill; but as the proviso contains a substantial re-enactment of the clause of the Revised Statutes (section 817) fixing the fees for similar services, with the prohibition against docket fees tacked thereto «as an amendment, we find it impossible to give effect to the whole proviso without construing it as expressing the intention of congress to amend that clause of section .847.”
It therefore clearly appears, under these rules of construction, that this proviso only applies to the money thereby appropriated. These items represent a meritorious case of an effort to save the government expense in mileage of witnesses.
It further appears from admissions herein, in the evidence, that there ivas no copy of the complaint or affidavit attached to the warrant issued in these cases. In the case of U. S. v. Donahower, 29 C. C. A. 342, 85 Fed. 547, the circuit court of appeals for the Eighth circuit, in construing this act, says:
‘‘The circuit court finds as a fact that in each case included iu this finding the warrant was not issued or made returnable before the circuit court commissioner before whom it was returnable by the connivance, at the request, or with the knowledge of the petitioner, but came into his hands-in the regular course of the business of his office, and was served and executed by him in obedience to its mandate; that it did not appear from the testimony that a certified copy of the complaint upon which each of the warrants was based was attached to the warrant; that in each case the mileage charged was actually and necessarily traveled by the plaintiff; «inti the several items included In the finding, amounting to ¡5188.70, were therefore allowed. We think the items of this account were properly allowed by the circuit court. The finding of fact shows that In none of the cases included in tlio finding, for which charges have been made, was there attached to the warrant a certified copy of tiie complaint, which, under this statute, would be necessary to confer jurisdiction upon any commissioner or magistrate before whom the marshal might take the person arrested. Without the certified copy of the complaint attached to the warrant, a commissioner or magistrate nearer the place of arrest than the commissioner issuing the warrant would be without jurisdiction to hear the ease. As stated by the circuit court, the marshal would have to obey the warrant in its legal effect; and, if no certified copy of the complaint was attached, to give jurisdiction to any 'other commissioner or magistrate he would — the warrant so directing — be obliged to take the arrested person before the commissioner who issued the warrant.”
There can be no presumption that in any of these cases the certified copy of the complaint was not attached by the commissi oner-through the connivance or at the request of the marshal, and there has been no attempt to prove this, or even a suggestion on behalf of the government; and, with as well-considered authority as the-foregoing, nothing could be added.
Schedule B: Nothing is developed by the facts in these items that calls for the further consideration of the court. This question was fully decided in the opinion on the demurrer. Puleston v. U. S., 85 Fed. 570.
“The seventh assignment of errors covers finding 11 of the findings of the circuit court, and is for the service of a bench warrant on a person then in the*975 custody of the United States marshal. The allowance of this Item, amounting to ff2, by the circuit court, we think should he sustained. The warrant was issued t»y the court. The marshal was bound to serve it, and was entitled to the fee charged for the service.”
All items in Schedule D have been fully passed upon on demurrer.
Schedule E, item i, arose through a mistake of the accounting officer of the treasury, and hence should he allowed.
“But, where a marshal attends examination before two different commissioners on the same day, we think he is entitled to his fee of $2 for the attendance before each commissioner. In the case of U. S. v. Erwin, 147 U. S. 685, 13 Sup. Ct. 443, we held that a district attorney was entitled to charge a per diem for services before a commissioner upon the same day that he was allowed a per diem for attendance upon the court, and Ihe argument controlling our opinion in that case is equally applicable here. It is true that In that case the charge was for attending before the court and before a single commissioner upon the same day; but where the officer attends before two or more commissioners, who may hold their sessions at a distance from each other, we see no reason why he should not be entitled to his fee in the case of each commissioner.”
The court in tills ease held that the principle applicable to the allowance of double per diem to district attorneys is “equally applicable” to the allowance of a double per diem to the marshal; and in this ease the court went even further than the contention here, in allowing the marshal not only a per diem for attendance on court and a commissioner, but that he was entitled to a per diem in two commissioners’ courts on the same day. This decision has been rendered since this disallowance, and the department did not have this authority to follow. There can be no question, under this decision, as to its propriety.
Schedule F: The questions here involved have been fully passed upon on the demurrer.
Schedule G: For discharging defendants on temporary bond. “The marshal is entitled to charge for release on bail before the com
Schedule H: The questions here involved have been fully passed upon on the demurrer.
Schedule I: The questions here involved have been fully passed upon on the demurrer.
Schedule J: This schedule includes a number of items representing all the fees earned in four criminal prosecutions, and were disallowed by the accounting officers as unnecessary and excessive. It is shown by the evidence that after the issuance of the warrants, and before the arrest, the defendants attended before the same commissioner as witnesses in other cases; but the deputy to whom the warrants had been issued did not have the same in his possession at the time the said persons attended as witnesses, and hence no legal arrest could have been effected. The mere fact that after the issuance of the warrants the defendants attended before the commissioner as witnesses would not authorize either the commissioner or the deputy to arrest them without duly-issued process, which the deputy did not then have. It seems clear that this fact alone, without the showing of some bad faith on the part of the marshal or his deputy, would not defeat this claim for* fees. There is no legal right for the accounting officers to determine in such a summary manner whether services are unnecessary and excessive. The services were actually rendered, at a large expense to the marshal, and the court has approved his accounts therefor.
Schedule K: This schedule represents items which were suspended for explanations, but after full explanation by the marshal they were neglected by the treasury, and have never been paid. Under paragraph 20, § 829, Kev. St., the marshal is entitled to 10 cents per mile for transportation of guard. The items therefor • appear correct.
Schedule L: The questions here involved have been fully passed upon on demurrer. The same is true of Schedule M.
Schedule N: This schedule represents certain sums disbursed to bailiffs employed under! specific order of the circuit and district courts, sitting in the same room, and presided over by the same judge. All amounts in excess of that paid to three bailiffs were disallowed. Section 715, Rev. St., reads:
“The circuit and district courts may appoint criers for their court, * * * and the marshals may appoint such number of persons, not exceeding five, as the judges of their respective courts may determine, to attend upon the grand and other juries, and for other necessary purposes, who shall he allowed for their services the sum of two dollars per day, to be paid by and included in the accounts of the marshal, out of any money of the United States in his hands. Such compensation shall be paid only for actual attendance, and, when both courts are in session at the same time, only for attendance on one court.”
The sundry civil appropriation act (August 18, 1894) provides, “For pay of bailiffs and criers, not exceeding three bailiffs and one
“In the case under consideration, if the proviso had "been simply that commissioners should not be entitled to any docket fee, we should have little doubt that it would be held as applying only to the $50,000 appropriated In the bill.”
The general provision of law, which stands unrepealed by this proviso in the appropriation bill, makes the employment of live bailiffs legal. There is a concluding fact relative to this item which has been overlooked by the government. The language of the act refers “each court,” and when, incidentally, the business of both courts is crowded upon one judge, it does not follow that the work is therefore thrown upon one set of three bailiffs. The marshal is entitled in such instances to three bailiffs in each court, and, as there were only five for which he claims compensation in his account, he has confined himself to the number prescribed by this proviso. There is no contention that he did not comply with the law relative to their appointment. But, on the other hand, the employment was under the express order of the court, requiring this number, and was made only after the court had found that the business then before it could not be dispatched economically or satisfactorily without the assistance of five bailiffs, distributed with regard to the relative business of the two courts.
The answer admits that this court approved each of the said items iu the current quarterly accounts as presented, and which now form part of the files and records of this court; and, as such order is prima facie, evidence of their correctness, in the absence of clear and unequivocal proof of mistake on the part of the court, it should be conclusive. U. S. v. Jones, 134 U. S. 483, 10 Sup. Ct. 615; Kinney v. U. S., 54 Fed. 313.
A further finding of facts is, in my judgment, deemed unnecessary, owing to the complete stipulation, covering all matters relative to the items in controversy; and a judgment for the petitioner may be entered for the amount claimed, after deducting the several amounts admitted in the replication to have been paid.