38 F. 538 | N.D. Ill. | 1889
This suit is brought under the second section of the act of March 3, 1887, entitled “An act to provide for the bringing of suits against the government of the United States.” . It is to recover a claim made by the plaintiff against the United States for services rendered by the plaintiff while acting as district attorney for this district. It is admitted that plaintiff was duly appointed, confirmed, and commissioned as United States district attorney for this district, and that he was acting as such from the 1st day of January to the 1st day of October, 1886.
The main contest in this case is upon a plea of set-off interposed by the government. All these items were duly allowed to the plaintiff by the court, pursuant to the provisions of the first section of the act of February 22,1875, entitled “An act regulating fees and costs,” etc., (18 St. at Large, 333,) and the accounting officers of the treasury, after examination and revision, allowed the sum of $750 in full for these three items, but instead of paying the sum so allowed the first comptroller of the treasury proposed to apply the sum so allowed on a claim for $2,500, or near that amount, presented by the accounting officers against the plaintiff for fees which, as it was then, and is now, claimed, had been theretofore illegally charged by the plaintiff against the government, and duly audited, approved, and paid, and this is pleaded as a set-off or counterclaim against the plaintiff’s right of recovery in this case, with a claim for a judgment against the plaintiff for the balance due the government, after deducting what is found due the plaintiff on the claims set out in his petition. The first question made as to this set-off is that this court has no jurisdiction to pass upon or consider it, because the second section of the act of March 3, 1887, under which this suit is. brought, only clothes the district court with jurisdiction to hear and adjudge on claims against the United States where the amount claimed does not exceed $1,000, but by clause 4, § 563, Rev. St., jurisdiction is conferred on this court “in all suits at common law brought by the United States, or any officer thereof, authorized by law to sue.” And as a set-off or éounter-claim is, in effect, a suit by the defendant against the jDlaintiff, in which defendant may have a judgment against the plaintiff for the balance found due the defendant, (chapter 110, § 29, Rev. St. Ill.,) I can see no reason why the set-off is not well pleaded, and this court authorized to pass upon its merits.
The facts in, regard to this defense are that, while plaintiff was acting as district attorney of this district he rendered accounts which were approved by the cotirt, as required by the statute, for fees earned in the prosecution and trial of criminal causes, which accounts were duly allowed by the first auditor and first comptroller of the treasury, and paid. Subsequently an accountant of the department of justice examined the records of the court in regard to these accounts for fees, and reported that the plaintiff, as such district attorney, had wrongfully charged and been allowed attorney’s fees of $20, and counsel fees in, addition to such attorney’s fees to the amount of $30 or less in each case, under section 824 of the Revised Statutes, in a large number of criminal cases tried before a jury, where the record showed there was a verdict of guilty Tendered by the “consent of the defendant,” and that the government had the right to insist upon the repayment of these alleged illegal attorney and counsel fees, the aggregate of which amounts to the $2,500 now here pleaded as set-off. And in accordance with the report and recommendation of this examiner the comptroller insists upon applying so much of plaintiff’s account as is claimed in this suit, and admitted
With all due respect to the astute examiner who reported these fees as illegal, I must say that I construe these words, “by consent,” found in the records, to simply and only mean that after the testimony for the prosecution had been submitted to the jury the defendants found themselves unable to contradict it, or interpose any valid defense to it, and hence offered no testimony, submitting the case on the proofs adduced by the prosecution. Every judge and lawyer who has had experience in the trial of criminal cases knows that it is a matter of common occurrence for a defendant to plead “not guilty,” and put the prosecution to proof of the offense charged, hoping that the prosecution may fail in its proof on some material point, and thereby an acquittal may be secured, but when the proof is in, and the case is so clearly made out as to completely silence any attempt at answer, the verdict of guilty is submitted to in a certain and limited sense by consent, because no reason is urged by defendant against the sufficiency of the proof. The plea of “not guilty,” interposed in these cases, made it imperative that a trial by jury should be had. If a trial by jury was had, an attorney’s fee of $20 in each case, and a counsel fee to some extent, may be said to have been earned, although the defendant may have offered no proof, and submitted to, or even consented to, a verdict of guilty. The statute provides that where “an indictment for a crime is tried before a jury, and a conviction is had, the district attorney may be allowed, in addition to the attorney’s, fee herein provided, a counsel fee in proportion to the importance and difficulty of the case, not exceeding $30.” The allowance of a counsel fee, as it seems to me, should be made by the court before whom the case is tried, and who must be presumed to -know something of the importance and difficulty of the case; and this allowance of a counsel fee may be made on the special motion of the district attorney in each case, or it may be allowed by the court in the accounts of the district attorney. In either case it would bo a judicial act.
Section 846, Rev. St., and the first section of “An act regulating fees and costs, and for other purposes, approved February 22, 1875,” both' seem to reserve to the accounting officers of the treasury a right of revision of the accounts of the district attorney, even after they have been allowed by the court; but it seems very clear to me that -this is a right of revision only, and, unless that right is exercised when the account