33 F. 572 | S.D.N.Y. | 1886
At the close of the testimony yesterday a motion was made to amend the complaint by setting up an account stated as of the date of the last quarterly adjustment of the plaintiff’s account, as consul, by the treasury department, in 1883. The evidence shows that the treasury department, by making deductions in 1883 that date back to the year 1870, has treated this account.as an open account, notwithstanding the quarterly adjustments. Three witnesses have testified that such was the
The other question, as to whether the moneys collected and represented in Exhibit 1 were moneys rightfully retained by the consul, or are to be treated as official moneys for official services, is no doubt a question of some embarrassment. Different views may very easily be entertained on the subject. To some extent this is, I think, in consequence of the different relations which the officer holds to different persons or different jurisdictions. There is very plainly a distinction between the mere acts of an official personage, and official acts, or acts done by that personage officially. Every official personage may do, and does do, a multitude of acts that are not official. It does not make his act official that he signs his title of office; nor, even, as I think, the mere fact that he should add his seal of office, if he has a seal. The question whether it is an official act or not,—whether the act is done officially,—must depend upon other considerations than the mere presence of a formal signature, or even the presence of the print of a seal.
. A few illustrations I think will make this clear. Suppose Mr. Badeau, in London, being consul general, observes an advertisement in a newspaper of some western property which he would like to purchase. An entire stranger to the place or to the advertiser, he addresses him on the subject, and signs his name with his title of office; and, as a further indication that he is a responsible person, and the person he professes to he, he might even put the print of his seal on the sheet of paper, or might use paper that bore the heading of the consulate. No one would imagine that an act of that kind was an official act; it would be purely private, for private purposes, as shown by the very nature of the business. The use of the seal might be unauthorized; but if it is not prohibited, no harm would be done, no law. would be violated; it would be a mere question of individual taste, or, possibly, of propriety. The use
To take another step. Suppose two persons in New York have a dispute about some matter of fact in London, Knowing no one there to ascertain the fact, and not even personally knowing the consul, they may agree to let the consul ascertain it, if he will, and write to him to that effect, promising to pay him $10 for his trouble; and at the same time suggest to him, as they do not know him, to add his title, and put Iris seal to his answer, that they may know that he is the person that they indicate. The consul does it; receives the pay It is purely a private matter; having nothing to do with the business of the consulate, resting purely upon the request of tho two persons, and having no legal validity whatever for any purpose; an act done simply to satisfy the two persons concerned as to a fact in London. There again the use of the seal may be unauthorized, though there were no Jaw prohibiting it; it has no official character, and shows only that the person who received the paper, and who signed it, was the man they intended. Tho consul, tho official personage, has done an act; ho was requested to do it because he was consul; but, nevertheless, the act was an act wholly unofficial in its relations to the United States.
It is only another step when the court, under tlic agreement of parties to a litigation, gives a dedvmus potestatem to a consul in London to lake testimony between the parties, and return it under his hand and seal; he acts in that case solely upon tho business of the private parties, or of the court. It has nothing to do with the business of the government, or with any proper business of the consulate. He puts his official title and the seal of his office to the return because it is not prohibited, and because it serves to attest the fact that he is the person that the court wished to take the testimony. Nothing in the use of the seal or the title makes the act official in its relations to the government; that is to say, official in the sense of the United States statutes; ho acts officially so far as the appointment of the court goes; it is the consular personage that was asked to do the work. So, when a state statute declares that for the purpose of recording mortgages, or deeds, or powers of attorney, persons in London may go before the United States consul and acknowledge such papers in the form prescribed by the state law, and that when ho certifies the fact under his hand and seal, they shall be entitled to be recorded; there again is an act done by the consul under an authority wholly in pursuance of a state law. It has nothing to do with the business of tho consulate. The seal and the title show that the act is done before the official personage specified in the statute for doing the act. It is not an act of the consulate any more than the other acts above instanced. Therefore it is not an official act in tho federal relations of the officer to tho United States government.
In the United Stales statutes we find, I think, a recognition of tho various characters in which a consul may act. The first section cited, section 1745, in authorizing the president to prescribe what shall be regarded as official services, adds: “ In the business of the several legations
Regulation 312 says: “It is to be understood that in such cases the consular officer does not act in his quality of an agent of the federal government, but simply as a citizen of the United Stales whose local position and character render him available to his follow-citizens for such services as might have been rendered by a private individual,” i. e., an official personage doing those acts under the authority of laws from other states or other sovereignties, which laws might have appointed any private individual to do precisely the same acts. This construction seems to me to be not only in harmony with the settled construction of the United States statutes in limiting them to the subjects of federal jurisdiction, but also to be entirely just and beneficial. The consul’s acts, in these matters are wholly voluntary; there is no obligation upon him to do these acts, if they arc such as I speak of. And if he is under no obligation whatever to do them, if they are entirely outside of the consular business, the government has no interest in the question whether the acts are done or undone. What equity, therefore, is there in the government’s demanding the fees for his labor? Congress might, of course, prohibit his doing such acts; they might prohibit the use of the seal as evidence that, he had done them; but it is for congress, and not the court, to say how far he may be permitted to use the seal.
It is for the convenience of American citizens, possibly of others, that services of this kind should be done to some extent by the consul, or by some one in bis position. He is under no obligation to do them; and if he is not to be paid anything for doing thorn; if his fees are to be returned to tho government, that wholly discourages the doing of such acts, and would naturally lead to their discontinuance, and to the inconvenience of our citizens to that extent. Whenever congress makes it the duty of the consul to do certain acts, then those acts become official by virtue of that obligation; but so long as it is left entirely voluntary, I see no reason in the claim that the fees for what is done voluntarily, at some
For these reasons I think the verdict should be for the defendant on the evidence as I have assumed it to be, viz., that the acts of the consul in the matters embraced in Exhibit 1 were all done under state laws, resting for their validity upon state laws, and not upon any statute of the United States, and having no reference to .any business of the United States, or to any federal relations; and the verdict will be so directed.
ON MOTION FOR NEW TRIAL.
Upon the exceptions argued before me upon this motion, only the same' points have been presented that were submitted at the trial; although they have been argued with greater fullness and detail. I am not satisfied that there was any material error in the conclusion reached at the trial.
As regards the first point, that moneys voluntarily paid could not be recovered back, further argument has not supplied any authority showing that that principle has ever prevented the correction of an account rendered so to accord with justice, when the suit itself was not brought upon an account stated, but was brought fora balance alleged to accrue during the whole period, and when the proofs show that the plaintiff had treated the account as an open one, by making corrections going back to the beginning. In speaking of the case at the trial as though the moneys collected for the notarial fees now claimed by the defendant to belong to him had been actually paid over to the government, too much was, perhaps, apparently conceded to the plaintiff. But the fact that it was distinctly proved at the trial that the defendant had always retained in his hands more than the amount of these notarial fees now recharged against the government, would indicate that no payment of these specific fees had been actually made to the government, unless the moneys which were paid over were now so applied as to be deemed a payment of the notarial fees which the defendant had credited to the government in his previous accounts, rather than the payment of other items' in the same account. There was no evidence, however, to show that any particular application of the moneys previously paid over to the treasury had been made, either by the plaintiff or by the defendant. Under such circumstances, the rule is stated by the supreme court in Bank v. Bank, 94 U. S. 487 , 439, as follows: “The rule settled by this court as to the application of payments is that the debtor or party paying the money may, if he chooses to do so, direct its application; if he fail, the right devolves upon the creditor; if he fail, the law will make the application according to its own notions of justice. Neither of the parties can make it after a controversy upon the subject has arisen between them and a fortiori not at the trial.” The court being at liberty, therefore, to apply the payments “according to its own notions of justice,” if it finds that the notarial fees in question were the property of the defendant, will treat the balance that all the time remained in his hands, (the same being always in excess of
As regards the other point urged, the court ruled upon the trial that the burden of proof was upon the defendant to prove what were the items included by mistake in the prior accounts, and that their character was such as showed that they belonged to him, and not to the government. It is urged that the defendant did not prove this, because, as it is said, the acknowledgments or affidavits might have been taken under the authority of section 1750 of the Revised Statutes, for use either in the United States courts, in the District of Columbia, or in the various territories of the United States; and in that event, as they would derive their whole authority and effect from the United States Statutes, they would fall within the regulation of the president, and within the definition of official fees belonging to the government, as laid down by the court at the trial. An examination of the testimony of the defendant does not seem to me to leave opportunity for this question to be raised. The defendant’s direct examination showed with considerable minuteness the nature of the notarial acts in question, and stated that they were for use in the individual states, under state authority, and not under any authority of the United States. It was not necessary, and would have been tedious for the defendant in the first instance, to undertake to go over every one of these several thousand items and say the same thing of each. Had the plaintiff desired to question the general fact testified to, it had opportunity to cross-examine the defendant as to any or all of the items. The defendant testified that in making up the itemized account, the separation of those that were unofficial and under state authority from those that were deemed official charges was made with scrupulous care, and with groat labor. Some items relating to ex
No error being perceived in directing a verdict, the motion for a new trial should be denied.