The defendant, a first lieutenant in a national guard regiment in New York, accepted a “provisional" commission as second lieutenant in the regular army in November, 1917, and served in it either as second or first lieutenant until June 28, 1919. On or before January 1, 1925, the Secretary of War “certified” him to the Director of the Veterans’ Bureau for an “adjusted service credit” of $500, upon which the Director issued to him a “certificate” for $1,246, and upon this he borrowed $623 on March 30, 1935. On November 21, 1935, the Secretary, having discovered that he had “certified” the defendant by mistake, “recertified” him for a credit of $149, and the Director reduced his “certificate” to $371. This action was brought to recover the difference, $252, between the amount borrowed, $623, and the amount of the corrected “certificate”, $371. The defendant counterclaimed for $623, the unborrowed remainder of the first “certificate”. The defendant does not dispute that, as a “provisional” officer, he was entitled under the statute to no more than $371; but he says that, having once “certified” him for $500, the Secretary jiad exhausted his powers, because of § 310 of the World War Adjusted Compensation Act, 38 U.S.C.A. § 620, which declares that the Secretary’s “decisions * * * on all matters within” his jurisdiction “shall be final and conclusive”. This, he argues, put the first decision, once made, beyond recall. Further, that even though this be not true, the Director lent him the money through a mistake of law — since he knew that his status was only that of a “provisional” officer — and that no recovery can be based upon such a mistake. Each side moved for a summary judgment, and the judge gave judgment against the defendant for the balance of the loan with interest, and dismissed the counterclaim. The defendant appealed.
The section has never come before a court, but its meaning seems to us plain; it was not designed to prevent review of their own decisions by the officials themselves, but to limit any review of the courts. Whether Congress could have prevented all judicial review whatever (United States v. Williams,
The second point is that the money was not recoverable, because it had been paid under a mistake of law. It is by no means clear just what was the mistake; the Secretary had in the War Department all the records upon which each of hi£ decisions was made; and it is the merest assumption that, he misconceived what rights the statute conferred upon a “provisional” officer. Nevertheless, we will not base our decision upon the absence of that proof; on the contrary we will assume that the mistake was one which between individuals would not have supported a recovery. The unjust and anomalous doctrine that one may not recover money paid under a mistake of law, unhappily still persists, though it is more honored in the breach than in the observance; but a well-settled exception is that payments made by the legal mistakes of officers of the United States are recoverable. United States v. Burchard,
The plaintiff asserts that it is entitled to a larger award of interest than the judge awarded, but as it did not appeal, it must be content with the judgment as entered. We see no reason, to disturb the award of interest against the defendant.
Judgment affirmed.
