49 F. 270 | N.D.N.Y. | 1892
The accounts offered in evidence by the plaintiff bring the defendants into debt, because the officials of the post-office department have charged the defendants in gross with “commissions ille7 gaily claimed” and .“property illegally retained,”withouta word of proof, so far as the accounts show, to sustain the charges. These officials haye tried the question at issue between the department and the postmaster, found him guilty of malfeasance, assessed the damages against him and certified their findings. The evidence, if there was any, on which these findings are based, has not been returned. There is nothing to show what the property was that the postmaster is accused of retaining improperly, or its value, or the reasons which induced the officials of the department to make the charges relating thereto. The account does not show-why the commissions are illegal. It contains nothing but the unsup
Again, it is said that the provisions of the act of June 17, 1878, which authorize the postmaster-general to withhold commissions on returns which he is satisfied are false, do not permit him to charge a postmaster with commissions on alleged false returns where the accounts have, in the due course of business, been settled and allowed. He may withhold commissions, but having allowed them, he cannot recover them without due process of law. There is great force in this position. U. S. v. Hutcheson, 39 Fed. Rep. 540; U. S. v. Johnston, 124 U. S. 237, 8 Sup. Ct. Rep. 446.
It follows that the verdict must he set aside, and a new trial granted.