189 F. 761 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1911
This is a case in which I feel compelled with some reluctance to give judgment against the defendant for the following reasons:
“It is impossible to- hold that men who are by statute declared to be a part, of the army, who may wear its uniform, whose names shall be borne upon its register, who may be assigned by their superior officers to specified duties by detail as other officers are, who are subject to the rules and articles of war, and may be tried, not by a jury, as other citizens are, but by a military court-martial, for any breach of those rules, and who may finally be dismissed on such trial from the service in disgrace, are still not in the military service.”
He is thus entitled to all the rights and must be subject to all the duties of an officer in the military service of the United States.
The defendant urges that I should accept the executive interpretation of the acts, but the trouble is that the executive branches differ, and it so happens that I agree with that construction placed on them by that department which Congress has inter se made controlling.
A great deal has been said of the hardship of such a construction, and ipdeed the hardship is great in compelling a man to refund money which he has long since and in good faith spent and forgotten. As an original question, however, there is really no great hardship in the Comptroller’s construction. As Justice Clifford says in United States v. Merrill, supra, these allowances are not gratuities, but are intended to tide over that period after discharge when a civilian has presumably no means of support. Such is not the case with a retired army officer, who resumes his two-thirds pay from the day of his discharge. He is pro tanto precisely in the same position as his brother upon active duty, and there is no period when he is left without resources. It is true that in respect of the commutation of travel and subsistence, the statute results in most shabby treatment, because the government requires the discharged officer to find his way home at his own charges, which is hardly a generous position for a sovereign to whom he has just volunteered his life. Even as to that, ungenerous as the result may be, it is a mistake to suppose that the loss so imposed was $412.50. That figure is reached upon the assumption of a travel of 20 miles per diem, or some other archaism, long since out of any relation with the facts. The court may take judicial notice that it costs not more than one-tenth of $412.50 to travel with the greatest comfort from South Carolina to New Jersey, so that though the result be unhandsome, the actual loss involved to the defendant would not have been great, had the allowance been originally denied. An act of Congress must be judged by the fair meaning of the words, and not by what Congress would have said, had the contingency been presented to it which subsequently arises and which the words do not cover; nevertheless it is always a legitimate inquiry whether the construction is unjust or unreasonable. In the case at bar I do not think that except in the omission of a travel commutation which bears some relation to the facts, this construction is either unjust or unreasonable. It is perhaps rather hard on Capt. Gillmore that he should not be permitted to keep a travel allowance, even though it be out of proportion to the actual expenses, to which volunteer officers are entitled, but so is it hard upon officers upon the active list, that they, too, are so deprived, and are only provided with actual transportation, when they retire from the volunteer service. Ea.ch loses a substantial perquisite which has be
Verdict directed for the plaintiff for $812.50, without interest.
This accords with the universal understanding prior to the statute. U. S. V. Bank ol Metropolis, 15 Pet. 377, 10 L. Ed. 774.