delivered the opinion of the court.
These are' writs of error from the same judgment. The action wasibrought by the United States, October 15, 1883, to recover from John D. Sanborn the sum of $7334, on account of.moneys alleged to have been received by him from the government without authority of law and without . right thereto,, with interest on that sum from August 16, 1873. A jury was waived by the written stipulation of the parties and the case was tried by the court, which made a special finding of facts and of law.
It was provided by an act of Congress, approved May 8, 1872,. making appropriations for the legislative, executive and judicial éxpenses of the-government for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1873, that “ the Secretary of the Treasury shall have power to employ not more than three persons to assist the proper officers of the government in discovering and collecting any money belonging to the United States, whenever the same shall be withheld by any person or corporation, upon such terms and conditions as he shall deem best for the interests of the United States : but no compensation shall be paid to such persons except out of the money and property so secured ; and no person shall be employed under the provisions of this clause who shall not have fully set forth in a written statement, under oath, addressed to the Secretary of the Treasury, the character of the claim out of which he proposes to recover, or assist in recovering moneys for the United States, the laws by the violation of which the .same had been withheld, and the name of • the' person, firm or corporation having thus' withheld such moneys.” 17 Stat. 69, c. 140.
This letter was followed by a written contract'between San-born and the Acting Secretary of the Treasury under date of August 13, 1872, in which it Avas agreed that the former might proceed to collect the taxes so alleged to be due to the United States by the persons named; that legal proceedings in the premises should be conducted by the proper United States attorneys, the written consent of the Secretary of the Treasury being first obtained; that no settlement of such claims should be made except under the provisions of section 10 of the act of' March 3,1863 ; that the costs and -expenses incurred by him in-investigating and prosecuting, said claims, of every’ nature, should be borne by him, and no part thereof paid out of the. .portion retained by the United States;,'that whenever required' by the Secretary he\should make a full report in. writing of his acts and proceedings under the contract; that. the money-collected,’ either by legal proceedings or “by settlement as-compromise,” .should be placed to the credit of the Secretary, of the Treasury, and out of the same there should be paid to .Sanborn; in full for his services and for all the costs and:expenses-'of collection, a sum equal to 50 per cent of the gross;amount collected and received, which should be paid to him-as fast as collected and- placed to the credit of the Secretary of the Treasury, the balance to .be paid into the Treasury of: the United States; and that the contract might be revoked at any time at the pleasure' of the Secretary.
On the 25th of October, 1872, Sanborn sent to the Secretary-another, letter, accompanied by a statement verified by his oath,
In the statement referred to in that letter is the following:
“District Waldenham. . . . James A. Burtis . . . John E. "Wool.”
Pursuant to this request,-the Acting Secretary of the Treasury on the 30th of October, 1872, entered into another contract with Sanborn; containing, among other provisions, the following:
“ Whereas John D. Sanborn, of the city of Boston, has fully set forth in a written statement signed by him, under oath, and has filed the same in the office of the Secretary of the Treasury, wherein he proposes to recover, or assist the proper officers of the government in recovering, for the United States from the following persons, to wit: . '. . John E. Wool estate, . . . large sum of. money, that is to say, the sum of fifty thousand dollars, Avhich the said Sanborn claims to be due to the United States, as and for -internal revenue taxes Avhich ha\re been withheld by said persons, under and by force of the act of' June 30, 1864, and other acts amendatory thereof, imposing taxes upon legacies, successions, and incomes; it is hereby agreed by and between W. A. Richardson, Acting Secretary of the Treasury, of the first part, and the said John D. Sanborn, of the second part, that the contract or agreement entered into by and between -the said parties, bearing date August 13, 1872, relating to the proposed recoAmry of certain moneys alleged to be due to the United States, is hereby extended and enlarged, so as to embrace, andrelate to the persons herein specifically enumerated ; and all the provisions, conditions and terms of .the said contract of' August 13, 1872, shall..be held to apply to and control this agreement.”
The Secretary, under date of February 3, 1873, issiied^a paper addressed'“ To supervisors and collectors of internal revenue,” in which he requested them.to assist Sanborn “in the examination of official records in reference to such cases of alleged violation of the'internal revenue laws as he may ask for your cooperation,” stating that he was acting under his appointment, and “may nqed some information from the offices of -collectors and assessors for the purpose of verifying his claims.” Subsequéntly, on the'15th of October, 1873, the Secretary issued asimilar circular, and. asked supervisors and collectors to render Sanborn such, assistance u.s he required.
General John E. Wool died at Troy, New York, November 10, 1869, leaving a large éstate, Mrs. Wool surviving him. His will having been duly probated on the 8th of February, 1870, letters testamentary were issued to John A. Griswold and Asher R. Morgan. Subsequently, October 31,' 1872, Griswold died, leaving Morgan as sole executor. Mrs. Wool died May 7, 1873.
On the first day of August, 1873, Morgan delivered' to Lucien Hawley, a supervisor of internal revenue, in payment of taxes due from -thé estate of Wool, his draft, as executor, upon the United States Trust Company of New York,-payable to the order of the Secretary of the Treasury, for the sum of $14,668. Hawley delivered it to Sanborn on or about fits date, and on the 3d of August, 1873, the latter enclosed it to the Secretary of the Treasury, in a letter of which the following ' is a copy : ■“ Referring to the contract made by me with the Hon. George S. Boutwell, late Secretary of the Treasury, bearing date August 13, 1872, and as.amended by the agreement October 30, 1872, I have the honor to report that Asher R. Morgan, executor of the estate of - General JohnE. Wool, deceased, late of Troy, N. Y., and one of the parties named in my schedule accompanying said contract has paid to me the sum of $14,668, being the" full amount of taxes due
The Secretary of the Treasury on the 9th of August, 1873, endorsed this draft to the order of the Treasurer of the United States, and directed the • latter to deposit it to, the special credit of’ the Secretary on account of moneys received and paid under the first section of the legislative, executive and judicial appropriation act, approved May 8, 1872. The draft, having been endorsed by the Treasurer of the United States to the Assistant-Treasurer of the United States at New York, was paid by the United States Trust Company, and the proceeds were placed to the special, credit of the Secretary of the Treasury.
On the 16th of August, .1873, the Secretary delivered to Sanborn a-' draft on the Treasurer-of the United States for $16,001.34, on account of moneys collected' in various cases specified in his contract, and of that sum, the above $7334 were on account of collections from the estate of General' Wool. That draft on its face directed the Treasurer to charge its amount to the Secretary’s special deposit account of moneys received and paid under the first section of the legislative, executive and judicial appropriation act, approved May 8., 1872. Under date of August 16, 1873, the Secretary enclosed to • Morgan a writing, acknowledging “ the receipt, through John D. Sanborn, special agent, of the sum of fourteen thousand six hundred and sixty-eight dollars ($14,668), being the amount of taxes on legacies and successions due the. government from the estate- of the late General John E. Wool,-of Troy, N. Y.” -
It was found as a fact that the United States has never refunded any part of the sum collected from the estate of General Wool; that no demand to have the same refunded has
As by section 125 of.the act of. June 30, 1864, amended by that of July 13, 1866, 14 Stat. 140, c. 184, a legacy tax was due and payable whenever the party interested was entitled to the enjoyment of the legacy, or to the beneficial interest in the profits accruing therefrom, there was some discussion at the bar in respect to the time when the legacies in question vested in possession and enjoyment; whether immediately upon the death of the testator, as claimed by the defendant, or at the death of the widow, as claimed by the government. The Solicitor of Internal Revenue contends that although the tax was not collectible until Mrs. Wool died, liability therefor arose immediately upon the death of the testator, and that such liability was not discharged, but was saved, by the act of July 14,1870, abrogating all legacy taxes. 16 Stat. 256. He also contends that these taxes, not being, payable until Mrs. Wool died, were not, within the meaning of the act of May 8, 1872, under which- this contract of October 30, 1872, with Sanborn purports to have been made,. “ withheld ” from the. United States at the time that contract was made. On this last ground he questions the authority-of. the Secretary of the Treasury to have allowed Sanborn any part of the sum collected from Wool’s estate on account of legacies.
It is unnecessary in the present case to examine any of these questions; for both of the parties to the present suit insist Dhat these taxes were, when collected, legally due from Wool’s estate to the government. The defendant insists that they vere collected under a valid contract between him and the Secretary of the Treasury. If we assume, for the purposes -of. this case, that such contract was in all respects valid, and was
Within a few weeks after the death of the widow, Morgan — upon his own motion, without having known Sanborn, and without having the matter brought to his attention by Sanborn, or by any one representing him — wrote to the Secretary of the Treasury asking that the question of a succession and legacy tax from the estate of General Wool be referred to some person having authority to pass upon his liability to pay it.
•. This was followed by a communication, under date of the 12th of July, 1873, by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, addressed to' Collector Masters, in which the former said: “ T. J. Cram, of 1817 De Lancey Place, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Writes: “ Major Genéral Wool, U. S. A., died November 10, 1869, (in Troy, N. Y., his residence,) leaving legacies of $1000 each to .my wife and myself. But there was a condition in the will forbidding his executors from paying any legacies until after the death of his wife. . . . Mm. Wool died 6th May last. The executors propose to retain from the legacies U. S. tax of 6 per cent on payment .18th ins't. of the legacies, etc.’ There is nothing;in the statements above to show that the said-legacies are not subject to tax, but the same would appear to be liable, as indicated in Circular 86. (See p. 30, Series 6, No. 1.) ”
At the date of General Wool’s death Masters was Collector of Internal Revenue, his district including the city of Troy. ■He and his deputy knew of his death at or about the time it occurred, and knew that he left.a large estate. They, also, knewr what were the provisions of his will and talked together,
It is stated in the finding that about one month after the death of Mrs. Wool the defendant called on Hawley ‘‘for aid in the matter of collecting the tax due from the estate of said John E. Wool.”
In view of the findings, which, upon this writ of error, we must assume to be true, it is clear that the representation of the defendant to the Secretary of the Treasury, in his letter of August 31, 1873, that the executor of Wool had paid to
him
the sum of $14,668 for taxes due the- government on legacies and successions, was not in accordance with the facts. The draft covering the taxes was delivered by the executor of Wool to Hawley, a supervisor of internal revenue, who, instead of sending it directly to the Secretary of the Treasury, as he might properly have done, and as, perhaps, he ought to have done, delivered it to Sanborn, who — so far as the record shows — performed no services in this business, except to call upon Hawley about one month after the death of Mrs.
■ It is, however, contended that the court below erred in excluding certain • evidence offered by the defendant1, which would have disclosed, more fully the nature of the services rendered. It is only necessary to say upon this point that the evidence so offered.and excluded relates to efforts made by Hawley and his employes to secure the payment of the taxes claimed from Wool’s estate. That evidence,' if admitted, would have strengthened the case for the government, for it tended to show that what Hawley did was done under his own responsibility and duty as an officer, and not in aid of Sanborn under his contract for the collection of taxes from Wool’s estate. The defendant, it is true, communicated to the Secretary of the Treasury, in October, 1872, the fact that the government had a claim against that estate for taxes. But -that fact was known long before that time to the collector of the' district in which the testator resided at his death, who intended to enforce the rights of the government when the widow'died. The defendant is not shown to have performed any services whatever in the matter,' except to request the aid of Supervisor Hawley. That, however, did not justify him in representing to the Secretary of the Treasury that he had collected those taxes from Wool’s estate. In fact, there was no effort upon the part of the executor to evade payment of them. Hé brought the matter himself to the' attention of the Secretary, and sought a decision by competent authority of the question of his liability. As soon as it was determined adversely to him he paid the taxes through the officer to whom the matter was referred by the Secretary and not to Sanborn, of whom he had no knowledge.
The suggestion that Sanborn was entitled to fifty per cent of all collections from the persdns named in his contract, by whomsoever, or in whatever mode, such collections were made, is wholly inadmissible. The contract, upon its face, contemplated, as a condition of his receiving compensation, that he should do something of a substantial character in collecting the taxes alleged to be withheld.
But we are of opinion that the court below' erred in allowing' interest for any time prior to the institution of this action. More than ten years elapsed after'the payment to Sanborn before his right to retain- the money was questioned by suit or otherwise. When the 'facts, disclosed by the evidence, were first discovered by the officers of the government whose duty it was to institute legal proceedings against the defendant, dejes not appear. It is entirely consistent with the record that the long delay which occurred is without excuse. In
Redfield
v.
Ystalyfera Iron Co.,
The writ of error on behalf of the government presents a question of costs that must be determined. After judgment was ordered in the court below for the United States, its attorney submitted a bill of costs, wffiich included, among other items, duly certified, the sums paid for the actual and necessary expenses of four clerks, two in the War Department and two in the Internal Revenue Office at Washington, in
The whole subject of fees in the courts of the United States is regulated by chapter 16, title “ Judiciary ” of the Revised Statutes.' By section 823 it is provided that the fees allowed in that chapter and no other “ compensation ” shall be taxed and allowed in the courts of the United States, to the officers therein named and to witnesses, except -in cases otherwise expressly provided by law; leaving attorneys, solicitors, and proctors to charge and receive from their clients, other than the government, such reasonable compensation for their services, in addition to the taxable costs, as may be in accordance with general usage in their respective States, or .as may be agreed' upon between the two parties. Sections 824 to 827, inclusive, relate to the fees of attorneys, solicitors, and proctors, and section 828 to the fees of clerks. Section 829 allows a marshal two per centum “ for disbursing money to jurors and .witnesses and for other expenses,” and provides that “ in all cases where mileage is allowed to the marshal he may elect to receive the same or his actual travelling expenses to be proved on his oath to the satisfaction of the court.” Section 846 provides: “ The accounts of district attorneys, clerks, marshals, and commissioners of Circuit Courts shall be examined and certified by the District Judge of the district for which.they are appointed before they are presented to the accounting.officers of the Treasury Department for settlement. They shall then be subject to' revision upon their merits by said accounting officers, as in case of other public accounts: Prometed, That no accounts of fees or costs paid to any witness or' juror, upon the order -of any judge or commissioner, shall be so reexamined as to charge any marshal for an erroneous taxation of such fees or costs.” Other sections of the
“ Seo. 848. For each day’s attendance in court, or before any officer pursuant to law, one dollar and fifty cents, and five cents a mile for going from his place of residence to the place of trial or hearing, and five cents a mile for returning. When a witness is subpoenaed in more than oiie cause between the same parties, at the same court, only one travel fee and one per diem compensation shall be allowed for attendance. Both shall be taxed in the case first disposed of, after which the per diem attendance fee alone shall be taxed in the other cases in the order in which they are disposed of. When a witness is detained in prison for want of security for his appearance, he' shall be entitled, in addition to his subsistence, to a compensation of one dollar a day.
“ Sec. 849. No officer of the United States Courts, in any State or Territory, or in the District of Columbia, shall be entitled to witness fees for attending before any court or commissioner where -he is officiating.
“Sec. 850. When any clerk or other officer of the United States is sent away from his place of business as a witness for the government, his necessary expenses, stated in items and swotn to, in going, returning, and attendance on the court, shall be audited and paid ; but no mileage or other compensa-' tion in .addition to his salary shall in any case be allowed.”
“ Sec. 855. In cases where the United States are parties, the marshal sháll, on the order of the court, to be entered on its minutes, pay to the jurors and witnesses all fees to which they appear by such order to be entitled, which sum shall be allowed him at the Treasury in his accounts.”
“ Sec. 983. The bill of fees of the clerk, marshal and attorney, and the amount paid printers and witnesses, and lawful fees for exemplifications and copies of papers ■ necessarily obtained for use on trials in cases where by law costs are recoverable in favor of .the prevailing party, shall be taxed by a judge or clerk of th'e court, and be included in and form a portion of a. judgment or decree against the losing party. Such taxed bills shall be filed with the papers in the cause.”
These views find additional support in section 851, which allows the court, subject to certain restrictions, to fix the compensation to be allowed to a seaman or other person sent to this country by a United States minister, chargé d’affaires, consul, captain or commander, to give testimony in a criminal case pending in a court of the United States. This section, as well as section 850, is brought forward from the third section of an act passed in 1858 to regulate “ fees and oosts ” in the Circuit and District Courts of the United States, in
For the reasons stated, we are of opinion that the court below erred in disallowing the item in the bill of costs of $212.20.
The judgment is reversed with directions to enter a judgment in favor of the United States for the sum of $7334, with .interest at the rate of six per cent per a/nrvwm from October 15, 1883, the date of the commencement of this action, and for its costs in the court below, as vndidated in this opinion.
