Donovan v. United States

Court: U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Missouri
Date filed: 1874-07-01
Citations: 7 F. Cas. 905, 3 Dill. 53
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Lead Opinion
DILLON, Circuit Judge.

Daniel H. Dono-wan was surveyor of the port of St. Louis -charged with the duties of collector of customs, and the administrator of his estate contends that in the accounting with the United States he should be allowed under the act oí June 8th, 1872 [17 Stat. 336], compensation upon the basis of 86,000 per year, instead of 35,000 as determined by the district court. The provision of this act is that the compensation of such an officer shall be the same as that given to collectors by the fifth section of the act of March 3,1841, not to exceed, however, the maximum amount therein allowed. In 1859 the supreme court of the United States construed the above mentioned act of 1841 [5 Stat 431] in connection with the previous acts in pari materia, and decided that as respects compensation there were two classes of collectors: 1st, collectors of the seven ports enumerated in the 9th section of the act of May 7, 1822, whose total compensation from all sources might equal, but could not exceed, 86,000 in a year; and, 2d, all other collectors, i. e. collectors of the non-enumerated ports, whose aggregate compensation could not exceed the sum of 85,000 in any one year. U. S. v. Walker (1859) 22 How. [63 U. S.] 299.

I am unable to discover in the act of 1872 satisfactory evidence that it was thereby intended to abrogate in favor of surveyors discharging the duties of collectors this established distinction in respect to compensation between what is termed the enumerated and the unenumerated ports. The act of 1841, as authoritatively construed, limited the aggregate compensation of a collector-of one of the enumerated ports to 36.000, and of a collector of any other port to 85,000; but while it did provide for the compensation of surveyors it did not provide a specific compensation for a surveyor who under the act of 1831 [4 Stat. 480] performed the duties of a collector of customs.

This was sought to be remedied by the act of March 3, 1857 [11 Stat 229, § 8], but as its phraseology was not clear, and as complaints were made that it was illiberally restricted by the accounting officers at the treasury department to the surveyors of the principal ports under the 9th section of the act of 1822,—[3 Stat. 693;] Cong. Globe, 2d Sess. 43d Cong. pt. 4, p. 3409,—the act of 1872, upon which the plaintiffs in error rely, was passed. This last named act places “all surveyors of customs ports performing the duties of collectors” upon the footing, as respects compensation of collectors,- under the act of March 3, 1841, for like services. St Louis being a non-enumerated port the maximum allowance to a collector can in no event exceed 85.000,—and this sum is in my judgment the limit of compensation to which the surveyor Of the port of St. Louis is entitled. I concur in the opinion of the district judge, and the judgment below is accordingly affirmed. Affirmed.