United States v. Evans
United States v. Evans
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
If the subject before us were confined to the terms of the bond and the conduct of the parties with reference to it, it would be very difficult to imagine where an issue existed. The appointment was duly made; this bond was executed; Benjamin received all this money and paid it all out, and received three-eighths of one per cent, commission for doing it. It would be very difficult to find any delinquency in connection with the conduct of this trustee of the fund or of his sureties. It is not alleged, in point of fact, that there was any. He was employed contemporaneously with this appointment as disbursing agent of the War Department, as a superintendent of laborers on the public grounds. He discharged his duties apparently with satisfaction to his employer and received his pay; but it is urged here
There is nothing disclosed in this declaration nor in the agreed statement of facts that intimates that these duties were incompatible with each other and must be carried on at the expense of the one or the other. There is nothing averred in the declaration or assigned in the argument that the separate duties discharged by this person were derivative one from the other, a protraction of the other, or correlative with each other; a distorting for the purposes of payment of one office into two.
It was that evil that Congress had in contemplation and provided against; and, as is said by Chief Justice Taney, if the duties are not incompatible with each other, there is no law prohibiting the duplication of duties, and upon that question we are all agreed. From the time of the decision in Converse vs. United States, 21 How., 410, where the question was fully examined by Chief Justice Taney, down to the last echo on that subject in the case of Meigs vs. United States, 19 Court of Claims, 497, that doctrine has traveled down through the courts to this hour.
We therefore affirm the decision of the court below.
For myself, I wish to give another reason which I think is perfectly unanswerable against the right of the Government to recover in this case. In this, not having deliberated with my brethren, I do not wish to be understood as giving their convictions.
This is an action brought against the administratrix of the surety upon a bond conditioned for the performance of the obligation of that bond. How is it that the surety is to be made responsible under his covenant for the performance of the obligation of this bond, that this man should not receive any money anywhere else? Is he to beheld responsible because the plaintiff, through the instrumentality and agency of its superintendent of public grounds, employed this man as a laborer and paid him? The proper
To my mind, this is an unanswerable reply to any claim on the part of the Government set up against the sureties alone. It is not an action against the principal on the bond.
The judgment below, which was for the defendant, is affirmed,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- United States v. Carrie B. Evans
- Status
- Published