Lowry v. Woodring
Lowry v. Woodring
Opinion of the Court
On November 11, 1917, petitioner was commissioned from civil life a provisional second lieutenant of infantry in the United States regular army. He was subsequently promoted to provisional first lieutenant, served overseas for approximately a year, and resigned his commission August 12, 1919. In May, 1924, Congress passed the World War Adjusted Compensation Act (Bonus Act.)
There are no disputed facts in the case and the decision depends upon the meaning of the word “holding” as used in Section 202(b) of the Act.
Petitioner’s appointment to and service in the army was pursuant to Section 23 of the National Defense Act of 1916,
After the close of the war Congress struck out Section 23 and substituted the following: “All laws providing that certain appointments of officers shall be provisional for a period of time are hereby repealed.”
“ * * * no allowance shall be made j-0— * * *
“Any individual holding a permanent or provisional commission or permanent or acting warrant in any branch of the military or naval forces, or (while holding such commission or warrant) serving under a temporary commission in a higher grade— in each case for the period of service under such commission or warrant or in such higher grade after the accrual of the right to pay thereunder. * * * ”
Petitioner insists that the obvious intent of Congress in the use of the words “holding a * * * provisional commission” was to debar, not one like himself, but only those provisional officers who had chosen to remain permanently in the military service after the war; that Congress used the present participle “holding” as referring only to officers then holding provisional commissions, and that since petitioner was not then holding a provisional commission, he was not included among the proscribed. On the other hand, the Secretary points out, as we have seen, that when the Bonus Act was passed, Congress had repealed all laws providing for provisional appointments, as the result of which there were no persons then holding provisional commissions. Consequently, he insists, Congress necessarily used the word “holding” as referring to the period during which compensable service in the army or navy had been performed.
Granting, as we do for the purposes of this case, that the duty of the Secretary was wholly ministerial and that mandamus is, in the circumstances, the correct remedy,
First, since all provisional commissions had been abolished when the Bonus Act was passed, any reference in that Act to persons then holding such commissions would be meaningless.
Second, when the essential parts of Sections 201 and 202(b) are read together, the word “holding” in the latter section clearly appears to mean holding during the period for which adjusted compensation is to be awarded. Section 201
Section 202(b) provides that in computing the adjusted service credit no allowance shall be made, among others, to a person holding a provisional commission “for the period of service under, such commission * * * after the accrual of the right to pay thereunder”. These words are inconsistent with petitioner’s position that “holding” means “holding in 1924”. Instead, the necessary implication of the language is to exclude from participation certain definite officers whose services during the period of tile war, i. e., from April 5, 1917, to July 1, 1919, were performed in one of the excluded grades. In short, we think the language of the disputed Section 202 is plain, and indicates on its face a clear policy. Each subsection excludes compensation for a certain class of service or for a period when no war connected service was being performed: (a) service as a commissioned officer above the grade of captain (or corresponding grade in other branches of the service) or service as an officer with the pay of such rank; (b) service in the capacity of a commissioned officer with the pay thereof when the commission was permanent or provisional; (c) service as civilian, cadet, or member of territorial forces or of the insular force of the navy; (d) service of men who entered the forces after the Armistice; (e) service for which commutation of quarters or subsistence was granted; (f) public health service not with the forces; (g) period of industrial or farm furlough; (h) service in construction work for which pay had al
The Secretary of War has consistently construed the statute to exclude persons in the situation of this petitioner. This administrative interpretation, we think, is in all respects correct, and in this view the denial of the writ by the lower court was proper. The judgment is therefore affirmed.
Affirmed.
43 Stat. 121, 38 U.S.C. § 591 et seq., 38 U.S.C.A. § 591 et seq.
38 U.S.C.A. § 612.
38 U.S.C. § 602(b), 38 U.S.C.A. § 602 (b).
39 Stat. 181.
Act of June 4, 1920, 41 Stat. 759, 771, c. 227.
Miguel v. McCarl, 291 U.S. 442, 54 S.Ct. 465, 78 L.Ed. 901; Hines v. U. S. ex rel. Cavanagh, 59 App.D.C. 207, 39 F.2d 517.
38 U.S.C. § 601, 38 U.S.C.A. § 601.
Reference
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- LOWRY v. WOODRING, Secretary of War
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