United States v. Noce/Opinion of the Court

Daniel Noce was major of engineers in the United States Army in the emergency establishment from May 18, 1920, until June 30, 1920, when he returned to a captaincy in the regular establishment. He sued the United States in the Court of Claims for $467.66 as longevity pay, alleged to be due him under the law over and above the pay he received. He was appointed cadet at the West Point Military Academy August 1, 1913. He was graduated April 20, 1917. If he can count for longevity pay his cadet service from August 1, 1913, to April 20, 1917, he will be entitled to the amount he claims from the date of approval of the Act of Congress (section 11, c. 190, 41 Stat. 601, 603; Comp. St. Ann. Supp. 1923, §§ 2089a[1], 8562ee), May 18, 1920, to April 19, 1922, the period covered by this suit. The accounting officers denied the claim.

The Court of Claims found that under the act claimant's cadet service must be counted, and gave judgment for him. The United States has appealed, and urges a reversal, on the ground that such a conclusion is forbidden by the Army Appropriation Act of August 24, 1912, c. 391, § 6, 37 Stat. 569, 594 (Comp. St. § 1923), which provides:

'That hereafter the service of a cadet who may hereafter be     appointed to the United States Military Academy, or to the      Naval Academy, shall not be counted in computing for any      purpose the length of service of any officer of the Army.'

A similar provision was made in the Naval Appropriation Act of March 4, 1913, c. 148, 37 Stat. 891 (Comp. St. § 2619), as follows:

'Hereafter the service of a midshipman at the United States     Naval Academy, or that of a cadet at the United States      Military Academy, who may hereafter be appointed to the United States Naval Academy, or to the United States      Military Academy, shall not be counted in computing for any      purpose the length of service of any officer in the Navy or      in the Marine Corps.'

The Court of Claims held that these two provisions held been repealed by the Act of May 18, 1920, already referred to. The act is entitled 'To increase the efficiency of the commissioned and enlisted personnel of the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Coast Guard, Coast and Geodetic Survey, and Public Health Service.' It increased the pay of certain commissioned officers of the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, and Public Health Service, mentioning in detail the ranks affected and the increases provided. It provided for a temporary commutation of quarters, heat, and light theretofore granted to Army officers on duty in the filed to those of the Navy, Marine Corps, Coast Guard, and Public Health Service. It gave warrant officers of the Navy an increase, in addition to all pay allowances, of $240 per annum. It increased the pay of all enlisted men of the Army and Marine Corps and of female nurses 20 per centum, with certain exceptions. It increased the commutation rations of noncommissioned officers of the Army, of the Marine Corps, and of filed clerks of the Army and the Quartermaster Corps. It gave a new base pay for enlisted ratings of petty officers and noncommissioned officers and of enlisted men in the Navy, of the Naval Academy band, and of the Fleet Naval Reserve. It authorized the Secretary of the Navy in his discretion to readjust the prevailing rates of pay of civilian professors and instructors of the Naval Academy. In section 8 (Comp. St. Ann. Supp. 1923, §§ 8459 1/2a [3 1/2], [3 3/4]) it provided that the Coast Guard should have the same pay ratings to correspond with the Navy and mentioned the officers. Then by section 11 (Comp. St. Ann. Supp. 1923, § 8562ee and section 2089a[1]) it provided as follows:

'Sec. 11. That in lieu of compensation now prescribed by law,     commissioned officers of the Coast and Geodetic Survey shall      receive the same pay and allowances as now are or hereafter may be prescribed for officers of the navy      with whom they hold relative rank as prescribed in the Act of      May 22, 1917, entitled 'An act to temporarily increase the      commissioned and warrant and enlisted strength of the Navy      and Marine Corps, and for other purposes,' including      longevity; and all laws relating to the retirement of      commissioned officers of the Navy shall hereafter apply to      commissioned officers of the Coast and Geodetic Survey:      Provided, that hereafter longevity pay for officers in the      Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Coast Guard, Public Health Service,      and Coast and Geodetic Survey shall be based on the total of      all service in any or all of said services.'

It is this proviso which it is said repealed the laws of 1912 and 1913 above quoted. It is urged that the words 'longevity pay shall be based on the total of all service in any or all of said services' are inconsistent with the exclusion of service in the Military Academy or in the Naval Academy from the calculation of longevity pay.

We are unable to put such a construction on this proviso. The whole act was intended to promote equality between the six services. After equalizing their pay, it was intended to give any officer or any man in either of the services the benefit of longevity increases for any service which he might have had in any other of the services. The Report of the Managers of the House of Representatives as to section 11 and its proviso (H. R. 948, 66th Congress, 2d Sess.) said:

'It provides that commissioned officers of the Coast and     Geodetic Survey, a highly technical and specialized service,      shall receive the same pay and allowances as are prescribed      for officers of the Navy with whom they hold relative rank as      prescribed in the Act of May 22, 1917. It also contains a     proviso placing all services on an equality in the matter of      computation of longevity or service pay.' In other words, the longevity pay of a member of any service was to be determined by his total service in any or all of the services. It was not dealing with the rules as to the longevity in any one service. It was to make the calculation of longevity as if the six services were but one service. It was not aiming at any inequality within a service, but at an inequality between services. No reference is made to cadet service, and nothing to indicate that Congress had it in mind.

The question whether service in either of the Academies was Army or Navy service which should count for longevity pay and retirement was a long-standing issue between the officers of the Army and Navy who were graduates of the two Academies on the one hand and the officers who were not graduates and the accounting officers of the Treasury on the other. This is evident from the decision of this court in United States v. Morton, 112 U.S. 1, 5 S.C.t. 1, 28 L. Ed. 613, and United States v. Watson, 130 U.S. 80, 9 S.C.t. 430, 32 L. Ed. 852. The legislative history of the act of 1912 and that of 1913 shows that the question was much contested between the two houses. The Report of the House Committee on Military Affairs (H. R. 270, 62d Congress, 2d Sess.) gives an extended argument against the practice of computing cadet service for pay and retirement purposes. It said:

'The result of this practice is that a graduate of the     Military Academy who was appointed a second lieutenant, after      having been educated for that appointment for four or more      years wholly at the expense of the government, receives his      first 10 per cent. increase of pay after not more than one     year of service as a commissioned officer, whereas the second      lieutenant who is appointed from civil life, after having      been fitted for the appointment wholly at his own expense,      must serve for five full years as a commissioned officer      before he can receive his first 10 per cent. increase of pay. And the same disparity between the two cases continues to the     end.' After pointing out other discriminations arising from this practice, the report continues:

'It is but just to say that this preposterous practice did     not originate with the War Department. It was the result of a     decision rendered by the Supreme Court October 27, 1884      (Morton v. United States, 112 U.S. 1), to the effect that      the time during which a person has served as a cadet is to be      regarded as 'actual time of service in the army.' *  *  * '

After referring specifically to retirement, the report says:

'These are additional discriminations against the civilian     appointee who pays for his own preliminary education and in      favor of the graduate of the Military Academy who is educated      for his commission at the expense of the government.'

In view of this long-continued controversy, which before 1912 had finally been settled only by two decisions of this court, it is inconceivable that the two acts of 1912 and 1913, nullifying the effect of those decisions, and passed after a heated struggle, should have been repealed without mention of the cadet service in the proviso now said to have worked this result. As already pointed out, the act of which this was a part was detailed in its reference to the commissioned officers, the noncommissioned officers, and to the enlisted men of the various six services affected, and to the pay and increases which they were to receive. Had it been intended to increase the 'fogey' pay, as the longevity pay is called, for only a part of the commissioned officers of the Army and only a part of the commissioned officers of the Navy, and only a part of the commissioned officers of the Marine Corps in such a specific act, the favor thus to be conferred upon them would certainly have been set forth in language whose meaning could not be mistaken.

It is, indeed, very difficult to say that there is any real inconsistency between the proviso of 1920 and the acts of 1912 and 1913. It is supposed to be shown in the use of the words 'any or all the services' and it is said that, as 'any' may mean one or more, it may apply to the Army alone, and can only be satisfied by making it apply to the total service in the Army alone and must therefore mean service in the Army as construed by this court in the Morton Case and the Watson Case, in which it was held that, under then existing legislation, service in the Military Academy was service in the Army. This, it seems to us, is a strained method of first finding an inconsistency, by no means clear if it exists at all, and then erecting it into an implied repeal. Implied repeals are not favored. United States v. Greathouse, 166 U.S. 601, 605, 17 S.C.t. 701, 41 L. Ed. 1130; Frost v. Wenie, 157 U.S. 46, 58, 15 S.C.t. 532, 39 L. Ed. 614; United States v. Yuginovich, 256 U.S. 450, 463, 41 S.C.t. 551, 65 L. Ed. 1043.

Judgment reversed.