United States v. Thornton/Opinion of the Court

By Rev. St. § 1290, as amended by the act of February 27, 1877 (19 Stat. 244), 'when a soldier is discharged from the service, except by way of punishment for an offense, he shall be allowed transportation and subsistence from the place of his discharge to the place of his enlistment, enrollment, or original muster into the service. The government may furnish the same in kind, but in case it shall not do so, he shall be allowed travel pay and commutation of subsistence, according to his rank, for such time as may be sufficient for him to travel from the place of discharge to the place of his residence, or original muster into service, computed at the rate of one day for every twenty miles.'

The case was disposed of in the court below as one depending solely upon the question whether a soldier, who is discharged from the service by his own consent, shall, under the above section, be allowed the transportation and subsistence therein provided for.

We do not find it necessary to express an opinion upon this question, as there is another point, apparently not called to the attention of the court of claims, upon which we think the case must be reversed. The transportation provided for is 'from the place of his discharge to the place of his enlistment, enrollment, or original muster into the service.' Claimant was originally enlisted at Washington in August, 1878, and was discharged at Mare Island, Cal., November 6, 1886, receiving, under the provisions of the above section, travel pay and commutation of subsistence from Mare Island to Washington. He did not return to Washington, however, but, on the fourth day thereafter (November 10th) re-enlisted at Mare Island as a private, and in the course of his service was returened to Washington, where, at the expiration of two years and four months, he was discharged at his own request, and now claims transportation and commutation of subsistence from Washington to Mare Island as the place of his enlistment, amounting to $141.30. The result is that, notwithstanding his original enlistment and final discharge were both at Washington, he receives $282.60 for travel and subsistence twice across the continent without ever having, so far as it appears, expended a dollar or traveled a mile.

These allowances are both of them, presumptively, for expenses actually incurred, as is evident from the provision that they may be furnished in kind, and are designed to reimburse the soldier for all necessary outlays of returning to the place of his enlistment, which is treated as, presumptively, his home. Indeed, the law of 1812 originally provided (2 Stat. 674) that the travel and subsistence should be allowed from the place of discharge to the place of residence of the claimant. By Rev. St. § 1290, however, congress substituted for place of residence the expression 'place of enlistment, enrollment, or original muster into the service,' the purpose of which was, doubtless, to protect the government against the soldier choosing a distant place for his assumed residence and recovering a large mileage, to which he was not justly entitled. The presumption, however, that these allowances are for expenses actually incurred is not absolutely conclusive; and if it be shown that the soldier cannot possibly intend to incur the expense for which the allowance is made, or for some other reason he is not within the spirit of the act, he is not entitled to the allowance. His claim, therefore, should be based upon something more than a mere technicality. If, for example, petitioner's discharge and re-enlistment at Mare Island had been cotemporaneous acts, he would clearly not have been entitled to travel and subsistence to Washington; and such we understand to have been the practice of the department. So, if such discharge and re-enlistment were so near together that they constituted, practically, a continuous service, we think the second enlistment may be treated as a re-enlistment, and, if the soldier be returned to the place of his original enlistment, and there discharged, he would not be entitled to an allowance for travel and subsistence.

In the case of U.S. v. Alger, 151 U.S. 362, 14 Sup. Ct. 346; Id., 152 U.S. 384, 14 Sup. Ct. 635,-where an officer resigned one day, and was appointed to a higher grade the next day, it was held that, for the purpose of computing longevity pay, he was to be considered as having been engaged in a continuous service. Bounties to private soldiers, in the form of increased pay after five years' service, are allowed by Rev. St. §§ 1282, 1284, to those who re-enlist within one month, since extended to three months (28 Stat. 216), after having been honorably discharged. This would seem to indicate an intention on the part of congress to regard a re-enlistment within 30 days as practically a continuous service for the purpose of additional pay, though not necessarily so for the purposes of transportation and subsistence.

In this case we are able to take judicial notice of the fact that claimant could not possibly have traveled from Mare Island to Washington, and back, within the four days which elapsed between his discharge and his re-enlistment, and hence, if he intended to re-enlist, that he received there an allowance to which he was not justly entitled, and, as the second discharge is at the place of his original enlistment, he is not entitled to another mileage across the continent. It will, perhaps, not be just to say of the claimant that the interval which elapsed between his discharge as a drummer, and his re-enlistment as a private at Mare Island, was for the purpose of drawing transportation and subsistence to Washington; but the case at least suggests that possibility. Nor do we undertake to say that the paymaster was not fully justified in paying the claimant his transportation and subsistence when originally discharged at Mare Island, since it was manifestly impossible for him to know whether the claimant intended to re-enlist or not; but, under the circumstances, we think the service should be treated as a continuous one. Indeed, it is somewhat doubtful whether this is not specially provided for by section 1290, which allows transportation and subsistence from the place of his discharge 'to the place of his enlistment, enrollment, or original muster into the service.' If the word 'original' preceded the word 'enlistment' this construction would be freer from doubt, but the section, as it reads, certainly lends support to the theory that the allowances were not intended as a mere bounty.

Whether the claimant should be recharged, after his re-enlistment, with the travel and subsistence allowed him on his first discharge raises a question which is not presented by the record in this case, and upon which we do not feel warranted in expressing an opinion. Other considerations may have a bearing upon this question, which do not enter into the present controversy. If, for instance, the claimant did not intend to re-enlist when first discharged, but subsequently changed his mind, it does not necessarily follow that he should be recharged these allowances, if the government chose to re-enlist him. The question at issue concerns only the propriety of the second claim, and not of the first allowance. The case is a somewhat exceptional one, and all that we decide is that, where the service is practically a continuous one, and the soldier's second discharge occurs at the place of his original enlistment, he is not entitled to his commutation for travel and subsistence to the place of his second enlistment.

The judgment of the court of claims is, therefore, reversed, and the case remanded, with directions to dismiss the petition.