The pay of a retired officer of the Navy is fixed by statute at
a certain percentage of the active service pay of the grade held by
him at the time of his retirement, and there is nothing in the Act
of March 3, 1883, 22 Stat. 472, c. 97, to modify this rule.
An officer of the Navy who was retired in the first five years
of service from a rank having longevity pay, but who was continued
on active duty until he had passed into his second five years of
service, is not entitled, under the Act of March 3, 1883, to a
greater rate of pay after active service ceased than seventy-five
per centum of the pay of the grade or rank which he held at the
time of retirement.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE SHIRAS delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Court of Claims,
finding in favor of the United States and dismissing the petition
of the claimant, Eugenia A. Roget, executrix of Edward A. Roget,
deceased. Edward A. Roget was a professor of mathematics in the
United States Navy, having been commissioned July 8, 1864, to rank
from May 21, 1864. On August 1 of that year, being then 62 years of
age, he was placed upon the retired list, in accordance with the
Act of Congress approved December 21, 1861, 12 Stat. 329, c. 1,
which contains the following provisions:
"That whenever the name of any naval officer now in service, or
who may hereafter be in the service, of the United States shall
have been borne on the naval register forty-five years, or shall be
of the age of sixty-two years, he shall be
Page 148 U. S. 168
retired from active service and his name entered on the retired
list of officers of the grade to which he belonged at the time of
such retirement."
"SEC. 2.
And be it further enacted that the President
of the United States be, and he is hereby, authorized to assign any
officer who may be retired under the preceding section of this act
to shore duty, and such officer thus assigned shall receive the
full shore pay of his grade while so employed."
"SEC. 5.
And be it further enacted that all officers
retired under the provisions of this act shall receive the retired
pay of their respective grades as fixed by law."
Under the same act, he was continued on active duty until June
30, 1873.
On July 15, 1870, a naval appropriation act was approved, 16
Stat. 321, 331, c. 295, the third section of which contains, among
other provisions, the following:
"That from and after the thirtieth day of June, eighteen hundred
and seventy, the annual pay of the officers of the Navy on the
active list shall be as follows:"
"* * * *"
"Professors of mathematics and civil engineers, during the first
five years after date of appointment, when on duty, two thousand
four hundred dollars; on leave or waiting orders, one thousand five
hundred dollars; during the second five years after such date, when
on duty, two thousand seven hundred dollars; on leave or waiting
orders, one thousand eight hundred dollars; during the third five
years after such date, when on duty, three thousand dollars; on
leave or waiting orders, two thousand one hundred dollars; after
fifteen years from such date, when on duty, three thousand five
hundred dollars; on leave or waiting orders, two thousand six
hundred dollars."
While performing active service, Professor Roget received the
full shore pay of his grade, including the increase after five
years' service at the rate so provided for. On June 30, 1873, he
was relieved from active service in accordance with the Naval
Appropriation Act of March 3, 1873, 17 Stat. 547, c. 230, which
provides in the first section "that no officer on
Page 148 U. S. 169
the retired list of the Navy shall be employed on active duty
except in time of war."
The same section of that act contains the following
provision:
"That those officers on the retired list, and those hereafter
retired, who were or who may be retired after forty years' service
or on attaining the age of sixty-two years, in conformity with
section one of the Act of December, eighteen hundred and sixty-one,
and its amendments, dated June twenty-fifth, eighteen hundred and
sixty-four, or those who were or may be retired from incapacity
resulting from long and faithful service, from wounds or injuries
received in the line of duty, from sickness or exposure therein,
shall, after the passage of this act, be entitled to seventy-five
percentum of the present sea pay of the grade or rank which they
held at the time of their retirement."
From the time Professor Roget was relieved from duty until
November 9, 1887, when he died, he was paid at the rate of $1,800 a
year.
It was contended by the claimant that under the Naval
Appropriation Act approved March 3, 1883, 22 Stat. 472, c. 97, her
testator should have been credited with the time of his active
service from May 21, 1864, to March 3, 1873, and should have
received the difference between the pay of a retired professor of
mathematics who has been retired within his first five years of
service and the pay of such officer who has been retired within his
second five years, or $225 per annum, from July 1, 1873, to the
date of his death, being 14 years and 122 days. She therefore asked
for a judgment against the United States in the sum of $3,200. The
Court of Claims, in dismissing the petition, decided that
"an officer in the Navy, who was retired in the first five years
of service from a rank having longevity pay, but who was continued
on active duty until he had passed into his second five years of
service, is not entitled, under the Act of March 3, 1883, to a
greater rate of pay after active service ceased than seventy-five
percentum of the pay of the grade or rank which he held at the time
of retirement."
24 Ct.Cl. 165.
Page 148 U. S. 170
The portion of the Act of March 3, 1883, relied upon by the
claimant, is as follows:
"And all officers of the Navy shall be credited with the actual
time they may have served as officers or enlisted men in the
regular or volunteer Army or Navy, or both, and shall receive all
the benefits of such actual service, in all respects, in the same
manner as if all said service had been continuous, and in the
regular Navy, in the lowest grade having graduated pay, held by
such officer since last entering the service,
provided
that nothing in this clause shall be so construed as to authorize
any change in the dates of commission or in the relative rank of
such officers;
provided further that nothing herein
contained shall be so construed as to give any additional pay to
any such officer during the time of his service in the volunteer
Army or Navy."
Prior to the approval of the act containing the foregoing
provisions, there had been three statutes operating to affect the
pay of professors of mathematics retired at the age of 62 years,
namely, the said acts of 1861, 1870, and 1873. The first gave
authority for the assignment of any retired officer to shore duty,
and provided that such officer thus assigned should receive the
full shore pay of his grade while so employed; the second provided
for longevity pay for officers on the active list, including
professors of mathematics, and the third fixed the pay of officers
so retired at 75 percentum of the sea pay of the grade or rank
which they held at the time of their retirement. The precise effect
of these acts may be readily seen by a brief examination of certain
terms employed in them. By the Act of March 3, 1835, 4 Stat. 756,
professors of mathematics were regarded as being subject to sea
duty, the language used in fixing their pay being as follows: "When
attached to vessels for sea service, or in a yard, twelve hundred
dollars." They are so regarded also by the Act of August 31, 1842,
5 Stat. 576, c. 276, which provides that they "shall be entitled to
live and mess with the lieutenants of seagoing and receiving
vessels," and by the Act of August 3, 1848, § 12, 9 Stat. c. 121,
pp. 266, 272, providing that they
"shall perform such duties as
Page 148 U. S. 171
may be assigned them by order of the Secretary of the Navy at
the naval school, the observatory, and on board ships of war, in
instructing the midshipmen of the Navy, or otherwise."
Though the Act of June 1, 1860, § 3, 12 Stat. 23, 27, c. 67,
declares that
"no service shall be regarded as sea service but such as shall
be performed at sea, under the orders of a department, and in
vessels employed by authority of law,"
the same statute as well as others, in fixing the pay of
professors of mathematics, provided for but one rate of pay for
such officers while on duty. It may therefore be considered that a
professor of mathematics assigned after his retirement to shore
duty would be entitled to the highest pay of his grade while so
employed, which would be as well his sea pay as his shore pay. The
grade of an officer in the Navy is his official station, by which
are regulated his powers, duties, any pay. His pay may be further
governed by his time of service within a grade, either in fact
rendered within the grade or constructively performed therein
through the force of statutes. That the office of professor of
mathematics is a grade is recognized by the Act of April 17, 1866,
§ 7, 14 Stat. 38, c. 45, which provides, "that hereafter no vacancy
in the grade of professor of mathematics in the Navy shall be
filled."
The operation of the statutes of 1861, 1870, and 1873, in the
case of Professor Roget, was to give him pay, during the time he
performed active service, as though he were on the active list,
including the longevity increase provided for by the act of 1870,
and, after his active service ended, to give him 75 percent of the
sea pay (which was also, in his case, the shore pay) provided for
by the act of 1873, attached to the grade which he held at the time
of his retirement. This being unquestionably the legal effect of
the acts approved prior to 1883, the single question involved is
whether, under the Act of March 3 of that year, he was entitled to
have active service credited in regulating his pay as a retired
officer after his active service ceased.
Ever since the retired list of the Navy was established, the pay
of a retired officer, as such, has been fixed by statute at a
Page 148 U. S. 172
certain percentum of the active service pay of the grade held by
such officer at the time of his retirement. His active service pay
at that time has always been taken as the basis in ascertaining his
future pay, and we are unable to discover in the act in question
any design to modify this persistent rule.
It would appear, not only that Congress has manifested no
intention by the act of 1883 to change the laws governing the pay
of retired officers, but that it has, in at least one instance,
shown the contrary purpose. By a provision in the fifth section of
the Act of July 15, 1870, no officer promoted upon the retired list
"shall, in consequence of such promotion, be entitled to any
increase of pay."
It can hardly be the intention of counsel to assume that the
amount of pay in question in this case should be calculated as
though Professor Roget was retired in 1873, instead of in 1864. The
retirement of an officer is a proceeding that can only take place
in a prescribed manner, and it is not pretended that such
proceeding occurred, with reference to that officer, more than
once.
The Court of Claims was right in dismissing the petition of the
claimant, and the judgment of that court is
Affirmed.