56 Ct.Clms. 411 affirmed.
Appeal from a judgment of the Court of Claims awarding a sum as
extra pay to a machinist's mate in the navy.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
The findings of fact of the Court of Claims are, in substance,
these: (1) Luskey was a machinist's mate in the Navy. He was by
proper authority detailed for duty involving actual flying in
aircraft, September 15, 1915, and continued in that duty until
after February 1, 1917. He made actual flights, one of which was in
September, 1916, and two others in December, 1916, and was at all
times capable of flying, if so ordered. (2) He received the sum of
$329, being 50 percent additional pay allowed him by the Act of
March 3, 1915, for duty involving actual flying for the entire
period from July 1, 1916, to January 31, 1917, a period of 7
months. At a later period, the amount was deducted from his pay. He
was paid a certain amount for the month of December, 1916.
Page 262 U. S. 63
If entitled to additional pay for aviation duty for the entire
period, July 1, 1916, to January 31, 1917, less pay received for
December, 1916, he would receive $279.95.
Upon the facts found, the court concluded "as a matter of law"
that he was entitled to recover, and "adjudged and ordered that" he
"recover of and from the United States the sum of two hundred and
seventy-nine dollars and ninety-five cents ($279.95)."
The United States, by this appeal, disputes the conclusion and
judgment. Its contention is that, "to entitle an officer designated
to such service to the extra compensation," he must
"be actually engaged in flying, and that, when an unreasonable
time elapses during which he makes no actual flight, he is not
entitled to extra pay for such period."
Expressing its contention in other words, it in effect is that
it is not the detail, but the flying, not the possibility of a
risk, but the actual risk, that vests the right to the additional
pay.
To sustain the contention, emphasis is put upon, and insistence
made of, the words of the act (38 Stat. 939) that compensation is
awarded to the officer "while lawfully detailed for duty involving
actual flying in aircraft."
To the contention, and rejecting it, the court replied, after
quoting the statute:
*
"The word 'involving,' used in the statute, may be inept, but
its meaning in the connection in which it is used is plain and not
to be mistaken, and that is that the pay is not made dependent upon
the number of flights while on such duty, but is made dependent on
the detail to such duty. When, therefore, the plaintiff was
lawfully detailed to duty involving flying in
Page 262 U. S. 64
aircraft, he must be regarded and treated as entitled to the
consequences of such detail, and to the pay provided for such
duty."
We concur in the conclusion and judgment. The meaning of the
statute "is plain." If Congress had intended to provide a detail to
intermittent duty with intermittent pay, Congress would have
specifically so provided, not left repulsion to it the advantage of
ambiguity. If it intended to regard "the possibility of a risk or
the actual risk" in flying as determination of compensation or as a
factor in compensation, as the United States urges, care would have
been taken not, we will say, against its abuse, but against its
use, putting the officer's life in peril many times a day. If that
were reasonable in expectation, the other contention is condemned
-- that is, that the officer is entitled to compensation only when
he engages in flights and for reasonable intervals between them.
The contention gives no animation to prepare for the duty and its
hazards.
Congress naturally supposed that there would be no detail to
aircraft duty unless there was requirement or use for it, and, when
either ceased, the detail would be revoked; but, if made and not
revoked, its duration constituted a service for which the officer
must keep prepared, and to which therefore the compensation was by
the statute assigned.
Judgment affirmed.
*
"Hereafter enlisted men in the Navy and Marine Corps, while
detailed for duty involving actual flying in aircraft, shall
receive the pay, and the permanent additions thereto, including
allowances, of their rating and services or rank and service, as
the case may be, plus fifty percentum increase thereof."