EMINENT DOMAIN Continued.
tial payment first to the accumulated interest and then to the principal. Such recovery is not properly interest within the prohibition of section 177 of the Judicial Code. Mattern et al., executors, 559.
See also Dent Act; Sovereignty.
Notice by the Comptroller General to a claimant that if he de- sired a review of the settlement "he should not accept pay- ment of the amount allowed as to such item, and that the check inclosed should not be cashed if its amount includes any item as to which review is applied for," does not preclude the claimant from suing for the balance alleged to be due, when in cashing the check he advises the Comptroller General that the sum tendered is accepted in part payment only and that the right to claim the remainder is reserved. Benedict, trustee, 437.
See also Settlement Contracts, I (1); Taxes, VII, XVII. EVIDENCE.
Where the books of account, upon which a case is based, in- volve an enormous number of entries, it is sufficient if they are verified on the stand by a supervising officer who knew them to be the books of regular entries kept in the establishment and which were relied upon in the regular course of the busi- ness. And expert testimony as to the result of a calculation made therefrom is not to be excluded merely because the witness was an accountant of the party not bearing the burden of proof. Dold Packing Co., 525.
See also Contracts, IV (1), XV; Patents, (1); Pay, X; Postal Service, I; Practice and Procedure, I; Settlement Contracts, III; Taxes, VII, XVII, XXIII.
See Jurisdiction, I; Settlement Contracts, II, IV.
FOREIGN TERRITORY.
See Postal Service, II; Sovereignty; Tenure of Office.
See Taxes, IX.
GRATUITIES.
See Indians, II.
GRAVES REGISTRATION SERVICE.
I. A treaty between the United States and Indian tribes is a part of the supreme law of the land, and can not be re- formed by the courts or treated by them as inoperative. The power to make, modify, or abrogate is political and with Congress, which can not assign to the courts duties not properly judicial. Osage Tribe of Indians, 64.
II. Gratuities can not be recovered in the Court of Claims in the absence of an enabling act. The special jurisdictional act of February 6, 1921, did not contemplate the recovery of gratuities to the Osage Tribe of Indians where the con- clusion of the court was against the tribal claim, nor did the act direct a consideration of counterclaims against the individuals of the tribe. Id.
See also Constitution.
INTEREST.
On a mandate of the Supreme Court, filed in the Court of Claims June 27, 1927, directing judgment in a tax case in favor of plaintiff with interest to date of judgment, interest is not allowable under the amendment of May 29, 1928, to sec. 177, Judicial Code, notwithstanding pending disposition of an additional claim, the judgment was not settled by the Comptroller General until after the effective date of the amend- ment. White Dental Mfg. Co., 624.
See also Eminent Domain; Jurisdiction, IV; Taxes, XI, XXVII. JURISDICTION.
I. Reimbursement of deficits during Federal control; trans- portation act of 1920. Niagara Junction Ry. Co., 204. II. Section 8 of the act of March 4, 1925, 43 Stat. 1269, 1273, authorizing the Secretary of the Navy to investigate and report upon claims under certain fixed-price contracts, does not afford exclusive relief or create an exclusive forum. Electric Boat Co., 333.
III. The courts have jurisdiction to review the determination of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue of the value of property for purposes of taxation. Mimnaugh, jr., execu- tor, 411.
IV. (1) Where Congress has made an appropriation to pay in- terest as specified in the judgment of a court, claim for such interest is founded upon a law of Congress, section 145, Judicial Code, and cognizable by the Court of Claims, notwithstanding the judgment was rendered in another court, and on a cause of action over which the Court of Claims did not have jurisdiction. (2) In giving judg- ment for the interest so specified and appropriated for down to the date of its own judgment, the Court of Claims is not allowing interest on a claim. (3) The award of interest by the court rendering the original judg- ment is res adjudicata, and the Court of Claims can not review such decision. Benedict, trustee, 437.
See also Contracts, XVIII; Indians, I, II; Postal Service, I; Statute of Limitations; Taxes, I, XVIII, XXIV.
Although there may be no express covenant in a written lease to repair or to leave the premises in as good condition as when received, there is an implied covenant against volun- tary waste. Italian National Rifle Shooting Society of the United States, 418.
See Postal Service, II.
MARINE CORPS PAY.
See Pay, VII, VIII; Tenure of Office.
MONEY ORDERS.
See Postal Service, I.
NAVY PAY.
See Pay, III, VI, VII, IX, X, XI. PANAMA CANAL PAY.
(1) The special jurisdictional act of March 3, 1927, requires a rendition of judgment as to legal liability on facts here- tofore reported to Congress, and validity of a patent in- volved therein is not res adjudicata where the judgment of another court affirming the validity did not rest upon proof of abandonment which was thereafter reported to Congress by the Court of Claims.
(2) The special jurisdictional act of March 3, 1927, requires the application of the statutory law in force and in exis- tence at the time the controversy arose and continued. Colgate, administrator, 667.
I. His contract of hire with the Quartermaster Corps, United States Army, in connection with the Graves Registration Service, being for services abroad and for a specified com- pensation per annum, the plaintiff was not entitled to the bonus provided by section 7, act of March 1, 1919, 40 Stat. 1213, 1267. Wall, 23.
II. Under the act of June 30, 1922, 42 Stat. 721, plaintiff, retired as a captain, Philippine Scouts, October 31, 1918, was promoted to the grade of major on the retired list effective January 1, 1923. He was never at any time prior to his retirement a captain in the Regular Army, by reason thereof could not have been a major in the Philippine Scouts, and was not entitled, prior to January 1, 1923, to the retired pay of a major, notwithstanding
length of active service. The act of June 10, 1922, granted him the retired pay of a captain, which he duly received from and after cessation of active duty on the retired list July 1, 1922, up to the date of his promotion to a majority, and this he was entitled to retain. De Court, 130.
III. An officer of the Navy, detached from duty and ordered to his home to await further orders, has been ordered to make a permanent change of station within the meaning of section 12 of the act of May 18, 1920, as amended by the act of June 10, 1922, providing for reimbursement of cost of transportation of wife and dependent child or children. Bullard, administratrix, 264.
IV. Training for commission; act of June 15, 1917; overseas school. Brown, 407.
V. The act of June 15, 1917, was a deficiency appropriation and did not authorize pay at the rate of $100 per month beyond June 30, 1918, to enlisted men in training for commissions. Nor was said rate authorized by the ap- propriation act of July 9, 1918, or of November 4, 1918.
VI. An officer of the Navy, whose resignation was accepted July 28, 1923, was thereafter, on March 17, 1927, in pur- suance of the relief act of March 3, 1927, and after com- pliance with its provisions, commissioned as a lieutenant commander and immediately retired. Held, (1) that he was not entitled to retired pay prior to his commission, and (2) under the act of June 10, 1922, by resigning in 1923, he surrendered his right to count previous service while a midshipman in computing longevity pay, and being an officer appointed after July 1, 1922, was entitled to count active commissioned service only. Hoffman, 452. VII. The retired pay of an enlisted man of the Marine Corps is not "official salary" within the meaning of section 4 of the act of August 24, 1912, establishing a permanent or- ganization for the Panama Canal, and providing for the deduction from the salary or compensation of its em- ployees the official salary, if any, paid them for naval or military service. Calhoun, administrator, 545.
VIII. Appointment as an officer in the Marine Corps without the
examination prescribed by the act of August 29, 1916, is not valid, and suit can not be maintained by the de facto officer for uniform gratuity not paid him. Aikins, 622. IX. The question of dependency of a Navy officer's mother on him for her chief support is one of fact, to be determined by the mother's station in life and other special circum stances. Tomlinson, 697.
X. Section 4 of the act of June 10, 1922, does not intend that the dependent mother should receive only the bare neces- sities of life, but contemplates the mother's station in life. The question of dependency is one of fact in which the moral obligation of other children to support the mother does not enter. Haas, 718.
XI. Where no quarters are assigned to an officer of the Navy for the occupancy of himself or his dependents, he is entitled under the act of June 10, 1922, as amended by the act of May 31, 1924, to rental allowance as an officer with dependents. This is so notwithstanding the dependents are the guests of an officer of the Marine Corps in quarters assigned thereto. Glennon, 723.
See also Tenure of Office.
PLEADINGS.
See Practice and Procedure, I.
POLICE POWER.
See Sovereignty.
POSTAL SERVICE.
I. Under the acts creating and regulating the post-office money- order system payment for lost money orders is with the Postmaster General, upon proof satisfactory to him, and where there has not been such proof suit can not be maintained in the Court of Claims. Whether the Court of Claims has jurisdiction in a case where the proof is satisfactory to the Postmaster General, not decided. Former Corporation, 83.
II. The ports in the Panama Canal Zone are not foreign within the meaning of section 4009, Revised Statutes, providing for the compensation allowable for transporting mail be- tween the United States and foreign ports. In the absence of a contract a carrier is entitled, for such services on a United States steamship, prior to the act of July 3, 1926, amending said section, to reasonable compensation only. Luckenbach S. 8. Co., 679.
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE.
I. The Court of Claims is authorized under its forms of plead- ing to award a judgment in accord with the facts stated and proven, notwithstanding the absence of a count in the pleadings for the particular recovery. Electric Boat Co., 333.
II. Where officers of the Government have pursued a practice long continued, in payments made for services rendered, such practice does not bind the Government if it was clearly never authorized or legal. Luckenbach S. 8. Co., 679.
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