United States v. Germaine, 99 U.S. 508 (1879), was a decision of the United States Supreme Court concerning who qualifies as an âÂÂOfficer of the United Statesâ for purposes of the Appointments Clause and a federal criminal statute prohibiting extortion by federal "officers". The Court held that a civil surgeon appointed by the Commissioner of Pensions to examine pensioners was not an âÂÂofficer of the United States,â and the Commissioner of Pensions was not the âÂÂhead of a departmentâ within the meaning of the clause.
Article II of the United States Constitution requires that officers of the United States, nominated by the President, are confirmed with the advice and consent of the Senate. Anticipating that the procedure might become unwieldy "when offices become numerous, and sudden removals necessary", the Constitution provided a guideline for the appointment of inferior officers, who could be appointed by the President alone, or by heads of departments, or courts of law.
The Commissioner of Pensions appointed Germaine to act as a civil surgeon to perform examinations of pensioners and applicants for pensions. For each examination and certificate, a $2 fee was provided, payable from appropriations for pension payments and under regulations prescribed by the Commissioner. The Germaine was indicted in the District of Maine for âÂÂextortion under color of officeâ under the Crimes Act of 1825, which punished âÂÂevery officer of the United Statesâ guilty of extortion. The indictment was remitted to the Circuit Court, whose judges divided on whether Germaine was an âÂÂofficer of the United Statesâ and whether judgment on demurrer should be for the United States or for Germaine.
On a certificate of division from the Circuit Court for the District of Maine, the Supreme Court considered whether the defendantâÂÂs appointment made him an âÂÂofficer of the United Statesâ within the Crimes Act of 1825 and, relatedly, whether the Commissioner of Pensions was a constitutionally recognized âÂÂhead of a departmentâ such that appointments made by him would satisfy the Appointments Clause for inferior officers.
Counsel relied on Article II, Section 2, Clause 2, which provides for presidential nomination and Senate confirmation of principal officers and permits Congress to vest the appointment of inferior officers âÂÂin the President alone, in the courts of law, or in the heads of departments.â The Court also discussed its earlier decision in United States v. Hartwell, which had described an âÂÂofficeâ as embracing âÂÂtenure, duration, emolument, and duties.âÂÂ
Justice Miller delivered the opinion of the Court. First, the Court concluded that the term âÂÂheads of departmentsâ in the Appointments Clause refers to the principal officers who lead the Cabinet-level executive departments (e.g., State, Treasury, War, Interior, Justice), not to bureau chiefs, commissioners, or auditors within those departments. Accordingly, the Commissioner of Pensions was not a âÂÂhead of a department.âÂÂ
Second, applying the Hartwell understanding of âÂÂoffice,â the Court held Germaine was not an âÂÂofficer of the United States.â His duties as a civil surgeon were âÂÂoccasional and intermittent,â performed only when called upon in specific cases; he maintained no public office, gave no bond, took no oath, and was paid a per-certificate fee from pension funds rather than a regularly appropriated salary. He was âÂÂbut an agent of the commissioner, appointed by him, and removable by him at his pleasure,â and thus fell outside the extortion statute limited to âÂÂofficers of the United States.â Judgment on the demurrer was directed for Germaine.
Germaine clarified that:
Later cases, such as Lucia v. SEC (2018) have cited Germaine for the proposition that an âÂÂofficerâ occupies a continuing position established by law.