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Losses to Registry Funds of United States Courts

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Highlights

The Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts asked whether appropriated funds were available to restore losses in the registry funds of the U.S. courts, the proper statutory authority for such restorations, and whether an erroneous transfer of money from the registry of the U.S. District Court of California to the U.S. District Court of New York could be restored. The director of the Office requested relief for the clerk and fiscal officer. He concluded that the erroneous transfer occurred while they were acting in their official capacities and that the loss was not a result of their acting in bad faith or due to a lack of care since the California Federal Court had ordered them to make the transfers. The improper transfer occurred in a securities fraud case in which five defendants were ordered to deposit funds with the California Federal Court. Four of the defendants who had deposited monies entered into a stipulation providing that the monies and interest deposited in the California Federal Court registry be distributed to two classes of plaintiffs in a case before the New York Federal Court. The stipulation referred to the funds to be transferred as the California funds. All of the funds were sent to the Clerk of the New York Federal Court in accordance with the stipulation. When the error in disbursement became manifest it was immediately reported. All of the funds had been distributed to the plaintiffs in the New York case and recovery did not appear to be practical. Statutory authority is given the Comptroller General to relieve a disbursing officer of the United States of accountability and responsibility for any deficiency in his official disbursing account where it is found that the payment was not the result of bad faith or lack of due care on the disbursing officer's part. The law also authorizes adjusting the account by charging the appropriation or fund available for the disbursing function at the time the adjustment is effected, absent another appropriation specifcally provided therefor. The clerk of the court was relieved of liability for the loss. The fiscal officer's error was in complying with an erroneous court order and she was granted relief. The amount could be restored to the California Federal Court's registry from the appropriation currently available for the operation of the offices of clerks of court.

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