A. muneration, from the head downwards, was excepted from the
definition of "officer." This is, in my opinion, quite untenable. It would introduce an anomalous distinction between Depart- ments or branches of Departments as such for which no reason can be assigned; it would place within each of these three branches its head and its subordinates on an equal footing for the purpose of the Act, and all of them for that purpose in the same situation as the employés mentioned at the beginning of the section. This would in turn necessarily lead to the absurd result that the subsequent words, "other persons occupying posi- tions of similar class character or importance," would mean persons high and low in any other Department whose positions were similar to all previously mentioned persons, including those high and low in the specially named branches-in other words would mean practically the whole service.
Consequently the words "occupying positions," &., must be read as qualifying both persons employed in the printing and telegraph offices and dredge and marine service as well as "other persons," and the word "similar" to positions of the enumerated classes of employés at the head of the section.
The next question is one of fact, that is to say, whether Mason's position was similar in importance to that of the enum erated classes.
Mr. Piddington contended that the Board did not think his duties were those of an officer, because it did not at any time include him in the classified list of officers, or compel him to submit to a deduction under sec. 53, and that he did not think
SO, he did not ask to be SO included, and did not see to any such deduction, and, most of all, from the plaintiff's standpoint, that he laid no claim to any increase of salary under sec. 4.
These are all powerful arguments, and were well put. But it is not suggested that there is any estoppel, or any agreement, barring Mason of any actual rights otherwise existing. The case was not, as I understood, put that way. The mutual conduct was only urged as evidence, SO to speak, of the view which both parties took on the spot of the facts now in dispute. But the value of the considerations SO addressed to the Court is com- pletely destroyed by one circumstance. The plaintiff was included,