1. The acts of the Assistant Surgeon General, appointed under
the act of Congress and located at St. Louis, are the acts of the
Surgeon General, and have the same validity until countermanded or
revoked.
2. Where parties in the effort to fulfill an order for a large
amount of ice for the use of the government, which by their
contract they were bound to furnish, purchased ice which was lost
by the suspension of the order of the Assistant Surgeon General by
his superior officer, they are entitled to recover the cost of the
ice so lost and the expense of the care and attempt to preserve
it.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action was commenced in the Court of Claims, under an Act
of Congress specially authorizing it approved May 31, 1872.
There is nothing in the act which furnishes any rule for its
decision, though some of its provisions are emphasized in the
argument of counsel. The action was brought on the following
contract:
"Article of agreement made this fifth day of March, 1863,
between Henry Johnson, medical storekeeper, United States Army, and
acting medical purveyor, Washington, D.C., on the one part, and
Joseph W. Parish and William L. Huse, comprising the firm of Joseph
W. Parish & Co., of the City of St. Louis, State of Missouri,
of the other part, witnesseth:"
"That the said Henry Johnson, medical storekeeper United States
Army, for and on behalf of the United States of America, and the
said Joseph W. Parish and William L. Huse, comprising the firm of
J. W. Parish & Co., for themselves, their heirs, executors, and
administrators, have mutually agreed, and by these presents do
mutually covenant and agree, to and with each other, in the manner
following,
viz.:"
"
First, that said J. W. Parish & Co. shall deliver
at Memphis, Tennessee, Nashville, Tennessee, St. Louis, Missouri,
and Cairo, Illinois, the whole amount of ice required to be
consumed at each
Page 100 U. S. 501
respective point and vicinity during the remainder of the year
1863. Ice to be in quality A No. 1, and delivered at two thousand
(2,000) pounds to the ton."
"
Second, that for each and every ton of ice delivered
at Nashville, Tennessee, and accepted by the medical officer in
charge, the said J. W. Parish & Co. shall receive the sum of
twenty-five dollars ($25)."
"
Third, that for each and every ton of ice delivered at
St. Louis, Missouri, and accepted by the medical officer in charge,
the said J. W. Parish & Co. shall receive the sum of sixteen
dollars ($16)."
"
Fourth, that for each and every ton of ice delivered
at Cairo, Illinois, and accepted by the medical officer in charge,
the said J. W. Parish & Co. shall receive the sum of twenty
dollars ($20)."
"
Fifth, that for each and every ton of ice delivered at
Memphis, Tennessee, and accepted by the medical officer in charge,
the said J. W. Parish & Co. shall receive the sum of twenty
dollars ($20)."
"
Sixth, all the ice delivered under this contract to be
subjected to the inspection and approval of the medical officer in
charge of the post where it is delivered, and such as does not
conform to the specifications set forth in this contract shall be
rejected."
"
Seventh, that payments shall be made from time to time
on receipted bills of lading and duplicate accounts certified to by
the medical officer in charge of the post where it is
delivered."
"
Eighth, no member of Congress shall be admitted to any
share herein or any benefit to arise therefrom."
"
Ninth, it is further agreed that the said J. W. Parish
& Co. will allow three (3) working days for discharging each
cargo at either one of the points before mentioned; after that
time, demurrage to be allowed by the said Henry Johnson, medical
storekeeper, United States Army, as per charter party or bill of
lading of the vessel."
"In witness whereof, the undersigned have hereunto placed their
hands and seals the day and date above written."
"[SEAL]"
"HENRY JOHNSON"
"
Med. Storekeeper U.S.A. Acting Med. Purveyor"
"J. W. PARISH & CO."
Under this contract, there was delivered and paid for by the
government, at the stipulated prices, 12,768 tons of ice, about
which there is no dispute.
Page 100 U. S. 502
The controversy grows out of the following correspondence and
the acts of parties under it:
"
ASSISTANT SURGEON-GENERAL'S OFFICE"
"ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI, March 25, 1863"
"Messrs. J. W. PARISH & CO.:"
"GENTLEMEN -- I am instructed by the Assistant Surgeon General
to direct that the ice which you have agreed to deliver at the
points designated in your contract shall be distributed in the
following quantities,
viz.:"
At St. Louis . . . . . . . . . . . 5,000 tons
At Cairo . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5,000 tons
At Memphis . . . . . . . . . . . . 10,000 tons
At Nashville . . . . . . . . . . . 10,000 tons
"making the total of 30,000 which you have contracted to
deliver. The ice to be delivered at Nashville and Memphis is for
the use of the sick of the armies in the field, and should be
furnished without delay."
"Very respectfully, your ob't servant,"
"By order of the Assistant Surgeon General:"
"(Sig.) JOSEPH B. BROWN"
"
Surgeon United States Army"
A copy of this order being received at the Surgeon General's
office, the following telegram and letter were sent to Assistant
Surgeon General Wood:
"SURGEON-GENERAL'S OFFICE"
"March 31, 1863"
"Parish & Co. have not contracted for 30,000 tons of ice.
Suspend the order you gave him."
"(Sig.) W. A. HAMMOND,
Surgeon General"
"Col. R. C. WOOD"
"
Asst. Surgeon General U.S. Army, St. Louis"
"SURGEON-GENERAL'S OFFICE"
"WASHINGTON, D. C., March 31, 1863"
"SIR -- Your communication of the 25th instant to J. W. Parish
& Co., in regard to the quantities of ice to be delivered at
the different points for which they contract, forwarded to this
office for the information of the Surgeon General, has been
received."
"I am instructed to inform you that the contract with Parish
&
Page 100 U. S. 503
Co. was made for such quantities as might be needed; and that
the ice should be ordered from them from time to time to different
points in lots of a few hundred tons, as needed."
"Very respectfully, your obedient servant,"
"C. H. ALDEN,
Assistant Surgeon, U.S.A."
"Col. R. C. WOOD"
"
Assistant Surgeon General, St. Louis, Mo."
"ASSISTANT SURGEON-GENERAL'S OFFICE"
"ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI, March 31, 1863"
"TO J. W. PARISH & CO. (Care C. H. WICKER & CO.),"
"Chicago, Ill.:"
"I am instructed by the Surgeon General to suspend the order I
have given you till further instructions are given from him."
"(Sig.) R. C. WOOD,
Asst. Surgeon General"
In the finding of facts by the Court of Claims, it is said that
it does not appear that this last dispatch was received by the
claimants, though they had knowledge of the notice by oral
information from the Assistant Surgeon General at St. Louis, on the
second day of April.
The sixth finding of fact by the Court of Claims, which is also
important, is thus stated:
"Prior to the delivery to the said Parish of Joseph B. Brown's
letter of March 25, 1863, set forth in finding V, the said Parish
had purchased for delivery under the contract sued on 8,100 tons of
ice; and after the delivery of said letter to him, he set about
purchasing ice for delivery in pursuance of said letter, and
thereafter, and before he was, on the second day of April, 1863,
apprised of the aforesaid order of Surgeon General Hammond, of
March 31, he had purchased or contracted for the purchase of 23,000
tons of ice."
If we add to this that 10,000 tons of this latter purchase was
made at Lake Pepin, on the upper Mississippi River, which was
stored there at the time and which became a total loss, and that
the order of the Surgeon General suspending the order of the
Assistant Surgeon General remained in that condition and has never
been revoked or modified, we have the main elements on which the
case was decided in the court below by dismissing the claimants'
petition.
The petitioners claim to recover the contract price of the
Page 100 U. S. 504
entire 30,000 tons, after deducting what they have been paid and
the reasonable cost of delivering the ice not received by the
government.
The opinion of the Court of Claims found in the record bases the
dismissal of the petition on the ground that the Assistant Surgeon
General, in making the order on claimants for the 30,000 tons of
ice, was acting so wholly without authority that Parish & Co.
had no right to treat it as of any validity or as one which they
were bound to regard. In the argument of the case before us, the
counsel for government abandons this view of the matter, and we
think very properly. We apprehend if the case were reversed and the
United States were suing for damages incurred by a refusal of the
contractors to conform to this order, the amount specified being
needed and not forthcoming, there would be no question of the
validity of the notice of the Assistant Surgeon General.
The office of Surgeon General is one of the distinct or separate
bureaus of the administrative service of the War Department. It has
been found in regard to many of these bureaus and even to the heads
of departments that it is impossible for a single individual to
perform in person all the duties imposed on him by his office.
Hence statutes have been made creating the office of assistant
secretaries for all the heads of departments.
It would be a very singular doctrine, and subversive of the
purposes for which these latter offices were created, if their acts
are to be held of no force until ratified by the principal
secretary or head of department. It was to relieve the overburdened
principal of some part of those duties that the office of assistant
was created. In the immense increase of business in the office of
Surgeon General during the war, similar relief was found necessary,
and the office of Assistant Surgeon General was created.
For the very reason that the prompt exercise of the powers of
the bureau was essential in the field of operations of the army,
the assistant in this case was located at St. Louis, over a
thousand miles from the City of Washington. He was appointed for
the purpose of exercising at that place the functions of the office
of Surgeon General. He was by law the
Page 100 U. S. 505
Assistant Surgeon General. If no virtue attached to his acts
until approved by the Surgeon General in Washington, any inferior
clerk would have answered the purpose as well. It is not intended
to deny that he was subordinate to the chief of his bureau, could
be ordered to do or not to do particular things, and when an order
made by him was disapproved, it might be revoked by that officer.
But until so revoked or disapproved, it was valid, and parties
required to act under it had a right to rely on it.
The order of the 25th of March, made within twenty days after
the contract was signed, was an unequivocal demand under that
instrument that the amount of 30,000 tons, part of an unlimited
quantity which might have been required of the contractor, should
be delivered as therein directed. No one familiar with the climate
and the sources of supply could doubt that, to enable him to
fulfill this demand, made at that season, required promptitude and
diligence in securing the ice. If claimants had failed to have the
amount thus demanded ready for use when required, the officers of
the government would have procured it at any price in the market, a
price which would have been enormously enhanced by this very
demand, and the claimants would have been liable for the difference
between what the government paid under these circumstances and the
price fixed in the agreement. They were therefore under an
imperative necessity to prepare to fulfill this requirement.
Impelled by this necessity, the Court of Claims finds that
between the time they received the order and the second day of
April, when they first learned of its suspension by the Surgeon
General, they purchased over 23,000 tons of ice. They were then
informed not that the order was revoked, but that it was suspended.
It never was revoked. It remained suspended until the time during
which the entire delivery was to be made was passed, and during
that time, 10,000 tons of the ice melted away at Lake Pepin and was
a total loss. As we have already stated, 12,768 tons were delivered
and paid for; 10,000 tons perished by melting. What became of the
7,232 tons neither received by the government nor lost at Lake
Pepin is not disclosed by the record, nor whether claimants
Page 100 U. S. 506
made by selling it to others or lost by it, in that or any other
way.
What are the rights of the parties under these
circumstances?
If claimants intended to treat the matter as a completed
contract to deliver 5,000 tons at St. Louis, 5,000 at Cairo, 10,000
at Memphis, and 10,000 at Nashville, after the order of Brown, and
to hold the government to the contract price for all those amounts,
they should have delivered, or tendered, or offered to deliver, and
demanded payment.
If the order had been revoked instead of suspended, and they
intended to deny the right of the government to revoke it, they
must clearly have offered a delivery to make the government liable.
Had they offered to deliver, and been in condition to deliver, or,
to use the old forms of declaration, if they had shown that they
were ready and willing to deliver after such revocation, it would
still remain a question as to the measure of damages, or rather
whether the government did not have a right to countermand the
order and pay for what it actually received, and the necessary loss
of claimants from the change of the order.
In point of fact, the order was never revoked, but suspended, so
that the claimants could not tell whether it would be revoked or
revived, and they never made, or offered to make, delivery of the
amount demanded by that order. The government did require, accept,
and pay for part of it. The balance was never delivered or
tendered.
Without elaborating the matter, we are of opinion that as the
claimants neither delivered or offered to deliver the remainder,
they cannot recover either the contract price or the profits they
might have made if they had done so. And as the government left the
demand suspended, so that while claimants were compelled to
purchase under the original order, and could not safely dispose of
it while it remained unrevoked, they are entitled to recover what
they paid for the ice that was lost, and what expense they were at
in making the purchase and in keeping it until it was lost. So if
they lost anything on the other ice not purchased at Lake Pepin,
but purchased before they learned of the order of suspension, they
should recover that.
Page 100 U. S. 507
Bulkley v. United
States, 19 Wall. 37, is an analogous case. Bulkley
had contracted to do all the transportation of supplies from Fort
Leavenworth to army posts further west which might be required of
him by the government. He was notified that 1,700,000 pounds would
be needed, and made large preparations to meet this requirement.
The United States did not need half this amount, and the freight
was not delivered to him. He claimed the profits which he would
have made by the terms of the contract if the freight had been
delivered and carried. This Court said he could not recover
profits, but that,
"in making ready to meet the requirements of the notice, he was
subjected to the loss of time, to trouble and expense. He is
entitled to be paid accordingly."
We think the case before us comes within that principle.
Claimants are entitled to the expenses and losses incident to the
preparation to meet the demand of the notice served on them. The
cost of the ice purchased at Lake Pepin and lost, the expense
bestowed upon its care, and the time and expense of making that
purchase, and any sum actually lost in regard to the other 7,232
tons of ice purchased to enable them to meet that requirement, must
form the measure of plaintiffs' recovery. Because these are not
found by the Court of Claims, the judgment of that court will be
reversed and the case remanded, that their damages may be
ascertained and judgment rendered accordingly, and it is
So ordered.