The Act of March 3, 1873, c. 231, 17 Stat. 558, in appropriating
"for increase of compensation for the transportation of mails on
railroad routes," directed the Postmaster General to readjust such
compensation thereafter to be paid "upon the conditions and at the
rate hereinafter mentioned," thereupon providing that the pay per
mile per annum "shall not exceed " certain specified sums graded
according to average weights of mails carried per day, and further
that
"the average weight . . . be ascertained, in every case, by the
actual weighing of the mails for such a number of successive
working days, not less than thirty [by Act of March 3, 1905, c.
1480, 33 Stat. 1082, 1088, increased to ninety] at such times . . .
not less frequently than once in every four years, and the result
be stated and verified in such form and manner, as the Postmaster
General may direct."
Held:
(1) The rates specified are the maxima, and the act leaves it
discretionary with the Postmaster General to fix lower rates in
contracting with railroads. Holmes, J., p.
251 U. S. 329;
Pitney, J., p.
251 U. S.
335.
(2) The aim of the weighing provision is to obtain the daily
average for the year; the "working days" and the weighing days
(whether including Sundays or not) are identical, and inasmuch as
the mileage of seven-day routes now greatly exceeds that of six-day
routes, the Postmaster General, in the exercise of his discretion
over rates, may adopt a general rule to use in all cases the whole
number of days of the weighing period, Sundays included, as a
divisor for obtaining the average weight, instead of omitting
Sundays from the
Page 251 U. S. 327
divisor as was done when the six-day routes predominated.
Holmes, J., p.
251 U. S.
331.
The statute prescribes that the aggregate weight for the
weighing period shall be divided by the number of "working days" --
meaning weekdays -- included in the period, but this is directory
only, so that a failure of the Postmaster General to follow this
method strictly in fixing rates will not render his action void.
Pitney, J., pp.
251 U. S.
335-337.
The provision of the Act of July 12, 1876, c. 179, 19 Stat. 79,
reducing the compensation "ten percentum per annum from the rates
fixed and allowed," and the similar provision of the Act of March
2, 1907, c. 2513, 34 Stat. 1212, refer to the statutory maximum
rates, and did not impair the discretion of the Postmaster General
to fix lower rates. Holmes, J., pp.
251 U. S. 330,
251 U. S. 333;
Pitney, J., p.
251 U. S.
338.
So also of the like provision in the Act of June 17, 1878, c.
259, 20 Stat. 142. Pitney, J., p.
251 U. S.
338.
The former practice of the Postmaster General of allowing the
railroads the full statutory rates and average weights derived
through a divisor excluding Sundays was an exercise of his
discretion in determining the pay, and not an interpretation of the
statutes as requiring that the pay be so determined. Holmes, J., p.
251 U. S.
332.
Rejection by Congress of amendments requiring the divisor to be
the number of weighing days is not an interpretation of the
existing law as forbidding that method. Holmes, J., p.
251 U. S.
333.
Prior to the Act of July 28, 1916, c. 261, 39 Stat. 429,
railroad companies which had not been aided by grants or otherwise
were free to refuse to carry the mails at rates offered. Pitney,
J., p.
251 U. S.
339.
Railroad companies which receive and transport the mails and
accept the compensation with knowledge that it is readjusted under
a rule insisted upon by the Postmaster General, whereby the whole
number of days in the weighing period, including Sundays, is used
as a divisor in obtaining the average weights, cannot afterwards
repudiate their contracts and claim a larger compensation because
the weekday divisor was not employed, as directed by the statute.
Pitney, J., p.
251 U. S.
339.
The same considerations apply to land grant railroads, under
duty to carry the mail at the prices fixed by law, and which by
statute are to receive a certain percentage of the pay authorized
in other cases, it not appearing that the Postmaster General acted
arbitrarily or discriminated against them, or fixed the pay at
noncompensatory amounts. Pitney, J., p.
251 U. S.
340.
53 Ct.Clms. 258 affirmed.
Page 251 U. S. 328
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES announced the judgment of the Court and
delivered the following opinion, concurred in by the CHIEF JUSTICE
and Justices BRANDEIS and CLARKE.
These are claims for compensation for carrying the mails above
the amounts allowed and paid by the Postmaster General. The four
cases are independent of one another,
Page 251 U. S. 329
but as the claims all depend for their validity upon a denial of
the Postmaster General's power to pass a certain order, they may be
considered together. They were rejected by the Court of Claims. The
question shortly stated is this: the pay for carrying the mails is
determined by the average weight carried. To ascertain this
average, the mails are weighed for a certain number of consecutive
days, and for some time before 1907 the total weight was divided by
the number of working days -- if the number of days was
thirty-five, it was divided by thirty, if one hundred and five, by
ninety. But on June 7, 1907, the Postmaster General issued an
order, No. 412,
"that when the weight of mail is taken on railroad routes, the
whole number of days included in the weighing period shall be used
as a divisor for obtaining the average weight per day."
This, of course, diminishes the average weight and therefore the
pay of the railroads. They deny the authority of the Postmaster
General to make the change, and sue for the additional sum that,
under the old practice, they would have received.
The texts to be discussed begin with an Act of 1873, but it
should be observed as furnishing a background for that and the
following statutes that, from the beginning of the government, the
Postmaster General, as the head of a great business enterprise,
always has been entrusted, as he must be, with a wide discretion
concerning what contracts he should make, with whom, and upon what
terms. It is needless to go into the early statutes or to do more
than to refer to Rev.Stats. § 3999, which authorizes him to make
other arrangements if he cannot contract for the carriage of the
mail upon a railway route at a compensation not exceeding the
maximum rates then established, or for what he deems reasonable and
fair. The limitations upon the power were in the interest of the
business, the principal one being that the pay per mile per annum
should not exceed certain rates. Act of June 8, 1872, c. 335, §
221,
Page 251 U. S. 330
17 Stat. 283, 309, Rev. St. § 3998, and § 4002. The language
plainly showed and the decisions have established that the
Postmaster General, if it seemed to him reasonable, could refuse to
pay the maximum and insist upon some lesser rate as a condition of
dealing with a road.
Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway
Co. v. United States, 225 U. S. 640,
225 U. S.
649.
The Act of March 3, 1873, c. 231, 17 Stat. 556, 558,
appropriates five hundred thousand dollars, or so much thereof as
may be necessary, "for increase of compensation for the
transportation of mails on railroad routes upon the conditions and
at the rates hereinafter mentioned." Then, after providing for due
frequency and speed and suitable accommodations for route agents --
matters on which obviously the Postmaster General is the person to
be satisfied -- it enacts that
"the pay per mile per annum shall not exceed the following
rates, namely: on routes carrying their whole length an average
weight of mails per day of two hundred pounds, fifty dollars; five
hundred pounds, seventy-five dollars,"
&c., &c. So far it will be seen that, although the
object is to permit an increase of compensation still the
discretion of the Postmaster General under the earlier acts remains
and that he could decline to pay the maximum rates however
ascertained, or any sum greater that he should deem reasonable. It
is argued, to be sure, that the rates were fixed at the maximum,
and the Act of July 12, 1876, c. 179, 19 Stat. 78, 79, reducing the
compensation "ten percentum per annum from the rates fixed and
allowed," is thought to help the conclusion. But no argument can
obscure the meaning of the words "shall not exceed." The rates were
fixed and reduced in their
maxima, but that was all that
was done with regard to them.
United States v. Atchison, Topeka
& Santa Fe Ry. Co., 249 U. S. 451,
249 U. S. 454. The
question is whether for any reason the control over the
compensation thus undeniably given to him
Page 251 U. S. 331
without imposing any downward limit as to the money rates is
wholly withdrawn from his judgment in the preliminary stage of
determining the basis to which the money rates are to be
applied.
The next words of the statute are:
"The average weight to be ascertained in every case by the
actual weighing of the mails for such a number of successive
working days, not less than thirty at such times"
&c., "and the result to be stated and verified in such form
and manner as the Postmaster General may direct." The pay, it will
be remembered, was to be per mile per annum, and, as it was not
practicable to weigh all the mails throughout the year and so to
find out the total actual weight of the mails and the exact number
of miles that they were carried in the year, the result had to be
arrived at approximately by finding the average weight carried on
days assumed to resemble the other days of the 365. The average to
be reached was not an average for the thirty days, but an average
weight per day for the year. This interpretation is shown to be the
understanding of Congress by the Act of July 12, 1876, c. 179, 19
Stat. 78, 79, which reduces the compensation ten percentum per
annum from the rates fixed and allowed by the Act of 1873 "for the
transportation of mails on the basis of the average weight." This
must mean the average weight for the year concerned. Again, by the
Act of March 3, 1905, c. 1480, 33 Stat. 1082, 1088
"the average weight [
i.e., of course, the average
weight for the year] shall be ascertained by the actual weighing of
the mails for such a number of successive working days not less
than ninety,"
&c., the increase in the number of days manifestly being for
the purpose of more nearly hitting the average for the whole time.
The statutes do not mention the divisor to be used in order to get
the average desired. In 1873, mails were not carried on Sundays
except over a comparatively small proportion of routes, and
therefore six was the fairest single divisor.
Page 251 U. S. 332
Now, on the other hand, it is said that the mileage of the
seven-day routes is much greater than that of the six days.
Therefore, now to weigh for Sundays as well as other days and to
divide by seven is the fairest single rule that can be found.
But it is said that, when an average is directed to be reached
by weighing for, say thirty working days, it is implied that you
are to get the average by using the number of working days on which
the mails were weighed as a divisor, that working days mean week
days, and that, if in fact Sundays are used as working days, the
divisor is not affected, because the statute only contemplated six
for a week. But the supposed implication of the statute disappears
when it is remembered that the average wanted is not the average
for the weighing days only, but the average for the year. It is
plain, too, that whether "working days" be read to mean week days
or the days on which work was done, in fact the statute
contemplates the working days and the weighing days as identical,
and therefore affords no ground for demanding the advantage of a
dividend of seven and a divisor of six, which is what the railroads
want.
Various make-weights are thrown in to help the construction
desired by the roads, but they seem to us insufficient to change
the result that is reached by reading the words. It is said that,
down to 1907, the Post Office Department construed the Acts of 1873
and after as entitling the railroads to the maximum rates for full
service as defined and to the minimum divisors, and that this
construction must be taken to have been adopted in silence by the
later statutes. But the exercise of power in the way deemed just
while the conditions stated to have existed in and after 1873
continued was not a construction, but the exercise of discretion in
determining the amount of pay -- a discretion which, as we have
seen, undeniably was given in the form of a right to regulate
Page 251 U. S. 333
rates, and which therefore there could be no reason for
withholding, beyond the express words of the act at the other end.
It is true that, in 1884, an assistant attorney general gave an
opinion that any departure from the practice would defeat the
intention of the law and cause no little embarrassment, and that,
thereafter, an order made by a previous Postmaster for taking the
number of weighing days as the divisor was revoked. But the letter
of the Postmaster General thus answered merely stated what had been
the practice as to the divisor, and asked whether it was in
violation of law. It did not state that the Post Office considered
itself bound to follow that way. The order that was revoked only
purported to affect seven-day routes, and is of little or no
importance to the question before us now.
It is said that the rate was fixed by the Act of March 2, 1907,
c. 2513, 34 Stat. 1205, 1212, if not before, by a reduction to
"five percentum less than the present rates" on certain routes.
But, as we have stated we understand this to mean a reduction of
the rates fixed by statute -- that is, the maximum rates. We do not
understand it to refer to rates specifically allowed. It is not
likely that Congress considered the latter in detail.
Finally, much is made of the fact that, before the passage of
the Act of March 3, 1905, and again before the passage of the Act
of March 2, 1907, provisos were stricken out that, in effect,
required the divisor to be the number of the weighing days. A
similar thing happened before the passage of the act making
appropriations for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1909. We do not
go into the particulars of these matters, because, whatever may
have been said by individuals, the provisos might as well have been
rejected for the purpose of leaving the choice between the two
divisors to the judgment of the Postmaster General as for any other
reason. On the other hand, we are not disposed to lay much stress
on the fact
Page 251 U. S. 334
that the appropriations by Congress accepted the Postmaster
General's estimates even when it had been notified that the
railroads were dissatisfied with Order No. 412. The Act of March 3,
1875, c. 128, 18 Stat. 340, 341, ordered the Postmaster General to
have the weighing done thereafter by the employees of the Post
Office Department, and to
"have the weights stated and verified to him by said employees
under such instructions as he may consider just to the Post Office
Department, and the railroad companies."
Possibly this might be construed to recognize the power now in
dispute, but this suggestion also we are content to leave on one
side. We also leave unconsidered the great difficulties that the
railroads encounter in the effort to show that their conduct did
not amount to an acceptance of the Postmaster General's terms
within the decision in
New York, New Haven & Hartford R.
Co. v. United States, ante, 251 U. S. 123. The
construction of the statutes disposes of all the cases without the
need of going into further details.
Judgments affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE DAY and MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER dissent. MR.
JUSTICE McREYNOLDS took no part in the decision of the cases.
* The docket titles of these cases are:
Northern Pacific
Railway Company v. United States, No. 109;
Seaboard Air
Line Railway v. United States, No. 132;
New York Central
& Hudson River Railroad Company v. United States, No. 133,
and
Kansas City, Mexico and Orient Railway Company of Texas v.
United States, No. 232.
MR. JUSTICE PITNEY, with whom concurred MR. JUSTICE McKENNA.
I concur in the affirmance of the judgments of the Court of
Claims in these cases, but upon grounds somewhat different from
those expressed in the opinion of MR. JUSTICE HOLMES.
All the claims arose under the law as it stood after the Act of
March 2, 1907, c. 2513, 34 Stat. 1205, 1212, and before that of
July 28, 1916, c. 261, 39 Stat. 412, 429, by which the carriage of
mail matter by the railways was made compulsory. The Act about
which the principal
Page 251 U. S. 335
controversy turns is that of March 3, 1873, c. 231, 17 Stat.
556, 558, the disputed portion of which was carried into § 4002,
Rev.Stats. By it, the Postmaster General was
"authorized and directed to readjust the compensation hereafter
to be paid for the transportation of mails on railroad routes upon
the conditions and at the rates hereinafter mentioned: . . .
Second. That the pay per mile per annum shall not exceed the
following rates, namely: on routes carrying their whole length an
average weight of mails per day of two hundred pounds, fifty
dollars; . . . five thousand pounds, two hundred dollars, and
twenty-five dollars additional for every additional two thousand
pounds, the average weight to be ascertained, in every case, by the
actual weighing of the mails for such a number of successive
working days, not less than thirty at such times, . . . and not
less frequently than once in every four years, and the result to be
stated and verified in such form and manner as the Postmaster
General may direct."
In my opinion, the rates of pay per mile per annum were maximum
rates, and the Postmaster General had a discretion to contract at
less if the railroads agreed; but, under § 210 of the Act of June
8, 1872, c. 335, 17 Stat. 283, 309; Rev.Stats. § 3997, he was under
a duty to arrange the routes into classes according to the size of
the mail, and the speed, frequency, and importance of the service,
"so that each railway company shall receive, as far as practicable,
a proportionate and just rate of compensation, according to the
service performed."
But I think that, in the clause
"the average weight to be ascertained, in every case, by the
actual weighing of the mails for such a number of successive
working days, not less than thirty,"
etc., the words "
successive working days," by proper
interpretation, mean successive week days, and since the aggregate
weight for the weighing period must be subjected to division in
order to ascertain the
Page 251 U. S. 336
average weight per day, it naturally follows that the divisor
should be the same number of "working days" (that is, week days)
that are included in the period. The previous history of the mail
service shows abundant reason for this, and, for more than thirty
years thereafter, the provision was uniformly so construed by the
Department. Upon a large number of the railway routes, mails were
carried six days each week, none being carried on Sunday; while on
other routes they were carried on every day in the week. The
aggregate weight of mails carried was not affected by the frequency
of the service, since the six-day routes carried the Sunday
accumulations on Mondays. This explains why a certain number of
"working days" (week days) was made the measure of the weighing
period, and at the same time shows that the week day divisor was
necessary in order to deal equitably with both the six-day and the
seven-day routes. From the passage of the Act of 1873 down to the
promulgation of Order No. 412 in the year 1907, the practice of the
Department was in accord with the above interpretation. It was
explained in a communication from the Postmaster General to the
Senate January 21, 1885, Senate Ex.Doc. No. 40, 48th Cong., 2d
Sess., p. 68:
"The present rule is, on those roads carrying the mails six
times a week, to weigh the mails on thirty consecutive days on
which the mails are carried, which would cover a period of
thirty-five days; dividing the aggregate thirty weighings by thirty
will give the daily average. On those roads carrying the mails
seven times per week, the weighing is done for thirty-five
consecutive days (including Sundays), and the aggregate divided by
thirty for a basis of pay. It is evident that the period during
which the weighing is continued covers, in both cases, all the
mails carried for thirty-five days. If, in the second case, we
should take our basis from an average obtained by dividing the
aggregate weight by thirty-five, we should commit the absurdity of
putting a
Page 251 U. S. 337
premium upon inefficiency, for evidently if the Sunday train
were cut off, we should virtually have the same mails less
frequently carried, and therefore with a higher daily average, and
therefore a higher pay basis than in the case where the seventh
train was run and the greater accommodation rendered. The present
method gives no additional pay for the additional seventh train,
but the other method would cause a reduction on account of better
service, and practically would operate as a fine on all those roads
carrying the mails daily, including Sunday."
The Act of March 3, 1905, c. 1480, 33 Stat. 1082, 1088, changed
the minimum weighing period so as to require the inclusion of at
least ninety, instead of thirty, successive working days, but made
no other change. Under this act, 105 calendar days necessarily were
included in the weighing period in order to take in 90 successive
working days. In my opinion, this act, like that of 1873, by fair
construction required that the week day divisor be employed. And so
it was officially construed until 1907.
But, while I regard this method of determining the average
weight to have been prescribed, and not left to the discretion of
the Postmaster General, still I think the statute in this respect
was only directory, and not mandatory. Considering the provision in
its relation to the context and subject matter, it will be seen to
be but an aid to the making of fair contracts within the maximum
rates allowed, and an aid to the Postmaster General in fixing the
rate of compensation upon land grant routes, and in so arranging
routes that each railway company shall receive a proportionate and
just rate of compensation according to the service performed.
Hence, it seems to me that a failure strictly to comply with the
prescribed method of ascertaining the average weight did not, of
itself, render the action of the Postmaster General
ultra
vires and void.
Page 251 U. S. 338
The principal controversy in the present cases is over his Order
No. 412 (June 7, 1907), which provided:
"That when the weight of mail is taken on railroad routes the
whole number of days included in the weighing period shall be used
as a divisor for obtaining the average weight per day."
While I regard it as embodying an erroneous view of the statute,
this is not sufficient, in my opinion, to vitiate a contract
voluntarily made by a railway mail carrier based upon a calculation
of average weight made and known to have been made in conformity
with the order. All the present claims originated after the
promulgation of the order, and arose out of the carriage of mails
under arrangements made with the Postmaster General after express
notice of its provisions.
It is contended that, although the Act of 1873 (Rev.Stats. U.S.
§ 4002), in providing that the pay per mile per annum should "not
exceed" the specified rates, conferred upon the Postmaster General
a discretion to pay less rates, this was modified by the language
of the Act of July 12, 1876, c. 179, 19 Stat. 78, 79, which reduced
the compensation ten percentum from "
the rates fixed and
allowed [by the Act of 1873] for the transportation of mails
on the basis of the average weight;" by that of the Act of June 17,
1878, c. 259, 20 Stat. 140, 142, where, however, the expression
is
"by reducing the compensation to all railroad companies for the
transportation of mails five percentum per annum from the rates for
the transportation of mails,
on the basis of the average weight
fixed and allowed,"
etc., or by the provision of the Act of March 2, 1907, c. 2513,
34 Stat. 1205, 1212, readjusting compensation on railroad routes
carrying an average weight per day exceeding five thousand
pounds,
"by making the following changes in the present rates per mile
per annum for the transportation of mail on such routes, and
hereafter the rates on such routes shall be as
follows,"
etc. I am not convinced that these amendments, or any of them,
had
Page 251 U. S. 339
the effect of impliedly repealing that part of the Act of 1873
(Rev.Stats. U.S. § 4002) "shall not exceed," etc., from which
alone, in my view, the Postmaster General derived any serviceable
discretion about readjusting the compensation.
Therefore, he still had liberty of action within the maximum
rates prescribed. And the railroad companies, other than such as
had been aided by grants of lands or otherwise, were free to carry
the mails at rates offered, or refuse them, as they chose.
Eastern R. Co. v. United States, 129 U.
S. 391,
129 U. S. 396;
Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Ry. v. United States,
225 U. S. 640,
225 U. S. 650;
Delaware, Lackawanna & Western R. Co. v. United
States, 249 U. S. 385,
249 U. S. 388;
New York, New Haven & Hartford R. Co. v. United States,
ante, 251 U. S. 123.
Furthermore, by § 212 of the Act of June 8, 1872, c. 335, 17
Stat. 283, 309; Rev.Stats. § 3999, if, because of the refusal of
the railway companies, the Postmaster General was unable to make
contracts at a compensation "not exceeding the maximum rates," or
for what he deemed a reasonable and fair compensation, he was at
liberty to use other means of carriage.
From the findings of the Court of Claims, it appears that in all
of these cases there were express contracts, and I concur in the
view of that court (53 Ct.Cls. 258, 308, 315, 318, 319) that the
contracts arose not out of the Distance Circular, in which the
Postmaster General specially called notice to Order No. 412, and to
which some of the claimants responded with protests, more or less
explicit, that they would not be bound by that order, but arose out
of what subsequently happened. The Postmaster General in every case
informed the protesting carriers that he would not enter into
contract with any railroad company excepting it from the operation
of any postal law or regulation. The mails were weighed and the
average weight ascertained in accordance with Order No.
Page 251 U. S. 340
412, as all the claimants had been notified would be done;
thereafter, the Postmaster General, upon the basis of the weight
thus ascertained, caused the maximum statutory rate to be
calculated, issued orders naming certain amounts thus arrived at as
the compensation for the service, and gave notice in proper form to
the carriers specifying in terms the readjusted pay that would be
allowed, "subject to future orders and to fines and deductions."
Thereafter, the carriers received and transported the mails as
offered, periodically accepted compensation in accordance with the
readjustment notices, and proceeded thus without further objection
or protest until the end of the respective quadrennial periods. In
short, although in some cases they declared they would not consent
to the ascertainment of average weights on the basis of Order No.
412, they did not insist upon their objection in the face of the
Postmaster General's declaration that he would not accede to it.
Had they refused to carry the mails on the terms proposed, he might
have exercised his discretion as to the rate of pay per mile, so
that, instead of agreeing to give them, as he did, the maximum pay
based on the average weight ascertained under Order No. 412, he
might have acceded to their contention by employing the week day
divisor, but have carried into effect his own view as to the amount
that ought to be allowed by reducing the rate of pay per mile. Or,
as already shown, he might have refused to make the contracts, and
have proceeded under § 3999.
I deem it clear, therefore, that the claimants in fact accepted
the Postmaster General's offers as contained in the readjustment
notices by proceeding to perform the prescribed service in
accordance therewith and accepting the compensation due to them
therefor. And so the Court of Claims held, 53 Ct.Clms. 258, 308,
313, 315, 318, 319.
Some of the routes of the Seaboard Air Line and of the Northern
Pacific Railway Company were over lines that had been aided by
government land grants, and hence
Page 251 U. S. 341
were subject to provisions of law summed up in § 214 of the Act
of June 8, 1872, Rev.Stats. U.S. § 4001, by which they were obliged
to
"carry the mail at such prices as Congress may by law provide;
and, until such price is fixed by law, the Postmaster General may
fix the rate of compensation."
The Seaboard Air Line makes no point of this, but in behalf of
the Northern Pacific it is contended that claimant, not being in
the position of a free agent, ought not to be regarded as having
voluntarily accepted the terms proposed by the Postmaster General.
But the effect of the findings is that it did so accept, and this
result cannot be overturned by raising an argument about the
circumstances that went to make up the evidence upon which the
findings were based, and the present contention amounts to no more
than this.
Were it otherwise, nevertheless it appears that Congress had not
provided the compensation for the land grant routes, except that it
had authorized and directed the Postmaster General to readjust all
railway mail pay in the manner set forth in § 4002 and within the
maxima prescribed therein and in the amendatory acts of 1876, 1878,
and 1907, above mentioned, and had provided by § 13 of the Act of
July 12, 1876, c. 179, 19 Stat. 78, 82,
"That railroad companies whose railroad was constructed in whole
or in part by a land grant made by Congress on the condition that
the mails should be transported over their road at such price as
Congress should by law direct shall receive only eighty percentum
of the compensation authorized by this Act,"
besides other legislation concerning the land grant routes that
may be referred to, but need not be recited. Acts of March 2, 1907,
c. 2513, 34 Stat. 1205, 1212; May 12, 1910, c. 230, 36 Stat. 355,
362; July 28, 1916, c. 261, 39 Stat. 412, 426. Assuming, therefore,
that there was no contract affecting the land grant lines of the
Northern Pacific, their compensation must be at the rate fixed by
the Postmaster General in the exercise
Page 251 U. S. 342
of the power and discretion conferred upon him by this
legislation, and so long as he exercised this power and discretion
reasonably, not fixing a noncompensatory rate or otherwise acting
arbitrarily, the carrier was concluded by his action. There is no
finding that he acted arbitrarily; on the contrary, he had in
support of Order 412 a considered opinion of the Attorney General
under date September 27, 1907 (26 Ops.Atty.Gen. 390), and, so far
as appears, he treated the land grant routes like others, not
reducing them below the eighty percentum contemplated by § 13 of
the Act of 1876 or otherwise violating the statutes. There is no
finding nor any contention that the amounts allowed them were not
compensatory, and, upon the whole, it seems to me that, although he
erred in failing to apply the week day divisor to the weighings,
this did not render the readjustment based thereon wholly void or
permit the carrier, after transporting the mails and accepting the
stated compensation without further objection, afterwards to treat
the readjustment orders as nullities.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA concurs in this opinion.