Section 5 of the War Minerals Relief Act of March 2, 1919,
authorizing the Secretary of the Interior to pay such net losses
"as have been suffered" in producing or preparing to produce
certain minerals, etc., does not include interest paid or accrued
after the date of the Act.
Cf. Wilbur v. United States,
284 U. S. 231. Pp.
289 U. S.
513-515.
61 App.D.C. 324, 62 F 2d 863, reversed.
Certiorari to review the reversal of a judgment denying a writ
of mandamus.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The claim of the Chestatee Pyrites & Chemical Corporation
for compensation under the War Minerals Relief Act, March 2, 1919,
c. 94, § 5, 40 Stat. 1272, 1274, is here for the fourth time.
[
Footnote 1] Before the World
War, the company
Page 289 U. S. 511
owned a pyrites mine. In 1918, it made extensive enlargements of
its plant at the request of the Secretary of the Interior. As
hostilities ceased soon thereafter, the undertaking resulted in a
large loss. Prior to 1922, it made applications for relief from the
losses suffered. These applications resulted in awards aggregating
$737,765.24. Of this amount, $223,529.17 was paid by the government
on October 25, 1919; $469,784.62 on October 5, 1922, and $44,451.45
on March 14, 1932. [
Footnote
2]
The demand now presented is for the further sum of $524,276.43,
alleged to have been due December 31, 1931, and for additional
amounts which cannot be stated definitely because they are accruing
daily. These sums, claimed as items of loss, represent interest
paid or accrued since March 2, 1919, on a contract to repay with
interest $645,000 borrowed by the corporation in 1918, mainly in
order to pay for enlarging the plant. [
Footnote 3] In 1922, the Secretary had, in calculating
losses suffered, refused to allow any sum paid for interest on
borrowed money. The corporation thereupon sought, by mandamus, to
compel the award of interest. In that proceeding, this Court held,
in 1925, that mandamus must be denied because the Act made the
determination of the Secretary conclusive. [
Footnote 4]
Work v. U.S. ex rel.
Chestatee Pyrites & Chemical Corp.,
Page 289 U. S. 512
267 U. S. 185. The
proceeding at bar is a second petition for mandamus, filed pursuant
to an amendment of the Act made February 13, 1929, c. 182, 45 Stat.
1166, which authorized a claimant thereunder to
"petition the Supreme Court of the District Court of Columbia to
review the final decision of the Secretary of the Interior upon any
question of law which has arisen or which may hereafter arise in
the adjustment, liquidation, and payment of his claim under said
Acts."
The corporation sought in the second petition for mandamus, as
in the first, to compel the Secretary to consider, in determining
the amount of net losses, interest payable on borrowed money. The
trial court denied the mandamus. Its judgment was reversed by the
District Court of Appeals, 60 App.D.C. 62, 47 F.2d 424, and, in
sustaining the reversal in
Wilbur v. United States,
284 U. S. 231,
284 U. S.
237-238, we said:
"The amount of interest that, at the time of the passage of the
Relief Act, March 2, 1919, had been paid or incurred by relator for
money borrowed and lost in producing and preparing to produce
pyrites upon the specified conditions, is to be taken into account
in determining the amount of its net loss as of that date."
Thereupon, the Secretary made an award of $44,451.45, this
amount being, as stated by him,
"the amount of interest that, at the time of the passage of the
act of Congress of March 2, 1919, had been paid on the obligations
incurred by the relator for money borrowed and lost in producing
and preparing to produce pyrites . . . and preparing to produce
pyrites . . . , and for which, in justice and equity, the relator
was entitled to receive reimbursement. . . ."
The corporation insists that there should, as stated, be allowed
as part of its net loss, on account of interest payable on borrowed
money, the further sum of $524,276.43, and also additional amounts
which cannot be
Page 289 U. S. 513
definitely stated now. The $524,276.43 represents interest paid
or accrued between March 2, 1919, and December 31, 1931, growing
out of obligations for borrowed money outstanding March 2, 1919.
The claim for additional unascertained amounts represents the
interest which has accrued on those obligations since December 31,
1931, plus that which will accrue hereafter on such parts thereof
as may, from time to time, be outstanding. To enforce this demand,
the corporation secured a rule upon the Secretary to show cause why
he had not complied with the decree entered pursuant to our
decision in the
Wilbur case. The Secretary averred that he
had fully complied therewith by allowing all interest paid or
accrued to March 2, 1919, and that this was all the interest
"for which, in justice and equity, the relator was entitled to
receive reimbursement from the appropriation made by Congress for
the payment of such losses."
The District Court sustained the position of the Secretary. Its
judgment was reversed by the Court of Appeals of the District, 61
App.D.C. 324, 62 F.2d 863. This Court granted certiorari, 289 U.S.
715. We think the District Court was right.
First. The corporation contends that, in computing
losses which "have been suffered" as of March 2, 1919, no
distinction can be drawn between the principal of the loan and the
interest thereon; that, as the amount of the principal was included
without question in ascertaining the loss as of March 2, 1919,
although the loan was not then due, the amount of the interest
should similarly be included, whether it had been paid or had
accrued as of that date or had accrued later. The argument rests
upon a misconception.
Congress did not authorize or direct the Secretary of the
Interior to pay any loan of a claimant. Section 5 of the War
Minerals Relief Act, March 2, 1919, authorized
Page 289 U. S. 514
the Secretary to
"adjust, liquidate, and pay such net losses as have been
suffered by any person, firm, or corporation by reason of producing
or preparing to produce . . . pyrites . . . in compliance with the
request or demand of the Department of the Interior . . . to supply
the urgent needs of the Nation in the prosecution of the war.
[
Footnote 5]"
The $645,000 capital raised by the loan, like some other capital
of the corporation, was wiped out by the deficit in operation and
the shrinkage of capital assets. And, for the loss thus sustained,
the corporation was reimbursed by the payments under the award
made. The cost to the corporation of carrying the loan after March
2, 1919, was not part of the net losses which had "been
suffered."
The method of determining the net losses in such businesses
during a particular period, or in a particular adventure, is well
settled. [
Footnote 6] The net
losses consist of any deficit from operations, plus any shrinkage
in value of the plant investment. In calculating the loss for a
period, it is immaterial whether items entered as operating expense
or as investment have been paid, or are still owed for. If the
capital employed by the corporation during the period, whether
owned or borrowed, was sunk, its loss
Page 289 U. S. 515
will necessarily be reflected either in the deficit from
operations or in the shrinkage in value of the capital assets. In
calculating the operating deficit during the period ending March 2,
1919, interest paid or accrued on the borrowed capital was treated
as an operating charge. Interest accruing thereafter on any loan
then outstanding is comparable to the cost of caring, after that
date, for property retained -- or to a lessening, after that date,
of the value of that property. Such items enter into the
determination of the losses of a later period, and with these the
government has no concern. Hence, the Secretary property refused to
consider interest accrued after March 2, 1919, in calculating
losses during the period ending that day.
Second. The corporation insists that the Act should be
construed as requiring the Secretary to include as an item in the
loss suffered before March 2, 1919, all interest thereafter
accruing on an "obligation incurred" before that date. It argues
that a liberal construction of the Act requires this conclusion,
United States v. New York, 160 U.
S. 598,
160 U. S. 620,
particularly in view of related legislation. [
Footnote 7] In support of that construction, it
points to provisos of § 5 which declare (1) that "no claim shall be
allowed or paid" by the Secretary "unless it shall appear to the
satisfaction of the said Secretary that the expenditures so made or
obligations so incurred . . . were made in good faith," and (2)
"that moneys were invested or obligations were incurred subsequent
to" April 6, 1917, and
Page 289 U. S. 516
prior to November 11, 1919. [
Footnote 8] These provisos did not, by referring to
obligations "incurred," enlarge the Secretary's authority to "pay
such net losses as have been suffered." On the contrary, their
purpose was to make clear that, where expenditures were alleged,
the Secretary must be satisfied that payment therefor had actually
been made, or that there was a valid agreement to pay therefor.
When this Court stated in the
Wilbur case that, in
determining the loss as of March 2, 1919, there shall be taken into
account "the amount of interest which has been paid or incurred by
relator for money borrowed and lost," the word "incurred" was used
to mean interest accrued on that date, as well as interest paid.
The language of the opinion was correctly construed by the
Secretary when he limited the additional award, on account of
interest, to $44,451.45.
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
See Work v. United States ex rel. Chestatee Pyrites &
Chemical Corp, 267 U. S. 185;
Wilbur v. United States, ex rel. Chestatee Pyrites &
Chemical Corp, 284 U. S. 231,
284 U. S. 237,
284 U. S. 238;
Wilbur v.United States ex rel. Chestatee Pyrites & Chemical
Corp, 288 U. S. 97.
[
Footnote 2]
Since then, two additional awards have been made to the
corporation which are not directly involved in this case. On
December 7, 1932, an award of $1,584.76 was made on account of
taxes. And on February 23, 1933, a further award of $90,500 was
made by the Secretary pursuant to the decision in
Wilbur v.
United States ex rel. Chestatee Pyrites & Chemical Corp.,
288 U. S. 97. The
corporation has thus received awards aggregating $829,850.
[
Footnote 3]
The loans totaled $695,000, but it was found that "$50,000 of
the amount was loaned prior to stimulation."
[
Footnote 4]
The Act declared in § 5:
"The said Secretary shall make such adjustments and payments in
each case as he shall determine to be just and equitable; that the
decision of said Secretary shall be conclusive and final. . .
."
40 Stat. 1274.
[
Footnote 5]
The section was amended November 23, 1921, c. 137, 42 Stat. 322,
by adding
"that all claimants . . . shall be reimbursed such net losses as
they may have incurred and are in justice and equity entitled to
from the appropriation in said Act,"
and,
"if, in claims passed upon under said Act [of March 2, 1919],
awards have been denied or made or rulings contrary to the
provisions of this amendment or through miscalculation, the
Secretary of the Interior may award proper amounts or additional
amounts."
[
Footnote 6]
See, e.g., T. O. McGrath, Mine Accounting and Cost
Principles (1921) pp. 147, 178-179; R. B. Kester, Accounting Theory
and Practice (1918) pp. 487- 488; H. A. Finney, Principles of
Accounting (1931) c. 3, pp. 4-7; W. J. Graham and W. G. Katz,
Accounting in Law Practice (1932) pp. 27-33.
[
Footnote 7]
Act of October 5, 1918, c. 181, 40 Stat. 1009, entitled
"An Act to provide further for the national security and defense
by encouraging the production, conserving the supply, and
controlling the distribution of those ores, metals, and minerals
which have formerly been largely imported, or of which there is or
may be an inadequate supply,"
and Act of June 7, 1924, c. 327, 43 Stat. 634, which removed the
limitation of $8,500,000 as the amount payable in the aggregate on
claims under the Act of March 2, 1919.
[
Footnote 8]
Among the provisos are the following:
"
And provided further, That no claim shall be allowed
or paid by said Secretary unless it shall appear to the
satisfaction of the said Secretary that the expenditures so made or
obligations so incurred by the claimant were made in good faith for
or upon property which contained either manganese, chrome, pyrites,
or tungsten in sufficient quantities to be of commercial
importance:
And provided further, That no claim shall be
paid unless it shall appear to the satisfaction of said Secretary
that moneys were invested or obligations were incurred subsequent
to April sixth, nineteen hundred and seventeen. . . ."