1. A demurrer to a petition in the Court of Claims admits facts
well pleaded, but not allegations amounting to conclusions of law.
P.
294 U. S.
324.
2. A gold certificate certifying that there have been deposited
in the Treasury of the United States a stated number of dollars
payable to the bearer on demand, and which is legal tender for
public and private debts, is not a warehouse receipt or a contract
for a certain amount of gold as a commodity, but is currency. P.
294 U. S.
326.
3.
Quaere, whether the issue of a gold certificate
creates an express contract upon which the United States may be
sued in the Court of Claims under Jud.Code, § 145. P.
294 U. S.
327.
4. The Court of Claims cannot entertain a claim for nominal
damages. P.
294 U. S.
327.
5. Congress has complete authority over the currency system,
including authority to provide that all gold bullion, gold coin,
and gold certificates outstanding shall be taken over by the
Government. P.
294 U. S.
328.
6. Assuming that the holder of a gold certificate who, prior to
the devaluation of the dollar, was required under the Emergency
Banking Act and Treasury orders to deliver the certificate to the
Treasury, was entitled, by its terms, to receive the amount of the
certificate in gold coin of the then existing standard of weight
and fineness, it cannot be said that, in being obliged to accept
payment, dollar for dollar, in legal tender currency not redeemable
in gold, he suffered any actual loss, since, if the gold coin had
in fact been paid him, he could not have held it or dealt in it
(having no license), but would have been compelled to surrender it
to the Treasury for the same number of currency dollars. P.
294 U. S.
328.
7. In a suit in the Court of Claims for damages claimed to have
been caused by refusal of the Government, on January 17, 1933, to
pay a gold certificate in gold coin, and substitution of other
currency, dollar for dollar, an allegation that gold was of a value
of $33.43 per ounce necessarily involves a conclusion of law,
since, under applicable legislative requirements, there was not on
that
Page 294 U. S. 318
date a free market for gold in the United States, or any market
for the gold coin claimed, or any right for person unlicensed to
dispose of it abroad. P.
294 U. S.
329.
Question answered " No."
Response to questions propounded by the Court of Claims arising
out of a claim based on gold certificates.
Page 294 U. S. 323
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE HUGHES delivered the opinion of the Court.
The facts certified by the Court of Claims may be thus
summarized: plaintiff brought suit as owner of gold certificates of
the Treasury of the United States of the nominal amount of
$106,300. He alleged that defendant, by these gold certificates and
under the applicable acts of Congress, had certified that there had
been deposited in the Treasury of the United States $106,300 in
gold coin which would be paid to the claimant, as holder, upon
demand; that, at the time of the issue of these certificates, and
to and including January 17, 1934, a dollar in gold consisted of
25.8 grains of gold, nine-tenths fine; that claimant was entitled
to receive from defendant one ounce of gold for each $20.67 of the
gold certificates; that, on January 17, 1934, he duly presented the
certificates and demanded their redemption by the payment of gold
coin to the extent above mentioned; that, on that date, and for
some time prior and subsequent thereto, an ounce of gold was of the
value of at least $33.43, and that claimant was accordingly
entitled to receive, in redemption, 5,104.22 ounces of gold of the
value of $170,634.07; that the demand was refused; that, in view of
the penalties imposed under the order of the Secretary of the
Treasury, approved by the President, on January 15, 1934,
supplementing the order of December 28, 1933, and the laws and
regulations under which those orders were issued, which the
claimant alleged were unconstitutional as constituting a
deprivation of property without due process of law, claimant
delivered the gold certificates to defendant under protest and
received in exchange currency of the United States in the sum of
$106,300 which was not redeemable
Page 294 U. S. 324
in gold, and that, in consequence,7 claimant was damaged in the
sum of $64,334.07, for which, with interest, judgment was
demanded.
Defendant demurred to the petition upon the ground that it did
not state a cause of action against the United States.
The questions certified by the court are as follows:
"1. Is an owner of gold certificates of the United States,
Series of 1928, not holding a Federal license to acquire or hold
gold coins or gold certificates, who, on January 17, 1934, had
surrendered his certificates to the Secretary of the Treasury of
the United States under protest and had received therefor legal
tender currency of equivalent face amount, entitled to receive from
the United States a further sum inasmuch as the weight of a gold
dollar was 25.8 grains, nine-tenths fine, and the market price
thereof on January 17, 1934, was in excess of the currency so
received?"
"2. Is a gold certificate, Series of 1928, under the facts
stated in question 1, an express contract of the United States in
its corporate or proprietary capacity which will enable its owner
and holder to bring suit thereon in the Court of Claims?"
"3. Do the provisions of the Emergency Banking Act of March 9,
1933, and the Order of the Secretary of the Treasury dated December
28, 1933, requiring the plaintiff as owner of gold certificates as
stated in question 1 to deliver the same to the Treasury of the
United States in exchange for currency of an equivalent amount, not
redeemable in gold, amount to a taking of property within the
meaning of the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution of the United
States?"
Defendant's demurrer, which admitted the facts well pleaded in
the petition, did not admit allegations which amounted to
conclusions of law in relation to the nature of the gold
certificates or the legal effect of the legislation
Page 294 U. S. 325
under which they were issued, held, or to be redeemed.
Dillon v.
Barnard, 21 Wall. 430,
88 U. S. 437;
United States v. Ames, 99 U. S. 35,
99 U. S. 45;
Inter-State Land Co. v. Maxwell Land Grant Co.,
139 U. S. 569,
139 U. S.
577-578;
Equitable Life Assurance Society v.
Brown, 213 U. S. 25,
213 U. S.
43.
Gold certificates were authorized by § 5 of the Act of March 3,
1863 (12 Stat. 709, 711), which provided that the Secretary of the
Treasury might receive "deposits of gold coin and bullion" and
issue certificates therefor "in denominations of not less than
twenty dollars each, corresponding with the denominations of the
United States notes." The coin and bullion so deposited were to be
retained in the Treasury for the payment of the certificates on
demand. It was further provided that
"certificates representing coin in the treasury may be issued in
payment of interest on the public debt, which certificates,
together with those issued for coin and bullion deposited, shall
not at any time exceed twenty percentum beyond the amount of coin
and bullion in the treasury."
See R.S. § 254, 31 U.S.C. § 428. Section 12 of the Act
of July 12, 1882 (22 Stat. 165) contained a further provision
authorizing the Secretary of the Treasury "to receive deposits of
gold coin" and to issue certificates therefor, also in
denominations of dollars as stated. The Act of March 14, 1900 (31
Stat. 45) prescribed that the dollar
"consisting of twenty-five and eight-tenths grains of gold
nine-tenths fine, . . . shall be the standard unit of value, and
all forms of money issued or coined by the United States shall be
maintained at a parity of value with this standard, and it shall be
the duty of the Secretary of the Treasury to maintain such
parity."
Section 6 of that act also authorized the Secretary of the
Treasury to receive deposits of gold coin and to issue gold
certificates therefor, and provided that the coin so deposited
should be held by the Treasury for the payment of such certificates
on demand, and should be "used for no other purpose."
Page 294 U. S. 326
And the latter clause appears in the amending Acts of March 4,
1907 (34 Stat. 1289), and of March 2, 1911 (36 Stat. 965).
See 31 U.S.C. § 429.
The Act of December 24, 1919 (41 Stat. 370), made gold
certificates, payable to bearer on demand, "legal tender in payment
of all debts and dues, public and private." And § 2 of the Joint
Resolution of June 5, 1933 (48 Stat. 113), amending the Act of May
12, 1933, § 43(b)(1) (48 Stat. 52), provided that
"all coins and currencies of the United States . . . theretofore
or hereafter coined or issued, shall be legal tender for all debts,
public and private, public charges, taxes, duties, and dues."
Gold certificates under this legislation were required to be
issued in denominations of dollars, and called for the payment of
dollars. [
Footnote 1] These
gold certificates were currency. They were not less so because the
specified number of dollars were payable in gold coin of the
coinage of the United States. Being currency, and constituting
legal tender, it is entirely inadmissible to regard the gold
certificates as warehouse receipts. [
Footnote 2] They were not contracts
Page 294 U. S. 327
for a certain quantity of gold as a commodity. They called for
dollars, not bullion.
We may lay on one side the question whether the issue of
currency of this description created an express contract upon which
the United States has consented to be sued under the provisions of
§ 145 of the Judicial Code, 28 U.S.C. § 250.
Compare Horowitz
v. United States, 267 U. S. 458,
267 U. S. 461.
[
Footnote 3] We may assume that
plaintiff's petition permits an alternative view. Plaintiff urges
as the gist of his contention that, by the acts of Congress and the
orders thereunder requiring the delivery of his gold certificates
to the Treasury in exchange for currency not redeemable in gold, he
has been deprived of his property, and that he is entitled to
maintain this action to recover the just compensation secured by
him by the Fifth Amendment. But, even in that view, the Court of
Claims has no authority to entertain the action, if the claim is,
at best, one for nominal damages. The Court of Claims "was not
instituted to try such a case."
Grant v.
United States, 7 Wall. 331,
74 U. S. 338;
Marion & Rye v. R.V. Ry. Co. v. United States,
270 U. S. 280,
270 U. S. 282.
Accordingly, we inquire whether the case which the plaintiff
presents is one which would justify the recovery of actual
damages.
By § 3 of the Emergency Banking Relief Act of March 9, 1933 (48
Stat. 2), amending § 11 of the Federal Reserve Act (39 Stat. 752),
the Secretary of the Treasury was authorized, whenever in his
judgment it was necessary
Page 294 U. S. 328
"to protect the currency system of the United States," to
require all persons "to pay and deliver to the Treasurer of the
United States any or all gold coin, gold bullion, and gold
certificates" owned by them. Upon such delivery, the Secretary was
to pay therefor "an equivalent amount of any other form of coin or
currency coined or issued under the laws of the United States."
Under that statute, orders requiring such delivery, except as
otherwise expressly provided, were issued by the Secretary on
December 28, 1933, and January 15, 1934. By the latter, gold coin,
gold bullion, and gold certificates were required to be delivered
to the Treasurer of the United States on or before January 17,
1934. It was on that date that plaintiff made his demand for gold
coin in redemption of his certificates and delivered the
certificates under protest. That compulsory delivery, he insists,
constituted the "taking of the contract," for which he demands
compensation.
Plaintiff explicitly states his concurrence in the government's
contention that the Congress has complete authority to regulate the
currency system of the country. He does not deny that, in
exercising that authority, the Congress had power "to appropriate
unto the Government outstanding gold bullion, gold coin, and gold
certificates." Nor does he deny that the Congress had authority "to
compel all residents of this country to deliver unto the Government
all gold bullion, gold coins and gold certificates in their
possession." These powers could not be successfully challenged.
Knox v. Lee,
12 Wall. 457;
Juilliard v. Greenman, 110 U.
S. 421;
Ling Su Fan v. United States,
218 U. S. 302;
Norman v. Baltimore & Ohio R. Co., ante, p.
294 U. S. 240. The
question plaintiff presents is thus simply one of "just
compensation."
The asserted basis of plaintiff's claim for actual damages is
that, by the terms of the gold certificates, he was
Page 294 U. S. 329
entitled, on January 17, 1934, to receive gold coin. It is plain
that he cannot claim any better position than that in which he
would have been placed had the gold coin then been paid to him.
But, in that event, he would have been required, under the
applicable legislation and orders forthwith to deliver the gold
coin to the Treasury. Plaintiff does not bring himself within any
of the stated exceptions. He did not allege in his petition that he
held a federal license to hold gold coin, and the first question
submitted to us by the Court of Claims negatives the assumption of
such a license. Had plaintiff received gold coin for his
certificates, he would not have been able, in view of the
legislative inhibition, to export it or deal in it. Moreover, it is
sufficient in the instant case to point out that, on January 17,
1934, the dollar had not been devalued. Or, as plaintiff puts it,
"at the time of the presentation of the certificates by petitioner,
the gold content of the United States dollar had not been
deflated," and the provision of the Act of March 14, 1900,
supra, fixing that content at 25.8 grains, nine-tenths
fine, as the standard unit of money with which "all forms of money
issued or coined by the United States" were to be maintained at a
parity, was "still in effect." The currency paid to the plaintiff
for his gold certificates was then on a parity with that standard
of value. It cannot be said that, in receiving the currency on that
basis, he sustained any actual loss.
To support his claim, plaintiff says that, on January 17, 1934,
"an ounce of gold was of the value at least of $33.43." His
petition so alleged, and he contends that the allegation was
admitted by the demurrer. But the assertion of that value of gold
in relation to gold coin in this country, in view of the applicable
legislative requirements, necessarily involved a conclusion of law.
Under those requirements, there was not, on January 17, 1934, a
free market for gold in the United States, or any market
Page 294 U. S. 330
available to the plaintiff for the gold coin to which he claims
to have been entitled. Plaintiff insists that gold had an intrinsic
value, and was bought and sold in the world markets. But plaintiff
had no right to resort to such markets. By reason of the quality of
gold coin, "as a legal tender and as a medium of exchange,"
limitations attached to its ownership, and the Congress could
prohibit its exportation and regulate its use.
Ling Su Fan v.
United States, supra.
The first question submitted by the Court of Claims is answered
in the negative. It is unnecessary to answer the second question.
And, in the circumstances shown, the third question is academic,
and also need not be answered.
Question No. 1 is answered "No."
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS, MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER, MR. JUSTICE
SUTHERLAND and MR. JUSTICE BUTLER, dissent.
See post, p.
294 U. S.
361.
*
See note, p. 240.
[
Footnote 1]
The form of the gold certificates here in question is stated to
be as follows:
"This certifies that there have been deposited in the Treasury
of"
"
THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA"
"
ONE THOUSAND DOLLARS"
"in gold coin payable to the bearer on demand."
"This certificate is a legal tender in the amount thereof in
payment of all debts and dues public and private."
On the reverse side appear the following words:
"
THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA"
"
ONE THOUSAND DOLLARS"
[
Footnote 2]
The description of gold certificates in the reports of the
Secretary of the Treasury, to which allusion was made in the
argument at bar, could in no way alter their true legal
characteristics. Reports for 1926, p. 80; 1930, pp. 29, 604, 607;
1933, p. 375.
[
Footnote 3]
The point was not determined in
United States v. State
Bank, 96 U. S. 30,
96 U. S. 36, upon
which plaintiff relies. The Court there decided that,
"where the money or property of an innocent person has gone into
the coffers of the nation by means of a fraud to which its agent
was a party, such money or property cannot be held by the United
States against the claim of the wronged and injured party."
The Court said that the basis of the liability was "an implied
contract" by which the United States might well become bound in
virtue of its corporate character. Its sovereignty was "in nowise
involved."