Contractors for the transportation of the mails between New York
and New Orleans, touching at Havana, and between Havana and
Chagres, having subsequently established a direct line between New
York and Chagres, which made the passage between the latter points
in a shorter time, by two days, than the mail ships running under
the contract by way of Havana, consented to take the Chagres and
California mails outward and homeward by the direct steamers,
without requiring from the Post Office Department a prior
stipulation to pay for the extra service, but without precluding
themselves from applying to Congress for such compensation as it
might deem just and reasonable. To this arrangement the Postmaster
General assented, with the understanding that his department did
not thereby become responsible for any additional expense.
Application was made to Congress for equitable relief and an act
passed referring the claim to the Court of Claims, with directions
to examine the same, and determine and adjudge what, if any, amount
was due for extra service.
Held that the Court of Claims
is authorized to adjudge such an allowance as is required
ex
aequo et bono by all the circumstances of the case.
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
Immediately after the conquest of California, the government of
the United States, through its various departments, made
arrangements for the transportation of the mails between that
territory and the Atlantic ports by way of Panama. By an Act of
Congress passed March 3, 1847, it was, amongst other things,
enacted as follows:
"SEC. 4. And be it further enacted that from and immediately
after the passage of this act, it shall be the duty of the
Secretary of the Navy to contract, on the part of the government of
the United States, with A. G. Sloo, of Cincinnati, for the
transportation of the United States mail from New York to New
Orleans
Page 92 U. S. 42
twice a month and back, touching at Charleston (if practicable),
Savannah, and Havana, and from Havana to Chagres and back, twice a
month. The said mail to be transported in at least five steamships
of not less than fifteen hundred tons burden, and propelled by
engines of not less than one thousand horsepower each, to be
constructed under the superintendence and direction of a naval
constructor in the employ of the Navy Department, and to be so
constructed as to render them convertible, at the least possible
expense, into war steamers of the first class, and that the said
steamships shall be commanded by officers of the United States navy
not below the grade of lieutenant, who shall be selected by the
contractor, with the approval and consent of the Secretary of the
Navy, and who shall be suitably accommodated without charge to the
government. Each of said steamers shall receive on board four
passed midshipmen of the United States Navy, who shall serve as
watch officers, and be suitably accommodated without charge to the
government; and each of the said steamers shall also receive on
board and accommodate, without charge to the government, one agent,
to be appointed by the Postmaster General, who shall have charge of
the mails to be transported in said steamers.
Provided the
Secretary of the Navy may, at his discretion, permit a steamer of
not less than six hundred tons burden, and engines in proportion,
to be employed in the mail service herein provided for between
Havana and Chagres;
provided further that the compensation
for said service shall not exceed the sum of $290,000, and that
good and sufficient security be required for the faithful
fulfillment of the stipulations of the contract."
In pursuance of this act, on the 20th of April, 1847, a contract
was made by the Navy Department with Sloo whereby he agreed to
build five naval steamships, capable of being converted to the
purposes of naval warfare, of which four were to be not less than
fifteen hundred tons burden, and one to be not less than six
hundred. The four larger ones were to carry the mails between New
York and New Orleans, touching at Charleston, Savannah, and Havana,
twice a month and back, and the smaller one was to be run from
Havana to Chagres and back twice a month, carrying the mails for
the Pacific. The compensation was to be $290,000 per annum, and the
period of service was to be ten years. The contract, amongst other
things, contained the following provision:
Page 92 U. S. 43
"And it is further agreed by and between the parties aforesaid
that on tender of compensation by the said government of the United
States not exceeding a due proportion of the pay herein stipulated,
the said A. G. Sloo, contractor, shall convey any mail or mails of
the said United States which he may be required to convey on any
steamship which he, the said Sloo, may own, run, or control on the
routes aforesaid beyond the number of trips herein specified."
At the time the mail service between New York and New Orleans
was evidently regarded as the more important, that between Havana
and Chagres being provided for by a branch line served by a single
small vessel twice a month. But after the discovery of gold in
California and the rush thither of emigration and trade, the aspect
of things was greatly changed. The assignees of Sloo (now
represented by the appellants) purchased additional ships and
established a direct line between New York and Chagres which made
the passage two days sooner than was done by the mail ships running
under the contract by way of Havana, and which, therefore, could
start two days later, and on the return arrive two days sooner. By
this means, the private dispatches by the direct line had an
advantage over communication by the mails, and some public
dissatisfaction arose in consequence. Thereupon a correspondence on
the subject ensued between the contractors and the Post Office
Department. The Postmaster of New York having, by direction of the
Postmaster General, laid before George Law, president of the United
States Mail Steamship Company (at that time beneficially interested
in Sloo's contract), a letter complaining of the existing
arrangement, Mr. Law, on the 25th June, 1851, wrote to the
postmaster a letter, in which, amongst other things, he said:
"The mails for California, via Chagres and back, are dispatched
by the mail steamships of this company twice each month, on the
days originally arranged with the department. Being required to go
and return by way of Havana, and to receive and discharge there the
mails from and for New Orleans, Charleston &c., the passage is
usually two days longer than the direct passage to and from Chagres
and this port."
"In addition to the mail steamers, we dispatch also, twice a
Page 92 U. S. 44
month, a steamer from this port and Chagres direct. These leave
here usually two days later than the mail steamers via Havana, so
as to make the arrival at Chagres at about the same time. Of
course, the return steamer, with the mail from Chagres, is usually
two days later in arriving here, coming via Havana, than the
steamer starting at the same time and coming direct. The mail to
and from Chagres will therefore be carried with greater dispatch by
the direct line; while the mails for New Orleans, Charleston
&c., must necessarily be carried by the Havana route. If the
department desires the Chagres and California mails, outward or
homeward, to be sent by the direct steamers, I shall be happy to
direct the commanders of the ships to receive them on board."
This letter was communicated to the Postmaster General, who, in
answer, declared it satisfactory, but intimated his understanding
that the proposed arrangement should make "no difference in respect
to the expense of the service." This intimation was met by a reply
from Mr. Law correcting any such understanding. After explaining
what the mail company proposed to do -- namely, to run their
steamers twice a month each way directly between New York and
Chagres, twice between New York and New Orleans, touching at
Havana, and twice between New Orleans and Chagres -- he said:
"In expressing in my letter of the 25th ultimo the readiness of
this company to instruct the commanders of their steamers, direct
as well as by the way of Havana, to convey the California mails if
desired by the department, it was not my intention to preclude a
claim for reasonable additional compensation for such service.
Although we desire to meet fully the requirements of the service
and the wishes of the department, it is not expected, I presume,
that the mails can be carried outward and homeward six times per
month, with the necessary additional clerks or agents, for the same
sum for which we contract to carry them twice monthly. Still
desirous of promoting to the utmost the interest and convenience of
the public, we are entirely willing to perform the additional
service in the confident expectation that a sense of justice will
induce Congress to make such further provision as may be considered
a suitable compensation for it."
After the receipt of this letter, the Postmaster General, on the
7th of August, 1851, in answer to a letter of the Postmaster of New
York asking whether he should send the mails
Page 92 U. S. 45
by the steamers going direct to Chagres, wrote as follows:
"In answer to your letter of the 7th instant, I have to say that
you will make up and forward mails by Mr. Law's direct steamers to
Chagres -- with this understanding, however, that this department
does not thereby become responsible for any additional
expense."
On the 9th of August, 1851, Marshall O. Roberts, on behalf of
the contractors, informed the Postmaster at New York by letter that
the mails for Chagres, both direct and via Havana, would be carried
by the United States Mail Steamship Company upon the terms and in
the manner theretofore stated to the Post Office Department,
viz., compensation for any extra or additional mail
service to be submitted to Congress without requiring a prior
stipulation to pay from the department. This letter being
transmitted to the Postmaster General, with a request for
directions as to sending the mails by the direct steamers, he
returned a dispatch giving directions to send them.
Upon the footing of this correspondence, the extra service by
the direct steamers was commenced on the 13th of August, 1851.
A temporary suspension of the trips having occurred from some
cause, further correspondence on the subject took place in 1852, in
which the Secretary of the Navy, as well as the Postmaster General,
participated. But the general result was that the matter was left
substantially in the same position as before -- namely that while
the departments declined to make themselves responsible for any
compensation for the extra service, the contractors were to be left
free to apply to Congress for such allowance as it might deem just
and reasonable. The contractors never gave up a claim for an
allowance; but they consented to perform the service in reliance
upon the justice of Congress, and with the distinct understanding
that they should not prefer any claim against the departments. It
is unnecessary to reproduce all the correspondence that ensued. Its
general purport and effect are as stated. Mr. Law, in a letter to
the Postmaster General dated 15th of June, 1852, referred to his
previous letter of July 21, 1851, quoting the passage relating to
compensation, in which he said,
"We are entirely willing to perform the additional service, in
the confident expectation that a sense of justice will induce
Congress
Page 92 U. S. 46
to make such further provision as may be considered a suitable
compensation for it,"
and, to avoid any misunderstanding which might arise from
expressions contained in the Postmaster General's communication, he
adds:
"While it has not been the intention of this company to hold
either of the departments liable, directly or indirectly, for any
additional mail service beyond the conditions of the contract, but
to perform it subject entirely to the decision of Congress, I
desire respectfully to say that I do not feel authorized to place
the company in a position that would preclude it from applying for
or accepting such additional allowance as in the judgment of
Congress might be considered equitable."
Upon this understanding, the service in question continued to be
performed until September, 1859, and no compensation therefor has
ever yet been allowed by Congress, although application has
persistently been made.
From the tenor of this correspondence, it is clear that the
proprietors of the Sloo contract did not rely upon that clause in
it (which has been referred to) providing extra compensation for
conveying mails, when required by the government, on any steamship
which might be run on the routes named in the contract beyond the
number of trips therein specified. Had they relied on this clause,
they would not have relinquished their claim against the department
and consented to look to Congress. Indeed, the service performed by
the steamers running on the direct route between New York and
Chagres or Aspinwall was not embraced in the terms of that
provision. The route was not the same, but a different one. The
question therefore is whether, doing the service they did upon the
footing on which they did it, and supposing it not to be embraced
within the letter of the contract, the contractors are entitled in
law or equity to compensation for that service. The service
performed directly under the contract and within its terms has all
been settled for and the accounts closed. This is specifically
found by the Court of Claims. But the question of this extra
service has never been settled, but is still open and undetermined.
Application, as before stated, was persistently made to Congress
for an equitable allowance, but, for some reason or other, the
subject was always postponed or
Page 92 U. S. 47
delayed until finally, on the 14th of July, 1870, Congress
passed an act entitled "An Act for the relief of the trustees of
Albert G. Sloo," the tenor of which is as follows:
"Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the
United States of America in Congress assembled, that the claim of
the trustees of Albert G. Sloo, for compensation for services in
carrying the United States mails by steamers direct between New
York and Chagres, and New Orleans and Chagres, in addition to the
regular service required under the contract made between the said
Albert G. Sloo and the United States be, and the same is hereby,
referred to the Court of Claims, and the said court is hereby
directed to examine the same and determine and adjudge whether any,
and, if any, what amount is due said trustees for said extra
service; provided that the amount to be awarded by said court shall
be upon the basis of the value of carrying other first-class
freight of like quantity with the mails actually carried between
the same ports at the same time."
In the meantime, several years prior to the passage of this act
(to-wit, in 1866), as soon as the disturbances incident to the
civil war had been allayed, the appellants had presented their
claim before the Court of Claims. But they were met by
embarrassments arising from the peculiar form which their
stipulations with the government had assumed. They had agreed to
submit to the arbitrament of Congress, and Congress had never acted
in their case. Under these circumstances, the act referred to was
passed. The claimants thereupon filed an amended petition, setting
up the act.
The counsel for the government contend, that, whilst this act
might be used to support proceedings commenced after its passage,
it cannot aid proceedings already commenced. We think that under
the peculiar circumstances of this case, its well known history,
and its frequent consideration by Congress itself, the act was
intended to validate the application to the Court of Claims then in
progress and to refer the whole matter to that court. It enacts
that the claim be, and it hereby is, referred to the Court of
Claims, and that the said court is hereby directed to examine the
same, and determine and adjudge &c. The words of that act are
apposite to validate the proceedings already commenced, and, as
those proceedings
Page 92 U. S. 48
had in view the very object sought by the act, it would be a
strain of technicality to turn the claimants out of court, and to
compel them to commence anew.
In view, then, of the circumstances and history of this case,
the correspondence between the parties, and the act of Congress
referred to, what are the rights of the appellants?
If this were a controversy between private parties, we do not
think that there could be a particle of doubt that the contractor
would be entitled to demand compensation upon a
quantum
meruit for the performance of the service in question.
Circumstances arose after the performance of the contract had
commenced, which neither of the parties had anticipated or dreamed
of, requiring an increase in the amount of service and a change in
the manner of performing it which could not be brought under the
literal provisions of the contract. But it was of the greatest
consequence that the service should be performed, and the
contractors, under the exigencies of the case, were willing to
depart from the literal stipulations of the instrument and do the
necessary work, relying upon Congress to provide suitable
compensation. As before said, if this were a controversy between
individuals, there could not be the slightest hesitation on the
subject. It would present a clear case of departure from the terms
of a contract by the mutual consent of the parties and the
performance of extras by the contractor for which he would be
entitled to the reasonable value of the work performed. The service
was performed on one side; it was accepted and received on the
other; and, whilst the agents of the government declined to incur
any specific responsibilities, they agreed that the question of
compensation should be settled between the contractors and their
principal.
This is, in short, the whole case, and whilst as a general thing
it may be true that government ought not to be bound unless
prescribed rules and forms are complied with, yet where a necessary
public service has been performed at the request of the proper
government agents and under the expectation of compensation, and
with reliance upon Congress to fix the amount, and where Congress,
upon application made to it, has referred the matter to the Court
of Claims, we think that that court is authorized to make and
adjudge such an allowance as
Page 92 U. S. 49
is required,
ex aequo et bono, by all the circumstances
of the case.
It is true that Congress did not determine in express terms that
the parties were entitled to any compensation, but referred it to
the court to decide "whether any, and if any what, amount is due."
Still we think it is plain that Congress principally intended to
refer to the adjudication of the Court of Claims the amount of
compensation to which the claimants were entitled, and for that
purpose prescribed the principle by which it should be estimated;
but even if it were intended to refer the whole subject, the right
to compensation as well as the amount the claimants under the
circumstances of the case are in our judgment entitled to
compensation.
The decree is reversed and the record remanded with
directions to proceed according to law and award compensation to
the claimants upon the principles directed by the act of
1870.
MR. JUSTICE SWAYNE, with whom concurred MR. JUSTICE DAVIS and
MR. JUSTICE STRONG, dissenting.
I dissent from the judgment of the Court in this case. In my
opinion, it makes a contract where the parties made none.