A claim against the United States for a part of the money
received from Great Britain in payment of the award made at Geneva
under the Treaty of Washington is both a claim growing out of a
treaty stipulation and a claim dependent upon such stipulation, and
is excluded from the jurisdiction of the Court of Claims by § 1066
Rev.Stat.
These were suits against the United States to recover portions
of the Geneva award. The insurance company sued on
Page 112 U. S. 194
its own account; the plaintiff Paulson, as receiver of the
Columbian Insurance Company. Motions to dismiss for want of
jurisdiction were made in both cases, and were heard together. The
facts making the case are stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER delivered the opinion of the Court in the
case of the Great Western Insurance Company as follows:
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Court of Claims
dismissing a petition for want of jurisdiction. This was not done
on a demurrer or plea, but on the following motion:
"The assistant Attorney General, on behalf of the United States,
moves the court to dismiss the petition in this cause for the
reason that it does not disclose a cause of action within the
jurisdiction of the court."
The motion on hearing was sustained, and it is this judgment of
dismissal we are asked to review.
The petition sets forth that the claimant was an insurance
company engaged in the business of insuring against losses by sea,
and that it insured, in numerous cases, vessels, cargoes, and
freight, owned by citizens of the United States against war risks
during the civil war between the United States and the Confederate
states; that by reason of the losses and destruction of the vessels
and cargoes so insured, inflicted by the Confederate cruisers
Alabama and
Florida, this claimant paid the sum
of $309,635 to the owners of the vessels and cargoes, and that
claimant not only became by law subrogated to rights of such owners
against the parties who caused the loss, but took assignments of
the claims from the losers to itself. The petition then alleges
that the British government, by its laches and unfriendliness in
permitting these cruisers to be built, fitted out, and furnished
with supplies within its dominion,
Page 112 U. S. 195
became responsible for the losses inflicted on the owners of the
vessels and cargoes captured and destroyed by them; that petitioner
placed these claims in the hands of the Secretary of State with the
evidence to prove them against that government. The negotiation,
treaty, and award known as the Alabama Claims Treaty and the Geneva
Award are then set out, with the allegation that the sum now
claimed by petitioner entered into and constituted a part of the
$15,500,000 which was awarded to the United States in satisfaction
of all claims of this character.
It is alleged that the money so awarded was paid to the United
States, by reason of which and certain subsequent dealings with
this money, which was finally paid into the Treasury of the United
States by order of Congress, an implied contract arose on the part
of the defendants to pay to the claimant the amount of the losses
thus set forth, with interest thereon, which is alleged to be over
$500,000. The names of the vessels, and the amounts insured in each
case on vessel, cargo, and freight, are shown by a schedule
attached to the petition. From this it appears that twelve of these
vessels were captured by the
Alabama, and eight by the
Florida. The names of the owners of the vessels, cargoes,
and freight are distinctly set forth, and the amounts paid to
each.
The claimant, in its petition, places the right to recover on
the ground that by virtue of the transactions between this
government and Great Britain, and the receipt by the former of the
money paid by the latter on account of these claims, the United
States became a trustee for the claimant to the amount of its loss,
and liable to pay the same; or, as expressed in another form, the
money was received by the government for the use and benefit of the
petitioner, and when it was paid into the Treasury became indebted
to petitioner for that amount.
The same ground is assumed in the argument of counsel in this
Court, the claim being treated essentially as
indebitatus
assumpsit for money had and received to the use of
plaintiff.
If, therefore, the claim is well "founded on a contract, express
or implied, with the United States" within the meaning
Page 112 U. S. 196
of § 1059 of the Revised Statutes, and is not forbidden by any
other act of Congress, the petition should not have been dismissed;
but if it does not present such an implied contract (for there is
no pretense of an express contract), or if, for any other reason,
the case is one of which the Court of Claims is forbidden to
entertain jurisdiction, then the judgment of dismissal was
correct.
The case has been mainly argued here on the proposition that the
transaction does raise an implied promise on the part of the
government of the United States to pay appellant the amount of
money paid by it on account of the losses inflicted by the Alabama
and Florida, or such proportion of that loss, if it be any less
than the whole, as was covered by the award. And the judgment of
the court below is defended largely upon the ground that no such
legal obligation or contract arises from the transaction.
The opinion of the learned Chief Justice of the Court of Claims
is an able presentation of this view.
But the judgment of that court is also defended on the ground
that whatever may be the moral or the legal obligation of the
government to the appellant growing out of the treaty, the award,
and the receipt of the money, it does not present a case cognizable
in the Court of Claims, both because the acts of Congress creating
the court and conferring its jurisdiction were not intended to
embrace this class of cases, and because they were in express terms
excluded from it.
If this latter proposition be sound, we deem it inappropriate to
express any opinion on the other, because the fund in the Treasury,
paid under the Geneva Award, has been already largely distributed
under the decisions of one special commission appointed for that
purpose, whose powers have expired, and is now under administration
by another commission created for the same purpose by another act
of Congress. And although it is said that neither of these
commissions could, under the law of its creation, take cognizance
of appellant's claim, it is matter of public notoriety that the
subject of claims of this class is occupying the attention of
Congress, and bills on that subject are now pending before it.
Under these circumstances, we do not think it appropriate to
Page 112 U. S. 197
express an opinion on the legal or moral obligation of the
government in the matter unless it is in the line of a plain
duty.
The question of jurisdiction is the one raised by the motion,
and is always to be decided before the Court can properly inquire
into the merits, and we are of opinion that even if the
circumstances recited in the petition can be held to raise an
implied obligation on the part of the United States, the Court of
Claims is forbidden to take jurisdiction in this class of
cases.
§ 1066 of the Revised Statutes enacts that
"The jurisdiction of said court shall not extend to any claim
against the government not pending therein on December one,
eighteen hundred and sixty-two, growing out of or dependent on any
treaty stipulation entered into with foreign nations or with Indian
tribes."
This language is comprehensive and explicit. If the cause of
action
grows out of a treaty stipulation, the court cannot
entertain it. If it is
dependent on any such stipulation,
the same result follows.
In any ordinary or usual sense of the words here used,
appellant's claim, as set forth in the petition, grows out of the
stipulations of the Treaty of Washington. The allegation is that
the United States took charge of the claim of petitioner against
Great Britain for the injuries inflicted by the
Alabama
and the
Florida; that, by a treaty on that subject, Great
Britain stipulated that she would pay this claim to the United
States, as petitioner alleges, for the use of said petitioner. In
accordance with said stipulation, Great Britain did pay it to the
United States, and the purpose of payment under the treaty inhering
in the receipt of the money constitutes the foundation of
appellant's claim. The intervention of the board of arbitration and
its award as a means of ascertaining the liability of Great Britain
does not change the fact that the final recognition and payment of
the claim
grows out of the stipulation of the treaty.
In a still clearer sense, it is obvious that this recognition of
the claim by the award, and its payment to the United States, were
dependent on the treaty stipulation. Without the treaty, the award
would have bound nobody, and would have been, at most, a friendly
recommendation. By virtue of the treaty, it
Page 112 U. S. 198
became a most solemn and important international obligation
whereby Great Britain became bound, as much as a nation can be
bound, to pay the amount of the award, and at the same time became
freed and discharged from any further liability on account of any
claims of that class.
The effort of counsel to ignore the treaty, the award, and the
receipt of the money by the United States as the foundation of
appellant's claim and rest the right to recover solely upon the Act
of March 31, 1877, by which the fund was changed from an investment
in government bonds and paid into the government Treasury, is too
fanciful for serious consideration. If the government had not
become liable, by reason of the original receipt of the money from
Great Britain under the treaty by which that country was discharged
and released from the claim of plaintiff, it is difficult to
comprehend how it became liable by a mere change in the manner of
keeping the account. Whether the United States was liable on the
bonds held in its own Treasury vaults, or on account of the actual
money represented by those bonds in the same vaults, cannot be
material in estimating the nature and extent of that
obligation.
Nor can we assent to the proposition that the section cited was
designed to prevent foreign governments or Indian tribes from suing
the United States to enforce rights founded on treaties. No such
suit has ever been brought before or after the enactment of this
provision. It is not believed that without it anyone ever supposed
that the Court of Claims had jurisdiction of suits by Indian tribes
or foreign nations against the United States. It could not have
been passed therefore to prevent such a suit.
That the restriction was intended to apply to cases of the
character of the one now before us was substantially decided in
Atocha's Case,
17 Wall. 439.
In that case, under the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo with Mexico
of February 2, 1848, our government undertook to satisfy the claims
of her citizens against Mexico to the amount of $3,250,000. In
execution of this stipulation, Congress passed an act creating a
board of commissioners before whom such citizens should appear and
establish their claims.
Page 112 U. S. 199
When the two years which terminated the existence of the
commission had expired, a considerable balance of this sum remained
in the hands of the government against which no claims had been
established.
In this condition, a special act of Congress authorized Atocha
to present his claim to the Court of Claims, and if established to
the satisfaction of that court, it was to be paid out of this fund.
That court found in his favor, and the United States asking an
appeal it was refused. On an application to this Court for a writ
of mandamus to compel the Court of Claims to allow the appeal, it
was urged by counsel for the government that, the case being one
cognizable under the general jurisdiction of that court on an
implied contract, there was a right to appeal, though by the
special statute referring the case to that court no such right was
given.
The court, in reply to this, said that since the Act of March 3,
1863, in which the provision, embodied as § 1066 of the Revised
Statutes, was first passed, the Court of Claims had no jurisdiction
over this class of cases by virtue of the acts conferring its
general powers.
"These acts have since then [said the court] applied only to
claims made directly against the United States, and for payment of
which they were primarily liable, if liable at all, and not to
claims against other governments, the payment of which the United
States had assumed or might assume by treaty. The Act of June 25,
1868, while allowing appeals in behalf of the United States from
all final judgments of the Court of Claims, did not change the
character of the claims of which that court could previously take
cognizance. Claims under treaty stipulations are not brought within
it, and when jurisdiction over such claims is conferred by special
act, the authority of that court to hear and determine them is
limited and controlled by the provisions of that act."
That was a case in which, by the express terms of the treaty,
the United States had assumed the debt of Mexico to Atocha and
others of his class. The present is a case in which such assumption
is implied from the circumstances of the treaty and the receipt of
the money. In the former case, the United States agreed, for a
valuable
Page 112 U. S. 200
consideration in land or territory, to pay for Mexico $3,250,000
to her creditors residing in the United States. In the latter, the
government received $15,500,000 from England, under what is alleged
to be an implied promise to pay a class of American claims against
her. We can see no difference in principle in the two cases, as
they have relation to the fact that both claims grow out of, and
were dependent on, treaty stipulations.
This limitation of the jurisdiction of the Court of Claims is in
accord with the uniform course of the government in dealing with
claims of our citizens against foreign governments. In such cases,
where those governments have acknowledged a liability, but the
amount of the number of the claims is in controversy, mixed
commissions, composed of arbitrators appointed by each party, and
an umpire, have usually been created by a treaty, which made the
award of the commission obligatory.
In cases like that of Guadalupe Hidalgo and the Treaty of
Washington, under which the present claim arises, where the foreign
nation pays or agrees to pay to this government a fixed sum in
discharge of the class of claims which is the subject of treaty,
Congress has provided a commission at home to pass upon the claims
asserted under the treaty.
In no case that we are aware of has Congress conferred on any
judicial tribunal the power to adjudicate such claims as a class,
and in the case of Atocha, where a reference of a single claim was
made to the Court of Claims, its action was rather in the nature of
a commission to ascertain the facts than a judicial tribunal, as in
other cases, and hence no appeal was allowed.
In the case of the Geneva Award, one such commission has been
created by act of Congress and its term of service has expired.
Another is now in existence, under another act, for the same
purpose -- namely the distribution of the sum paid under that
award, and Congress is still devoting its attention to other means
for the proper distribution of the remainder of this fund.
For these reasons, we are of opinion that the Court of
Claims
Page 112 U. S. 201
had no jurisdiction of the case presented by the petition of
appellant, and its decree dismissing it is
Affirmed.