The Act of March 3, 1887, "to provide for the bringing of suits
against the government of the United States," 24 Stat. 505,c. 359,
does not confer upon the District or Circuit Courts of the United
States, or upon the Court of Claims, jurisdiction in equity to
compel the issue and delivery of a patent for public land.
These cases were suits in equity brought against the United
States under the recent Act of March 3d, 1887, 24 Stat. 505, c.
359, extending the jurisdiction of claims against the government to
the District and Circuit Courts of the United States. They were
suits for specific performance, seeking to compel the United States
to issue and deliver to the plaintiffs respectively patents for
timber land alleged to have been taken up and purchased by them
under the act for the sale of timber lands in the States of
California, Oregon, etc., passed June 3d, 1878, 20 Stat. 89, c.
151.
* The petitions
contained averments
Page 131 U. S. 2
of performance of the conditions required by said act, the
payment of the price of the lands to the receiver of the land
office, the giving of his certificates and receipts therefor, and
the refusal of the government to issue patents to the petitioners
as entitled thereto. They prayed in each case for a decree, 1st,
that the petitioner is owner of the land by virtue of the purchase,
and 2d, that the United States issue and deliver, or cause to be
issued and delivered, in accordance with law, a patent granting and
conveying the land purchased. The United States by its attorney
demurred to the several petitions. The circuit court overruled the
demurrers and rendered decrees for the plaintiffs. From these
decrees the present appeals were taken.
Page 131 U. S. 14
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY, after stating the case as above reported,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question involved is whether the Act of March 3, 1887, which
is entitled "An act to provide for the bringing of suits against
the government of the United States" (24 Stat. 505) authorizes
suits of the kind like the present, which are brought not for the
recovery of money, but for equitable relief by specific performance
to compel the issue and delivery of a patent. In the case of
United States v.
Alire, 6 Wall. 573, we distinctly held that the
acts of 1855 and 1863, which established the Court of Claims, and
defined its jurisdiction, did not give it power to entertain any
such suits as these, and that case was followed by
Bonner v.
United States, 9 Wall. 156, and has been approved
in subsequent cases.
United
Page 131 U. S. 15
States v. Gillis, 95 U. S. 407,
95 U. S. 412;
United States v. Schurz, 102 U. S. 378,
102 U. S. 404.
It is argued, however, that the new law has extended the
jurisdiction of the Court of Claims and the concurrent jurisdiction
of the circuit and district courts, or at least the latter, so as
to embrace every kind of claim, equitable as well as legal, and
specific relief, or a recovery of property, as well as a recovery
of money. If such is the legislative will, of course, the courts
must conform to it, although the management and disposal of the
public domain, in which the newly claimed jurisdiction would
probably be most frequently called into exercise, has always been
regarded as more appropriately belonging to the political
department of the government than to the courts, and more a matter
of administration than judicature. A careful examination of the
state and a comparison of its terms with those of the acts of 1855
and 1863 can alone settle the question.
By the first section of the act of 1855, 10 Stat. 612, it was
enacted that a court should be established, to be called the "Court
of Claims," the jurisdiction of which was defined as follows:
"The said court shall hear and determine all claims founded upon
any law of Congress, or upon any regulation of an executive
department, or upon any contract, express or implied, with the
government of the United States, which may be suggested to it by a
petition filed therein, and also all claims which may be referred
to it by either house of Congress."
The Act of March 3, 1863, passed to amend the act of 1855, (12
Stat. 765), added:
"That the said court . . . shall also have jurisdiction of all
set-offs, counterclaims, claims for damages, whether liquidated or
unliquidated, or other demands whatsoever, on the part of the
government against any person making claim against the government
in said court."
Jurisdiction was subsequently given of claims for the proceeds
of property captured or abandoned during the rebellion, and of
claims of paymasters and other disbursing officers for relief from
responsibility on account of capture of government funds or
property in their hands. These latter branches of jurisdiction need
not be considered here.
Turning now to the Act of March 3, 1887, which reenacted
Page 131 U. S. 16
or revised the previous laws as to the jurisdiction of the Court
of Claims and conferred concurrent jurisdiction for limited amounts
on the ordinary courts, we find the following language used:
"The Court of Claims shall have jurisdiction to hear and
determine the following matters:"
"First. All claims founded upon the Constitution of the United
States or any law of Congress, except for pensions, or upon any
regulation of an executive department, or upon any contract,
expressed or implied, with the government of the United States, or
for damages, liquidated or unliquidated, in cases not sounding in
tort, in respect of which claims the party would be entitled to
redress against the United States either in a court of law, equity,
or admiralty, if the United States were suable. . . ."
"Second. All set-offs, counterclaims, claims for damages,
whether liquidated or unliquidated, or other demands whatsoever on
the part of the government of the United States against any
claimant against the government in said court."
"SEC. 2. That the district courts of the United States shall
have concurrent jurisdiction with the Court of Claims as to all
matters named in the preceding section where the amount of the
claim does not exceed one thousand dollars, and the circuit courts
of the United States shall have such concurrent jurisdiction in all
cases where the amount of such claim exceeds one thousand dollars,
and does not exceed ten thousand dollars."
The jurisdiction here given to the Court of Claims is precisely
the same as that given in the acts of 1855 and 1863, with the
addition that it is extended to "damages . . . in cases not
sounding in tort" and to claims for which redress may be had
"either in a court of law, equity, or admiralty."
"Damages in cases not sounding in tort" -- that is to say,
damages for breach of contract -- had already been held to be
recoverable against the government under the former acts.
United States v. Behan, 110 U. S. 338;
United States v. Great Falls Manufacturing Co.,
112 U. S. 645;
Hollister v. Benedict & Burnham Mfg. Co., 113 U. S.
59,
113 U. S.
67.
"Claims" redressible "in a court of law, equity, or
admiralty"
Page 131 U. S. 17
may be claims for money only, or they may be claims for property
or specific relief, according as the context of the statute may
require or allow. The claims referred to in the original statute of
1855, as described in the first section thereof, above quoted,
might have included claims for other things besides money, but
various provisions of that act and of the Act of March 3, 1863,
were inconsistent with the enforcement of any claims under the law
except claims for money. Thus, in the fifth section of the act of
1863, the right of appeal was limited to cases in which the amount
in controversy exceeded $3,000, and in the seventh section it was
provided that if judgment should be given in favor of the claimant,
the sum due thereby should be paid out of any general appropriation
made by law for the payment of private claims; and, if a judgment
was affirmed on appeal, interest was to be allowed thereon, etc. In
the case of
United States v.
Alire, 6 Wall. 573, Mr. Justice Nelson, speaking
for the Court, said:
"It will be seen by the above reference which we have made to
the two acts of Congress on this subject that the only judgments
which the Court of Claims are authorized to render against the
government, or over which the supreme court have any jurisdiction
on appeal, or for the payment of which by the Secretary of the
Treasury any provision is made, are judgments for money found due
from the government to the petitioner. And although it is true that
the subject matter over which jurisdiction is conferred both in the
act of 1855 and of 1863 would admit of a much more extended
cognizance of cases, yet it is quite clear that the limited power
given to render a judgment necessarily retains the general terms,
and confines the subject matter to cases in which the petitioner
sets up a moneyed demand as due from the government."
The decree of the Court of Claims in that case was that the
claimant recover of the government a military land warrant for 160
acres of land, and that it be made out and delivered to him by the
proper officer. This Court said:
"We find no provision in any of the statutes requiring a
judgment of this character, whether in this Court or in the Court
of Claims, to be obeyed or satisfied."
The sections of the act of 1863 referred to in this opinion
are
Page 131 U. S. 18
still in force, not being repealed by the act of 1887, which
only repeals "all laws and parts of laws inconsistent" therewith.
Section 5, relating to appeals, is transferred to § 707 of the
Revised Statutes, giving an appeal to this Court "where the amount
in controversy exceeds $3,000," and section seven, relating to the
mode of paying judgments out of a general appropriation, and
allowing interest where a judgment is affirmed, is contained in
§§ 1089, 1090 of the Revised Statutes. These sections are
still the law on the subjects to which they relate, being necessary
to the completion of the system, and not being supplied by any
other enactments. Indeed, they are expressly retained. The fourth
section of the act of 1887 declares that
"The jurisdiction of the respective courts of the United States
proceeding under this act, including the right of exception and
appeal, shall be governed by the law now in force insofar as the
same is applicable and not inconsistent with the provisions of this
act,"
and the ninth section declares
"That the plaintiff or the United States, in any suit brought
under the provisions of this act, shall have the same rights of
appeal or writ of error as are now reserved in the statutes of the
United States in that behalf made, and upon the conditions and
limitations therein contained."
These provisions undoubtedly include the Court of Claims as well
as the district and circuit courts. So, in relation to interest,
section ten declares that
"From the date of such final judgment or decree, interest shall
be computed thereon at the rate of four percent per annum until the
time when an appropriation is made for the payment of the judgment
or decree."
It seems therefore that in the point of providing only for money
decrees and money judgments, the law is unchanged, merely being so
extended as to include claims for money arising out of equitable
and maritime as well as legal demands. We do not think that it was
the intention of Congress to go further than this. Had it been,
some provision would have been made for carrying into execution
decrees for specific performance or for delivering the possession
of property recovered in kind. The general scope and purport of the
act are against any further extension than that here indicated. The
expression in the fifth section, referring
Page 131 U. S. 19
to "money or any other thing claimed, or the damages sought to
be recovered," on which so much reliance is placed by the
appellees, cannot outweigh the considerations referred to, and
operate to introduce entirely new fields of jurisdiction. It is one
of those general expressions which must be restrained by the more
special and definite indications of intention furnished by the
context.
We cannot yield to the suggestion that any broader jurisdiction
as to subject matter is given to the circuit and district courts
than that which is given to the Court of Claims. It is clearly the
same jurisdiction -- "concurrent jurisdiction" only -- within
certain limits as to amount, and the language in which those limits
are expressed furnishes an additional argument in favor of the
conclusion which we have reached. It is declared
"that the district courts of the United States shall have
concurrent jurisdiction with the Court of Claims . . . where the
amount of the claim does not exceed $1,000,' etc. This language is
properly applicable only to a money claim. Had anything but money
been in the legislative mind the language would have been, 'where
the amount or value of the thing claimed does not exceed
$1,000,"
etc.
Of course, our province is construction only; the policy of the
law is the prerogative of the legislative department. But
notwithstanding the glowing terms in which able jurists have spoken
of the progress of civilization and enlightened government as
exhibited in subjecting government itself, equally with
individuals, to the jurisdiction of its own courts, we should have
been somewhat surprised to find that the administration of vast
public interests like that of the public lands, which belong so
appropriately to the political department, had been cast upon the
courts -- which it surely would have been if such a wide door had
been opened for suing the government to obtain patents and
establish land claims, as the counsel for the appellees in these
cases seems to imagine. We are satisfied that the door has not yet
been thrown open thus wide.
The decrees of the court are reversed in all the cases, and
the causes are respectively remanded, with instructions to dismiss
the original petitions or bills.
* The material parts of this statute will be found in the
opinion of the Court,
post, p.
131 U.S.
15-16.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER (with whom concurred MR. JUSTICE FIELD),
dissenting.
I find myself unable to concur with the majority of the Court in
the construction given by it in the opinion just read to the
provisions of the Act of March 3, 1887. This act was evidently
intended to confer a new and important jurisdiction upon the Court
of Claims, and a concurrent jurisdiction, to a limited extent, in
the same class of cases, upon the circuit and district courts of
the United States. I can see no other possible object in that part
of the statute which confers this new jurisdiction by the use of
language which for the first time in the history of that court
authorizes it to take cognizance of claims where the party would be
entitled to redress against the United States, either in a court of
law, equity, or admiralty, if the United States were suable, than
to make them suable in such cases. To hold that the distinct grant
of power here provided for is controlled by the fact that this
Court has under former statutes decided that it did not then exist,
is simply to nullify this new grant of power. The manifest purpose
of this new act was to confer power which the Court of Claims did
not previously have, and to authorize it to take jurisdiction of a
class of cases of which it had not cognizance before. To say that
under such circumstances the new statute is to be crippled and
rendered ineffectual in the only new feature which it has, in
regard to the jurisdiction of that court, is, in my mind, a refusal
to obey the law as made by Congress in the matter in which its
power is undisputed. It is clear to me that Congress intended by
this act to enlarge very materially the right of suit against the
United States, to facilitate this right by allowing suits to be
brought in the circuit and district courts where the parties
resided, and that it also designed to enlarge the remedy in the
Court of Claims to meet all such cases in law, equity, and
admiralty against the United States, as would be cognizable in such
courts against individuals.
I am authorized to say that MR. JUSTICE FIELD agrees with me in
this dissent.