In March, 1878, P. contracted to carry the mails three times a
week for four years on route 36,107, commencing July 1, 1878, and
entered on the performance of his contract. On the 5th day of the
following December, in consequence of false and fraudulent sworn
statements made by him concerning the number of horses and men that
would be required to expedite the service by reducing the time, a
large additional compensation was allowed him by the Postmaster
General for that purpose. On the 13th of the same December he
sublet his contract to S. with the consent of the Department, and
the service was from that time performed by S. Further increased
allowances, based on like fraudulent statements by P. were made in
January and July, 1879, and assented to by P. and S. The amount so
fraudulently received during the term of service was $99,556.20.
The government sued P. and S. to recover back that sum. In the
first count, the above facts were set forth and it was alleged that
the false statements were designed to mislead and did mislead the
Post Office Department. A second count was for money had and
received. A third count set forth the same facts and averred that
the money had been paid in mistake of fact, and had been received
contrary to the provisions of Rev.Stat. § 3961. No process was
served upon P., and he did not appear.
S. appeared and demurred, and the demurrer was sustained. Each
was cited in the writ of error, and service acknowledged by the
attorney for both.
Held:
(1) That the statements regarding the "horses and men" required
for the expedited service came within the statement as to "stock
and carriers" required therefor, as provided in Rev.Stat. §
3961.
(2) That P. and S. were bound by these statements and were
estopped from asserting that it was not intended thereby to bring
the contract within the statute.
(3) That the demurrer admitted the fact that the increase had
been allowed on the basis of the false representation.
(4) That the court below erred in sustaining the demurrer to the
third count.
(5) That the defendants having each participated in the
transaction, were properly sued jointly.
(6) That the demurrer should have been overruled.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 157 U. S. 114
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action was instituted by the United States to recover from
the defendants in error certain moneys claimed to have been paid to
then for services in carrying the mail in excess of the amount to
which they were legally entitled.
The first count alleges in substance that on March 15, 1878, the
defendant Piatt contracted in writing with the United States,
through the Postmaster General, to carry the mail three times a
week for four years, from July 1, 1878, for a consideration of
$16,500 per annum, on the route then known as No. 36, 107, between
Bozeman, Montana, by way of Shields River, Crow Agency, Stillwater,
Head of Navigation, Pompey's Pillar, Fort Peace, and Big Horn City,
to Tongue River and back. By power of attorney dated August 15,
1878, Piatt authorized the defendant Salisbury to collect from the
Auditor of the Treasury for the Post Office Department all pay to
become due for carrying the mails upon that route, and
subsequently, on December 13, 1878, with the permission of the Post
Office Department, he sublet his contract to Salisbury. Piatt
entered upon and continued the performance of this service from
July 1, 1878, until December 13, 1878, from which date the service
was performed by Salisbury.
For the purpose of expediting the service, the Post Office
Department, by order dated December 5, 1878, on agreement with
Piatt, shortened the schedule of departures and arrivals on the
above route after December 16, 1878, by reducing the time from 132
hours to 72 hours in summer, and 96 hours in winter, allowing
therefor additional compensation of $16,500 per annum, in supposed
accordance with the provisions of § 3961 of the Revised
Statutes of the United States. A
Page 157 U. S. 115
similar order was made January 17, 1879, allowing an additional
annual sum of $3,542.92 from January 25, 1879, for an increased
distance on the route of 35 miles, such allowance being computed
pro rata upon the basis of the compensation previously
allowed. A further order, dated July 15, 1879, increased the
service to seven trips a week from August 1, 1879, for which the
additional sum of $48,723.89 per annum was allowed upon the same
basis of compensation. Both Piatt and Salisbury consented to the
conditions of these orders.
Piatt procured the issuing of the above orders amending the
original contract. They were issued solely upon the basis of
certain representations made in his sworn statement dated August
16, 1878, to the effect that to carry the mail upon said route
three times a week, on a schedule of 132 hours, required 26 men and
90 horses, while the proposed expedited schedule of 72 hours in
summer and 96 hours in winter would require 48 men and 200 horses.
This statement was wholly false and fraudulent, in that it alleged
an increase of 22 men and 110 horses necessary to perform the
expedited schedule, whereas to fact neither Piatt nor Salisbury
ever required or used in performing the mail service, three times a
week or seven times a week, more than 34 men and 100 horses, being
14 men and 100 horses less than Piatt alleged in his sworn
statement were necessary for performing said expedited service
three times a week. By means of such fraudulent representations by
Piatt, and by means of false vouchers presented to the Post Office
Department, Piatt and Salisbury received from the plaintiff a
larger sum of money then they were lawfully entitled to receive.
The sum so received by them during the period of their service by
means of such false statements and fraudulent vouchers was
$261,016.50, being $99,556.20 in excess of the amount that could,
after certain reductions and remissions, be lawfully paid to them.
The false statements above referred to were designed to mislead,
and did mislead, the Post Office Department of the United States,
and the defendants were entitled to receive from the United States
for such service the sum of $148,438.23 and no more.
Payment of such excess having been demanded and refused,
Page 157 U. S. 116
judgment was asked against the defendants for $99,556.20, with
interest from August 21, 1882, and costs of suit.
The second count is the common law count for money had and
received
The third count sets forth the same facts as are embodied in the
first count, and alleges that plaintiff's officers were induced to
pay the $99,556.20 in mistake of fact, and that that sum was
received by defendants contrary to section 3961 of the Revised
Statutes of the United States.
The payments referred to are set out in full in an exhibit
showing the amounts defendants were lawfully entitled to receive on
the basis of the actual increase of stock and carriers consequent
upon the reduction in running time, as before mentioned.
Piatt was not served with process, nor did he appear or plead.
Service of process was had upon Salisbury, who appeared and
demurred both generally and specially to the complaint.
The court below sustained the demurrer and dismissed the
complaint as to both defendants. Each defendant is cited in the
writ of error upon which this action is before us, and service
acknowledged by the attorney of both.
The plaintiff in error has assigned the following errors: (1)
that the circuit court erred in sustaining Salisbury's demurrer to
the complaint; (2) that judgment was wrongly given in favor of both
defendants, Piatt not having appeared or pleaded.
By section 3961 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, it
is provided that
"no extra allowance shall be made for any increase of expedition
in carrying the mail unless thereby the employment of additional
stock and carriers is made necessary, and in such case the
additional compensation shall bear no greater proportion to the
additional stock and carriers necessarily employed than the
compensation in the original contract bears to the stock and
carriers necessarily employed in its execution."
It is contended that as the statement of the contractor in every
case merely stated the number of men and horses required to perform
the service on the contract time, and also
Page 157 U. S. 117
how many men and horses, in his opinion, it would require to
perform the service on the proposed expedited schedule, and as it
merely alleged that the subcontractor or person who performed the
service did not use the men and horses stated to be necessary, the
complaint is insufficient to maintain this action, for the reason
that section 3961 of the Revised Statutes, under which the action
is brought, provides nothing as to men and horses, but does provide
that the allowance for expedition shall be based upon the
additional stock and carriers made necessary by the expedited
schedule; and, it is said,
"there is not a word in the complaint that charges that the
defendants did not employ additional stock and carriers on the
expedited schedule in exact proportion to the expedition
allowance."
It is also said that the words "stock and carriers' in section
3961 are not synonymous with the words "men and horses;" that the
word "stock" does not mean simply livestock, nor does the word
"carriers' mean either horses or men, but rather includes all the
equipment of the route, whether horses, wagons, harness, stage
stations, fuel, food, stables, in fact everything needed to carry
on the service, such being the popular sense in which these words
are used.
There is nothing of substance in these contentions. Whatever may
be comprehended by the term "stock and carriers� in section
3961, it certainly included within it "men and horses," and, as the
Postmaster General could allow an increased compensation only in
conformity with that statute, it must be assumed that he did so
upon the basis of the sworn statement alleging an increase of "men
and horses" necessary for the performance of the expedited
schedule. The defendants in error are bound by this sworn
statement, and as the increased compensation was ordered only upon
the assumption of the truth of its allegations, and in conformity
with the statute, and as they agreed to the amendment of the
original contract in this regard, they are estopped from asserting
that this sworn statement was not intended to bring the contract
within the statute.
If the term "stock and carriers� does not include "men
and
Page 157 U. S. 118
horses," then the Postmaster General had no right to make the
increased allowance mentioned, and if this be true, such additional
allowances exceeded the "sum which, according to law, might
rightfully have been allowed therefor;" and, by the provisions of
section 4057 of the Revised Statutes, the Postmaster General "shall
cause suit to be brought to recover such wrong . . . payment or
excess, with interest thereon." But as by the provisions of section
3961,
"no extra allowance shall be made for any increase of expedition
in carrying the mail unless thereby the employment of additional
stock and carriers is made necessary,"
and as the Postmaster General, upon the defendant Piatt's sworn
statement that certain increases of men and horses were necessary
to perform the service upon the proposed expedited schedule, made
the said allowance of increased compensation, the conclusion must
be that the plaintiff made, and the defendants accepted, the
amended contract with the understanding that it was within the
provisions of the statute.
The defendants in error further contend that the increased
allowances in question were not made by the Postmaster General
solely upon the basis of the sworn statement designating the
additional number of men and horses necessary to perform the
service upon the proposed expedited schedule, but that it was
merely for the information of the Postmaster General in making the
new schedules. But whether it be true or not that he acted solely
upon such representations, it is sufficient that they constituted a
substantial part of the information from which he made the new
schedules allowing increased compensation. The complaint, however,
alleges that the Postmaster General did allow the increased
compensation solely upon the basis of these false representations.
The allegations of the complaint must be taken to be true for the
purposes of this demurrer. The question is whether the facts as
stated, if true, constitute a sufficient cause of action. We think
they do.
The third count alleges that the excessive payments in question
were made by the plaintiff in
mistake of fact. We do not
doubt the plaintiff's right to recover the amount of
Page 157 U. S. 119
such excessive payments in case of fraud in the transaction
leading to their disbursement. But if there were no actual fraud in
these proceedings, it is clear from the allegations of the
complaint that the defendants received the moneys in question
without consideration; for, whatever may be the meaning of the term
"stock and carriers," the original contract itself, and the sworn
statement on the basis of which it was amended, mention only "men
and horses" as the means of performing the service of carrying the
mail, and it is shown by the allegations of the complaint that to
perform the expedited schedule either three times per week or seven
times per week, there were never required nor used
"more than 34 men and 100 horses, being 14 men and 100 horses
less than the said Piatt alleged in his said sworn statement were
necessary for performing said expedited service three times per
week."
The provisions of section 4057 of the Revised Statutes are
applicable to this very State of case. That section provides
that
"in all cases where money has been paid out of the funds of the
Post Office Department under the pretense that service has been
performed therefor, when in fact such service has not been
performed, or as additional allowance for increased service
actually rendered, when the additional allowance exceeds the sum
which, according to law, might rightfully have been allowed
therefor, and in all other cases where money of the department has
been paid to any reason in consequence of fraudulent
representations, or by the mistake, collusion, or misconduct of any
officer of other employee in the postal service, the Postmaster
General shall cause suit to be brought to recover such wrong or
fraudulent payment or excess, with interest thereon."
We are of opinion that the court below erred in sustaining the
demurrer to the third count.
Very little need be said upon the question of misjoinder,
constituting the second ground of demurrer.
Section 3963 of the Revised Statutes provides that
"no contractor for transporting the mail within or between the
United States and any foreign country shall assign or transfer his
contract, and all such assignments or transfers shall be
Page 157 U. S. 120
null and void."
If the alleged subletting of the contract to Salisbury be
regarded merely as an arrangement between the defendants, still
Piatt was liable for the performance of both the original and the
amended contract during the whole period of service. The claim of
the plaintiff is confined to the period between December 16, 1878,
and August 21, 1882, during which time the expedited schedule was
in force. So there is nothing in the contention of improper joinder
in reference to matters previous to December 13, 1878. As to
matters subsequent thereto, the joinder was proper, for both
defendants were parties to the fraudulent transaction whereby the
plaintiff was induced to make the increased allowance of
compensation referred to, and it is specifically alleged in the
third count of the complaint that the sworn statement of Piatt was
presented "by and on behalf of both the said defendants, Piatt and
Salisbury, to the Postmaster General." The complaint further
alleges that by means of these false representations and
"by means of false and fraudulent vouchers presented to the said
Post Office Department of the United States, the said defendants,
George H. Piatt and Monroe Salisbury, were paid by and received
from this plaintiff a larger sum of money than they were entitled
to receive."
It thus appears that each of the defendants participated in this
transaction, and it was proper to sue them as jointly and severally
liable.
There is but one cause of action, and that for the excessive
payments made between December 16, 1878, and August 21, 1882. Piatt
was contractor during this period, and the service was performed
for him by Salisbury, to whom was paid the compensation agreed upon
in the amended contract. The single cause of action, then, is for
the recovery of such amount as was in excess of the sum allowed by
law. Piatt and Salisbury, according to the facts admitted by the
demurrer, are equally concerned in the fraud perpetrated upon the
government -- one by presenting in behalf of both a sworn statement
containing false and fraudulent allegations, whereby the Postmaster
General was induced to amend the original contract, allowing
increased compensation, the other by presenting
Page 157 U. S. 121
for payment false and fraudulent vouchers comporting therewith,
upon the faith of which the money was paid. They are, then, jointly
and severally bound to refund the sum so paid and received in
violation of section 3961 of the Revised Statutes.
Assuming, as we must on this hearing, the truth of the facts set
forth in the complaint, we are of opinion that the demurrer should
have been overruled.
As Piatt was not in the court below, it was error to have
sustained the demurrer and dismissed the action as to him.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded, for further
proceedings in conformity to this opinion.
Reversed.