An interlocutory order or decree of the Supreme Court of the
District of Columbia at special term may be reviewed by the general
term on appeal, without awaiting a final determination of the
cause; and, on appeal to this Court from the final decree at
general term, the entire record is brought up for review.
After a critical examination of the record, the Court, on the
facts, finds that the contract which forms the subject of
controversy in this suit is a valid contract, and directs judgment
for the defendant in error for the principal sum which it finds to
be clue him, but orders a correction to be made in the calculation
of interest by the court below.
Mason filed his bill in equity in the Supreme Court of the
District of Columbia for a discovery and an accounting by Harvey
Spalding as to certain fees collected by the defendant,
Page 161 U. S. 376
in which Mason claimed a one-fourth interest. The persons joined
with Spalding in this Court are the sureties upon an appeal bond
given by Spalding, the general term, upon the affirmance of a
judgment in favor of Mason, having entered judgment against all the
parties who executed the appeal bond.
The interest in question was acquired by Mason under an
agreement between himself and Spalding, executed June 3, 1880,
which recited that Spalding had on hand about 1,700 claims (and
expected to receive enough more to make up 4,000 claims) for moneys
which it was believed would be due from the government to
postmasters and late postmasters upon a readjustment of salaries
under the provisions of an Act approved June 12, 1866, and was in
need of funds to prosecute said claims, and to urge the passage of
bills then pending in Congress looking to their settlement. By the
agreement, Spalding sold to Mason for the consideration of $2,500,
payable in installments, a one-fourth interest in the fees to
collected from said claims, "free from charges for expenses in
prosecuting said claims to collection," and Spalding agreed to
obtain as many claims as he could secure in addition to those
referred to in the contract as on hand or expected to be
acquired.
The congressional bills alluded to in the agreement failed of
passage, but at the next Congress, an act was passed, and was
approved March 3, 1883, which was similar to one of said bills
which had failed of passage at the preceding Congress,
"except two unimportant verbal alterations, with a proviso added
as to the manner of application for readjustment of salaries
thereunder and the manner of payment thereof."
The bill averred that defendant had collected a large sum of
money as fees upon the claims in question, and was largely indebted
to complainant on account thereof, but that he had failed and
refused to render a statement of the amount of the fees collected,
and in substance the bill also averred that the defendant Spalding
was liable to account to complainant not only for fees received by
him from the 4,000 claims referred to in the agreement as on hand
and expected to be
Page 161 U. S. 377
obtained, but for all fees received by him from claimants whose
rights depended upon the act of 1866 and the act of 1883.
In his answer, Spalding averred that at the time of the
negotiation for the sale to Mason of an interest in his business,
he had in his possession, and so informed Mason, lists of the names
of some 7,500 postmasters who he was satisfied were embraced by the
provisions of the bills then pending in the respective houses of
Congress. He alleged in substance that upon the defeat of the house
bill on January 17, 1881, the rights of Mason under the contract of
June 3, 1880, ceased, and a new and oral contract was entered into
between them by which, in consideration of his (Spalding's)
agreement to make renewed efforts to procure favorable legislation
and secure the collection of the claims in question, and the
retention by complainant of an interest in the claims covered by
the prior contract, complainant agreed to share in future expenses
and make advances of money for such purposes, and it was averred
that in consequence of such renewed efforts on defendant's part,
the Act of March 3, 1883, became law. He alleged that Mason failed
to keep his agreement in respect to advances, and for that reason,
in September, 1882, he (Spalding) terminated the contract between
them by notice to him, but that, in consideration of the $2,500
paid under the first contract, he promised to pay Mason, in case of
eventual success, $10,000, and it was averred that since said date
he had conducted his business upon that footing.
The answer also alleged:
"That besides the 1,700 claims in defendant's hands on the 3d of
June, 1880, he had received by the 17th of January, 1881, some 500,
and also between the latter date and March 3, 1883, he had procured
enough more of these to make in all 4,208, all of these being
included in the list of 7,500 first above mentioned."
It was charged that, in administering the Act of March 3, 1883,
the Postmaster General adopted a construction of that act and of
the act of 1866 which was entirely different from the construction
of the act of 1866 assumed by complainant and defendant when
entering into the contract of June 3, 1880, and from that
Page 161 U. S. 378
entertained by defendant when making up said list of 7,500
persons who it was supposed would be entitled to claim relief. He
averred that the effect of the construction given to the act of
1883 by the Postmaster General was not only to defeat claims
mentioned in said list, but to create a class of new claims not
contemplated at the time he made his original contract with
Mason.
It was also averred that, in consequence of the new claimants
whose rights arose solely from this new construction, defendant,
subsequent to July, 1883, adapted his business thereto, and secured
20,000 cases of postmasters other than those who were upon the list
of 7,500 cases, or who had been thought of as having claims under
the act aforesaid at any time before the month of May, 1883.
The answer concluded with a statement as to the fees collected
from the 4,208 claims (out of the list of 7,500,) etc., and averred
that he (Spalding) had been put to an expense of about ten percent
in collecting said fees by reason of a proviso in the act of 1883
requiring payments to be made directly to the claimants, and
denied
"that, excepting what may be due to the complainant upon the
above statement, after deducting therefrom what he has already
received thereabouts, any debt is or will at any time be due to the
said complainant by this defendant because of the contract of June
3, 1880, and subsequent dealing between the parties thereto."
An additional answer was subsequently filed giving a more
detailed account of the receipts, etc., in connection with all the
claims. Various sums were also set out, claimed to have been
expended after January 17, 1881 -- the date of the alleged new and
oral contract -- for clerk hire, printing, office rent, postage,
discounts, interest, etc., in prosecuting the business. It was
specifically stated that "this statement does not include the ten
percent expended, as in the original answer stated, to collect fees
that had been received."
Issue was joined by the replication of complainant, and evidence
was taken in the cause. Upon the hearing, the court, on March 23,
1888, entered a decree which substantially rejected the
complainant's demand for a right to share in any
Page 161 U. S. 379
other fees than those resulting from such claims as were
included in the list of 7,500 cases referred to in the answer, and
contemplated and considered by the parties at the time the contract
was made.
It is adjudged in favor of the complainant that he was entitled
to one-fourth of each and every fee which had been collected or
might thereafter be collected upon claims included in the list
aforesaid, and that he was not chargeable with any part of the
expenses of the business of securing and prosecuting such claims.
The cause was referred to an auditor to state an account upon this
basis. From this decree an appeal was taken by the complainant to
the general term, and, on January 23, 1889, that tribunal affirmed
the decree of the special term, and remanded the cause for further
proceedings in accordance therewith. The opinion of the general
term is reported in 18 Dist.Col. 115.
The hearing before the auditor was then proceeded with. He
reported that Mason was entitled to share in the fees received by
Spalding, as well from claims which had been forwarded to him by
attorneys as in claims that had been received directly from
claimants.
He also held that certain claims designated by half numbers,
that were entered in a book which purported to contain the list of
the 7,500 cases heretofore referred to, constituted part of the
said list of 7,500 cases, and that complainant was entitled to
share in the fees derived from said claims. He allowed deductions
made by Spalding for bank discounts on collections of drafts for
fees, as also sums paid attorneys for collecting fees, upon the
theory that such charges were not expenses for securing and
prosecuting the claims, which latter claim had been rejected by the
court; but he declined to allow a claim made by defendant for a
deduction of twenty percent from complainant's share for alleged
expenses in collecting fees, on the ground that the same had not
been sufficiently proven. Other matters included in the report are
not in controversy in this Court.
Exceptions were filed to the auditor's report on behalf of both
parties.
Page 161 U. S. 380
Upon the amount found due by the auditor as Mason's share of
fees collected in accordance with the decree of reference the
auditor allowed interest as follows: he took the sum total of fees
collected in each month, and awarded interest to run from the
beginning of the succeeding month, and on the payments made by
Spalding to Mason on account of fees he allowed interest from the
date of payment.
The court at the special term overruled all of the exceptions
and approved and confirmed the report of the auditor, and entered
judgment in favor of complainant for the sum of $16,304.82 (being
the principal sum of $13,669.11, and interest to date of decree).
The court also reserved the right to complainant to apply
thereafter in this suit for an accounting as to fees which might
subsequently be collected from claims embraced in the list of
7,500, these being the only claims in which Mason was adjudged to
have an interest.
On appeal, the general term modified the judgment as to interest
by providing that the interest on the principal sum should commence
from August 9, 1887, the date of the demand by Mason for an
accounting, set aside the reservation of a right in favor of
complainant to apply in this action for a further accounting, and
entered a decree for the amount found due against the defendant
Spalding and the sureties on his bond for appeal. The cause was
then brought here by appeal.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, after stating the case, delivered the opinion
of the Court.
A preliminary objection has been advanced on behalf of the
appellee against a review of the first judgment rendered by the
general term, which determined the principles upon which the
account was to be taken by the auditor. It is claimed that the
appellants are concluded by the failure of the then defendant,
Harvey Spalding, to appeal from the decree of the
Page 161 U. S. 381
special term when an appeal had been taken by the
complainant.
Section 772 of the Revised Statutes, relating to the District of
Columbia, provides as follows:
"Any party aggrieved by any order, judgment or decree, made or
pronounced at any special term, may if the same involve the merits
of the action or proceeding, appeal therefrom to the general term
of the supreme court, and upon such appeal the general term shall
review such order, judgment or decree, and affirm, reverse or
modify the same, as shall be just."
This section does not in terms confine the right of appeal from
the special to the general term to merely final orders or final
decrees in a cause. An interlocutory order or decree which involves
the merits may be reviewed by the general term upon the appeal of a
dissatisfied party without awaiting a final determination of the
cause. It is not made obligatory upon a dissatisfied party to
appeal because the other party has done so, and we are of opinion
that upon an appeal to this Court from a final decree of the
general term (Rev.Stat. § 705), the entire record is brought
up for review.
Hitz v. Jenks, 123 U.
S. 297;
District of Columbia v. McBlair,
124 U. S. 320;
Grant v. Phoenix Mutual Life Ins. Co., 121 U.
S. 105.
The errors specified in the brief of counsel are fifteen in
number. The first six and number thirteen attack the correctness of
the decision holding that the complainant was entitled to recover
his proportion of the fees collected upon claims embraced in the
list of 7,500 referred to in the answer. Assignment seven covers
the second exception taken to the report of the auditor.
Assignments eight and nine question the correctness of the finding
"that the complainant is not chargeable with any part of the
expenses of the business of securing and prosecuting" the claims
contained in said list of 7,500 cases. The tenth and eleventh
assignments of error cover the fourth exception to the auditor's
report, and the twelfth assignment alleges error in the allowance
of interest.
Before taking up, for detailed examination, these
assignments
Page 161 U. S. 382
of error, it will be necessary to consider the claims which the
defendant Spalding represented at the time of the execution of the
contract of June 3, 1880, and his construction of the rights of the
claimants.
We quote the following statement from the brief of his
counsel:
"Under the provisions of the Act of June 22, 1854, c. 61, 10
Stat. 298, postmasters were paid for their services by commissions
on the postage collected at their respective offices, which
commissions were adjusted by the auditor of the Post Office
Department upon the returns for each quarter after the said returns
had been made by the postmaster and received by the
department."
"By the Act of July, 1864, c. 195, 13 Stat. 335, a complete
change was made in the mode of regulating the compensation of
postmasters. A salary system was adopted instead of the commission
system. The salaries were fixed for two years in advance upon the
basis of the business of the past two years -- that is, the
commissions upon the business of the past two years were computed
at the rate fixed by the act of 1854, and the sum thus arrived at
was made the fixed salary of the office for the ensuing two years,
a readjustment of the salaries of every post office to be made upon
this basis every two years."
Under the provisions of the act of 1864, it necessarily followed
that where the business of an office rapidly increased, the
compensation earned by the postmaster fell below what he would have
received if his pay had been calculated by commissions as under the
act of 1854. It also followed that if the business of the office
fell off, the incumbent might receive a larger compensation than he
would have been entitled to under the previous act. The Act of June
12, 1866, c. 114, 14 Stat. 60, directed the Postmaster General to
readjust salaries of postmasters when the quarterly returns showed
that the salary allowed the postmaster was ten percent less than it
would have been had the provision of the act of 1864 continued in
force. The claims which Spalding was prosecuting resulted from this
act of 1866, and the reason for their prosecution
Page 161 U. S. 383
before Congress was the fact that the Postmaster General had not
made a readjustment, and that this Court had decided in January,
1878, that the Court of Claims had no jurisdiction to enter a
judgment for any amount in favor of such claimants until after the
Postmaster General had readjusted the salaries.
By an Act approved March 3, 1883, c. 119, 22 Stat. 487, it was
provided:
"That the Postmaster General be, and he is hereby, authorized
and directed to readjust the salaries of all postmasters and late
postmasters of the third, fourth and fifth classes, under the
classification provided for in the Act of July first, eighteen
hundred and sixty-four, whose salaries have not heretofore been
readjusted under the terms of section eight of the Act of June
twelfth, eighteen hundred and sixty-six, who made sworn returns of
receipts and business for readjustment of salary to the Postmaster
General, the First Assistant Postmaster General or the Third
Assistant Postmaster General, or who made quarterly returns in
conformity to the then existing laws and regulations, showing that
the salary allowed was ten percentum less than it would have been
upon the basis of commissions under the Act of June twelfth,
eighteen hundred and sixty-six, and to date from the beginning of
the quarter succeeding that in which such sworn returns of receipts
and business or quarterly returns were made,
provided that
every readjustment of salary under this act shall be upon a written
application signed by the postmaster or late postmaster or legal
representative entitled to said readjustment, and that each payment
shall be by warrant or check on the treasurer or some assistant
treasurer of the United States, made payable to the order of said
applicant, and forwarded by mail to him at the post office within
whose delivery he resides, and which address shall be set forth in
the application above provided for."
Except as to one or two immaterial verbal alterations, this act
of 1883 was similar to house bill 3981, mentioned in the contract
between complainant and defendant, and which failed to pass January
17, 1881, except that the house
Page 161 U. S. 384
bill did not embody the proviso found at the end of the act of
1883.
In making up the list of 7,500 cases referred to, Spalding had
construed the act of 1866 -- as he subsequently did the act of 1866
-- as entitling the claimants embraced in said list to a sum equal
to the difference between the amount of any salary which, during a
particular term, they had received and the sum which they would
have received had they been paid commissions on the business done
in the office at the rate prescribed by the amount of any salary
which, during a May, 1883 -- and his opinion was concurred in by
the Attorney General in February, 1884 -- construed the act of 1883
in connection with the act of 1866 in a different manner. It is
unnecessary, for the purpose of this opinion, to state or discuss
the particulars in which the construction of the Postmaster General
differed from that adopted by Spalding or to indicate in any way
which construction was correct. I t is unquestioned, however, that
the operation of the construction by the Postmaster General was
that many of the persons whose claims were embraced in the list of
7,500 cases referred to in the contract of June 3, 1880, were
excluded from receiving any additional pay, and that rights arose
in favor of others who were not supposed by Spalding to have claims
at the time he prepared the list. Mason asserted a right to
participate not only in the fees collected from the claims embraced
in the list of 7,500, but also in all other claims obtained by
Spalding after the passage of the act of 1883. The general term,
however, decided adversely to the contention of the complainant,
and held that his share in fees was limited to cases embraced in
the list of 7,500, upon which claims the court held that the
contract between complainant and defendant was based. In that
construction complainant has acquiesced.
Assignments Nos. 1 to 6 read as follows:
"1st. The court erred in allowing to the complainant an interest
in all or any of the claims embraced in a list of 7,500 claims
mentioned in the answer of defendant."
"2d. The court erred in holding that the claims contemplated by
the parties when they executed the contract of
Page 161 U. S. 385
June 3, 1880, were of such a nature that they could be regarded
for the purpose of giving the complainant an interest therein, as
the same claims that were actually prosecuted and collected under
the acts of 1883 and August 4, 1886."
"3d. The court erred in allowing the complainant $9,972.88 as
his share of fees collected by the defendant on claims paid at
various dates between October 1, 1886, and May 1, 1889, as all of
said fees were collected upon claims allowed, and paid neither
under authority of section 8 of the Act of June 12, 1866, or under
authority of the Act of March 3, 1883, but under the sole authority
contained in the Act of August 4, 1886, 24 Stat. 308."
"4th. The court erred in not holding that the contract of June
3, 1880, became of no effect by the failure of passage of the bill
in Congress mentioned therein, and in not holding that thereupon a
new contract was made which became of no effect in charging the
defendant with any liability thereunder by reason of the failure of
the complainant to perform the same on his part, and by the putting
an end thereto by the act of the defendant."
"5th. The court erred in holding that the complainant was
entitled to one-fourth of all fees which have been collected out of
the said list of 7,500 claims which were procured subsequently to
January 17, 1881."
"6th. The court erred in holding that the complainant was
entitled to one-fourth of all fees which had been collected out of
the list of 7,500 claims which were procured subsequently to March
3, 1883."
As before stated, no appeal was taken by the defendant to the
general term from the interlocutory decree at the special term
fixing the principles upon which the account should be taken. At
the hearing in general term, he seems to have acquiesced in the
view that the complainant was entitled to an account as to 4,208
cases admitted in the answer to have been received by Spalding for
prosecution, and to have been embraced in his list of 7,500 cases,
from which he received fees, and concerning which he offered to
account. On the hearing before the auditor, no exception was taken
to the
Page 161 U. S. 386
admission of evidence as to the fees calculated upon claims
embraced in the list of 7,500 cases, except as to cases which were
sent to him for prosecution by attorneys. And although the auditor
reported that the "amount of fees received by him in the cases
included in the order of reference" was the sum of $16,339.11, no
exception was taken by Spalding to such finding.
It is insisted now, however, that a proper construction of the
contract excludes the complainant from any share whatever in the
fees collected upon the claims embraced in the list of 7,500 cases.
This is asserted although the claimants had valid claims against
the government under the act of 1866, either upon the theory which
Spalding believed to be correct according to his construction of
the act or upon the theory actually put into practice by the
Postmaster General under his construction of that act in connection
with the act of 1883. The contract, it is contended, contemplated
that a recovery by the claimants should be had upon the precise
theory which Spalding and the complainant entertained when the
contract of June 3, 1880, was made. We do not adopt such a narrow
view of the terms of the contract between the parties in the
absence of clear and unequivocal language warranting it. This
construction imports that Mason took the hazard not of Spalding's
ability to collect from the government for the claimants he
represented, but the hazard of the government's adopting and
putting in practice Spalding's theory as to the exact status of the
claimants under the act of 1866. If the claim of counsel is well
founded, then, had the house bill referred to in the contract, and
which, as has been shown, was practically identical with the
subsequent act of 1883, become a law, a construction of that act
similar to that adopted by the Postmaster General with reference to
the act of 1883 would have defeated all Mason's rights under the
contract. But, in consideration of the payment by Mason of $2,500,
Spalding agreed to "prosecute to collection" the "claims" then in
hand, and others expected to be secured of "postmasters and late
postmasters for adjustment of their salaries in conformity
Page 161 U. S. 387
to section 8 of the Act of June 12, 1866." There was no
qualification that the collection should be according to a
particular theory as to the amount which ought to be recovered, but
the plain import was that whatever was due by the general
government to the claimants under the provisions of that act was to
be collected. Whether we look at the act of 1866 and 1883 or the
later act of 1886, which merely approved the form of readjustment
which had been theretofore pursued by the Postmaster General under
the act of 1883, and directed that mode of adjustment to be
continued in the settlement of further claims under the act of
1866, it is clear that whatever was allowed and paid to claimants
was acquired by virtue of the provisions of the act of 1866. We
therefore find assignments one and two to be without merit.
The objection covered by assignment three is also made for the
first time in this Court. No exception of this character was taken
to the findings of the auditor. It appears to have been an
afterthought. The point that payments subsequent to October 1,
1886, were made solely under the authority of the Act of August 4,
1886, is clearly not well taken, for that act did not originate
rights against the government, but simply regulated the mode of
adjusting rights which had vested under the act of 1866, pursuant
to the remedy afforded by the act of 1883. We have looked in vain
through the carefully prepared answer of the defendant, himself an
attorney, for any suggestion that the Act of August 4, 1886, in any
way injuriously affected the rights of complainant, though an
intimation to that effect is contained in one or more letters from
Spalding to Mason written after August 9, 1887. All through the
answer, it is admitted that the remedy by which Spalding made his
collections was provided by the act of 1883. Further, the table
showing the dates from which the auditor found the interest should
be calculated does not justify the assumption of counsel that any
part of the $9,972.88 was allowed complainant, as his share of fees
collected by defendant on claims paid at various times between
October 1, 1886, and May 1, 1889. The table does not indicate when
the "claims" were either "allowed" or "paid," and as the fees were
collected
Page 161 U. S. 388
from claimants after they had received the full amount of their
claims, it may well be that the entire sum had been allowed and
paid by the government prior to October 1, 1886.
Some of the observations heretofore made are applicable to the
fourth assignment of error. The terms of the contract will not
justify the construction that the rights of complainant were
dependent upon the successful passage of the bills then pending in
Congress. As to the alleged oral contract set up in the answer as
having been entered into on the day of the failure of the passage
of the house bill, to-wit, January 17, 1881, aside from the fact
that no consideration appears therefor, the making of the same was
flatly denied by complainant, and the auditor found that no such
contract was entered into. We not only cannot say that the finding
of the auditor, sustained by both the special and general terms of
the Supreme Court of the district, is obviously wrong, but we
think, on the contrary, that it was clearly warranted by the
evidence. A circumstance which would be of great weight in inducing
us to reach this conclusion, were it necessary for us to carefully
weigh the evidence, is the fact that, at the time of the failure of
the bill in question, $500 was still due from Mason to defendant
under the contract of June 3, 1880, and that sum was subsequently
paid to Spalding, and the payment endorsed upon the contract, and
there was no endorsement of a modification in any respect of the
terms of that contract.
What we have said with reference to the fourth assignment,
disposes of the fifth.
The sixth assignment of error needs but little consideration. It
was provided in the contract of June 3, 1880, as follows:
"The said Harvey Spalding agrees and binds himself to obtain all
the claims of the class named he can, and to make contracts for
fees equal to twenty-five percent of the collections, and to
subject the whole to be shared together with those in hand by said
George Mason for the consideration herein specified."
The house bill 3981, referred to in the contract between the
parties as having been favorably reported by the proper committee,
was, as we have shown, practically identical with
Page 161 U. S. 389
the subsequent act of 1883, the only material difference being
that the provision contained in the act of 1883 was not in the
house bill. If we suppose that the house bill in question had been
amended by adding a similar proviso, and, as thus amended, became a
law, it could not reasonably be contended that Mason would not have
had a right to share in any fees collected upon claims embraced in
the list of 7,500 cases which Spalding had procured for collection
subsequent to the passage of the bill. If such would not have been
the effect had the house bill passed with that proviso, no reason
is apparent why a contrary effect should be claimed for the act of
1883. The assignment is not tenable.
The seventh assignment reads as follows:
"7th. The court erred in allowing complainant an interest in
fees in claims registered in the same book as the 7,500 claims, but
inserted at a different time, and designated by half numbers."
This is a reiteration of the second exception to the auditor's
report.
The list of 7,500 cases which the evidence shows Spalding had
collected in books and upon slips at the time of the making of the
contract was supposed and was intended to embrace all persons
entitled to $25 and over, by virtue of section 8 of the act of
1866, as construed by Spalding. His counsel does not argue that the
half-numbered claims held by the auditor to constitute part of the
list of 7,500 cases were not embraced in the character of claims
designed to be covered by said list.
We adopt the reasoning by which the auditor reached a decision
allowing complainant a share in the fees derived from these
half-numbered claims. He said:
"In the examination of the defendant's books containing a list
of the claims which are the subject of this account there appeared
to have been entered claims described in the testimony as half
numbers, and the fees received in these cases are not included in
the statements of the defendant above referred to. These claims are
enumerated in another paper, marked 'Defendant's Schedule B.'"
"The defendant contends (see his brief) that these claims
Page 161 U. S. 390
do not belong on the Mason list. They were subsequently entered
there in error, and that they are not covered by the decree."
"The order of reference directs an accounting as to the claims
contained 'in a list of about 7,500 cases mentioned in the
defendant's answer.' No list was filed with the answer, nor has any
list been produced in the progress of the cause other than the
schedules made by the defendant for the purposes of this reference
and the books in which these half numbers appear. It is clear,
therefore, that the court in making the decree had no such list
before it and could not intend to restrict the accounting to any
particular claim by names or numbers. Indeed, the whole case shows
the intention of the court to have been to divide the cases as to
which the bill sought an accounting into two classes, the dividing
line being the change of construction by the government officers of
the law relating to these claims."
"So far as appears here, these half-numbered cases are of the
same class as the others on the Mason list, and are therefore
included in the contract of sale, and not excluded by the
decree."
"The evidence as to the time of their entry on the list and the
attempted withdrawal of them from it is not at all clear."
"These fees aggregate the sum of $1,678.48."
The eighth and ninth assignments of error read as follows:
"8th. The court erred in holding that the complainant was not
chargeable with any part of the expense of procuring claims
obtained by the defendant subsequent to January 17, 1871."
"9th. The court erred in holding that the complainant was not
chargeable with any part of the expenses of prosecuting claims
obtained by the defendant."
It was expressly stipulated in the contract of June 3, 1880,
that the one-fourth interest of Mason should be "free from all
charges of expenses in prosecuting said claims to collection."
These assignments therefore depend for their support upon the
claim that on the 17th of January, 1881, a new contract
Page 161 U. S. 391
was entered into between complainant and defendant, under the
terms of which Mason agreed to share in all future expenses
connected with the business. Our concurrence with the holding of
the master that no such agreement was entered into leads us to
overrule these assignments.
The tenth and eleventh assignments of error read as follows:
"10th. The court erred in holding that the complainant was not
chargeable with any part of the expenses of securing and collecting
fees which were incurred in consequence of the proviso of the Act
of March 3, 1883, and of a circular issued by the Postmaster
General to make difficult the collection of the fees."
"11th. The court erred in not allowing the defendant twenty
percent or some percent or gross amount for expenses in collecting
fees."
In his original answer, defendant, after averring the amount of
fees collected upon the 4,208 claims concerning which he submitted
to an account, said
"that, owing to the change made by the act of 1883 in the
previous method of collecting fees, as well to certain circulars
thereunder issued by the Postmaster General, he has been put to an
expense of about ten percent to collect such fees after the
allowances had been made and in respect of which they were
due."
This refers to the requirement by Congress that the claims under
the act, when allowed, should be paid to the claimants directly,
and not to attorneys.
In his additional answer Spalding admitted that he had received
for collection 24,259 claims, and averred that the expenditures
incurred and paid for clerk hire, printing, office rent, postage,
discounts, interest, etc., in prosecuting said claims from January
17, 1881, to December 31, 1887, aggregated $64,547.75, but that
such expenditures did not include the ten percent, expended, as in
the original answer stated, to collect fees that had been earned.
It thus appears that before the taking of testimony, the expenses
of the prosecution of the claims was sworn to by the defendant as
being distinct and separate from the expense of collecting
fees.
The auditor allowed all actual, direct, and necessary
expenses
Page 161 U. S. 392
in the collection of fees, such as bank charges, express
charges, and attorney's fees, the total amount of such expenses
having been deducted from the gross fee charged by Spalding under
the contract with claimants, the net sum received by Spalding being
returned as the gross amount of fees which he had collected.
Changing, however, the position taken in his sworn answer, the
defendant demanded at the auditor's hands an allowance for expenses
in collecting fees, for office rent, clerk hire, postage,
stationery, printing, etc., from 1883 to 1887, to an amount
exceeding more than one-half the total expenditures of that
character stated in Spalding's answer to have been by him incurred
in the prosecution of the entire business of over 24,000 claims.
Mason had an interest in but 4,208 of these, and 427 of that number
were received from two attorneys, and presumably did not require
special effort in each of the cases to collect Spalding's
proportion of the fees. The claims asserted were not itemized, but
were made in bulk sums, and the amounts were mere estimates. No
receipts or vouchers were produced by defendant, nor was any book
produced containing itemized statements, whereby the propriety or
correctness of the expenditures might have been determined or
tested. Though no fees were collected during the year 1883 and the
first five months of 1884, one-half of the total expenses of that
period are charged as expenses for collection of fees.
The defendant testified that the gross amount of fees collected
on all claims was $165,241.80. He claimed that in order to effect
collections he had expended for --
Clerk hire . . . . . . . . . . $15,608.24
Office rent. . . . . . . . . . 22,540.00
Postage. . . . . . . . . . . . 6,375.00
Stationery, printing, etc. . . 5,959.18
Miscellaneous expenses . . . . 2,565.78
----------
Total . . . . . . . . . . $53,048.20
The alleged expenses thus amounted to exactly twenty percent
Page 161 U. S. 393
of the gross amount of fees collected, whereas the answer
claimed but ten percent
The unreliable character of the testimony as to these items of
expenditure is illustrated by counsel for appellee in his brief. On
cross-examination of Mr. Spalding as to an expense account filed
May 22, 1889, he testified that he had disbursed the following
amounts:
Statement Made at Session May 22, 1889
Half of postage from March 3, 1883,
to January 1, 1884 . . . . . . . . . . $ 750.00
Half of postage in 1884. . . . . . . . . 1,000.00
Half of postage in 1885. . . . . . . . . 1,000.00
Half of postage in 1886. . . . . . . . . 1,500.00
Whole of postage in 1887 . . . . . . . . 750.00
Whole of postage in 1888 . . . . . . . . 1,000.00
Whole of postage 5 months, 1889. . . . . 375.00
Add miscellaneous expenses . . . . . . . 2,565.78
---------
Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8,940.78
When pressed to give the items of the miscellaneous expenditures
stated as $2,565.78, defendant promised a full statement at the
next session, but instead of making such explanation, he filed a
statement showing miscellaneous expenditures reduced to $143.50,
but the postage items increased proportionately, as shown in the
following statement:
Statement Made at session June 5, 1889
Half of postage from March 3, 1883,
to January 1, 1884 . . . . . . . . . . $ 865.00
Half of postage in 1884. . . . . . . . . 730.00
Half of postage in 1885. . . . . . . . . 1,600.00
Half of postage in 1886. . . . . . . . . 2,920.00
Whole of postage in 1887 . . . . . . . . 1,300.00
Whole of postage in 1888 . . . . . . . . 1,240.00
Whole of postage 5 months, 1889. . . . . 518.50
---------
Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9,173.50
Page 161 U. S. 394
The contract did not contemplate a necessity for expenditures in
connection with the collection of fees, as, on June 3, 1880, it was
believed that drafts for the amounts of the difference claimed
would be delivered to Spalding as attorney for the claimants, and
that he would make his deduction of fees therefrom.
For this reason, the auditor reached the conclusion that Mason's
interest should be charged with its just share of expenses
necessary and reasonably incurred in securing, and realizing the
fees of which he was to receive a share, with the qualification
that perhaps before any considerable amount of such expenses had
been incurred, the complainant should have been notified.
Complainant does not find fault with the deductions actually
allowed. Concerning, however, the claim for an allowance of twenty
percent upon Mason's share of fees, as an expense for collection,
the auditor said:
"Some of these expenses were incurred in unsuccessful endeavors
to secure fees, and before his interest in fees collected can be
charged with expenses connected with fees not collected it should
appear that he assented to such expenditures, or at least had
knowledge of them. Neither of these conditions is shown to exist
here."
"The defendant kept no current account of these expenditures,
even in gross, and is now compelled to estimate some of them upon a
basis of unreliable data. He made no attempt to keep any separate
account of those incurred in securing the Mason fees as
distinguished from his other business, as he should have done if he
intended to claim allowance for them in his settlement with the
complainant."
"Nor is the evidence before me sufficient to establish the
necessity for or reasonable character of these expenses."
We find no obvious error in this conclusion. Where an allowance
is asked which is clearly excessive and exorbitant, it is for the
party claiming to be entitled to establish just what is the amount
he is properly entitled to, and it is not made the duty of the
court or its officers to arbitrarily guess at the amount.
The twelfth assignment alleges error in the allowance by
Page 161 U. S. 395
the general term in its final decree of interest upon the entire
principal sum found due from August 9, 1887.
The contract of June 3, 1880, provided that
"all the fees collected by the said Spalding shall be accounted
for and settlements shall be made from time to time as collections
are made, and the divisions thereof shall be made, three-fourths
going to said Spalding and one-fourth to said Mason."
The auditor made monthly rests in the collection of fees, and
allowed interest on all collections during a particular month from
the first day of the succeeding month. The special term entered a
decree in accordance with that method. The general term, however,
sustained the exception to the auditor's allowance of interest, and
modified the decree of the special term in that particular by
allowing interest on the entire principal sum found due by the
auditor from the time when complainant made his demand upon
Spalding for an account as to the fees collected.
Spalding's failure, prior to August 9, 1887, to render an
account and make settlements for collections of fees is shown by
the evidence of Mason to have been acquiesced in by him. The
general term therefore correctly held that interest should run only
from the date when the demand for an accounting was made, and the
right of complainant thereto was denied.
Appellant strenuously insists that no interest whatever should
be allowed. The claim is without merit. Defendant had no reasonable
ground for refusing to account at least as to the fees earned upon
the claims embraced in the list of 7,500 cases. To that extent, he
was clearly indebted to Mason, less the amount of any payments
which he had made. He had in his possession and control the means
of determining the amount of such indebtedness, and as to an
indebtedness which he ought not to have disputed he should have
ascertained the amount due, and tendered it without prejudice to a
dispute concerning other items. Interest is allowed both at law and
equity upon money due. As said by this Court in
Curtis v.
Innerarity, 6 How. 146,
47 U. S. 154,
considering and overruling an exception to an allowance of interest
from the time certain payments had become due:
Page 161 U. S. 396
"It is a dictate of natural justice, and the law of every
civilized country, that a man is bound in equity not only to
perform his engagements, but also to repair all the damages that
accrue naturally from their breach. . . . Everyone who contracts to
pay money on a certain day knows that, if he fails to fulfill his
contract, he must pay the established rate of interest as damages
for his nonperformance. Hence, it may correctly be said that such
is the implied contract of the parties."
It is no hardship for one who has had the use of money owing to
another to be required to pay interest thereon from the time when
the payment should have been made.
Crescent Mining Co. v.
Wasatch Mining Co., 151 U. S. 317,
151 U. S.
323.
The circumstance that the complainant may have considered
himself entitled to an account, and to receive a greater sum than
was actually found to be due, does not affect complainant's right
to the interest upon what was really due.
Sturm v. Boker,
150 U. S. 312,
150 U. S. 341.
In the case just cited, while the right to an account was
sustained, it was held that a portion of the matters claimed by
complainant could not be allowed on a final accounting, but it was
directed that the account should be stated up to the filing of the
bill, and that any balance shown in favor of either side should
bear interest from that date.
The general term, however, erred in its direction on the subject
of interest. It overlooked the fact that some of the fees for which
a recovery was allowed, amounting to $4,735.06, were collected
after August, 1887. The dates of the collections made after that
date are shown by the record, and an allowance of an average of
interest will correct the error.
This completes our consideration of the specific assignments of
error. The general assignment that the court erred in not
dismissing the bill of complaint with costs is shown to be without
merit by what we have already stated.
The error in respect to interest necessitates a modification of
the decree under review. As it is a matter, however, of mere
interest, not affecting the real merits of the controversy, and
which we think would have been corrected by the lower court
Page 161 U. S. 397
had its attention been called to it, the costs of this appeal
must be borne by appellants.
It is therefore ordered that the judgment of the Supreme
Court of the District of Columbia be, and is hereby, modified, by
providing that of the principal sum due $8,934.05 shall bear
interest from August 9, 1887, and $4,735.06 shall bear interest
from August 2, 1888, and, as thus modified, the judgment is
affirmed at the costs of appellants.
MR. JUSTICE GRAY dissented.