In actions in the Court of Claims, interest prior to the
judgment cannot be allowed to claimants against the United States,
but the provisions of Rev.Stat. § 966 peremptorily require it
to be allowed to the United States against claimants under all
circumstances to which the statute applies, and without regard to
equities which might be considered between private parties.
This was a petition by the administrator of James R. Verdier,
deceased, for the payment of a balance of $1,300.41, claimed to be
due him upon a readjustment of his accounts as postmaster at
Beaufort, South Carolina, from July 1, 1866, to April 30, 1869.
Upon a hearing in the Court of Claims, that court made the
following findings of fact:
"1. James R. Verdier was a duly qualified postmaster at
Beaufort, South Carolina, from July 1, 1866, to the 30th day of
April, 1869."
"2. Upon his retirement from office, he appeared as indebted to
the United States on the face of his postal accounts in the sum of
$929.20. June 28, 1870, an action was brought by the United States
against him on his official bond, in the United States District
Court of South Carolina, to recover said sum, and July 5, 1870, the
jury returned a verdict in favor of the United States for the sum
of $1,063.20, which verdict was, upon motion of Verdier's attorney,
set aside."
"October 31 following, the attorney for said Verdier consented
that the case be submitted to the court, and upon said date the
jury returned a verdict in favor of the United States against
Verdier for the sum of $1,059.03; the costs were $36.80; total,
$1,095.83. Judgment thereon was duly signed January 25, 1871."
"3. November 3, 1885, application was made to the Postmaster
General by the administrator for a review and readjustment
Page 164 U. S. 214
of decedent's salary as postmaster aforesaid, under the
provisions of the Act of March 3, 1883, c. 119, 22 Stat. 487.
December 23, 1885, said salary was readjusted, and the sum of
$2,892.84 found due said decedent's estate. August 4, 1886, a sum
of money was appropriated by Congress to pay this and similar
allowances. 24 Stat. 256, 307, 308."
"4. March 4, 1887, decedent's postal account was audited by the
auditor for the Post Office Department, who charged his account
with the aforesaid judgment and interest thereon from July 5, 1870,
to August 4, 1886 (the date of appropriation), and costs of suit,
the total thereof being the sum of $2,296.77, and deducted this sum
from the amount of salary credited to said account, showing a
balance of $596.07."
"June 20, 1887, the United States attorney for the aforesaid
district was instructed to satisfy said judgment, which was
accordingly done July 25, 1887."
"5. The sum of $596.07 was paid plaintiff, who gave the
following receipt:"
"
Transfer draft"
"Mailed Sept. 14, 1887. Received Sept. 26, 1887, the transfer
draft of the Third Assistant Postmaster General, No. 4655, for 596
dollars .07 cents, in my favor, on the postmaster at New York,
State of N.Y. _____, to the _____."
"W. J. Verdier,
Administrator"
Upon these facts, the court found as a conclusion of law that
the petitioner was entitled to recover in the sum of $1,233.57, 28
Ct.Cl. 268, for which amount judgment was entered, and the United
States appealed.
MR. JUSTICE BROWN, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
Page 164 U. S. 215
The contest in this case is really over a question of interest.
Upon the termination of his services as postmaster, Verdier was
found, upon the face of his accounts, to be indebted to the
government. Suit was brought against him upon his bond, and a
verdict obtained July 5, 1870, for $1,063.20, which was
subsequently set aside; but the action ultimately resulted in a
judgment against him, rendered January 25, 1871, in the sum of
$1,095.83.
By Rev.Stat. § 966,
"interest shall be allowed on all judgments in civil causes
recovered in a circuit or district court . . . in all cases where,
by the law of the state in which such court is held, interest may
be levied under process of execution on judgments recovered in the
courts of such state, and it shall be calculated from the date of
the judgment at such rate as allowed by law on judgments recovered
in the courts of such state."
We see no reason why this section, or § 3624, fixing the
rate of interest upon delinquent accounts of public officers at six
percent, does not apply to this case. Verdier was therefore
properly charged with interest upon the judgment.
Amis v.
Smith 16 Pet. 303.
By the Act of July 1, 1864, c. 197, 13 Stat. 335, the system
which had theretofore prevailed of paying postmasters by a
commission upon the receipts of their offices was changed, and
postmasters were divided into five classes, and paid by a salary
gauged by their compensation for the two consecutive years
preceding the act. The classification of postmasters was determined
by the Postmaster General upon the basis of the commissions
previously paid to them, and the exact amount of their salaries
fixed within certain limitations provided by the act for each
class. There was a further provision in the second section that the
salary should be reviewed and readjusted by the Postmaster General
once in two years upon the basis upon which the salary was
originally fixed, but that such change should not take effect until
the first day of the quarter next following the order for the same.
This section was amended by the Act of July 12, 1866, c. 114, 14
Stat. 59, 60, by adding a proviso that when the quarterly returns
of any postmaster showed that the salary allowed was
Page 164 U. S. 216
ten percent less than it would have been on a basis of
commissions, the Postmaster General should review and readjust
under the provisions of the prior act.
It will be observed that these acts of 1864 and 1866 were both
prospective in their operation.
United States v. McLean,
95 U. S. 750. We
must assume that when Verdier took office, July 1, 1866, his salary
was fixed by the Postmaster General under the act of 1864, this
being the date at which the first biennial term fixed by the act of
1864 expired. It would seem that no readjustment could then be made
until the lapse of two years, or until July, 1868, unless, upon
satisfactory representation, it was deemed expedient by the
Postmaster General. If a readjustment had been made under these
acts, it would have operated prospectively only, and until April
30, 1869, when he ceased to serve as postmaster. Why a readjustment
was not made does not appear. It may have been for the absence of
quarterly returns, as there is no finding that such returns were
made. It may have been by simple neglect of the Postmaster General
to comply with the law, but there is no evidence of his refusal to
do so, and in any event the government would not be liable for his
neglect in that particular.
United States v.
Kirkpatrick, 9 Wheat. 720;
United States v.
Sherman, 98 U. S. 565. It
was not until 1883 that the Postmaster General was authorized to
readjust the compensation of postmasters and to make such
readjustments retrospective.
By the Act of March 3, 1883, c. 119, 22 Stat. 487, the
Postmaster General was authorized and directed to readjust the
salaries of postmasters, whose salaries had not theretofore been
readjusted under the act of 1866, "who had made sworn returns of
their receipts and business for readjustment of salary" to the
department, or who had
"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,"
such readjustment to be made in accordance with the act of 1866,
and
"to date from the beginning of the quarter succeeding that in
which such sworn returns of receipts and business
Page 164 U. S. 217
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 such readjustment."
Pursuant to this statute, application was made by the
administrator of Verdier for a review and readjustment of his
salary as postmaster, and on December 23, 1885, his salary was
readjusted, and the sum of $2,092.84 found to be due his
estate.
On August 4, 1886, an act was passed by Congress, c. 903, 24
Stat. 307, appropriating a sum of money to pay this and similar
allowances. Verdier's account was finally audited March 4, 1887. In
this statement, he was charged with the judgment and interest
thereon from July 5, 1870, to August 4, 1886 (the date of the
appropriation), the total being the sum of $2,296.77, and was
credited with the amount of his readjusted salary and a balance of
$596.07 found to be due him. This sum was subsequently paid, the
receipt of petitioner's administrator taken for the amount, and the
judgment against Verdier satisfied of record July 25, 1887. On
September 28, 1888, this petition was filed to recover the
difference between the original verdict and the amount which was
deducted from his readjusted salary upon final settlement.
By the act of 1883, no readjustment could be made except upon
the application of the postmaster, and when that application was
made in this case, the salary was for the first time readjusted.
Until this time, the debt was not liquidated. In fact, it would be
more accurate to say that it did not exist. The argument is made
that as the readjusted salary was earned prior to the verdict
against Verdier of July 5, 1870, he ought not to be charged with
interest upon the judgment against him for the sixteen years which
elapsed from that time until August, 1886, when the act of Congress
appropriating money for the payment of readjusted salaries was
passed, or, which is nearly the same thing, that the government
should be charged with interest upon his readjusted compensation
from the time he left the office. It would certainly seem to be
equitable that if the government were indebted to Verdier at the
time it obtained judgment against him, it should not charge
Page 164 U. S. 218
him with interest upon its judgment. But, interest being a
matter of purely statutory regulation, we are bound to give or
withhold it as the statute directs. By the judgment of the District
Court of South Carolina, Verdier became indebted to the government
on January 25, 1871, in the sum of $1,095.83, and as he did not pay
the debt at the time, he was properly chargeable with interest.
Rev.Stat. § 966.
Upon the other hand, the government did not become a debtor to
Verdier until his claim was liquidated, and by Rev.Stat. §
1091, no interest can be allowed upon any claim against the
government up to the time of the rendition of judgment thereon by
the Court of Claims unless upon a contract expressly stipulating
for the payment of interest. The theory upon which interest is
claimed seems to be that the Postmaster General was in fault for
not having readjusted Verdier's salary under the act of 1866, and
that Verdier ought not to be prejudiced by such default. The whole
difficulty in the case, however, arises from the fact that there
were claims upon both sides. Did the case of the government stand
alone, there could be no doubt whatever that Verdier's estate would
be properly chargeable with interest. Upon the other hand, if his
accounts had been settled and paid at the expiration of his term,
and a claim were now made under the act of 1883, it would not be
claimed that the government would be chargeable with interest. The
equity of petitioner's claim, if there be any, arises from the fact
that while interest was running against him on his judgment, the
government was equitably his debtor. Were the case between private
individuals, perhaps interest would be chargeable to both parties;
but we are unable to see how the fact that there were mutual claims
can authorize us to disregard the plain letter of the statutes.
There is really no greater hardship in denying the petitioner
interest than there would have been if he had not been a judgment
debtor of the government.
An inherent vice of petitioner's argument is in the assumption
that he and the government stand upon an equality with respect to
interest. The truth is that, in its dealings with individuals,
public policy demands that the government
Page 164 U. S. 219
should occupy an apparently favored position. It may sue, but,
except by its own consent, cannot be sued. In the matter of costs,
it recovers, but does not pay, and the liability of the individual
would not be affected by the fact he had a judgment against the
government which did not carry costs. So the statute of limitations
may be pleaded by the government, but not against it, nor is it
affected by the laches of its officers.
United
States v. Barker, 2 Wheat. 395;
The
Antelope, 12 Wheat. 546;
United
States v. McLemore, 4 How. 286;
United
States v. Boyd, 5 How. 29;
United States v.
Thompson, 98 U. S. 486;
Simmons v. Ogle, 105 U. S. 271;
United States v.
Kirkpatrick, 9 Wheat. 720;
United
States v. Nicholl, 12 Wheat. 505;
Gaussen v.
United States, 97 U. S. 584. Under
the bankruptcy law, it was a preferred creditor, and its claims
were paid even before the wages of operatives, clerks, or house
servants. Rev.Stat. § 5101. In short, the equities which arise
as between individuals have but a limited application as between
the government and a citizen.
Nor is it strictly true to say that the government was indebted
to Verdier at the date of its judgment against him. He had
performed services for which an indebtedness was subsequently
voluntarily created by the government, but until the readjustment
was made, the law imposed no obligation upon the government to pay
him an increased salary. Verdier could not have availed himself of
it as a set-off or counterclaim to his own debt to the government,
and in fact it never became a debt until the claim was liquidated
under the act of 1883. As was said by this Court in
United
States v. McLean, 95 U. S. 750,
95 U. S.
753:
"The law imposes no obligation upon the government to pay an
increased salary unless a readjustment has preceded it. And by the
act of 1866, the Postmaster General is not to readjust an existing
salary unless the quarterly returns made show cause for it. Now if
it be conceded that the quarterly returns made on the last day of
each quarter, beginning with June 30, 1871, made it the duty of the
Postmaster General to make a readjustment immediately on the
receipt of the returns, still his readjustment
Page 164 U. S. 220
was an executive act, made necessary by the law, in order to
perfect any liability of the government. If the executive officer
failed to do his duty, he might have been constrained by a
mandamus. But the courts cannot perform executive duties, or treat
them as performed when they have been neglected. They cannot
enforce rights which are dependent for their existence upon a prior
performance by an executive officer of certain duties he has failed
to perform. The right asserted by the claimant rests upon a
condition unfulfilled."
In that case, as stated by Mr. Justice Miller in
United
States v. Vilas, 124 U. S. 86,
124 U. S. 87,
this Court held that the Court of Claims could not
"perform the duty of readjusting the salary under the acts which
conferred that power on the Postmaster General, and that there was
no legal liability against the United States for the amount claimed
by him until that officer had readjusted the salary in accordance
with those acts of Congress."
And in
United States v. Vilas, it was held that the
statute did not contemplate a readjustment oftener than once on two
years, as a legal duty or obligation on the part of the Postmaster
General.
Verdier's claim for interest in this case is based upon the
assumption that the Postmaster General neglected his duty in
failing to readjust his salary. We have shown that if he had
performed his statutory duty, his action would have been
prospective only, and would have covered but comparatively a short
period of Verdier's services; but, however this may be, the
government is not chargeable for his neglect in that
particular.
It results that the judgment of the court below must be
Reversed, and the case remanded with direction to dismiss
the petition.
MR. JUSTICE GRAY did not hear the argument, and took no part in
the decision of this case.