For several years in succession before the commencement of this
action, the Central Pacific Railroad Company transported the mails
of the United States on its roads. During the same period, post
office inspectors, commissioned by the department, under
regulations which required the railroads "to extend facilities of
free travel" to them, were also transported by the company over its
roads. During all this period, the railroad company presented to
the department its claim for the transportation of the mail without
setting up any claim for the transportation of the inspectors, and
the said claims for mail transportation were, after such
presentation, from time to time, and regularly, adjusted and paid
on that basis. This action was then brought in the Court of Claims
to recover for the transportation of the inspectors. Until it was
commenced, no claim for such transportation had ever been made on
the United States.
Held that, without deciding whether the
claim of the department that its inspectors were entitled to free
transportation was or was not well founded, the silence of the
company, and its acquiescence in the demand of the government for
such free transportation operated as a waiver of any such right of
action.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Central Pacific Railroad Company owned or leased and
operated numerous railroad lines which may be generally described
as (1) those which were constructed by the aid of bonds from the
United States; (2) lines of the Southern Pacific Railroad Company
to which lands were granted by the Acts of Congress of July 27,
1866, § 18, c. 278, 14 Stat. 292, and of March 3, 1871, c. 22,
§ 23, 16 Stat. 573, and the Act of July
Page 164 U. S. 94
25, 1866, c. 242, 14 Stat. 239; (3) other railroads constructed
without the aid of bonds from the government. All the subsidized
portions of claimant's railroads transported for a number of years
prior to the filing of this claim many post office inspectors,
formerly designated as special agents, traveling on government
business, for which services the company has received no pay from
the government, and never demanded any before making and filing the
claim in suit. If the claimant is entitled to be paid therefor, the
amount is between twenty-five and twenty-six thousand dollars.
The post office inspectors for whose transportation the claimant
now asks compensation were commissioned by the Postmaster General,
traveled on the business of the Post Office Department as such
inspectors, and were furnished transportation by the claimant upon
the production of their commissions, which were in the following
form:
"Post-Office Department"
"United States of America"
"To Whom it May Concern:"
"The bearer hereof [name of special or inspector] is hereby
designated a post office inspector of this department, and travels
by my direction on its business. He will be obeyed and respected
accordingly by mail contractors, postmaster, steamboats, stages,
and others connected with the postal service. Railroads,
steamboats, stages, and other mail contractors are required to
extend facilities of free travel to the holder of this
commission."
"_____ _____"
"
Postmaster General"
"Washington, _____, 188_."
The regulations of the department were, during the time such
transportation was furnished, as follows:
"On routes where the mode of conveyance admits of it the special
agents of the Post Office Department, also post office blanks, mail
bags, locks and keys, are to be conveyed without extra charge."
"Railroad companies are required to convey, without specific
Page 164 U. S. 95
charge therefor, all mail bags, post office blanks, and
stationery supplies. Also to convey free of charge all duly
accredited special agents of the department on exhibition of their
credentials."
The claimant transported these officials for more than six years
prior to the filing of this claim, upon the production of their
commissions, and made no claim for compensation for such
transportation up to the filing of its claims therefor in the Court
of Claims. No protest was ever made by or on behalf of claimant to
the government because of this claim for the free transportation of
these officials, as contained in their commissions. The Court of
Claims, among other facts, found that:
"It has always been assumed by the Post Office Department that
the carriage of inspectors upon the exhibition of their credentials
in the form before stated was an acquiescence by the railway
companies with the regulations of the department, and that the
regulation was a notice to the company that there was no implied
agreement on the part of the United States or of the department to
pay for the transportation of such inspectors, but that such
transportation was to be deemed an incident of their carriage of
the mails. That in all cases where written contracts have been made
with companies, the contracts have provided for the transportation
of their agents; but in cases of what are called 'recognized
service' -- that is, where the companies carry the mails for the
compensation fixed by law without express contracts being made --
the department has relied upon the regulation, the terms of the
commission, and the long established usage to secure the
transportation of these officers."
The Court of Claims decided that the claimant was not entitled
to recover, and dismissed its petition. 28 Ct.Cl. 427.
The claimant cites some sections in other statutes than those
above referred to as applicable to the different classes of
railroads owned or leased by claimant. Section 6 of the Act of July
1, 1862, c. 120, 12 Stat. 489, is one of them, and it reads as
follows:
"
And be it further enacted that the grants aforesaid
are made upon condition that said company shall pay said bonds
Page 164 U. S. 96
at maturity, and shall keep said railroad and telegraph line in
repair and use, and shall at all times transmit dispatches over
said telegraph line, and transport mails, troops, and munitions of
war, supplies, and public stores upon said railroad for the
government whenever required to do so by any department thereof,
and that the government shall at all times have the preference in
the use of the same for all the purposes aforesaid (at fair and
reasonable rates of compensation not to exceed the amounts paid by
private parties for the same kind of service),"
etc.
Section 11 of the Act of July 27, 1866, c. 278, 14 Stat. 292, is
another, and it reads as follows:
"
And be it further enacted that said Atlantic and
Pacific Railroad, or any part thereof, shall be a post route and
military road, subject to the use of the United States for postal,
military, naval, and all other government service, and also subject
to such regulations as Congress may impose restricting the charges
for such government transportation."
Section 5 of the Act of July 25, 1866, c. 242, 14 Stat. 239,
240, is in substance the same as section 6 of the act of 1862,
above recited. This section applies to the case of the California
and Oregon Railroad, one of the lessees of the claimant.
The argument upon the part of appellant is that by these various
sections the government entered into a contract with the claimant
to pay for the services rendered, and the claimant agreed to
transport the mails at fair and reasonable rates of compensation,
not to exceed the rates paid by private parties for the same kind
of service, and in the case of the Southern Pacific Railroad, one
of the lessees, it was to perform such services subject to such
regulations as Congress might impose, restricting the charges for
such government transportation. It is urged that, under these
various sections applicable to the various companies forming the
Central Pacific Railroad Company nothing is left to the judgment of
or the regulation by the Postmaster General, nor has Congress at
any time, delegated or attempted to delegate to him the right to
refuse payment of compensation to any of the railroads for the
transportation of government officials; that as to all of
claimant's
Page 164 U. S. 97
railroads, whether subsidized or unsubsidized, no department of
the government is entitled to demand free transportation for any of
its officers or employees, and that the regulation of the Post
Office Department demanding free transportation for post office
inspectors is simply void as being an attempt to take private
property without just compensation.
It is not necessary in this case to construe the meaning of the
various sections of the statute cited by counsel for claimant.
Whether the Post Office Department had or had not the right to
demand free transportation for the post office inspectors appointed
by the Postmaster General is, in the view we take of this case,
beside the question. By the regulations of the Post Office
Department, the right was assumed as existing, and the demand
contained in the commissions for free transportation for the
holders of the commissions was, when acquiesced in by the company,
an acknowledgment on its part of the existence and validity of the
right. The company was informed by the contents of the commission
that the right of free transportation was claimed, and when it was
accorded pursuant to the claim, and no demand made for payment at
the time, or for years thereafter, until the commencement of this
suit, such acquiescence amounts to a clear and conclusive waiver on
the part of the company of any right to now demand such payment. If
the company intended to deny such right or to dispute the validity
of the demand, it should have taken some step to that end at an
early date, so that the government might know that its claim was
disputed, instead of being acknowledged. This was not done. On the
contrary, when the demand was made, the company acceded to it
without objection, the inspectors were transported in accordance
with the demands of the government, and no notice whatever given to
any one that the company disputed, or intended to thereafter
dispute, the validity of the demand. It cannot be possible that it
could silently acquiesce in this claim on the part of the
government, and continue for years the free transportation of these
inspectors, and then suddenly make a demand for payment for their
transportation for all that time,
Page 164 U. S. 98
just the same as if it had always disputed the claim and
demanded compensation for the transportation.
It is insisted, however, that the principle has been decided in
favor of the company in the case of
Union Pacific Railroad v.
United States, 104 U. S. 662. We
think the contention is untenable. The case cited was one where the
services claimed were of a nature described in section 6 of the act
of 1862,
supra, and, in the absence of any other fact, the
government was clearly liable to pay for them as prescribed in that
act. But the government insisted that the rule of compensation
allowed under section 6 of the act had been changed by subsequent
legislation. It therefore required the company to perform the
services, and then undertook to pay for them at the reduced rate
which the government alleged subsequent legislation called for. The
company objected, and this Court held that the section alluded to
was, in substance, a contract, and that the claim of the government
that its terms were altered by subsequent legislation was without
foundation, and that the company was entitled to be paid, as
prescribed in the sixth section, a reasonable compensation which,
if not agreed upon, was to be arrived at upon consideration of all
the facts material to the issue, not to exceed the amounts paid by
private parties. The company at all times disputed the amount of
compensation it was entitled to as claimed by the government for
services confessedly within the description of section 6, and it
never acquiesced in the ruling of the government that the rate had
been altered by subsequent legislation, but protested against it.
Notwithstanding these facts, the government claimed that the
company, having performed the services required of it with notice
of the subsequent law, Rev.Stat. § 4002, must be taken to have
assented to those terms in spite of its protest, but it was held
that the Revised Statutes did not apply, and therefore they did not
alter the contract, nor did they give to the Postmaster General any
authority to insist that the contract, as evidenced by section 6 of
the act mentioned, was not binding. It was stated in the opinion
that:
"As the company, by its terms, was bound to render the service
if required, its compliance cannot be
Page 164 U. S. 99
regarded as a waiver of any of its rights. The service cannot be
treated as voluntary in the sense of submission to exactions
believed to be illegal, so as to justify an implied agreement to
accept the compensation allowed, for, according to the terms of the
obligation, which it did recognize and now seeks to enforce, it had
no option to refuse performance when required. But it might
perform, rejecting illegal conditions attached to the requirement,
and save all its rights."
One of the material facts lacking in the case at bar was present
in the case cited,
viz., the continuous claim on the part
of the company as to its rights, its ever-present dispute with the
government in regard to the correctness of the claim, and its
protest against the government's construction of the law. Instead
of that, we have absolute silence on the part of the claimant here
for many years, and a peaceful acquiescence in the demand made by
the govern ment for the free transportation of these officials.
It is also urged that the Court of Claims erred in its finding
that the railroad company carried United States mails under the
provisions of § 4002 Rev.Stat. and amendatory acts, which
services were recognized and payments made therefor from time to
time by the defendant under the provisions of said section. It is
said that that section does not apply to the case of the Central
Pacific Company, but that section 6, above mentioned, of the act of
1862, does apply, and counsel cites the case above commented upon
of
Union Pacific Railroad v. United States, 104 U.
S. 662, as conclusive of that point. It is immaterial,
so far as the question in this case is concerned, whether the
payments to the company were made under section 4002 or under
section 6 of the act of 1862, the material fact being that during
all these years, the company has presented its accounts to the
government for services in the transportation of the mails and for
the use of the telegraph, and that it has made no claim in any of
these years for compensation for the services described in its
petition to the Court of Claims. Whether the services for which the
company has been paid were performed under the act of 1862 or under
the Revised Statutes, the material fact is that the company has
Page 164 U. S. 100
claimed and been awarded compensation for certain services in
connection with the mails, and at the same time has failed to make
any charge or claim for services connected with the transportation
of post office inspectors. Such omission is further evidence of
waiver. We are satisfied that no cause of action arises in favor of
the company for compensation for the transportation of post office
inspectors upon the facts developed in this case.
The judgment of the Court of Claims was right, and it must
be
Affirmed.