The Secretary of the Interstate Commerce Commission is entitled
to be reimbursed for telegrams sent by him pursuant to directions
of the Commission, on presenting vouchers in the form prescribed by
law to the proper auditing officer of the Treasury Department,
approved by the chairman of the Commission and accompanied by the
request of the chairman that the rules of the Comptroller as to the
production of copies of telegrams for which credit is asked be
disregarded on account of the confidential character of the
messages, the Secretary having also offered to submit the books of
the Commission to the Comptroller and Auditors of the Treasury.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was a petition in the Court of Claims to recover the
Page 187 U. S. 323
sum of $310.37, disallowed by the auditing officers of the
government.
The petitioner is Secretary of the Interstate Commerce
Commission, and the claim disallowed was incurred for telegrams
sent at the direction of the Commission. Judgment passed for the
petitioner October 28, 1901, and the United States took this
appeal.
The findings of fact and the conclusion of law by the Court of
Claims were as follows:
"I. The claimant herein, a citizen of the United States, is
Secretary and disbursing agent of the Interstate Commerce
Commission, and as such agent it becomes his duty to disburse the
moneys appropriated by Congress from time to time to enable the
Commission to carry out the provisions of the Act of February 4,
1887, and amendments thereto. The disbursements were made under the
direction of the Commission, and the accounts therefor, together
with itemized vouchers, approved by the chairman of the Commission,
were presented to the accounting officers of the Treasury
Department for the quarter and year ending June 30, 1899, and also
his supplemental accounts, with vouchers so made out and approved,
for the same year, among which were the accounts and itemized
vouchers for $310.37 for money paid from time to time to the
Western Union Telegraph Company and Postal Telegraph Cable Company
for sundry dispatches sent over their lines under the direction of
said Commission."
"II. The accounts for money so expended for telegrams were
disallowed by the Auditor for the State and other Departments, and
on appeal to the Comptroller of the Treasury, the decision of the
Auditor was sustained on the ground that the claimant had not
complied with the requirement of the Comptroller to furnish the
original telegrams or copies thereof, or, if of a confidential
nature, to furnish in lieu thereof a certificate to that effect
signed by the chairman of the Commission."
"In response to that ruling, the claimant presented and filed
with his said accounts the following order, issued by the
Commission April 27, 1899:"
" That so much of the Comptroller's communication as
requires
Page 187 U. S. 324
copies of telegrams relating to the business of the Commission
to accompany telegraph vouchers for which credit is asked be
disregarded by the Secretary and disbursing agent, the Commission
holding that such messages are so far confidential as to justify
refusal to disclose their contents, and that the requirement for
their production is unreasonable and against public interest."
"And that the Interstate Commerce Commission did, through their
Secretary, address to the Hon. R. J. Tracewell, Comptroller of the
Treasury, a letter dated October 4, 1900, containing an invitation
to inspect the books, papers, and other matters relating to the
accounts of the disbursing agent, as follows, viz.:"
" By the Act of March 15, 1898, Acts 1897-99, page 316, it is
provided:"
" 'SEC. 5. All books, papers, and other matters relating to the
accounts of officers of the government in the District of Columbia
shall at all times be subject to inspection and examination by the
Comptroller of the Treasury and the Auditor of the Treasury
authorized to settle such accounts, or by the duly authorized
agents of either of said officers.'"
" I am authorized by the Commission to extend to the officers
and agents referred to in this section the fullest opportunity of
making such examination, in the offices of the Commission, of all
such books, papers, and other matter relating to the accounts of
the disbursing agents as they may see proper to examine, and among
these all such telegrams as are embraced in the accounts of the
disbursing agent. By this means, the objections which the
Commission have made to the undue publicity of their telegrams will
in some measure be avoided, and the purposes of the auditing
officers should be thereby fully attained."
"But the decision of the Comptroller was adhered to."
"III. The accounts and itemized vouchers were presented to the
accounting officers in the form prescribed by statute -- that is to
say that each telegram sent by the Commission, and the cost
thereof, and the dates, number of words, persons from and to whom
sent, places from and to which sent, and the charge for each
message transmitted, were fully shown in a voucher approved by
Martin A. Knapp, chairman, and the defendants
Page 187 U. S. 325
concede the correctness of the several amounts so expended."
"IV. After the disallowance of the claimant's accounts for the
moneys so disbursed to the Western Union Telegraph Company and
Postal Telegraph Cable Company, as aforesaid, and to avoid any
balance being stated against him, he, under protest, paid into the
Treasury of the United States the full amount of the sum so
disallowed, to-wit, $310.37."
"V. That prior to January, 1899, the original telegrams, or
copies thereof, or certificates that such telegrams were of a
confidential character, were not required by the auditing officers
of the Treasury to be produced by the disbursing officers of the
Department of State, or the Post Office Department, or the Navy
Department, or the Interstate Commerce Commission, with the
vouchers produced by these disbursing officers, for the telegrams
sent from such Departments on official business."
"VI. The correspondence by official communications between the
Comptroller of the Treasury and the claimant appears in the letter
of June 15, 1900, from Edward A. Moseley, Secretary and disbursing
agent, to Hon. R. J. Tracewell, Comptroller; letter of July 23,
1900, from the Acting Comptroller to the claimant; the letter of
October 4, 1900, from the claimant to the Comptroller, and the
letter of October 6, 1900, to the claimant; which were filed as
part of the claimant's petition and exhibits therewith."
"
Conclusion of Law"
"From the foregoing findings of fact, the court decides as a
conclusion of law that the claimant is entitled to recover judgment
against the United States, on the authority of the
Moseley
case, 35 Ct.Cl. 347, in the sum of three hundred and ten dollars
and thirty-seven cents ($310.37)."
The case is in narrow compass. There is no controversy over the
fact of expenditure of the sum sued for, and the Court of Claims
found that
"the accounts and itemized vouchers were presented to the
accounting officers in the form prescribed by statute -- that is to
say, that each telegram sent by the Commission, and the cost
thereof, and the dates, number of words, persons
Page 187 U. S. 326
from and to whom sent, places from and to which sent, and the
charge for each message transmitted, were fully shown in a voucher
approved by Martin A. Knapp, chairman, and the defendants concede
the correctness of the several amounts so expended."
Relying on a former decision between the same parties, 35 Ct.Cl.
347, the court evidently thought that the issue made by the
government was not substantial. In that case, it was said:
"The claimant's statement of account being in the form
prescribed by statute --
i.e., 'itemized vouchers
therefor, approved by the chairman of the Commission,' is
prima
facie correct. The defendants do not controvert the fact of
the expenditures therein shown to have been made under the
direction of the Commission, nor of the money paid into the
Treasury, and, as under the circumstances of this case we have no
reason to doubt the correctness or legality of such expenditures,
the claimant is entitled to recover, and judgment will be entered
accordingly."
The case comes, therefore, to a very narrow question. The Act to
Regulate Commerce, as amended March 2, 1889, Supp.Rev.Stat. 2d ed.
690, provides "all of the expenses of the Commission . . . shall be
allowed and paid on the presentation of itemized vouchers therefor
approved by the chairman of the Commission." The appropriation act
of the same date (Supp.Rev.Stat.2d ed. 698) provides: "That
hereafter expenses of the Interstate Commerce Commission shall be
audited by the proper accounting officers of the Treasury."
It is claimed that these provisions can be reconciled and leave
unimpaired the first as the only condition of the allowance and
payment of the expenses of the Commission. Not passing upon that,
but granting the power of the auditing officers to require
something more, we think their requirement was substantially
complied with.
It is to be remembered that the petitioner (appellee) is but the
Secretary of the Commission. He does not direct its functions, its
expenditures, or control its records. He could only submit the
requirement of the Comptroller to the Commission and its response
to the Comptroller. Its response was
"that
Page 187 U. S. 327
so much of the Comptroller's communication as requires copies of
telegrams relating to the business of the Commission to accompany
telegraph vouchers for which credit is asked be disregarded by the
Secretary and disbursing agent, the Commission holding that such
messages are so far confidential as to justify refusal to disclose
their contents, and that the requirement for their production is
unreasonable, and against public interest."
This was a substantial compliance with the requirement of the
Comptroller.
Judgment affirmed.