No action can be maintained against the United States for the
destruction or taking of property under the Tucker Act of March 3,
1887, c. 359, 24 Stat. 505, unless the United States is bound by
express or implied contract to compensate the owner therefor or
unless the case be one not sounding in tort.
Under the recognized rules of war, Cuba, being a part of Spain,
was during the war of 1898-1899, enemy country, and all persons
residing in Cuba pending the war were to be deemed enemies whatever
their nationality, including citizens of the United States there
domiciled and doing business.
Property of citizens of the United States in Cuba was during the
war with Spain to be regarded as enemy property subject to the laws
of war, and to be destroyed whenever military necessity so
demanded; nor could a citizen of the United States invoke the
protection of the Constitution pending the war for his property in
Cuba, any more than could a Spanish subject.
A citizen of the United States domiciled in Cuba cannot maintain
an action against the United States under the Act of March 3, 1887,
in the Court of Claims for the value of property destroyed during
and as the result of military operations in Cuba by order of the
commanding officer in the field, as there is no obligation based on
implied contract to compensate for the value of such property. If
the order was not justified by the rules of war, it would amount to
a tort, and the action based thereon would be one sounding in tort,
and the action cannot be maintained.
Quaere, and not decided, whether the Act of March 3,
1887, c. 359, 24 Stat. 505, supersedes or modifies § 1066,
Rev.Stat., and § 9 of the Act of March 3, 1863, c. 92, 12
Stat. 767, relating to claims against the United States growing out
of, or dependent on, treaty stipulations.
42 Ct.Cl. 99 affirmed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 212 U. S. 300
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action was brought in the Court of Claims to recover from
the United States the alleged value of certain property
Page 212 U. S. 301
destroyed in Cuba, during the war with Spain, by order of the
officer who at the time of its destruction commanded the troops of
the United States operating in the locality of the property.
The case depends altogether upon the facts found by the court.
We cannot go beyond those facts.
The Court of Claims found that the Juragua Iron Company
(Limited) was a corporation of Pennsylvania, having its principal
office and place of business in Philadelphia, and was and for many
years had been engaged in the business of mining and selling iron
ore and other mineral products in the United States, Cuba, and
elsewhere, and in manufacturing iron and steel products; that it
was so engaged at the opening of the late war with Spain; and, to
enable it to carry on business, it owned, leased, and operated
mines in Cuba, maintaining offices, works, and the necessary tools,
machinery, equipments, and supplies for its business in the
Province of Santiago de Cuba at or near Siboney, Firmeza, and La
Cruz; that, in addition to its mines, works, and their equipments,
the company also owned real estate at or near Siboney, which was
improved by 66 buildings of a permanent character, used for the
purposes of its business, and occupied by its employees as
dwellings and for other purposes; that in the year 1898, and
"while the war with Spain was in progress, the lives of the
United States troops who were engaged in military operations in the
province of Santiago de Cuba, in the belligerent prosecution of the
war, became endangered by the prevalence of yellow fever, and it
was deemed necessary by the officers in command, in order to
preserve the health of the troops and to prevent the spread of the
disease, to destroy all places of occupation or habitation which
might contain the fever germs;"
that, on or about the eleventh of July, 1898, General Miles,
commanding the United States forces in Cuba, because of the
necessity aforesaid, and by the advice of his medical staff, issued
orders to destroy by fire these 66 buildings at Siboney, which
belonged to the claimant and had been used for the purposes
aforesaid; that, pursuant to that order, such buildings and their
contents were destroyed by fire by the military authorities of
Page 212 U. S. 302
the United States; that the reasonable value of the buildings at
the time and place of destruction was $23,130, and the reasonable
value of the drills, furniture, tools, and other personal property
so destroyed by fire was seven thousand, nine hundred and
eighty-six dollars ($7,986), making a total of thirty-one thousand,
one hundred and sixteen dollars ($31,116).
As a conclusion of law, the court found that the United States
was not liable to pay any sum to the plaintiff on account of the
damage aforesaid, and dismissed the petition.
It is to be observed at the outset that no fact was found that
impeached the good faith, either of General Miles or of his medical
staff, when the former, by the advice of the latter, ordered the
destruction of the property in question; nor any fact from which it
could be inferred that such an order was not necessary in order to
guard the troops against the dangers of yellow fever. It is
therefore to be assumed that the health, efficiency, and safety of
the troops required that to be done which was done. Under these
circumstances, was the United States under any legal obligation to
make good the loss sustained by the owner of the property
destroyed?
By the Act of March 3d 1887, providing for the bringing of suits
against the government of the United States, the Court of Claims
was given jurisdiction to hear and determine all claims
"founded upon the Constitution of the United States or any law
of Congress, except for pensions, or upon any regulation of an
executive department, or upon any contract, expressed or implied,
with the government of the United States, or for damages,
liquidated or unliquidated, in cases not sounding in tort, in
respect to which claims the party would be entitled to redress
against the United States, either in a court of law, equity, or
admiralty if the United States were suable."
24 Stat. 505, c. 359.
Manifestly no action can be maintained under this statute unless
the United States became bound by implied contract to compensate
the plaintiff for the value of the property destroyed, or unless
the case -- regarding it as an action to recover damages -- be one
"
not sounding in
tort."
Page 212 U. S. 303
The plaintiff contends that the destruction of the property by
order of the military commander representing the authority and
power of the United States was such a taking of private property
for public use as to imply a constitutional obligation on the part
of the government to make compensation to the owner. Const. Amend.
5. In support of that view, it refers to
United States v. Great
Falls Mfg. Co., 112 U. S. 645,
112 U. S. 656;
Great Falls Mfg. Co. v. Attorney General, 124 U.
S. 581,
124 U. S.
597-598;
United States v. Lynah, 188 U.
S. 445. Let us examine those cases.
United States v. Great Falls Mfg. Co. supra, was a case
of the taking for public use by agents and officers of the United
States, proceeding under the authority of an act of Congress, of
certain private property -- lands, water rights, and privileges --
which were held and used by the government for nearly twenty years
without any compensation being made to the owner. A suit was
brought against the United States in the Court of Claims, and
judgment was rendered for the claimant. This Court said:
"It seems clear that these property rights have been held and
used by the agents of the United States under the sanction of
legislative enactments by Congress, for the appropriation of money
specifically for the construction of the dam from the Maryland
shore to Conn's island was, all the circumstances considered,
equivalent to an express direction by the legislative and executive
branches of the government to its officers to take this particular
property for the public objects contemplated by the scheme for
supplying the capital of the nation with wholesome water. The
making of the improvements necessarily involves the taking of the
property, and if, for the want of formal proceedings for its
condemnation to public use, the claimant was entitled at the
beginning of the work to have the agents of the government enjoined
from prosecuting it until provision was made for securing in some
way payment of the compensation required by the Constitution --
upon which question we express no opinion -- there is no sound
reason why the claimant might not waive that right, and, electing
to regard the action of the government as a taking under
Page 212 U. S. 304
its sovereign right of eminent domain, demand just compensation.
Kohl v. United States, 91 U. S. 367,
91 U. S.
374. In that view, we are of opinion that the United
States, having, by its agents, proceeding under the authority of an
act of Congress, taken the property of the claimant for public use,
are under an obligation, imposed by the Constitution, to make
compensation. The law will imply a promise to make the required
compensation where property to which the government asserts no
title is taken, pursuant to an act of Congress, as private property
to be applied for public uses. Such an implication being consistent
with the constitutional duty of the government as well as with
common justice, the claimant's cause of action is one that arises
out of implied contract within the meaning of the statute which
confers jurisdiction upon the Court of Claims of actions founded
'upon any contract, express or implied, with the government of the
United States.'"
In reference to the subsequent case of
Great Falls Mfg. Co.
v. Attorney General, 124 U. S. 581,
124 U. S. 597,
it may be said that, so far as it has any bearing upon the present
controversy, it reaffirms the principle announced in
United
States v. Great Falls Mfg. Co. supra. The court said:
"It is sufficient to say that the record discloses nothing
showing that he [the Secretary of War] has taken more land than was
reasonably necessary for the purposes described in the act of
Congress, or that he did not honestly and reasonably exercise the
discretion with which he was invested; and, consequently, the
government is under a constitutional obligation to make
compensation for any property or property right taken, used, and
held by him for the purposes indicated in the act of Congress,
whether it is embraced or described in said survey or map, or not.
. . . Even if the Secretary's survey and map, and the publication
of the Attorney General's notice, did not, in strict law, justify
the former in taking possession of the land and water rights in
question, it was competent for the company to waive the tort and
proceed against the United States as upon an implied contract, it
appearing, as it does here, that the government recognizes and
Page 212 U. S. 305
retains the possession taken in its behalf for the public
purposes indicated in the act under which its officers have
proceeded."
In
United States v. Lynah, 188 U.
S. 445,
188 U. S.
464-465, which involved the inquiry whether the injury
done to certain lands as the result of work done on the Savannah
river by the United States was a taking of private property for
public use, the court said:
"The rule deducible from these cases is that, when the
government appropriates property which it does not claim as its
own, it does so under an implied contract that it will pay the
value of the property it so appropriates. . . . So the contention
that the government had a paramount right to appropriate this
property may be conceded, but the Constitution, in the Fifth
Amendment, guarantees that, when this governmental right of
appropriation -- this asserted paramount right -- is exercised, it
shall be attended by compensation. . . . Whenever, in the exercise
of its governmental rights, it takes property the ownership of
which it concedes to be in an individual, it impliedly promises to
pay therefor."
It is clear that these cases lend no support to the proposition
that an implied
contract arose on the part of the United
States to make compensation for the property destroyed by order of
General Miles. The cases cited arose in a time of peace, and in
each it was claimed that there was, within the meaning of the
Constitution, an actual taking of property for the use of the
United States, and that the taking was by authority of Congress.
That taking, it was adjudged, created by implication an obligation
to make the compensation required by the Constitution. But can such
a principle be enforced in respect of property destroyed by the
United States in the course of military operations for the purpose,
and only for the purpose, of protecting the health and lives of its
soldiers actually engaged at the time in war in the enemy's
country? We say "enemy's country" because, under the recognized
rules governing the conduct of a war between two nations, Cuba,
being a part of Spain, was enemy's country, and all persons,
whatever their nationality, who resided there, were, pending such
war, to be
Page 212 U. S. 306
deemed enemies of the United States and of all its people. The
plaintiff, although an American corporation, doing business in
Cuba, was, during the war with Spain, to be deemed an enemy to the
United States with respect of its property found and then used in
that country, and such property could be regarded as enemy's
property, liable to be seized and confiscated by the United States
in the progress of the war then being prosecuted -- indeed,
subject, under the laws of war, to be destroyed whenever, in the
conduct of military operations, its destruction was necessary for
the safety of our troops or to weaken the power of the enemy.
In
Miller v. United
States, 11 Wall. 268,
78 U. S. 305,
the Court, speaking of the powers possessed by a nation at war,
said:
"It is sufficient that the right to confiscate the property of
all public enemies is a conceded right. Now what is that right, and
why is it allowed? It may be remarked that it has no reference
whatever to the personal guilt of the owner of confiscated
property, and the act of confiscation is not a proceeding against
him. The confiscation is not because of crime, but because of the
relation of the property to the opposing belligerent -- a relation
in which it has been brought in consequence of its ownership. It is
immaterial to it whether the owner be an alien or a friend, or even
a citizen or subject of the power that attempts to appropriate the
property. In either case, the property may be liable to
confiscation under the rules of war. It is certainly enough to
warrant the exercise of this belligerent right that the owner be a
resident of the enemy's country, no matter what his
nationality."
In
Lamar's Ex'r v. Brown, 92 U. S.
187,
92 U. S. 194,
the Court said:
"For the purposes of capture, property found in enemy territory
is enemy property, without regard to the status of the owner. In
war, all residents of enemy country are enemies."
"All property within enemy territory," said the Court in
Young v. United States, 97 U. S. 39,
97 U. S. 60,
"is, in law, enemy property, just as all persons in the same
territory are enemies. A neutral owning property within the enemy's
lines holds it as enemy property, subject to the laws of war; and
if it is hostile property,
Page 212 U. S. 307
subject to capture."
Referring to the rules of war between independent nations as
recognized on both sides in the late Civil War, the Court, in
United States v. Pacific Railroad Co., 120 U.
S. 227,
120 U. S. 233,
120 U. S. 239,
said:
"The rules of war, as recognized by the public law of civilized
nations, became applicable to the contending forces. . . . The
inhabitants of the Confederate states, on the one hand, and of the
states which adhered to the Union, on the other, became enemies,
and subject to be treated as such, without regard to their
individual opinions or dispositions; while during its continuance
commercial intercourse between them was forbidden, contracts
between them were suspended, and the courts of each were closed to
the citizens of the other.
Brown v. Hiatt, 15 Wall.
177,
82 U. S. 184. . . . More than
a million of men were in the armies on each side. The injury and
destruction of private property caused by their operations, and by
measures necessary for their safety and efficiency, were almost
beyond calculation. For all injuries and destruction which followed
necessarily from these causes, no compensation could be claimed
from the government. By the well settled doctrines of public law,
it was not responsible for them. . . . The principle that, for
injuries to or destruction of private property in necessary
military operations during the Civil War, the government is not
responsible is thus considered established. Compensation has been
made in several such cases, it is true; but it has generally been,
as stated by the President in his veto message, 'a matter of
bounty, rather than of strict legal right.'
See also The
Venus, 8 Cranch 253,
12 U. S.
278;
The Venice, 2 Wall. 258,
69 U. S. 275;
The
Cheshire, 3 Wall. 233;
The Gray
Jacket, 5 Wall. 342,
72 U. S.
369;
The Friendschaft, 4 Wheat.
105,
17 U. S. 107;
Griswold v.
Waddington, 16 Johns. 438, 446, 447; Vattel, Law of Nations,
b. 3, c. 5, § 70, and c. 4, § 8; Burlamaqui, Pt. 4, c. 4,
§ 20."
So, in Hall's International Law, 5th ed. 500, 504, 533:
"A person, though not a resident in a country, may be so
associated with it through having or being a partner in a house of
trade as to be affected by its enemy character, in respect at
least, of the
Page 212 U. S. 308
property which he possesses in the belligerent territory."
In Whiting's War Powers Under the Constitution, 340, 342, the
author says:
"A foreigner may have his personal or permanent domicil in one
country, and at the same time, his constructive or mercantile
domicil in another. The national character of a merchant, so far as
relates to his property engaged in trade, is determined by his
commercial domicil."
"All such persons . . . are
de facto subjects of the
enemy sovereign, being residents within his territory, and are
adhering to the enemy so long as they remain within his territory.
. . ."
"A neutral, or a citizen of the United States, domiciled in the
enemy's country, not only in respect to his property, but also as
to his capacity to sue, is deemed as much an alien enemy as a
person actually born under the allegiance and residing within the
dominions of the hostile nation."
In view of these principles -- if there were no other reason --
the plaintiff corporation could not invoke the protection of the
Constitution in respect of its property used in business in Cuba
during the war, any more than a Spaniard residing there could have
done, under like circumstances, in reference to his property then
in that island. If the property destroyed by order of General Miles
had belonged at the time to a resident Cuban, the owner would not
have been heard in any court, under the facts found, to claim, as
upon implied contract, compensation from the United States on
account of such destruction. How, then, under the facts found,
could an obligation based on implied contract arise under the
Constitution in favor of the plaintiff, an American corporation
which, at the time and in reference to the property in question,
had a commercial domicil in the enemy's country? It is true that
the Army, under General Miles, was under a duty to observe the
rules governing the conduct of independent nations when engaged in
war -- a duty for the proper performance of which the United States
may have been responsible in its political capacity to the enemy
government. If what was done was in conformity to those rules --
as, upon the facts found, we must assume that it was -- then
the
Page 212 U. S. 309
owner of the property has no claim of any kind for compensation
or damages, for, in such a case, the commanding general had as much
right to destroy the property in question, if the health and safety
of his troops required that to be done, as he would have had if, at
the time, the property had been occupied and was being used by the
armed troops of the enemy for hostile purposes. In the
circumstances disclosed by the record, it cannot reasonably be said
that there was, in respect of the destruction of the property in
question, any "convention between the parties," any "coming
together of minds," or any circumstances from which a contract
could be implied.
Russell v. United States, 182 U.
S. 516,
182 U. S. 530;
Harley v. United States, 198 U. S. 229,
198 U. S. 234.
Again, if, as contended -- without, however, any basis for the
contention -- the acts of that officer were not justified by the
laws of war, then the utmost that could be said would be that what
was done pursuant to his order amounted to a tort, and a claim
against the government for compensation on account thereof would
make a case "sounding in tort." But of such a case the court would,
of course, have no jurisdiction under the act of Congress.
In this connection, we may refer to
Hijo v. United
States, 194 U. S. 315,
194 U. S. 322,
in which the United States was sued by a Spanish corporation for
the value of the use of a merchant vessel taken by the United
States in the port of Porto Rico, when that city was captured by
our Army and Navy on July 28th, 1898, and kept and used by the
Quartermaster's Department for some time thereafter. The Court
said:
"There is no element of contract in the case, for nothing was
done by the United States, nor anything said by any of its
officers, from which could be implied an agreement or obligation to
pay for the use of the plaintiff's vessel. According to the
established principles of public law, the owners of the vessel,
being Spanish subjects, were to be deemed enemies, although not
directly connected with military operations. The vessel was
therefore to be deemed enemy's property. It was seized as property
of that kind, for purposes of war, and not for any purposes of
gain. "
Page 212 U. S. 310
After observing that the case did not come within the principle
announced in
United States v. Great Falls Mfg. Co.,
112 U. S. 645,
112 U. S. 656,
the Court proceeded:
"The seizure, which occurred while the war was flagrant, was an
act of war, occurring within the limits of military operations. The
action, in its essence, is for the recovery of damages, but, as the
case is one sounding in tort, no suit for damages can be maintained
under the statute against the United States. It is nonetheless a
case sounding in tort because the claim is in form for the use of
the vessel after actual hostilities were suspended by the protocol
of August 12, 1898. A state of war did not in law cease until the
ratification in April, 1899, of the treaty of peace. . . . If the
original seizure made a case sounding in tort, as it undoubtedly
did, the transaction was not converted into one of implied contract
because of the retention and use of the vessel pending negotiations
for a treaty of peace."
In our judgment, there is no element of contract in the claim of
the plaintiff. And even if it were conceded that its property was
wrongfully and unnecessarily destroyed under the order of the
general commanding the United States troops, the concession could
mean nothing more, in any aspect of the case, than that a tort was
committed by that officer in the interest of the United States.
But, as already said, of a cause of action arising from such a tort
the Court of Claims could not take cognizance, whatever other
redress was open to the plaintiff.
It may be well to notice one other matter referred to in
argument. Section 1066 of the Revised Statutes provided that the
jurisdiction of the Court of Claims
"shall not extend to any claim against the government not
pending therein on December 1st, 1862, growing out of or dependent
on any treaty stipulation entered into with foreign nations or with
the Indian tribes."
12 Stat. 767, c. 92, § 9. We need not now consider or
definitely determine whether that section was superseded or
modified by the above Act of March 3, 1887, for, if it was, and if
an implied contract could, in any case, arise from a treaty
stipulation, there is nothing in any treaty with Spain
Page 212 U. S. 311
which stood in the way of the destruction of the buildings in
question under the circumstances stated in the findings without
liability on the part of the United States for their value, and if
that section was not superseded or modified, then the law is for
the United States, because of the absence of any implied contract
entitling the plaintiff, under the facts found, to be compensated
for the loss sustained by it.
Having noticed all the questions that require consideration, and
finding no error in the record, the judgment of the Court of Claims
must be affirmed.
It is so ordered.