Public policy requires that the mail be carried subject to
postal regulations, and that the department, and not the railroad,
shall, in the absence of contract, determine what service is needed
and the conditions under which it hall be performed.
A railroad company, not required so to do by its charter, is not
bound to furnish postal cars of the kind demanded or to accept
terms named by the Postmaster General, but if it does carry the
mail, it does so as an agency of the government, and subject to the
laws and the regulations of the Department.
A railroad company cannot, by using a larger railway postal car
than that authorized by the department, recover the greater value
of the car.
The Postmaster General can establish full railway postal lines,
and, as the greater includes the less, he can also establish
half-lines; he can abolish between two points a full line in one
direction and a half line in the other.
The facts, which involve claims made by a railroad company for
furnishing railway post office cars to the government, are stated
in the opinion.
Page 225 U. S. 646
MR. JUSTICE LAMAR delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad had a four-year
contract with the Post Office Department to carry
Page 225 U. S. 647
the mail between Chicago and Kansas City. Payment was made on
the basis of weight hauled and the speed with which the service was
performed. The company also furnished sufficient "railway post
office cars," sixty feet in length, to make three round trips each
twenty-four hours. This constituted three "car lines," for which
the plaintiff received the maximum additional compensation then
allowed by Rev.Stat. § 4004, under which the pay varied in
proportion to the length of the car.
This contract was to expire June 30, 1907, by limitation, and,
with a view of obtaining data and proposing terms for a new
arrangement to begin July 1st, 1907, the postal authorities, in
February, mailed to the company a "Distance Circular," which, among
other things, stated that the company was "to accept and perform
mail service under the conditions prescribed by law and the
regulations of the Department." The form was filled out and signed
by an agent of the company. He, however, noted exceptions to
certain postal orders previously promulgated, and "future
regulations which, in the company's opinion, might be unjust or
unfairly reduce its compensation for services." The circular, with
these objections, was not received by the Department until July
24th, but the company, in the meantime, and without any express
contract, continued to carry the mails and to furnish the three car
lines. Payment therefor was made at the maximum rate allowed by the
Act of March 2, 1907 (34 Stat. 1212, c. 2513), which declared:
"Additional pay allowed for every line comprising a daily trip
each way of railway post office cars shall be at a rate not
exceeding twenty-five dollars per mile per annum for cars forty
feet in length, . . . thirty-two dollars and fifty cents per mile
per annum for fifty-foot cars, and forty dollars per mile per annum
for cars fifty-five feet or more in length."
The reports and returns as to the amount of mail carried
Page 225 U. S. 648
over plaintiff's road during the spring of 1907 indicated that
the quantity of east-bound matter was less than that going west
from Chicago to Kansas City. Accordingly, the Department, on July
18, 1907,
"authorized 'three half-lines' R.P.O. cars fifty feet in length
. . . to supersede three 'half-lines' of such cars sixty feet in
length over route 135,098, Chicago to Kansas City."
As the distance between the two cities was about 450 miles, this
change would largely reduce the rate of pay, and the company at
once objected, claiming in the lengthy correspondence and
subsequent suit which followed that the statute did not authorize
"half-car lines;" that the order would require the company to
furnish 60-foot cars in one direction and 50-foot cars on the
return, thus involving an empty haul one way or forcing the company
to furnish 60-foot cars both ways without corresponding or adequate
compensation.
The Department, on the other hand, insisted that, under the
statute, regulations, and long continued practice, it had the right
to establish "half-lines," that "no contract would be made with any
railroad by which it could be excepted from the postal laws and
regulations," and that compensation would only be made in
accordance with the orders of the Department establishing the three
half-lines.
The warrant in settlement of the September quarter was made out
on this basis. It was accepted by the company, but under protest.
In answer, the Department again repeated the statement that any
service performed by the company must be with the distinct
understanding that payment was to be made in accordance with the
orders for space, facilities, and car service required by the
postal authorities. The plaintiff continued to protest and to
furnish the three full lines. They were daily used by the
Department for postal purposes, but payment was made only for
half-lines.
The plaintiff thereupon brought suit, under the Tucker
Page 225 U. S. 649
Act, claiming that, even though there was no express agreement,
it was entitled, as under an implied contract, to recover the
reasonable value of the three car lines authorized by law,
furnished by the company, and actually used by the Post Office
Department. This contention should have been sustained but for the
fact that neither party was bound to continue the indefinite
relation begun July 1, 1907, and under which the rights and
liabilities of each arose, from day to day, as the facilities were
furnished by the one and used by the other. Whatever may be the
rule between private parties where both are demanding performance,
and each is insisting on different terms (
Thompson v.
Sanborn, 52 Mich. 141;
Jenkins v. National
Association, 111 Ga. 734), no such question arises in a
controversy like this between the railroad, on the one hand, and
the post office, on the other. For public policy requires that the
mail should be carried subject to postal regulations, and that the
Department, and not the railroad, should, in the absence of a
contract, determine what service was needed and under what
conditions it should be performed. The company, in carrying the
mails, was not hauling freight, nor was it acting as a common
carrier, with corresponding rights and liabilities, but, in this
respect, it was serving as an agency of government, and as much
subject to the laws and regulations as every other branch of the
Post Office.
The statute defined a car line, but did not fix the
compensation. It left that to be determined by the Postmaster
General, who could have named any rate, not to exceed the statutory
maximum. By virtue of that authority he could have made the same
price for 60-foot cars as for 50-foot cars, and, as the greater
includes the less, he could abolish full lines, or establish
"half-lines" and adjust the rates accordingly. Such had been the
practice before the passage of the Act of 1907, and there is
nothing in its language indicating any intent
Page 225 U. S. 650
to change the construction previously given Rev.Stat. §
4004.
The railroad, however, was not bound to furnish "half-lines" nor
to accept the terms named by the Postmaster General. For Congress
had not legislated so as to require compulsory service at adequate
compensation, to be judicially determined, or in a method provided
by statute. And, as the plaintiff's road between Chicago and Kansas
City had not been aided by a land grant, it was, under existing
law, not obliged to carry the mails when tendered, nor to supply
R.P.O. cars when demanded.
Eastern Railroad v. United
States, 129 U. S. 395,
129 U. S. 396;
United States v. Alabama G.S. Railroad, 142 U.
S. 615. It may have been impracticable to furnish long
cars one way and short ones the other. But there was in that fact
no hardship imposed by law. The company could have protected itself
against onerous terms or inadequate compensation by refusing to
supply the facilities on the conditions named by the Department.
But if, instead of availing itself of that right, it preferred to
furnish 60-foot cars after having been informed that the Department
only needed and would only pay for those 50 feet in length, the
company cannot recover for more than the Department ordered, nor,
under the statute, can it demand compensation for full lines when
the Postmaster General had established "half-lines" consisting of
cars of one length going, and of another returning, on the route
between Chicago and Kansas City.
There was no error in dismissing the complaint, and the judgment
is
Affirmed.