While the Act of March 3, 1887, c. 359, 24 Stat. 505, broadened
the general jurisdiction of the Court of Claims, it was not
repugnant to or or inconsistent with the limitations of §
1066, Rev.Stat., expressly excluding from such jurisdiction all
claims growing out of treaty stipulations, and it did not,
therefore, repeal that section.
Claims based on treaty stipulations within § 1066,
Rev.Stat., include those which arise solely as the result of
cession of territory to the United States.
The policy and spirit of a statute should be considered in
construing it, as well as the letter.
Page 231 U. S. 327
Although the Court of Claims has not jurisdiction of claims
against the United States based on treaty stipulations, it has
jurisdiction of claims based on contracts originally made with the
former sovereign of ceded territory and assumed by the United
States after the cession, either expressly or by implication.
Where the court below declined to take jurisdiction and the
appeal is solely on that question, this Court will not express any
opinion on the merits, as they are not before it.
48 Ct.Clms. 33 reversed.
The facts, which involve the jurisdiction of the Court of
Claims, are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HUGHES delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal from the judgment of the Court of Claims,
which dismissed, upon demurrer, the petition of the claimant for
the want of jurisdiction. 48 Ct.Clms. 33.
The petition averred that the claimant, a British corporation,
secured from the government of Spain, in the year 1879, a
concession for the construction and operation of a submarine
telegraph cable between the island of Luzon and Hong Kong, with an
exclusive privilege for forty years, under which it maintained a
cable from Hong Kong to Bolinao, and that, in 1897, the government
of Spain granted a further concession for three submarine telegraph
cables to provide communication between the islands of Luzon,
Panay, Negros, and Zebu, in the Philippine Archipelago. Among the
conditions of the last-mentioned grant, a copy of which is annexed
to the petition and made a part of it, are the following:
Page 231 U. S. 328
"Article 9. The concessionaire undertakes to work, at his own
expense and risk, the cables of this concession for a period of
twenty years, the said term to begin from the date of the taking
over of the cables and their adjuncts in perfect working
order."
"Article 10. The concessionaire shall enjoy an annual subsidy of
�4,500 (four thousand, five hundred pounds sterling),
payable monthly in twelve installments, during the whole term of
the working of the cables, the said payments being made at Manila
by the Chief Treasury Office of those islands."
"Article 16. The company holding the concession shall pay the
state the ten percent, which tax, in its application to cablegrams,
is fixed after first deducting the amount of the expenses for the
maintenance of the stations, calculated at �6,000 (six
thousand pounds sterling) per annum, the said expenses not to
exceed the amount specified."
"Article 17. It shall be obligatory to transmit official
dispatches, which shall enjoy precedence at half the rates charged
for those of a private character. . . ."
In March, 1898, the claimant obtained an additional concession
from the government of Spain for a submarine telegraph cable
between Hong Kong and Manila, which was completed in the following
month.
It was further alleged that the claimant had "actually
fulfilled" and continued "to fulfill" all of the conditions of the
concessions, and "to perform all of the duties imposed upon it" by
their terms. After setting forth the making of the Treaty of Paris,
and the cession thereby to the United States of the Philippine
Islands, the petition continued:
"Thereupon the United States of America entered into the
occupancy of said Philippine Islands, and proceeded to exercise
sovereignty over said islands and of the inhabitants thereof, and
to assume jurisdiction and control
Page 231 U. S. 329
over all property and property rights in and upon said
Philippine Islands, including the several lines of submarine cable
and telegraph land lines established, constructed, and operated by
the claimant, and availed itself of all of the benefits and
advantages thereof, using the said lines of cable and telegraph for
its governmental and other purposes, which it has continued to do
ever since and still continues to do, and it has become in all
respects the successor of the government of Spain to all rights,
privileges, and advantages conferred upon and secured and reversed
to the government of Spain under the terms of the aforesaid
concessions. . . ."
"By reason of the premises, the United States of America assumed
all of the obligations and the performance of all the conditions
accepted by the government of Spain and agreed to by it, according
to the terms of the aforesaid concessions . . . and of each of
them, and agreed with the claimant to perform the covenants and
agreements, and to fulfill the conditions, set forth in said
several concessions, and accepted and agreed to by the government
of Spain."
"The United States of America has failed to perform said
agreements and to fulfill the said conditions, in that it has
failed and refused to pay to the claimant the annual subsidy of
�4,500 sterling, as required by the terms of Article 10 of
the aforesaid concession . . . for the years 1905, 1906, 1907,
1908, and 1909, and for each of said years, and by reason of such
failure and refusal to pay it has become indebted to the claimant
in the sum of �4,500 sterling for each of said years, with
interest on each of said annual installments at the rate of six
percent per annum from the 31st day of December of the year in
which the same became payable."
And judgment was demanded accordingly for the sum of
$109,462.50, with interest as stated.
The government demurred to the petition, asserting
Page 231 U. S. 330
(1) that it did not set forth facts sufficient to constitute a
cause of action against the United States, and (2) that it did not
disclose a cause of action within the jurisdiction of the
court.
Upon hearing, the court held that it was without jurisdiction,
and it was upon this ground that the petition was dismissed. 48
Ct.Clms. 33.
The Act of February 24, 1855 (10 Stat. 612), creating the Court
of Claims, provided that it should hear and determine all
claims
"founded upon any law of Congress, or upon any regulation of an
executive department, or upon any contract, express or implied,
with the government of the United States,"
and also all claims which might be "referred to said court by
either house of Congress." It required the court to report to
Congress the cases upon which it had finally acted, stating the
material facts found with its opinion, and to prepare such bills as
would be appropriate, if enacted, to carry its decisions into
effect. Important amendments were made by the Act of March 3, 1863
(12 Stat. 765), which gave jurisdiction of set-offs and
counterclaims, authorized appeals to the Supreme Court, and
provided for payment of final judgments out of any general
appropriation made by law for the satisfaction of private claims.
* But, at the same
time, Congress was careful to exclude from the jurisdiction of the
court such claims as arose out of treaty stipulations
(
id., § 9, 12 Stat. 767). As was said in
Ex Parte
Atocha, 17 Wall. 439,
84 U. S.
444:
"All the cases of which the court could subsequently take
cognizance, by either the original or amendatory act, were cases
arising out of contracts or transactions between the government or
its officers and claimants. . . . Those acts have since then
applied only to claims made directly against
Page 231 U. S. 331
the United States, and for the payment of which they were
primarily liable, if liable at all, and not to claims against other
governments, the payment of which the United States had assumed or
might assume by treaty."
The provisions of the Act of 1855, as amended, relating to
jurisdiction were placed in § 1059 of the Revised Statutes,
and § 9 of the Act of 1863 became § 1066 of the revision,
as follows:
"SEC. 1066. The jurisdiction of the said court shall not extend
to any claim against the government not pending therein on December
one, eighteen hundred and sixty-two, growing out of or dependent on
any treaty stipulation entered into with foreign nations or with
the Indian tribes."
By the Act of March 3, 1887 (24 Stat. 505), the general
jurisdiction of the court theretofore defined by § 1059 was
broadened, and it was thus provided:
"That the Court of Claims shall have jurisdiction to hear and
determine the following matters:"
"First. 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 of 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:
Provided, however, That nothing in this section shall be
construed as giving to either of the courts herein mentioned
jurisdiction to hear and determine claims growing out of the late
Civil War, and commonly known as 'war claims,' or to hear and
determine other claims, which have heretofore been rejected, or
reported on adversely by any court, department, or commission
authorized to hear and determine the same. "
Page 231 U. S. 332
"Second, All set-offs, counterclaims, claims for damages,
whether liquidated or unliquidated, or other demands whatsoever on
the part of the government of the United States against any
claimant against the government in said court."
The statute of 1887 repealed all inconsistent enactments. The
question whether § 1066 was thus repealed has been raised, but
not decided.
United States v. Weld, 127 U. S.
51,
127 U. S. 57;
Juragua Iron Co. v. United States, 212 U.
S. 297,
212 U. S. 310.
Both the provisions above quoted and those of § 1066 are
incorporated in the Judicial Code §§ 145, 153. It is
argued that the Act of 1887 was intended to provide a complete
scheme for the bestowal of jurisdiction over all claims against the
government, save those therein expressly excepted, and that hence
it must be regarded as a substitute for the provisions of the
Revised Statutes, including § 1066, which should therefore be
deemed to be repealed (
United States v.
Tynen, 11 Wall. 88,
78 U. S. 92;
The Habana, 175 U. S. 677,
175 U. S.
684-685). We cannot accede to this view. The question is
one of legislative intent (
United States v. Claflin,
97 U. S. 546,
97 U. S. 551).
The section dealt with a special class of cases. There is no
essential repugnancy between the broadening of the general
provisions as to jurisdiction and the maintenance of the limitation
as to claims based upon treaties, and, in considering the scope and
manifest purpose of the later act in relation to claims arising out
of transactions between the government, or its officers and
claimants, we find no warrant for concluding that, in enlarging the
jurisdiction previously conferred by § 1059, it was the
intention of Congress to effect such a complete substitution as
would destroy the established exception set forth in § 1066.
So far, then, as the petition may be viewed as one seeking to
assert a claim growing out of the treaty with Spain, we are of the
opinion that it was not within the jurisdiction of the Court of
Claims.
Page 231 U. S. 333
It is insisted, however, that the claim should not be treated as
one dependent upon a treaty stipulation (
United States v.
Weld, 127 U. S. 51,
127 U. S. 57);
that the treaty merely serves to confer upon the United States the
title to the Philippine Islands (December 10, 1898, 30 Stat. 1754;
November 7, 1900, 31 Stat.1942), and that the claim is based upon
considerations of international law. It is pointed out that it was
stated in the protocol that an article proposed for the assumption
of contracts which had been entered into by the Spanish government
was rejected by the American commissioners, while it was also set
forth that it might be assumed that the United States would deal
justly and equitably in respect of contracts that were binding
under the principles of international law (Sen.Doc. No. 62, 55th
Cong.3d Sess. pp. 240, 241). But if the claim of the appellant were
deemed to rest exclusively upon the transfer of sovereignty, upon
the theory that thereby, under the principles of international law,
an obligation in its favor was imposed upon the United States, the
claim would still, in our judgment, be excluded by the statute from
the consideration of the court below. The words "treaty
stipulation" should not be so narrowly interpreted as to permit the
exercise of jurisdiction where the claim arises solely out of the
treaty cession. Whether the liability asserted is said to result
from an express provision of assumption contained in a treaty, or
is sought to be enforced as a necessary consequence of the cession
made by a treaty, it is equally within the policy and spirit of the
statute, and the letter of the statute should not be otherwise
construed. It is its evident purpose that the obligations of the
United States, directly resulting from a treaty, should not be
determined by the Court of Claims.
But the petition has another aspect. The grant to the appellant,
as already stated, provided in Article 16 for a payment of a tax of
ten percent, and, under Article 17, for precedence and half rates
in the transmission of official
Page 231 U. S. 334
dispatches. It is argued by the appellant that the fact that the
United States "has received and is receiving the special tax" and
"the precedence and half rates specified" must be regarded as
admitted, and it is urged that, under the general principles of
jurisprudence, the facts set forth in the petition import an
obligation on the part of the United States to the appellant to pay
the subsidy provided for in the concession so long as the United
States shall continue to avail itself of the rights and privileges
which have accrued to it under the terms of the concession.
If the petition can be fairly said to present the claim that the
United States not simply by virtue of succession to sovereignty
under the treaty of cession, but through its subsequent
transactions with the appellant, and by contract to be implied from
such transactions, has become indebted to the appellant, we think
that the claim, as thus limited, would be within the jurisdiction
of the court below under the Act of 1887. It is true that the
averments of the petition lack definiteness. It is not specifically
alleged that the United States has received the tax or enjoyed the
benefit of the half rates, nor is it precisely stated what
transactions have been had between the government and the
appellant. But the petition alleges that the United States, since
it entered into the occupancy of the Islands, has "availed itself
of all the benefits and advantages" of the submarine cable and
telegraph lines established by the appellant, "using the said lines
of cable and telegraph for its governmental and other purposes,
which it has continued to do ever since and still continues to do,"
and that
"it has become in all respects the successor of the government
of Spain to all rights, privileges, and advantages conferred upon
and secured and reserved to the government of Spain under the terms
of the aforesaid concession."
These general allegations are not altogether inapposite with
respect to a claim based upon an implied contract outside of the
treaty itself,
Page 231 U. S. 335
and the claimant should not be denied the right to have its
claim, thus considered, adjudicated. In this view, the petition
would be susceptible of amendment, and its sufficiency, in law and
fact, could be heard and determined.
We express no opinion upon the merits of the claim in this
aspect, as they are not before us, the court below having declined
to take jurisdiction. But, as we think there was jurisdiction to
pass upon the claim under the limitations above stated, the
judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded, with instructions
to the court below to take further proceedings in conformity with
this opinion.
It is so ordered.
*
Cf. Act of March 17, 1866, 14 Stat. 9, c. 19;
United States v.
Alire, 6 Wall. 573,
73 U. S.
576.