The findings of the Court of Claims in an action at law
determine all matters of fact precisely as a verdict of a jury, and
this Court cannot refer to the opinion for the purpose of eking
out, controlling, or modifying their scope.
Secret arrangements with government officials by which they
share in profits on contracts which they have a voice in awarding
are most reprehensible, and vitiate the contract, justifying its
rescission, even if made by those negotiating the contract on
behalf of the contractor and without the actual knowledge of the
latter.
Page 240 U. S. 75
No recovery can be had upon a government contract tainted with
fraud and rescinded by the proper officer of the government on that
ground.
The rescission of a government contract to supply articles at a
specified price is not an obstacle to a recovery upon a
quantum
valebat if there was requisite proof of the value of the
articles delivered.
Where there is fraud in obtaining the contract, the contract
price of the articles cannot, for the
quantum valebat, be
regarded as an admission by the government of the value of the
articles delivered prior to the discovery of the fraud and
rescission of the contract.
The burden of proof to establish value upon a
quantum
valebat for articles delivered under a contract rescinded for
fraud is on the claimant, and if the Court of Claims made no
finding of value in that respect and stated in explanation there
was complete absence of evidence, there can be no recovery. In this
instance, the case will not be remanded for findings on the
question of value.
49 Ct.Cl. 85 affirmed.
The facts, which involve a claim against the United States for
letter carriers' satchels and the effect of fraud on the right of
the contractor to recover therefor, are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a claim for furnishing letter carriers' satchels under a
contract with the Postmaster General. The contractor was a New
Jersey corporation, and its trustee in bankruptcy is the present
claimant. In the Court of Claims, a small part of the claim was
sustained and the balance rejected. 49 Ct.Cl. 85. Only the claimant
appeals, so the part sustained is not here in controversy.
Page 240 U. S. 76
As shown by the findings, the facts are these: by public
advertisement in May, 1902, the Postmaster General solicited bids
for furnishing letter carriers' satchels for the free delivery
service for a period of four years. Shortly after the
advertisement, the New Jersey company and one Lorenz entered into a
written agreement whereby the company employed him to assist in
securing for it the contract for furnishing the satchels, it being
particularly stipulated that he and the company's vice-president,
one Crawford, should determine the bid to be made, and should
present it in the company's name; that, if the company got the
contract, Lorenz should receive all profits arising out of the same
in excess of 25 cents on each satchel, and that, if the company did
not get the contract, he was to accept $1 as full payment for his
services. Lorenz and Crawford then entered into a secret
arrangement with one Machen, who was superintendent of the free
delivery service and charged with important duties relating to the
purchase of the satchels, whereby, in the event the company got the
contract, Lorenz's share of the profits was to be divided among
them on the basis of one half to Machen and one fourth to each of
the others. After this arrangement was made, a bid for the satchels
was prepared and submitted in the company's name, and was accepted
by the Postmaster General. The contract sued upon followed in
regular course, the company agreeing therein to furnish the
satchels in such quantities and at such times as the post office
authorities might direct. The satchels were to be of three classes,
those of classes A and C to have shoulder straps and those of class
B to be without straps. The prices to be paid by the government
were $2.19 for each satchel of class A; $3.16 for each of class B.,
and $3.15 for each of class C. This included the shoulder straps on
those of classes A and C. The company was not a manufacturer of
satchels or of the materials used in making them, and, to enable it
to comply with
Page 240 U. S. 77
the contract, it arranged, through Crawford, to have the
satchels made by a manufacturer at Hartford, Connecticut. But, as
the manufacturer could not supply shoulder straps of the type
required, the company and Lorenz entered into a further agreement
to the effect that Lorenz should supply the shoulder straps, that,
out of what was paid by the government for the satchels, the
company should pay him 45 cents on each satchel of class A, $1.19
on each of class B, and 84 cents on each of class C, as his share
of the profits and to reimburse him for supplying the straps.
Crawford and Machen had conferred about the straps, and Machen had
said that the government would get the straps, pay for them, send
them to the company's manufacturer, and adjust any difference
afterwards.
Thereafter and prior to March 17, 1903, the company furnished
over 10,000 satchels pursuant to the terms of the contract, save
that the shoulder straps on those of classes A and C, which were in
excess of $5,000, were provided and paid for by the government,
through Machen at a cost of 39 1/2 cents each. These satchels were
all paid for by the government, through Machen at the contract
rates without any deduction for the straps. Out of the moneys so
received, the company paid Lorenz 45 cents on each satchel of class
A, $1.19 on each of class B, and 84 cents on each of class C, and
he, in turn, divided what he received with Machen and Crawford.
Between March 17 and April 30, 1903, the company furnished 6,201
more satchels pursuant to the terms of the contract, save that the
shoulder straps on those of classes A and C, of which there were
4,912, were provided and paid for by the government, through
Machen, at a cost of 39 1/2 cents each. These satchels were
accepted and retained by the post office authorities. But when
payment for them under the contract was requested, it was refused.
This was because the Postmaster General had then learned of the
corrupt arrangement giving
Page 240 U. S. 78
Machen an interest in the profits, and had rescinded the
contract and stopped further payments under it.
No shoulder straps were furnished by the company, through Lorenz
or otherwise, and both he and Crawford knew that the straps were
purchased and supplied by the government. Before the rescission by
the Postmaster General, the company did not know that Machen was to
share or was sharing in the profits, or that the government was
supplying the shoulder straps, save as the company may have been
chargeable with the knowledge of Lorenz and Crawford, who
represented it in securing and executing the contract.
It was for furnishing the 6,201 satchels after March 17, 1903,
that a recovery was sought in the Court of Claims, and the part of
the claim rejected was for the 4,912 satchels of classes A and C,
the rejection being put on the grounds (a) that no recovery could
be had upon the contract, because it called for satchels with
shoulder straps and the company did not furnish the straps, and (b)
that no recovery could be had upon a
quantum valebat,
because the value of the satchels as furnished was not shown.
In the briefs, reference is made to portions of the opinion
delivered in the Court of Claims as if they were not in accord with
the findings. We do not so read the opinion, but deem it well to
observe, as was done in
Stone v. United States,
164 U. S. 380,
164 U. S.
382-383, that "the findings of the Court of Claims in an
action at law determine all matters of fact precisely as the
verdict of a jury," and that "we are not at liberty to refer to the
opinion for the purpose of eking out, controlling, or modifying the
scope of the findings."
See also Collier v. United States,
173 U. S. 79,
173 U. S. 80;
United States v. New York Indians, 173 U.
S. 464,
173 U. S.
470.
We are of opinion that, in the transactions out of which the
claim arose, there was an obvious departure from recognized legal
and moral standards. It began when the company employed Lorenz,
upon a compensation contingent
Page 240 U. S. 79
upon success, to secure the contract for furnishing the
satchels, and it persisted until its discovery by the Postmaster
General led to the rescission of the contract. Because of their
baneful tendency as here illustrated, agreements like that under
which Lorenz was employed are deemed inconsistent with sound morals
and public policy, and therefore invalid. Dealing with such an
agreement, this Court said in
Providence Tool Co. v.
Norris, 2 Wall. 45,
69 U. S.
54-55:
"All contracts for supplies should be made with those, and with
those only, who will execute them most faithfully, and at the least
expense to the government. Considerations as to the most efficient
and economical mode of meeting the public wants should alone
control, in this respect, the action of every department of the
government. No other consideration can lawfully enter into the
transaction, so far as the government is concerned. Such is the
rule of public policy, and whatever tends to introduce any other
elements into the transaction is against public policy. That
agreements like the one under consideration have this tendency is
manifest. They tend to introduce personal solicitation and personal
influence as elements in the procurement of contracts, and thus
directly lead to inefficiency in the public service, and to
unnecessary expenditures of the public funds. . . . Agreements for
compensation contingent upon success suggest the use of sinister
and corrupt means for the accomplishment of the end desired. The
law meets the suggestion of evil, and strikes down the contract
from its inception. There is no real difference in principle
between agreements to procure favors from legislative bodies and
agreements to procure favors in the shape of contracts from the
heads of departments. The introduction of improper elements to
control the action of both is the direct and inevitable result of
all such arrangements."
Further recognition of this rule is found in
Marshall
v. Balt. & Ohio R. Co., 16 How. 314,
Page 240 U. S. 80
57 U. S.
334-335;
Trist v.
Child, 21 Wall. 441;
Meguire v. Corwine,
101 U. S. 108;
Oscanyan v. Winchester Repeating Arms Co., 103 U.
S. 261,
103 U. S. 273;
Sage v. Hampe, 235 U. S. 99,
235 U. S.
105.
The secret arrangement whereby Machen was to share in the
profits was most reprehensible. Its natural effect, as also its
purpose, was to secure for the company an inadmissible advantage.
The satchels were wanted for the free delivery service, and
Machen's relation to that service made it probable, if not certain,
that his advice respecting the reasonableness of the bid, the
number of satchels required from time to time, and the company's
performance of the contract, would be sought and given
consideration by his superiors in the Post office Department. The
advertisement for bids, the postal regulations (1902 ed.
§§ 17 and 70), and the findings leave no doubt that he
was charged with important duties of that character. Public policy
and sound morals forbade that he should have any personal interest
in the bid or contract, lest he might be tempted to advance that
interest at the expense of the government. Under the secret
arrangement, which was made before the bid was submitted, he had
such an interest, and therefore was in a position where the hope of
personal gain was likely to exercise a predominant influence and
prevent a faithful discharge of his public duties, as in fact it
did. Referring to this arrangement, this Court said in
Crawford
v. United States, 212 U. S. 183,
212 U. S.
192:
"Its almost necessary result, if carried out, would be to
defraud the United States. The fraud might be perpetrated by
getting the contract at a higher price than otherwise would have
been obtained, or, if already obtained, then the United States
might be defrauded by the general superintendent [Machen] accepting
improper satchels, not made of the materials or in the manner
specified in the contract, or by his requiring the delivery of more
satchels than were sufficient for the wants of the Department. . .
. Such a corrupt agreement, if
Page 240 U. S. 81
carried out, would naturally, if not necessarily, result in
defrauding the United States by causing it to pay more for satchels
than was necessary, or for more satchels, or possibly inferior
ones, than it otherwise would, but for the corrupt agreement set
forth."
Of course, the secret arrangement with Machen operated to
vitiate the company's contract, and justified the Postmaster
General in rescinding it on discovering the fraud.
Wardell v.
Un. Pac. R. Co., 103 U. S. 651,
103 U. S. 658;
Thomas v. Brownville &c. R. Co., 109 U.
S. 522,
109 U. S. 524;
McGourkey v. Toledo & Ohio Central R. Co.,
146 U. S. 536,
146 U. S. 552,
146 U. S. 565;
Smith v. Sorby, L.R. 3 Q.B.Div. 552;
Harrington v.
Victoria Graving Dock Co., ibid., 549; 2 Dillon Municipal
Corporations, 5th ed. § 773. And this is so even though the
company was without actual knowledge of the corrupt arrangement. It
was made by Lorenz and Crawford while endeavoring to secure the
contract for the company, and was a means to that end. They were
the company's agents, and were securing the contract at its
request. It accepted the fruits of their efforts, and thereby
sanctioned what they did, and made their knowledge its own.
Krumm v. Beach, 96 N.Y. 398, 404;
Fairchild v.
McMahon, 139 N.Y. 290;
White v. Sawyer, 16 Gray, 586,
589;
First National Bank v. New Milford, 36 Conn. 93, 101;
Barwick v. English Joint Stock Bank, L.R. 2 Exch. 259,
265;
Mackay v. Commercial Bank of New Brunswick, L.R. 5 P.
C. 394, 410
et seq.; Leake on Contracts, 6th ed. 255,
335-336; Wald's Pollock on Contracts, 3d ed. 392.
It results that no recovery could be had upon the contract with
the Postmaster General, because it was tainted with fraud and
rescinded by him on that ground. But this was not an obstacle to a
recovery upon a
quantum valebat. Clarke v. United
States, 95 U. S. 539,
95 U. S. 543;
Wardell v. Un. Pac. R. Co., 103
U. S. 659;
Thomas v. Brownville &c. R. Co.,
109 U. S. 525.
Whether requisite proof was made of the value of the satchels as
furnished is another
Page 240 U. S. 82
question. The Court of Claims made no finding of their value,
and, in explanation of this, said that there was "a complete
absence" of evidence upon the subject. The burden of proof was with
the claimant, and, if he failed to carry it, he is not in a
position to complain -- especially as it appears that the
government seasonably objected that he had not proved the value. He
insists, however, that the findings show the price at which the
government contracted to take the satchels with the shoulder
straps, and also what it cost the government to supply the straps,
and that the difference should be regarded, in the absence of other
evidence, as representing the value of the satchels as furnished --
that is, without the straps. The insistence proceeds upon the
theory that the contract price was in the nature of an admission by
the government of the value of the satchels with the straps.
However this might be in other circumstances, it is wholly
inadmissible here, for the fraud with which the contract was
tainted completely discredited the contract price, and prevented it
from being treated as an admission of the value by the government.
It therefore was incumbent upon the claimant to show the value by
other evidence, and, as this was not done, no recovery could be had
upon a
quantum valebat.
Judgment affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA and MR. JUSTICE HOLMES dissent, being of
opinion that the case should be remanded for findings on the
question of value.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS took no part in the consideration or
decision of this case.