The circuit courts of the union have jurisdiction, under the
Constitution, and the Acts of April 30 1810, ch. 262, s. 29, and of
March 3, 1816, ch. 782, s. 4, of suits brought in the name of "the
Postmaster General of the United States" on bonds given to the
postmaster general by a deputy postmaster, conditioned
"to pay all moneys that shall come to his hands for the postages
of whatever is by law chargeable with postage to the Postmaster
General of the United States for the time being, deducting only the
commission and allowances made by law for his care, trouble, and
charges in managing the said office,"
&c.
The Postmaster General has authority to take such a bond under
the different acts establishing and regulating the Post Office
Department, and particularly under the Act of April 30, 1810, ch.
262. s. 29, 42.
This was an action of debt commenced in the Circuit Court for
the District of Georgia by the district Attorney of the United
States for that district in the name of the Postmaster General of
the United States against the defendants on a bond executed by them
in June, 1820, to the Postmaster General of the United States, the
condition of which, after reciting that Eleazer Early (one of the
co-obligors and defendants in the suit) is Postmaster at Savannah,
provides, that if he shall perform the duties of his office
"and shall pay all moneys that shall come to his hands for the
postages of whatever is by law chargeable
Page 25 U. S. 137
with postage, to the Postmaster General of the United States for
the time being, deducting only the commission and allowances made
by law for his care, trouble, and charges in managing the said
office, . . . then the above obligation shall be void."
The breach assigned was that the said E. Early did not pay to
the Postmaster General the moneys which came to his hands, as
postmaster at Savannah, but that the sum of $7,736.64 was still in
arrear and unpaid. The defendants pleaded to the jurisdiction of
the court that this was
"not a suit in which the United States is a party, nor is the
debt declared on one contracted, authorized, or arising under a law
of the United States and over which jurisdiction has been given to
this honorable court."
On the argument of the cause in the court below, the opinions of
the judges of the court were opposed upon the question of
jurisdiction, and it was certified to this Court for a final
decision.
Page 25 U. S. 144
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE MARSHALL delivered the opinion of the Court,
and after stating the case, proceeded as follows:
The Post Office Department was established at the commencement
of the Revolution under the superintendence of a Postmaster
General, who was authorized to appoint his deputies, and was made
responsible for their conduct. Soon after the adoption of the
present government in September, 1789, Congress passed a temporary
act directing that a Postmaster General should be appointed and
that his powers, and the regulations of his office should be the
same as they last were, "under the resolutions and ordinances of
the last Congress." The power of appointing deputies, therefore,
and the responsibility for their conduct still remained with the
Postmaster General.
This act was continued until the first day of June, 1792. In
February, 1792, an act was passed detailing the duties and powers
of the Postmaster General, and fixing the rates of postage. It
directs his deputies to settle at the end of every three months,
and to pay up the moneys in their hands; on failure to do which it
becomes the duty of the Postmaster General
"to cause a suit to be commenced against the person or persons
so neglecting or refusing. And if the Postmaster General shall not
cause such suit to be commenced within three months from the end of
every such three months, the balances due from every such
delinquent shall be charged to and recoverable from him."
This act was to take effect on 1 June, 1792, and to continue for
two years. In May, 1794, a permanent act was passed for two years.
In May, 1794, a permanent act was passed. It retains the provision
requiring the Postmaster General to settle quarterly with his
deputies, but omits that which makes it his duty to cause suits to
be instituted within three months after failure.
In March, 1799, the subject was again taken up and Congress
passed an act which retains the clause making it the duty of the
deputy postmasters to settle their accounts quarterly and
reinstates that which directs the Postmaster General to cause suits
to be instituted against delinquents, substituting six months in
the place of three after the expiration of the quarter under the
penalty of being himself chargeable with the arrears due from such
delinquent. This
Page 25 U. S. 145
act declares that all causes of action arising under it may be
sued before the judicial courts of the several states and of the
several territories of the United States.
In April, 1810, Congress passed an act for regulating the post
office establishment which enacts, among other things, that all
suits thereafter to be brought for the recovery of debts or
balances due to the General Post Office should be instituted in the
name of "the Postmaster General of the United States." This act
also authorizes all causes of action arising under it to be sued in
the courts of the states and territories.
In March, 1815, Congress passed "An act to vest more effectually
in the state courts and in the district courts of the United States
jurisdiction in the cases therein mentioned."
This act enables the state courts to take cognizance of all
suits arising under any law for the collection of any direct tax or
internal duties of the United States. The 4th section contains this
clause:
"And be it further enacted that the district court of the United
States shall have cognizance, concurrent with the courts and
magistrates of the several states and the circuit courts of the
United States, of all suits at common law where the United States
or any officer thereof, under the authority of any act of Congress,
shall sue, although the debt, claim, or other matter in dispute
shall not amount to $100."
On these several acts the question of jurisdiction depends.
The suit is brought for money due to the United States, and at
any time previous to the act of 1810, the suit for the money, had
no bond been taken, might have been brought in the name of the
United States. It is not certain that, independent of the bond, it
could have been instituted in the name of any other party. The
courts of the United States had, of course, jurisdiction. The laws
make it the duty of the Postmaster General to "cause suits to be
instituted," not to bring them, and it was not until March, 1799,
that Congress authorized these suits to be instituted in the state
courts. It is obvious that the right to institute them in those
courts anterior to the passage of that act was doubted -- at any
rate was not exercised, for it could not have
Page 25 U. S. 146
been deemed necessary to give expressly the power to sue in
those courts had the power been admitted to exist and been commonly
exercised. We must suppose, then, that these suits were usually
instituted in the courts of the United States, and no doubt could
be entertained on the question of jurisdiction if they were
brought, as they certainly might have been, in the name of the
United States.
The act of 1810 directed that all suits for debts or balances
due to the General Post Office should be brought in the name of the
Postmaster General. The manner in which this change in the style of
the suit might affect jurisdiction was not noticed, and no
provision was made for this new state of things. These debts and
balances which were due to the General Post Office were not due to
the officer personally, but to the office and were to be sued for
and collected for the United States. The money belonged to the
nation, not to the individual by whose agency it was to be brought
into the Treasury. The whole course of opinion and of legislation
on this subject is that although for convenience and to save
expense to the debtors recourse may be had to the state courts for
the recovery of small sums, yet a right to resort to the courts of
the Union in suits for money due to the United States was never
intended to be relinquished. If the effect of any provision in a
statute be to abolish this jurisdiction, it must be an effect which
was neither intended nor foreseen. That construction which will
produce a consequence so directly opposite to the whole spirit of
our legislation ought to be avoided if it can be avoided without a
total disregard of those rules by which courts of justice must be
governed.
If the question had rested solely on the act of 1810, it is
probable that the aid of the legislature might have been thought
indispensable to the jurisdiction of the federal courts, over suits
brought for the recovery of debts and balances due to the General
Post Office. But it does not rest solely on that act. The act of
1815 contains a clause which does, we think, confer this
jurisdiction. It cannot be doubted that this clause vests
jurisdiction expressly in the district courts in all suits at
common law where any officer of the United States sues under the
authority of any act of Congress.
Page 25 U. S. 147
The Postmaster General is an officer of the United States who
sues under the authority of the act of 1810, which makes it his
duty to sue for debts and balances due to the office he
superintends and obliges him to sue in his own name.
It has been contended that this clause, if it gives
jurisdiction, gives it only where the demand is under $100. We do
not think the words will sustain this criticism.
The right to take cognizance of suits brought by any officer of
the United States under authority of any act of Congress is first
given in general words, comprehending sums to any amount. The
limitation which follows is not a proviso that the sum shall not
exceed the sum of $100; it is no restriction on the previous grant,
but an enlargement of it, if an enlargement should be thought
necessary. This act might be construed in connection with the
Judiciary Act of 1789, and a general clause giving jurisdiction
might be limited as to amount to the sum mentioned in the 9th
section of that act. The subsequent words, therefore, of the
section we are considering were introduced for the purpose of
obviating this construction and removing the doubt which might
otherwise exist of the right to take cognizance of sums less than
$100. After giving the jurisdiction generally, the words are
"although the debt, claim, or other matter in dispute shall not
amount to $100." These words do not confine the jurisdiction
previously given to $100, but prevents it from stopping at that
sum.
The jurisdiction of the district courts, then, over suits
brought by the Postmaster General for debts and balances due the
General Post Office is unquestionable. Has the circuit court
jurisdiction?
The language of the act is that
"the district court shall have cognizance concurrent with the
courts and magistrates of the several states and the circuit courts
of the United States of all suits,"
&c. What is the meaning and purport of the words "concurrent
with" the circuit courts of the United States? Are they entirely
senseless? Are they to be excluded from the clause in which the
legislature has inserted
Page 25 U. S. 148
them, or are they to be taken into view and allowed the effect
of which they are capable?
The words are certainly not senseless. They have a plain and
obvious meaning. And it is, we think, a rule that words which have
a meaning are not to be entirely disregarded in construing a
statute. We cannot understand this clause as if these words were
excluded from it. They perhaps manifest the opinion of the
legislature that the jurisdiction was in the circuit courts, but
ought, we think, to be construed to give it if it did not
previously exist. Any other construction would destroy the effect
of those words. The district court cannot take cognizance
concurrent with the circuit courts unless the circuit courts can
take cognizance of the same suits. For one body to do a thing
concurrently with another is to act in conjunction with that other;
it is equivalent to saying the one may act together with the other.
The phrase may imply that power was previously given to that other,
but if in fact it had not been given, the words are capable of
imparting it. If they are susceptible of this construction, they
ought to receive it, because they will otherwise be totally
inoperative or will contradict the other parts of the sentence,
which show plainly the intention that the district court shall have
cognizance of the subject and shall take it to the same extent with
the circuit courts.
It has been said, and perhaps truly, that this section was not
framed with the intention of vesting jurisdiction in the circuit
courts. The title of the act and the language of the sentence are
supposed to concur in sustaining this proposition. The title speaks
only of state and district courts. But it is well settled that the
title cannot restrain the enacting clause. It is true that the
language of the section indicates the opinion that jurisdiction
existed in the circuit courts, rather than an intention to give it,
and a mistaken opinion of the legislature concerning the law does
not make law.
But if this mistake is manifested in words competent to make the
law in future, we know of no principle which can deny them this
effect. The legislature may pass a declaratory act which, though
inoperative on the past, may act
Page 25 U. S. 149
in future. This law expresses the sense of the legislature on
the existing law as plainly as a declaratory act, and expresses it
in terms capable of conferring the jurisdiction. We think,
therefore, that in a case plainly within the judicial power of the
federal courts as prescribed in the Constitution and plainly within
the general policy of the legislature, the word ought to receive
this construction.
So far as the suits brought by the Postmaster General were
referred to in argument in the case of
Bank of the United
States v. Osborn, this construction was assumed as
unquestionable. As the act was referred to for the sole purpose of
illustrating the argument on the point then under consideration, it
was not examined with the attention which has since been bestowed
upon it; but the opinion then expressed, that the section we have
been considering conferred jurisdiction on the courts of the United
States over suits brought by the Postmaster General was
correct.
Had this suit been brought to recover the balance due from the
deputy postmaster on his original liability to pay the money in his
hands, no doubt would have been felt respecting the jurisdiction of
the court. The act of 1810 gives the Postmaster General a right to
sue for such balances, and the act of 1815 enables him to sue in
the circuit or district courts of the United States. But it is
contended that he has no right to secure such balances by bond, and
consequently, the bond being unauthorized, the act of Congress
cannot be construed to authorize a suit upon it.
Were it even true that an official bond cannot be taken in a
case where it is not expressly directed by law, we do not think
that a bond taken to secure the payment of a sum of money is void
because it is also an official bond. Even supposing this bond to be
void so far as it is intended to stipulate for the performance of
official duties, it is not necessarily void so far as it stipulates
for the payment of money of the United States which might come to
the hands of the deputy postmaster. That part of the condition
which shows the bond was taken to secure the payment of money which
should be received for the United States is not vitiated by that
part of it which shows that it was also taken
Page 25 U. S. 150
to secure the general official conduct of the deputy. Now a part
of the condition is expressly "that if he shall pay all moneys that
shall come to his hands for the postages of whatsoever is by law
chargeable with postage," then the obligation is to be void. The
obligation itself on which the suit is brought was intended to
secure the payment of money collected for the United States, as
well as the official conduct of the deputy, and as no law
prohibited such an official bond, we cannot think, although it
might not in itself be valid, that it would destroy an obligation
taken for a legitimate purpose. As the breach assigned is
altogether in the nonpayment of the money collected, we do not
think that if a bond would be good taken for this single object, it
is made bad by being extended also to the official conduct of the
obligor.
The inquiry, then, is whether, under a fair construction of the
acts of Congress, the Postmaster General may take bonds to secure
the payment of money due or which may become due to the General
Post Office.
All the acts relative to the post office make it the duty of the
Postmaster General to superintend the department, to regulate the
conduct and duties of his deputies, and to collect the moneys
received by them for the General Post Office. May not these powers
extend to taking bonds to the officer who is to perform them? May
not these bonds be considered as means proper to be used in the
collection of debts, and in securing them?
If this interpretation of the words should be too free for a
judicial tribunal, yet if the legislature has made it, if Congress
has explained its own meaning too unequivocally to be mistaken,
their courts may be justified in adopting that meaning.
The 22d section of the act of 1799, after directing the
Postmaster General to sue for all balances due from his deputies,
within six months after the expiration of the three months within
which they ought to have been paid, enacts
"That all suits which shall be hereafter commenced for the
recovery of debts or balances due to the General Post Office,
whether they appear by bond or obligations made in the name of the
existing or any preceding postmaster general
Page 25 U. S. 151
or otherwise, shall be instituted in the name of the Postmaster
General of the United States."
These words follow immediately the clause which makes it the
duty of the Postmaster General to sue for the money due from his
deputies, and are obviously applied to the moneys in their hands.
They show the sense of the legislature that this money may be a
"debt" or a "balance," may "appear by bond or obligation" or
otherwise, and are, we think, a legislative exposition of the words
describing the power and duty of the Postmaster General in the
superintendence of his department and the means he may employ for
collecting the money due from his deputies.
The 31st section of the same act repeals the previous laws for
establishing the Post Office Department after the 1st day of the
ensuing May, and adds a proviso to the repealing clause, that as
to
"all bonds, contracts, debts, demands, rights, penalties, or
punishments, which have been made, have arisen, or have been
incurred, . . . the said acts shall have the same effect, as if
this act had not been made."
It is said by the counsel for the defendants that these words do
not give efficacy to the bonds to which they refer, but leave them
as they were anterior to the repealing act. This is true. But they
explain the sense of the legislature respecting the powers of the
Postmaster General and the manner in which he might execute those
powers.
An additional proviso extends even to official bonds. After
continuing the Postmaster General and all his deputies in office,
it adds,
"and also the bonds which they or either of them have or may
give for the faithful execution of their several duties shall
continue to have the same force and effect, to all intents and
purposes, after the 1st day of May next, as though this act had not
been made."
This proviso also is no more than a recognition of the validity
of those bonds, but it is a recognition of it, and goes the full
extent of showing the legislative opinion that they might be taken.
The act of 1810 repeals former acts and contains the same
provisions on this subject with the act of 1799.
The Court has felt the pressure of this part of the case.
Page 25 U. S. 152
There is always difficulty in extending the operation of words
beyond their plain import, but the cardinal rule of construction is
that where any doubt exists, the intent of the legislature, if it
can be plainly perceived, ought to be pursued. It is also a rule
that the whole law is to be taken together, and one part expounded
by any other which may indicate the meaning annexed by the
legislature itself to ambiguous phrases. The words describing the
power and duty of the Postmaster General may be expounded by other
parts of the act showing the legislative opinion as to their
extent, and if this be true, the sections which have been cited
cannot be misunderstood. They show plainly that the legislature
supposed it had given the Postmaster General authority to take
these bonds.
A case cannot exist in which effect may be given to the
legislative intent more safely than in this. The bonds are taken in
a case where no doubt can exist respecting the right and propriety
of giving authority to take them; they are for money due to the
United States, and the opinion of the legislature that authority
was given is expressed in as plain words as can be used. The acts
of Congress sustain the opinion that they have been taken with the
knowledge and approbation of the legislature from the first
establishment of the offices, and provision is made by law for
their being put in suit. The courts of the United States have,
until very lately, uniformly given judgments on them.
Under these circumstances, we think ourselves justified in
continuing to sustain them and to certify in this case that the
circuit court has jurisdiction of the cause.