It is a perversion of the rule requiring assignments of error to
multiply them unnecessarily. P.
250 U. S.
124.
State statutes of limitations and the principle of laches are
inapplicable to the United States when asserting governmental
rights. P.
250 U. S.
125.
Semble that the presumption of payment arising from the
lapse of twenty years without suit to collect does not apply to the
United States in such cases.
Id.
The collection of dividends declared on corporate shares owned
by the United States is an assertion of its right as creditor
unaffected by its relations as shareholder, and, in suing for such
dividends, they being public moneys applicable only to public
purposes, the United States acts in its governmental capacity. P.
250 U. S.
126.
Books of the Treasury Department showing the miscellaneous
receipts and disbursements of the government, printed from the
written public records of the Department pursuant to the acts of
Congress and Art. I, § 9, cl. 7, of the Constitution and used
as original records in the daily business of the Department and
produced from its custody
held competent evidence without
certification under Rev.Stats. § 882 for the purpose of
proving the nonpayment as well as the payment of dividends by a
private corporation to the United States. P.
250 U. S.
127.
Evidence
held sufficient to show that dividends sued
for by the government many years after they were declared were
never paid, and to sustain refusal of defendant's motion for a
directed verdict. P.
250 U. S.
129.
240 F. 903 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 250 U. S. 124
MR. JUSTICE CLARKE delivered the opinion of the Court.
In 1912, the United States sued the Canal Company to recover the
amount of three dividends which had been declared on shares of its
capital stock owned by the government, in the years 1873, 1875, and
1876, payment of which, it was averred, had been refused when
demand was made therefor in the year 1911.
After various vicissitudes, the case went to trial on issue
joined on the plea of payment by the company, and it comes into
this Court on writ of error to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the
Third Circuit.
There are forty-one assignments of error in this Court, which
counsel in their brief compress into five questions, and these
resolve themselves at once, into three,
viz.: (1) the
applicability of the statute of limitations of the State of
Delaware; (2) the admissibility in evidence of certain books of the
Department of the Treasury, and (3) the propriety of a requested
instruction in favor of the Canal Company.
Such a record constrains us to repeat the following:
"This practice of unlimited assignments is a perversion of the
rule, defeating all its purposes, bewildering the counsel of the
other side, and leaving the court to gather from a brief, often as
prolix as the assignments of error, which of the latter are really
relied on."
Phillips & Colby Construction Co. v. Seymour,
91 U. S. 646,
91 U. S. 648,
Grayson v. Lynch, 163 U. S. 468, and
Central Vermont Ry. Co. v. White, 238 U.
S. 507.
The plea of the statute of limitations was rejected by both
lower courts, and, although the specific assignment of this ruling
as error in the circuit court of appeals is
Page 250 U. S. 125
not repeated in this Court, it will be considered because
possibly embraced within some of the general assignments.
Both lower courts ruled that the government was not bound by the
state statute of limitations, and that the doctrine of laches was
not applicable to it, but they agreed that a rebuttable presumption
of payment arose after the lapse of more than twenty years from the
date when the debt became due without suit being instituted to
collect it, and that, this appearing from the pleadings of the
government, the burden was upon it of overcoming the presumption by
evidence that payment, as it averred, had not been made. The
company, without introducing any testimony, relied wholly upon this
presumption of payment.
Although the burden of the responsibility of proving nonpayment
was accepted by the government, the Canal Company nevertheless
argues that the state statute of limitations is also
applicable.
It is settled beyond controversy that the United States, when
asserting "sovereign" or governmental rights, is not subject to
either state statutes of limitations or to laches.
That the doctrine of laches is not applicable to the government
was announced by Mr. Justice Story on the circuit in 1821, and
afterward in 1824 authoritatively, upon principle, in
United States v.
Kirkpatrick, 9 Wheat. 720.
This rule has been often approved, and was applied so lately as
Utah Power & Light Co. v. United States, 243 U.
S. 389,
243 U. S.
409.
That the United States is not bound by state statutes of
limitations is settled with equal definiteness in
United States
v. Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Ry. Co.,
118 U. S. 120;
United States v. Whited & Wheless, 246 U.
S. 552,
246 U. S.
561.
Whether this rule extends to and includes the presumption of
payment arising from the lapse of twenty years
Page 250 U. S. 126
without suit to collect is not questioned by appropriate
exceptions in the record before us, and it is therefore not
decided. It is not intended, however, to approve the holding of the
circuit court of appeals on this subject.
United States v.
Thompson, 98 U. S. 486,
98 U. S. 489,
and cases hereinbefore cited.
The contention of the Canal Company that the government, by
becoming a stockholder in a private corporation, so abdicated its
governmental character that, under the circumstances of this case,
it was bound as a private person by statutes and rules of
limitation cannot be allowed.
If the government were asserting any rights with respect to the
conduct of the corporation's affairs, its contracts, or its torts,
then its rights, duties, and privileges would be no greater than
those of any other stockholder.
Bank of
the United States v. Planters' Bank, 9 Wheat. 904,
22 U. S. 907.
But here, the government is pursuing a right to recover which is
not affected by its relation to the corporation as a stockholder.
The declaration of the dividends, which is admitted, gave it the
status of a creditor of the company, and thereafter the right to
recover was unaffected by any stockholder relation. To this must be
added that the statutes and rules of limitation relate to the
remedy to enforce the right, and not to the corporate relation from
which the right springs, and that, since these dividends
constituted "public money" applicable to public purposes only, the
government, in collecting them, was acting in its governmental
capacity as much as if it were collecting taxes such as those with
which, no doubt, the stock which produced the dividends was
purchased. The circuit court of appeals answered this contention in
a manner not to be improved upon, saying (223 F. 926, 928):
"We may perhaps add a few words to say that the fallacy of the
company's argument seems to lurk in the assumption that, in this
action, the government is asserting a right
Page 250 U. S. 127
in its character as a stockholder. Undoubtedly the right came
into being because the government owns the stock, but in no other
respect has the suit anything to do with such ownership. The
government is not suing as a stockholder; it is suing as a
creditor, and in this character alone is it now to be
considered."
The questions remain as to the admissibility of the books and
the sufficiency of the evidence to carry the case to the jury.
The government produced a witness who testified that he, in
conspiracy with another employee of the Canal Company, embezzled
the amount of these dividends, and that, to conceal their crime,
they placed in the files of the Canal Company, from which they were
produced in evidence, forged drafts purporting to have been drawn
by Assistant Treasurers of the United States upon the treasurer of
the Canal Company for payment of these dividends, and also what
purported to be receipts therefor. This witness testified that,
until 1886, when he left the employ of the Canal Company, no notice
of the declaration of the three dividends in controversy had been
sent to the government, as had been the practice when earlier
dividends were declared; that, until that time, no payment of them
had been made, and that the names signed to the drafts and receipts
were fictitious.
The government also produced the notices by the Canal Company of
the declaration of each of the fourteen earlier dividends and the
record of the payment of them.
To supplement this evidence, the books were produced in
evidence, the admission of which is assigned as error.
Employees of the Department of the Treasury who produced the
books testified that they were records of the department compiled
by authority of law under the direction of the Secretary of the
Treasury and were the volumes in daily use by officials and
employees in the discharge of their duties; that part of them were
printed
Page 250 U. S. 128
from the original records of miscellaneous revenues, in which
such dividends would be classed, while others were printed
compilations from books not of original entry, and the testimony
was that the volumes produced were intended to, and the witnesses
believed did, show all of the miscellaneous receipts and
disbursements of the government from 1848 to 1914. They showed the
receipt by the government of fourteen dividends paid by the Canal
Company prior to those in controversy, and the witnesses testified
that a careful search made by them failed to discover any record in
the books of the receipt of any of the three dividends sued for.
There was an elaborate description of the method employed by the
Department of the Treasury in keeping its accounts and of the
necessarily contemporaneous character of the original entries which
it is not necessary to rehearse. The copies produced were printed
by the Public Printer.
The objection is that these are not books of original entry, and
that they are not certified, as copies of public records are
required to be by Rev.Stats. § 882.
It is enough to say of this last contention that, although the
books admitted were printed from written public records, they were
so printed by authority of law, and were produced from the custody
of the Department of the Treasury, where they were used as original
records in the transaction of the daily business of the department,
and therefore they did not require certification.
They were public records, kept pursuant to constitutional and
statutory requirement. Constitution of the United States, Article
1, § 9, cl. 7; Act of Congress, approved September 2, 1789, c.
12, § 2, 1 Stat. 65; Rev.Stats. § 257; Act of Congress,
approved September 30, 1890, c. 1126, 26 Stat. 504, 511; Act
approved July 31, 1894, c. 174, § 15, 28 Stat. 210. Thus,
their character as public records required by law to be kept, the
official character of their contents entered under the sanction of
public duty,
Page 250 U. S. 129
the obvious necessity for regular contemporaneous entries in
them, and the reduction to a minimum of motive on the part of
public officials and employees to either make false entries or to
omit proper ones all unite to make these books admissible as
unusually trustworthy sources of evidence.
Gaines v.
Relf, 12 How. 472,
53 U. S. 570;
Bryan v.
Forsyth, 19 How. 334,
60 U. S. 338;
Post v. Supervisors, 105 U. S. 667,
105 U. S. 670;
Oakes v. United States, 174 U. S. 778,
174 U. S. 783,
174 U. S. 796;
Holt v. United States, 218 U. S. 245,
218 U. S. 253.
Obviously such books are not subject to the rules of restricted
admissibility applicable to private account books. The
considerations which we have found rendered the books admissible in
evidence as tending to prove the truth of the statements of entries
contained in them also make them admissible as evidence tending to
show that, because the receipt of the dividends was not entered in
them, they were not received, and therefore were not paid. The
evidence may not be as persuasive in the latter case as in the
former, but that it was proper evidence to be submitted to the jury
for the determination of its value we cannot doubt. Such books so
kept presumptively contained a record of all payments made, and the
absence of any entry of payment where it naturally would have been
found if it had been made was evidence of nonpayment proper for the
consideration of the jury.
United States v.
Teschmaker, 22 How. 392,
63 U. S. 405;
State v. McCormick, 57 Kan. 440;
Bastrop State Bank v.
Levy, 106 La. 586; Wigmore on Evidence, § 1531, and
§ 1633, par. 6.
We agree with the circuit court of appeals that the evidence
introduced carries clear conviction that the dividends were never
paid, and that the request of the Canal Company for an instructed
verdict in its favor was properly denied. The judgment of the
circuit court of appeals is
Affirmed.