To review a judgment of the Court of Claims dismissing a
petition for want of jurisdiction upon the ground that the facts
alleged have no tendency to establish a contract with the United
States, a finding of facts is not essential. P.
250 U. S.
546.
Paragraph 13 of Article 8 of the Articles for the Government of
the Navy (Rev.Stats. § 1624), which imposes a penalty on any
person in the Navy who receives, etc., on board his vessel any
goods or merchandise, for freight, sale, or traffic, except gold,
silver or jewels, for freight or safekeeping; or who demands or
receives any compensation for the receipt or transportation of any
other article than gold, silver or jewels without authority from
the President or the Secretary of the Navy, recognizes and limits
the preexisting discretion of commanding officers to receive
property on board for the protection of private rights, and neither
under this statute nor under § 1020 of the Navy Regulations,
by which the compensation for the permitted service is to be
applied to the benefit of officers and men, does such a deposit of
gold give rise to any contract with the United States. P.
250 U. S.
547.
48 Ct.Clms. 161 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought to recover from the United States $51,000
in American gold coin with interest from 1869,
Page 250 U. S. 546
based upon a contract alleged to have been made in that year by
the United States as the result of a deposit of the principal sum
claimed on a war vessel of the United States. The court, concluding
that the facts alleged had no substantial tendency to establish a
contract liability on the part of the United States, either express
or implied, dismissed the suit for want of jurisdiction as its
power to adjudge against the United States extended only to
obligations of that character. A written opinion was filed, but no
finding of facts was made. The United States suggests that the
cause be remanded for such finding, but if that course were
pursued, only the relevant facts could be embraced in the finding,
and as all such facts were admitted by the court below, the case is
open to our consideration, and we think there is no necessity for
remanding it.
In the petition which was filed in 1902 by Ricardo Cartas, now
the appellant, it was alleged that, about 33 years before, in
January, 1869, Carlos del Costillo deposited on board the American
flagship
Contoocook, then in Havana Harbor, Spanish gold
the equivalent of $51,000 in American gold coin. It was alleged
that the deposit was evidenced by a receipt given by the American
consul at Havana, and that the petitioner was the grandson of
Costillo, and was vested by inheritance with all his rights growing
out of the deposit. It was further alleged that the deposit was a
contract between the depositor and the United States binding the
United States to preserve and return the deposit when demanded, and
that it had never been returned; indeed, that no demand for its
return had been made during the time which elapsed either by
Costillo or by any one authorized to represent him or his interest.
Further, it was averred that, although it appeared from the files
of the Navy Department that, a few months after the deposit was
made -- that is in April, 1869 -- it had been returned by the
officer commanding the
Contoocook
Page 250 U. S. 547
to one Arridondo, acting as the agent of Costillo and who was
believed by such commanding officer to be fully authorized to
receive it, nevertheless the contract obligation on the part of the
United States yet existed because said Arridondo was not the agent
of Costillo, and the United States remained bound to return the
said deposit, and was not relieved therefrom by the payment made by
such officer, although in good faith to a person not entitled to
receive it.
Admitting the facts thus alleged, it is indisputable that the
only question for decision is the making of the alleged contract
with the United States. Indeed, it is to that question and to that
question alone that the errors assigned and the contentions
advanced to sustain them relate. They all are based upon a power in
the commanding officer to contract on behalf of the United States
asserted to be conferred by Paragraph 13 of Article 8 of the
"Articles for the government of the Navy" (Rev.Stats. § 1624),
as elucidated by § 1020 of the Navy regulations. A brief
reference to the matters thus relied upon will bring us to the end
of the controversy.
The first, the statutory provision, imposes a penalty upon any
person in the navy who
"takes, receives, or permits to be received on board the vessel
to which he is attached any goods or merchandise for freight, sale,
or traffic except gold, silver, or jewels, for freight or
safekeeping, or demands or receives any compensation for the
receipt or transportation of any other article than gold, silver,
or jewels without authority from the President or the Secretary of
the Navy."
The wide discretion possessed by the commanding officer of a
naval vessel concerning the receipt on board, for the protection of
private rights, of gold, silver, or jewels, which it was the
obvious purpose of this statute not to modify, since the power as
to such articles was excepted from the additional limitation which
the statute imposed
Page 250 U. S. 548
as to other articles, affords no ground for the implication that
contract obligations would automatically arise as against the
United States from the mere exercise by the officer of his
discretion. A consideration of the nature of the objects which the
provision excepted and the complex and varied character of the
conditions which might call for the exercise of the discretion add
cogency to this view, and at once suggest the incongruity and
conflict which must result from the contrary contention.
And this view serves also to dispose of the contention based
upon § 1020 of the Navy Regulations which but comprehensively
recognizes that compensation due for services rendered as the
result of the exercise of the discretion of the officer to permit
the articles in question to be taken on board should be applied not
for the benefit of the United States in virtue of any contract
relation with the subject, but for the benefit of the officers and
men designated in the proportions stated in the regulation. Indeed,
the coordination which the regulation thus manifests between the
burden resulting from the exercise of the discretion to receive on
board and the distribution of the emoluments arising from its
exertion serves to point out the entire unison between the
expression of legislative power and the administrative regulation
and to make clear the disregard of both which would inevitably
result from sustaining the contention as to contract obligation on
the part of the United States now relied upon.
Affirmed.