A railroad company which contracted to carry the mail for a
compensation fixed by test weighings made after withdrawing empty
mail bags, as directed by the Act of May 27, 1908, c. 206, 35 Stat.
412, is not injured by such withdrawal, although its purpose was to
diminish the pay for mail carriage. P.
251 U. S.
205.
Empty mail bags withdrawn from the mails, and which, with other
articles of furniture and equipment, are, under the Act of May 27,
1908,
supra, required to be transmitted by freight or
express are "property of the United States," within the free
transportation provisions of the railroad land grant Acts of
February 9, 1853, c. 59, § 4, 10 Stat. 155, and July 28, 1866,
c. 300, § 1, 14 Stat. 338. P.
251 U. S.
206.
The provision of the land grant Act of 1853,
supra,
§ 6, requiring transportation of the mail over claimant's
land-aided road at such price as Congress may by law direct, and
that of the Act of July 12, 1876, c. 179, § 13, 19 Stat. 82,
fixing the compensation in such cases at 80 percent of that
generally allowed, do not embrace, as part of the mail, empty mail
bags which by the Act of May 27, 1908, are classified with other
property of the United States for transportation by freight or
express.
Id.
The Act of June 30, 1882, c. 254, 22 Stat. 120, directing
payment on a 50 percent basis for army transportation by land grant
railroads, is inapplicable to transportation of empty mail bags. P.
251 U. S.
207.
53 Ct.Clms. 45 affirmed.
Page 251 U. S. 199
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 251 U. S. 202
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case presents questions arising upon a suit brought by the
railway company in the Court of Claims to recover compensation for
the carriage of mail bags under facts found in the Court of Claims
in the record sent up for our consideration. These facts are that
the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Company, a
corporation organized under the laws of the Missouri, operated a
line of railway between Tower Grove, Missouri, and Texarkana, in
Arkansas. So much of the railway line as lies between Poplar Bluff,
Missouri, and Texarkana, Arkansas, was aided in its construction by
a grant of land from the United States by the Act of February 9,
1853, c. 59, 10 Stat. 155, and by the Act of July 28, 1866, c. 300,
14 Stat. 338.
The fourth section of the Act of February 9, 1853, provides:
"The said railroad and branches shall be and remain a public
highway for the use of the government of the United States, free
from toll or other charge upon the transportation of any property
or troops of the United States."
The first section of the Act of July 28, 1866, with respect to
said railway provides:
"All property and troops of the United States shall at all times
be transported over said railroad and branches at the cost, charge,
and expense of the company or corporation owning or operating said
road and branches respectively when so required by the government
of the United States."
February 4, 1910, the Post Office Department transmitted to the
claimant company a distance circular which
Page 251 U. S. 203
relates to mail transportation, the same was duly filled out and
certified and returned to the Post Office Department. Between the
17th of February and the first day of June, 1910, the Post Office
Department made the quadrennial weighing of mail in the weighing
division which included the railway company's lines. Before this
weighing of the mails, Congress passed the Act of May 27, 1908, c.
206, 35 Stat. 412, making appropriations for the Post Office
Department, which provides:
"The Postmaster General shall require, when in freightable lots
and whenever practicable, the withdrawal from the mails of all
postal cards, stamped envelopes, newspaper wrappers, empty mail
bags, furniture, equipment, and other supplies for the postal
service except postage stamps, in the respective weighing divisions
of the country, immediately preceding the weighing period in said
divisions, and thereafter such postal cards, stamped envelopes,
newspaper wrappers, empty mail bags, furniture, equipment and other
supplies for the postal service, except postage stamps, shall be
transmitted by either freight or express."
Subsequent to the passage of the Act of May 27, 1908, the Post
Office Appropriation Acts provided for specific sums for the
payment of expressage on postal cards, stamped envelopes, newspaper
wrappers, and empty mail bags, and they carried similar provisions
as to the withdrawal of said articles from the mails preceding
weighing periods.
Before the weighing of the mails of the railway company, the
Postmaster General, acting under authority of the provisions of the
Act of 1908, withdrew from the mail the empty mail bags, and the
same were thereafter transported by freight over claimant's line of
railway, and the weights were not included in estimating the weight
of the mail carried during the contract term beginning July 1,
1910.
The findings give the number of pounds of empty mail
Page 251 U. S. 204
bags withdrawn from the mails during the weighing season of 1910
and sent by freight to St. Louis from Texarkana, Arkansas, and
Little Rock, Arkansas, and show that, if these empty bags had not
been so withdrawn and the weight thereof had been included with the
weight of the mails, upon which compensation was based, the
claimant would have received $15,296.82 more than it did receive
for service performed between July 1, 1910, and February 1,
1912.
During the period from July 1, 1910, to and including January
31, 1912, a total of 1,452,271 pounds of empty mail bags were
transported over the railroad of the claimant in freight trains
from Texarkana, Arkansas, to St. Louis, Missouri, for which service
the claimant submitted bills at the published tariff rate against
the United States amounting in the aggregate to $14,043.17. In
making settlement of these charges, the Auditor for the Post Office
Department made a deduction for the entire charge for the services
performed from Texarkana, Arkansas, to Poplar Bluff, Missouri,
amounting to $8,251.45.
The sixth section of the Act of 1853 provides:
"The United States mail shall at all times be transported on the
said road and branches, under the direction of the Post Office
Department at such price as Congress may by law direct."
And the thirteenth section of the Act of July 12, 1876, c. 179,
19 Stat. 78, provides:
"That railroad companies whose railroad was constructed in whole
or in part by a land grant made by Congress on the condition that
the mails should be transported over their road at such price as
Congress should by law direct shall receive only eighty percentum
of the compensation authorized by this act."
The findings further state that, ever since the passage of said
last-mentioned act, it has been the custom and practice of the Post
Office Department to pay all the railroads
Page 251 U. S. 205
whose construction was aided by grants of land from the United
States eighty percentum of the rate of compensation paid to
non-land-aided roads for carrying the mails.
Claimant presented its bill for the transportation of said
freight at the full commercial rate provided by the duly published
and approved tariffs. In making settlement therefor, the Postmaster
General made deduction of the entire charge between Texarkana,
Arkansas, and Poplar Bluff, Missouri, and refused to pay anything
therefor, on the ground that the railway company was obliged by the
provisions of the Acts of 1853 and 1866 to transport said empty
mail bags without cost or expense to the United States.
Upon these findings, the Court of Claims decided against the
claimant, and dismissed its petition. 53 Ct.Clms. 45.
Two questions are presented, which are thus stated in the
opinion of the Court of Claims:
"(1) Could the empty mail bags be lawfully withdrawn from the
mails merely for the purpose of reducing claimant's compensation
for mail transportation service?"
"(2) And assuming that said empty mail bags were lawfully
withdrawn from the mails and shipped by freight, were they
'property' of the United States within the purview of the land
grant acts of 1853 and 1866?"
As to the first question, there can be little difficulty. There
was nothing in any law or contract of the government which required
it to permit the weighing of empty sacks or containers as part of
the mail in determining the compensation to be paid for carrying
the same. While, generally speaking, a bag or container in which
letters or other mailable matter is carried is part of the mail,
and collectively the containers might be considered as part of the
mail essential to carry the mailable matter from one place to
another, nevertheless there was nothing to prevent Congress, in
fixing compensation for the carriage of the mails, to expressly
withdraw therefrom the empty
Page 251 U. S. 206
mail bags, and this it did by the Act of May 27, 1908, above
quoted.
For the purposes of fixing compensation in the weighing of the
mail, Congress directed that the weight of the empty bags should be
withheld in determining the average weight of the mails as the
basis of fixing compensation. We agree with the Court of Claims
that such action violated no contractual or other right of the
claimant.
Concerning the other question presented, there is perhaps more
difficulty. By the sixth section of the Act of 1853, it was
directed that the United States mail should be transported over the
claimant's road at such prices as Congress may by law direct, and
by the thirteenth section of the Act of July 12, 1876, railroads
aided by grants of land made by Congress on condition that Congress
should fix the basis of compensation for transportation of mails
over its lines should receive 80 percentum of the compensation
provided for in the act. These acts make specific reference to the
amounts to be paid for the transportation of the mails. The payment
provided in them is for the transportation of the mails, which, it
may be conceded, might include with the mail matter the bags in
which the same was carried. However, by the Act of May 27, 1908,
the Congress has classified empty mail bags with furniture and
equipment and other supplies for the postal service, to be
transported by freight or express. Congress thus undertook to make
a separate provision covering the carrying of empty mail containers
after they had served their purpose of enclosing the mail matter
during transportation.
It is insisted that the return of the empty mail bags is but
part of the transportation of the mail. But certainly Congress
might provide that empty mail bags should be differently treated
than those used in the actual transportation of mailable matter.
None will dispute that forwarding mail bags from their place of
manufacture to
Page 251 U. S. 207
different points in the country for use would not constitute
transportation of mail. We see no reason why Congress may not
regard empty mail bags being returned for further use as no longer
a part of the mails. Congress authorized contracts for the
transportation of the mail, but, by the Act of May 27, 1908, it
withdrew empty mail bags from mail transportation and directed that
they be sent by freight or express. How, then, was such
transportation to be compensated? Ordinarily, the applicable
freight or express rates would control. But the acts of Congress
which provided that property of the United States should be
transported at the expense of the company were in full force and
effect. It is said that, in the report and action upon the
legislation which took empty mail bags from carriage as part of the
mails and directed the carriage by freight or express, there is no
intimation that the result of such legislation would have the
effect of obtaining free transportation under the land grant acts,
and that no such requirement is made in the act itself. But
Congress must be presumed to have known of its former legislation
in the Acts of 1853 and 1866, and to have passed the new laws in
view of the provisions of the legislation already enacted. These
statutes must be construed together, and effect given to all of
them. Under the earlier acts, this railroad, in consideration of
benefits received, was bound, when required, to transport troops
and property of the United States free of charge.
We have here a question concerning the transportation of
property of the United States.
See Southern Pacific Co. v.
United States, 237 U. S. 202,
237 U. S. 204.
The act of Congress providing for fifty percent rates concerns only
"army" transportation, and is not applicable to this case.
See 22 Stat. 120, 1st Supp.Rev.Stats. 375, 376. The empty
mail bags were property, and belonged to the United States. When
the government required their transportation by freight, the former
legislation which accompanied
Page 251 U. S. 208
the grant of lands to this railway company controlled the terms
of carriage.
We find no error in the judgment of the Court of Claims, which
was also the conclusion of the Comptroller of the Treasury, 17
Comp.Dec. 749.
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS, dissenting.
Appellant's right to recover seems quite plain to me.
The Act of February 9, 1853, c. 59, 10 Stat. 155, granted lands
afterwards used to aid in constructing appellant's lines. Section
4:
". . . The said railroad and branches shall be and remain a
public highway for the use of the government of the United States,
free from toll or other charge upon the transportation of any
property or troops of the United States."
Section 6:
"That the United States mail shall at all times be transported
on the said road and branches, under the direction of the Post
Office Department at such price as Congress may by law direct."
The Act of July 28, 1866, c. 300, 14 Stat. 338, among other
things, revived and extended the Act of 1853. Section 1:
". . .
And provided further, that all property and
troops of the United States shall at all times be transported over
said railroad and branches at the cost, charge, and expense of the
company or corporation owning or operating said road and branches
respectively, when so required by the government of the United
States."
And thus it appears that one section of the statutes directs
free transportation of "all property and troops of the United
States," and a wholly different section requires transportation of
the United States mail "under the direction of the Post Office
Department at such price as Congress may by law direct."
Through the Post Office Department, the United States
Page 251 U. S. 209
are engaged in handling the mails for pay. Their transportation
is part of a well defined business. In the orderly course and as an
essential part of that business, emptied sacks are constantly being
returned for further use. They are property of the United States in
a certain sense, whether full or empty, and they are elements of
the mail whether going out or coming back.
A clear distinction between property of the United States and
United States mail is preserved by the very language of the land
grant statutes, and, I think, Congress had no purpose -- if,
indeed, the power -- to convert mail into property within the
meaning of these statutes simply by directing carriage of the
former in freight trains. The purpose was to secure transportation
at less than former cost, and, to such end, Congress in effect
commanded that emptied bags, a portion of the mails for which rapid
movement is not essential, "shall be transmitted by either freight
or express," and compensation made according to the ordinary rates.
Under this interpretation, the railroad would suffer no oppressive
burden, and contemplated economics would be effectuated.