A foreign steamship company alleged that, under duress practiced
by the immigration authorities, it paid bills rendered by them
under color of the Immigration Act for maintenance and medical care
furnished by the United States to certain immigrants who, after
landing from the company's ships, were temporarily detained before
being admitted to the country, and it claimed reimbursement under
the Tucker Act upon the ground that the exactions were in violation
of its rights as an alien subject, secured by the Constitution,
treaties, and laws of the United States.
Held that the
claim, being founded on alleged torts of federal officials, was not
within the Tucker Act or the jurisdiction of the Court of Claims.
P.
254 U. S.
155.
53 Ct.Clms. 522 reversed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 254 U. S. 150
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
A suit was brought in the Court of Claims by the
Holland-American Line to recover from the United States for the
cost of the maintenance and medical care furnished by the United
States for certain aliens brought by the plaintiff to this country
on the steamers of its line which it had been required to pay.
The petition sets forth that the United States immigration
officials temporarily detained some aliens in hospitals because
they were alleged to be suffering from temporary illness, or
accompanied aliens who were so suffering, and subsequently
permitted them to enter the country. The aliens were detained, and
subsequently admitted under the act of Congress known as the
Immigration Act, passed February 20, 1907. It is stated that the
Secretary of Commerce and Labor and the Commissioner General of
Immigration, and their subordinates, claiming to act under the
authority of the Immigration Act, rendered to the petitioner from
month to month bills for the hospital treatment and maintenance of
the aliens so detained and subsequently admitted. Certain
regulations of the Commissioner General of Immigration are cited,
and it is alleged that the United States officials threatened that,
if the bills were not paid, thereafter all aliens so brought to
this country would be held on board ship until their application
for admission to the United States should be finally adjudicated.
It is set forth that, on all vessels arriving in the port of New
York, there were aliens who were temporarily detained and
subsequently admitted; that detention on board ship would have
delayed the sailing of petitioner's vessels from periods varying
from a few days to several weeks. The threats were actually carried
out at least in one instance, and if vessels were so detained, the
result would have been not merely great inconvenience and financial
loss to the petitioner,
Page 254 U. S. 151
but a complete disruption of oceanic commerce in the port of New
York and the United States. "Consequently, the petitioner paid,
under duress and involuntarily, the bills when rendered."
It is alleged that the exaction of such payments of the
petitioner, and the making of such threats were entirely without
warrant of law; that the Immigration Act provides that, where a
suitable building is used for the detention and examination of
aliens, the immigration officials shall there take charge of such
aliens and the transportation companies shall be relieved of the
responsibility for their detention thereafter; that there was in
the port of New York a suitable building for the detention and
examination of aliens; that the Immigration Act required petitioner
to pay the United States $4 for each alien entering the Unites
states on its vessels; that the aliens whose hospital and
maintenance expense bills were rendered to and paid by the
petitioner were detained and examined and subsequently admitted to
the United States pursuant to the requirements of the Immigration
Act; that special appropriations have been made for all expenses of
the enforcement of the laws regulating the immigration of aliens
into the United States, so that there has always been an available
fund in the United States Treasury for the payment of the expenses
of regulating the immigration of aliens into the United States,
including the hospital bills referred to above.
Petitioner recites disagreement, as to such charges between the
Secretary of Commerce and Labor and the steamship companies
transporting aliens to the United States, and sets forth that an
action was brought by the United States in the United States
District Court for the Southern District of New York against the
petitioner to recover hospital charges for aliens brought to the
port of New York and temporarily detained and subsequently
admitted. A judgment in favor of the company was
Page 254 U. S. 152
subsequently reviewed by the circuit court of appeals, and was
there affirmed.
See 212 F. 116, affirmed by an equally
divided court, 235 U.S. 686.
It is further alleged that the exaction from the claimant of the
above-mentioned hospital charges under duress was in violation of
its rights and privileges secured to petitioner as a subject of the
Kingdom of the Netherlands under the Constitution of the United
States, by the treaties between the United States and the Kingdom
of the Netherlands and the laws of the United States; that the
amounts thus unlawfully exacted from the claimant were remitted to
the Commissioner of Immigration at the port of New York, as
required by him.
There being no demurrer, plea, answer, counterclaim, set-off,
claim of damages, demand, or defense in the premises on the part of
the United States, the Court of Claims directed a general traverse
under the rules of the court, and afterwards made findings of fact,
and, substantially following the decision of the circuit court of
appeals,
supra, held the United States liable for the
payments exacted.
As to the claim that the plaintiff had bound itself by contract
to pay these charges, the court held that the claimant was coerced
into making the contract by threats of the defendant which would
have destroyed the plaintiff's business if ever executed.
The government contends that the claim thus presented was one
sounding in tort, and, consequently not within the jurisdiction of
the Court of Claims, and that the petition should have been
dismissed.
The jurisdiction of the Court of Claims rests upon § 145 of
the Judicial Code, reenactment of the Tucker Act of March 3, 1887,
c. 359, 24 Stat. 505. The jurisdiction conferred includes:
"All claims (except for pensions) founded upon the Constitution
of the United States or any law of Congress,
Page 254 U. S. 153
upon any regulation of an executive department, upon any
contract, expressed or implied, with the government of the United
States, or for damages, liquidated or unliquidated, in cases not
sounding in tort, in respect of which claims the party would be
entitled to redress against the United States either in a court of
law, equity, or admiralty if the United States were suable."
We think that the statement of the substance of the petitioner's
claim, as above set forth, shows that it rested upon payments
alleged to have been made under duress because of the wrongful and
tortious acts of officials of the United States government acting
without authority of law in coercing the claimant to pay the sums
demanded.
In many decisions of this Court, it has been held that, by the
provisions of the Tucker Act, the government did not subject itself
to liability for the torts or wrongful acts of its officers.
Gibbons v. United
States, 8 Wall. 269;
Morgan v.
United States, 14 Wall. 531;
Hill v. United
States, 149 U. S. 593;
Schillinger v. United States, 155 U.
S. 163;
United States v. Buffalo Pitts Co.,
234 U. S. 228;
Tempel v. United States, 248 U. S. 121;
Ball Engineering Co. v. White Co., 250 U. S.
46.
The appellee relies upon and quotes certain expressions found in
the opinion delivered in
Dooley v. United States,
182 U. S. 222. In
Basso v. United States, 239 U. S. 602,
suit was brought in the Court of Claims for the illegal arrest and
imprisonment of the claimant upon a charge of having imported goods
from the United States into Porto Rico without having made entry of
the same under an act of Congress which the appellant alleged was
not in force in Porto Rico. It was alleged that the court was
without jurisdiction, and that therefore the trial, conviction, and
sentence of imprisonment deprived him of his liberty without due
process of law in violation of the Constitution. The United States
filed a general
Page 254 U. S. 154
traverse of the petition, and subsequently moved to dismiss upon
the ground that the court had no jurisdiction, as the action
sounded in tort. This motion was sustained in the Court of Claims,
and an appeal taken to this Court. Speaking of the contention of
the appellant that the Court of Claims had jurisdiction, this Court
said:
"He, however, contends that the Court of Claims has jurisdiction
under the Tucker Act over claims
ex delicto founded upon
the Constitution of the United States. And this, he further
contends, is supported by the recent decisions of this Court, and
relies especially upon
Dooley v. United States,
182 U. S.
222."
"But that case did not overrule
Schillinger v. United
States, 155 U. S. 163, which, counsel
says, holds directly contrary to his contention, and that he has
not the ingenuity to suggest how the Court can now decide the case
at bar in appellant's favor without at least by implication
overruling the
Schillinger case. We are not disposed to
overrule the case, either directly or by implication. . . ."
"The
Dooley case and cases subsequent to it which are
relied upon by the appellant concerned the exaction of duties or
taxes by the United States or its officers or property taken by the
government for public purposes. In such cases, jurisdiction in the
Court of Claims for the recovery of the duties and taxes or for the
value of the property taken was declared."
"In the case at bar (assuming as true all that is charged),
there was a wrong inflicted, if a wrong can be said to have been
inflicted by the sentence of a court legally constituted after
judgment upon issues openly framed by the opposing parties both of
fact and the applicable law, whether that law was §§ 2865
and 3082 of the Revised Statutes or the Constitution of the United
States. But, conceding that a wrong was inflicted through these
judicial forms, the case nevertheless is of different character
from the
Dooley
Page 254 U. S. 155
case, as was also the
Schillinger case. The latter case
passed upon the jurisdiction of the Court of Claims in actions
founded on tort, and declared the general principle to be, based on
a policy by imposed necessity, that governments are not liable (155
U.S., p.
155 U. S. 167) 'for
unauthorized wrongs inflicted on the citizen by their officers,
though occurring while engaged in the discharge of official
duties.' And it was further said (p.
155 U. S.
168):"
"Congress has wisely reserved to itself the right to give or
withhold relief where the claim is founded on wrongful proceedings
of an officer of the government."
"
Gibbons v. United States, 8
Wall. 269,
75 U. S. 275;
Morgan
v. United States, 14 Wall. 531,
81 U. S.
534."
The principle, reaffirmed in the case just quoted, is applicable
here, for the reason that the claim presented sounded in tort, and
was in substance an action to recover for the wrongful acts of the
United States officials in compelling the claimant to pay under
duress and without authority of law the sums sued for. Following
the well established construction of the Tucker Act, as declared in
many cases in this Court, we think that the Court of Claims should
have dismissed the petition because it presented a claim not within
its jurisdiction. The judgment of the Court of Claims is reversed,
and the cause remanded to that court, with instructions to dismiss
the petition.
Reversed.