1. The amount in controversy in a suit in the Court of Claims,
for the purposes of an appeal to this Court (Jud.Code, § 242),
is determined from the petition as amended, and is the whole amount
claimed, without deduction for a partial defense. P.
254 U. S.
584.
2. Where shipments of newspapers which their owner supposed were
going by express at lower rates were in fact sent by mail at higher
but legal postal rates, through oversight of its agents,
held that the United States was under no implied contract
to reimburse it. P.
254 U. S.
585.
63 Ct.Clms. 12 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 254 U. S. 582
MR. JUSTICE PITNEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought to recover moneys paid for the
transportation of newspapers in the mails upon the ground that they
were paid under mistake of fact. The Court of Claims dismissed the
petition. 53 Ct.Cls. 612.
The facts are as follows: claimant was engaged in publishing at
Knoxville, Tennessee, a daily morning newspaper having a
circulation in Eastern Tennessee and adjacent parts of Virginia and
North Carolina. It sent out a considerable part of its daily issue,
destined for points on the United States postal route between
Bristol and Chattanooga or on other postal routes connecting
therewith, upon a Southern Railway train leaving Knoxville at 4
a.m. daily. The mail was dispatched in wagons from the main post
office at Knoxville to the office of a mail transfer clerk at the
railway station, the wagons being operated by persons having
contracts for the purpose with the United States postal
authorities. For claimant's convenience, the post office
authorities consented that its newspapers might be weighed for
mailing at the railway station instead of at the post office,
claimant furnishing scales for the purpose. The mail wagons, under
an arrangement between claimant and the contractor, called at
claimant's place of business and carried the newspapers thence to
the station. For this service, claimant compensated the contractor
or the driver. While this arrangement was in effect, and in the
fall of the year 1906, claimant concluded to transport a part of
the newspapers by express instead of mail, the express charges upon
large lots being one-half the postal charge for transporting
newspapers as second-class mail. It notified the express company of
this purpose, and requested the express agent to be on the watch.
Thereafter,
Page 254 U. S. 583
it caused certain copies of its newspaper intended for news
dealers -- theretofore sent by mail -- to be wrapped in bundles and
labeled "Express or baggage," with directions for throwing them off
the train at the several destinations. Other copies of the paper,
intended for subscribers and for news dealers, were placed,
properly addressed, in mail sacks. The method of transporting the
papers to the railway station continued as before, those intended
to go by express and those contained in mail sacks being carried
upon the same wagon and the driver instructed to take them to the
railway station, which he did, depositing bundles and sacks on the
platform where all mail was deposited. In the fall of 1906, and for
about a year thereafter, the express company's office adjoined that
of the mail transfer clerk, the doors of the two opening upon the
same platform. Claimant's representative had notified the express
company's agent of the purpose to send certain of the papers by
express, and, pursuant to that notice, until about October, 1908, a
porter from the express agent's office went to the platform, took
the bundles of newspapers labeled as mentioned, and caused them to
be transported by express. During the same period, the United
States mail transfer clerk took the sacks of papers, ascertained
the net weight, and caused them to be transported as second-class
mail matter upon the same train. The net weight was reported to the
postmaster, and he charged to claimant's account the proper
second-class postage thereon. The system adopted was that claimant
made a deposit with the postmaster to cover postage to accrue, and
renewed the deposit from time to time as it was reduced by charges
against it. During the year 1907, the express company's office was
removed to a distance of about 150 yards from the transfer clerk's
office, and about a year after this, the express messenger or
porter ceased calling at the mail platform for the bundles of
papers labeled for transportation by express. Why he did so
does
Page 254 U. S. 584
not definitely appear. Thereafter and down to March 31, 1913,
claimant's newspapers, whether in sacks or in bundles, were alike
treated as mail matter by the United States mail transfer clerk,
who weighed them all and reported the net weights to the
postmaster, and the bundles and sacks were transported to their
respective destinations as second-class mail matter. The charge
appropriate for such mail matter was regularly made against
claimant's deposit and paid by claimant during the entire period.
In the spring of 1913, claimant's business manager, having his
attention called to the fact that the express bills were small,
discovered upon investigation that the bundles of papers labeled
"Express" were being transported as second-class mail matter, and
the present suit followed. During the period referred to,
approximately 358,442 pounds of newspapers were transported by the
United States mail that were labeled "Express" and had been
intended by claimant to be transported by express. Claimant paid
thereon the regular second-class mail matter rate of one cent per
pound, aggregating $3,584.42. The transportation of the same matter
by express would have cost claimant $1,792.21.
The government insists that this Court is without jurisdiction
to entertain the appeal, upon the ground that the amount in
controversy is less than the $3,000 specified in the applicable
provision, § 242 of the Judicial Code (Act of March 3, 1911,
c. 231, 36 Stat. 1087, 1157). It is said that, viewing the claim in
the most favorable light and assuming a mistake was made entitling
claimant to recover, the amount recoverable could not exceed the
difference between what was paid as postage and what would have
been paid had the newspapers been sent by express -- that is to
say, $1,792.21. But while, in its original petition, claimant
prayed recovery for only the latter amount, in an amendment made by
leave of the court, it sought a return of the entire $3,584.42 on
the
Page 254 U. S. 585
ground that there was a failure of consideration, and it was
entitled to a return of the whole sum as paid by mistake. The
amount in controversy is to be determined by the amended, rather
than the original petition (
Washer v. Bullitt County,
110 U. S. 558,
110 U. S.
561-562), and since there is nothing in the nature of
the case to prevent a recovery of the entire amount were claimant's
view of the law sustained, the amount claimed is the amount in
controversy within the meaning of the jurisdictional act,
notwithstanding there may be a defense to a part that would not
extend to the entire claim (
Barry v. Edmunds, 116 U.
S. 550,
116 U. S.
560-561;
Schunk v. Moline, etc., Co.,
147 U. S. 500,
147 U. S.
504-505;
Vance v. W. A. Vandercook Co. (No. 2),
170 U. S. 468,
170 U. S. 472;
Smithers v. Smith, 204 U. S. 632,
204 U. S.
642-643).
Upon the merits, we concur in the opinion of the Court of Claims
that there is no legal basis for a recovery. The money was not paid
under any such mistake as to render it inequitable for the United
States to retain it. The bundles of newspapers actually were
transported as mail by the government, claimant being charged by
the postmaster the amount fixed by law for the service rendered,
and paying it without protest. No error is shown to have been made
in the weights or in the rate charged. So far as any "mistake"
appears from the findings, it was that of claimant's agents in
causing or permitting the papers to go by mail instead of by
express, as claimant intended. There is no finding attributing
negligence or other fault to the mail transfer clerk, but, if there
were such and claimant's loss were attributable to it, this would
not form a ground for recovery, since the United States has not
consented to be sued in the Court of Claims for the torts of its
officers or agents.
Bigby v. United States, 188 U.
S. 400,
188 U. S.
404-407;
Hijo v. United States, 194 U.
S. 315,
194 U. S. 323;
Tempel v. United States, 248 U. S. 121,
248 U. S. 129;
Ball Engineering Co. v. White & Co., 250 U. S.
46,
250 U. S.
57.
Judgment affirmed.