1. The Act of June 15, 1917, c. 29, 40 Stat. 182, empowered the
President, within the limits of amounts appropriated, "to modify,
suspend, cancel, or requisition any existing or future contract for
the building, production, or purchase of ships or material," and to
exercise the authority "through such agency or agencies as he shall
determine from time to time," "material" being defined as including
stores, supplies, and equipment for ships and everything required
for or in connection with the production thereof.
Page 261 U. S. 515
Held: (a) The word "material" included anti-aircraft
gun mounts for the Navy. P.
261 U. S.
518.
(b) The power "to modify, suspend, cancel, or requisition" any
contract, etc., extends to the cancellation of the government's own
contracts. P.
261 U. S.
519.
(c) An executive order delegating power under this clause in
sweeping terms to the Secretary of the Navy should be construed
broadly, and included the power to cancel government contracts. P.
261 U. S.
523.
(d) An order of the Secretary cancelling a contract need not
refer to the statute.
Id.
(e) The just compensation to which a party is entitled upon
cancellation of his contract under the statute does not include
anticipated profits.
Id.
2. The maxim
noscitur a sociis is used only to solve
ambiguity. Verbs in an enumeration whose meaning, when they are
separately applied to their common object, is plain should be
interpreted distributively. P.
261 U. S.
519.
3. Where the meaning of a statute may be ascertained without
extrinsic aid, debates in Congress will not be considered. P.
261 U. S.
522.
57 Ct.Clms. 464, 244, and 626 affirmed.
Appeals from three judgments of the Court of Claims fixing just
compensation for the cancellation of claimants' contracts with the
government. In the first and third cases, the contracts for the
manufacture of anti-aircraft gun carriages and brass shell cases
were entered into through the Navy Department, and were cancelled
by the Secretary of the Navy by authority delegated under the Act
of June 15, 1917. In the second case (No. 480), the contract was
with the Emergency Fleet Corporation, for the construction of
barges, and was cancelled through that agency under like
authority.
Page 261 U. S. 516
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.
These cases, here on appeal from the Court of Claims, differ in
details of fact, but are controlled by the same principles of law,
and depend alike upon the construction and application of the same
statutory provisions.
The salient facts in the case of the Motor Car Company are as
follows: that company, on May 14, 1918, entered into a contract,
numbered 1498, with the United States, acting through the Secretary
of the Navy, to make 250 anti-air craft gun mounts at an agreed
price of $7,860 each, to be delivered at stipulated periods, the
last being the 60 days ending April 30, 1919.
Prior to the making of the foregoing contract,
viz., in
November, 1917, a similar contract, numbered 949, had been entered
into by the same parties, the last period for delivery being the 60
days ending January 15, 1919. The actual work under contract 949
was begun about March, 1918, and some time later, and after the
making of contract 1498 at the request of the company, the
Secretary consented to allow all shipments of mounts to be applied
upon contract 949 until its completion. Deliveries under that
contract were finished in June, 1919.
On November 18, 1918, the Navy Department expressed a desire
that the manufacture of gun mounts under both contracts be greatly
decreased, and that the company resume production of peace-time
products as soon as possible, "so that the minimum of economic
disturbance
Page 261 U. S. 517
will be felt during the transition." In its communication, the
Navy Department requested that immediate arrangements be made for
the reduction and eventual stoppage of production of materials
under these contracts and the substitution therefor of commercial
products, and that the company "initiate preparations for the
cancellation along the lines indicated." On November 23, 1918, the
company was notified that the Secretary had authorized the
cancellation of contract 1498, directed to cease work in connection
therewith not later than December 2, 1918, and informed that a just
and fair settlement would be made as provided by contract and in
accordance with the statute covering such cases. Extended
negotiations followed in an effort to bring about a settlement, and
the Secretary finally fixed the sum of $444,847.68 as just
compensation for the cancellation of the contract. Seventy-five
percent of this amount was paid and accepted by the company,
expressly without prejudice to its rights.
The Court of Claims, after hearing the case, found that just
compensation for the cancellation of the contract was the sum of
$495,250.34, which amount included a number of elements and items
not necessary to be set forth. The court further found that, if the
company had been permitted to complete the contract according to
its terms, it could and would have earned a profit, in round
figures, of $960,000, but held that the action of the Secretary of
the Navy in cancelling the contract was within the authority
conferred by the statute, presently to be mentioned, and that the
company consequently was not entitled to an award including
anticipated profits.
The statute upon which this determination rested was the Act of
June 15, 1917, c. 29, 40 Stat. p. 182, making deficiency
appropriations for the military and naval establishment on account
of war expenses, and for other purposes. This act contained a
provision authorizing and
Page 261 U. S. 518
empowering the President, within the limits of the amounts
appropriated: " . . . (b) To modify, suspend, cancel, or
requisition any existing or future contract for the building,
production, or purchase of ships or material." The President was
authorized to exercise the authority conferred upon him by the act
and expend the money therein and thereafter appropriated "through
such agency or agencies as he shall determine from time to time."
The authority, so far as it concerned the Navy, was by him
delegated to the Secretary of the Navy in an order dated August 21,
1917,
"insofar as applicable to and in furtherance of the construction
of vessels for the use of the Navy and of contracts for the
construction of such vessels, and the completion thereof, and all
powers and authority applicable to and in furtherance of the
production, purchase and requisitioning of materials for
construction of vessels for the Navy and for war materials,
equipment, and munitions required for the use of the Navy, and the
more economical and expeditious delivery thereof."
The word "material," the act provided, should include stores,
supplies and equipment for ships, and everything required for or in
connection with the production thereof, and, in our opinion,
included the articles contracted for in this as well as in the
other two cases. The act provided that whenever the United States
should cancel, modify, suspend, or requisition any contract, just
compensation should be made therefor to be determined by the
President. If the amount so determined should be unsatisfactory,
the person entitled to receive it could accept 75 percent thereof
and bring suit to recover such further sum as added to the 75
percent would make just compensation. By the terms of the act, the
authority granted to the President or delegated by him was to
"cease six months after the final treaty of peace is proclaimed
between this government and the German Empire."
Page 261 U. S. 519
The motor car company contends that subdivision (b) of the
statute above quoted applies to private contracts alone, and
affords no authority for the cancellation by the government of its
own contracts. The Court of Claims held otherwise, and whether its
holding or the company's contention is correct presents the
principal question for our consideration.
It must be apparent, we think, that the words of the provision,
"
any existing or future contract," read with literal
exactness, include all contracts, whether private or governmental.
But it is pointed out that the power to "requisition" cannot apply
to a governmental contract, and this may be conceded, since the
government cannot requisition what it already has. Then it is said
that, inasmuch as the application of the word "requisition" must be
confined to private contracts, the other words associated with it
must be likewise restricted by virtue of the maxim "
noscitur a
sociis." That a word may be known by the company it keeps is,
however, not an invariable rule, for the word may have a character
of its own not to be submerged by its association. Rules of
statutory construction are to be invoked as aids to the
ascertainment of the meaning or application of words otherwise
obscure or doubtful. They have no place, as this Court has many
times held, except in the domain of ambiguity.
Hamilton v.
Rathbone, 175 U. S. 414,
175 U. S. 421;
United States v. Barnes, 222 U. S. 513,
222 U. S.
518-519. They may not be used to create, but only to
remove, doubt.
Id. Moreover, in cases of ambiguity, the
rule here relied upon is not exclusive. The problem may be
submitted to all appropriate and reasonable tests, of which
"
noscitur a sociis" is one. Here, we have one word which
it may be conceded applies only to private contracts, but the other
three words, standing alone, it likewise must be conceded,
naturally apply to governmental contracts as well. Indeed, they
more naturally apply to such contracts. The
Page 261 U. S. 520
power to modify the obligations of a private contract is, to say
the least, a most unusual one for governmental exercise. To modify
a contract is in effect to make a new one, and it puts something of
a strain on our conception of the functions of government to
concede its power to make contracts between private parties, to
which neither may assent, and which, consequently, neither will be
bound to perform.
We do not mean to deny the power of Congress, in time of war, to
authorize the President to modify private contracts (leaving the
parties free, as between themselves, to accept or not), nor do we
suggest that Congress has not done so by the present statute; but
the contention here is not that the power in question extends to
private contracts, but that it is limited to them. This cannot be
conceded. The meaning of the four predicate words is not doubtful;
in that respect, as well as in their operative scope, they
obviously differ from one another. The question we are called upon
to answer is whether, because the words "any . . . contract" must
be given a narrower meaning when qualified by the predicate
"requisition," their meaning must be limited in like manner when
qualified by one of the other three predicates. "
Noscitur a
sociis" is a well established and useful rule of construction
where words are of obscure or doubtful meaning, and then, but only
then, its aid may be sought to remove the obscurity or doubt by
reference to the associated words.
Virginia v. Tennessee,
148 U. S. 503,
148 U. S. 519;
Benson v. Chicago, etc., R. Co., 75 Minn. 163. But here,
the meaning of the words, considered severally, is not in doubt,
and the rule is invoked not to remove an obscurity, but to import
one. There is nothing in the rule or in the statute which requires
us to assimilate the words "modify" and "cancel" to the scope of
the word "requisition" simply because the latter has a necessarily
narrower application. The
Page 261 U. S. 521
meaning of the several words, standing apart, being perfectly
plain, what should be done is to apply them distributively,
diverso intuitu, giving to each its natural value and
appropriate scope when read in connection with the object (any
contract) which they are severally meant to control. Thus, the
predicate "requisition" will be limited to private contracts, while
the other words may be appropriately extended to include
governmental contracts as well. An illustration is afforded by the
commerce clause of the Constitution. The power to regulate
interstate and foreign commerce is found in the same clause and
conferred by the same words, but the scope of the power when
applied to the former may be narrower than when applied to the
latter.
Groves v.
Slaughter, 15 Pet. 449,
40 U. S.
505.
This disposition of the question also accords with the broad
purposes of the legislation. When the act was passed, we were in
the midst of a great war which called for the utilization of all
our resources. The necessities were great beyond the power of
statement. The government was confronted with the vital necessity
not only of producing ships and supplies in unprecedented
quantities, but of producing them with the utmost haste. Hence it
was necessary that everything which stood in the way of or hindered
such production should be put aside. But this was a necessity which
Congress, of course, realized must sooner or later come to an end,
suddenly and completely. With the termination of the war, the
continued production of war supplies would become not only
unnecessary, but wasteful. Not to provide, therefore, for the
cessation of this production when the need for it had passed would
have been a distinct neglect of the public interest. The situation,
it is plain, required that production should proceed while the war
lasted to the utmost limit of the nation's power, but that it
should come to an end as soon as possible upon the passing of the
emergency.
Page 261 U. S. 522
In the light of these circumstances, it is not unreasonable to
regard the statute now under consideration as intended to
accomplish both results, that is: (1) to enable the President,
during the emergency, to utilize his powers over contracts to
stimulate production to the utmost, and then, (2) upon the passing
of the emergency, to enable him to utilize these same powers to
stop that production as quickly as possible. To the latter
accomplishment authority to modify and cancel government war
contracts would contribute most effectively. These considerations
lend support to the judgment of the court below construing the
statute as having this effect.
In this connection, it is not without significance that the
authority granted to the President was to cease six months after
the final treaty of peace. Obviously, the powers granted to him,
among them to modify and cancel contracts, were to continue during
the six months' period not for the purpose of forwarding war
production, but, on the contrary, for the purpose of stopping it.
To that end, we conclude, he was authorized to cancel the
government's own contracts, such as the one here involved, upon
making just compensation to the parties concerned.
We are referred to the utterances of certain members of Congress
in debate, which it is argued show that the provision under
consideration was meant to cover private contracts. Whether they
come within the rule forbidding resort to legislative debates,
Lapina v. Williams, 232 U. S. 78,
232 U. S. 90;
Omaha Street Railway v. Interstate Commerce Commission,
230 U. S. 324,
230 U. S. 333;
Standard Oil Co. v. United States, 221 U. S.
1,
221 U. S. 50;
United States v. Freight Association, 166 U.
S. 290,
166 U. S. 318,
or within the exception,
Wisconsin R. Co. Comm'n v. C., B.
& Q. R. Co., 257 U. S. 563,
257 U. S. 588,
we need not consider, since, for reasons already stated, extrinsic
aid for ascertaining the meaning of the language here under review
is not required. Besides, though they
Page 261 U. S. 523
may tend to show that the statute was meant to apply to private
contracts, these utterances do not justify the conclusion that the
statute was not meant to apply to governmental contracts also.
Certain other contentions of the car company may be briefly
disposed of. In the first place, it is said that the President did
not delegate his power respecting contracts to the Secretary of the
Navy, and it is suggested that that officer did not in fact pretend
to cancel this contract under the statute. The order of the
President delegating his authority to the Secretary is in sweeping
terms, and it is impossible to conclude otherwise than that it was
intended to cover the whole field of power insofar as it pertained
to the Navy. Executive power, in the main, must of necessity be
exercised by the President through the various departments. These
departments constitute his peculiar and intimate agencies, and, in
devolving authority upon them, meticulous precision of language is
neither expected nor required. In cancelling the contract, it was
not necessary that the statute should be expressly referred to. It
was public law of which everyone was bound to take notice.
It is contended further that, even if the action of the
Secretary of the Navy was warranted by the statute, the car company
was nevertheless entitled to have included as just compensation its
anticipated profits.
This contention confuses the measure of damages for breach of
contract with the rule of just compensation for the lawful taking
of property by the power of eminent domain. In fixing just
compensation, the court must consider the value of the contract at
the time of its cancellation, not what it would have produced by
way of profits for the car company if it had been fully performed.
It is evident that no prudent person desiring to acquire this
contract would have paid for it the full amount which could be
realized upon completion, leaving no chance of
Page 261 U. S. 524
return to himself upon the investment or for the risk and labor
incident to its performance. The contract, we must assume, was
entered into with the prospect of its cancellation in view, since
the statute was binding, and must be read into the contract. The
possible loss of profits therefore must be regarded as within the
contemplation of the parties. The lower court was right in refusing
to allow anticipated profits, and, there being nothing in the
findings to justify the contrary, we must accept the amount fixed
on the basis of just compensation as adequate.
Our attention is directed to the fact that, prior to the
cancellation of contract No. 1498, the car company had manufactured
25 mounts, which it would have delivered under that contract except
for the fact that they were made applicable to the former contract,
No. 949, and it is insisted that the profit which the car company
would have made upon these mounts should have been included in the
amount of its compensation in any event. It is sufficient to say
that the car company was permitted to deliver these mounts under
its former contract at its own request. Presumably the full
contract price therefor was paid in the adjustment of that
contract.
It is unnecessary to burden this opinion with a statement of the
facts in the
Freygang and
Anderson Manufacturing
Company cases. They are not differentiated in any essential
respect from the case of the motor car company, and are governed by
the same reasons and conclusions.
The judgments of the Court of Claims are severally
Affirmed.