1. Where the duties imposed upon an executive officer by a
statute granting gratuities based on equitable and moral
considerations include the duty of construing the statute itself in
its execution, his construction of it is a discretionary act which
cannot be controlled by the writ of mandamus. P.
267 U. S.
177.
2. Under § 5 of the Dent Act, March 2, 1919, c. 94, 40
Stat. 1272, refusal by the Secretary of the Interior to allow a
claim for money spent to obtain a release from a contract to buy
manganese land, the refusal being based upon the view that
expenditures for real estate or mining rights were not "for or
upon" property, but were speculative within the meaning of the act,
was conclusive against the claimant. P.
267 U. S.
178.
3. The amendment of November 23, 1921, c. 137, 42 Stat. 322, did
not change the act in this regard. P.
267 U. S.
182.
4. This case, upon the facts admitted by the demurrer to the
answer, is not within the class allowing mandamus to compel an
officer to take action and exercise his discretion, or an inferior
tribunal to take jurisdiction. P.
267 U. S.
184.
54 App.D.C. 84, 295. F. 225, reversed.
Page 267 U. S. 176
Appeal from a judgment of the Court of Appeals of the District
of Columbia which affirmed a judgment of the Supreme Court of the
District in mandamus directing the Secretary of the Interior to
consider and allow relator's claim, under the Dent Act, insofar as
it included money spent to obtain a release from a contract he had
made before the Armistice, to buy land containing manganese.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TAFT delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal under § 250 of the Judicial Code, par. 6,
from a judgment of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia,
affirmed by the court of appeals, granting a mandamus compelling
the Secretary of the Interior to consider and allow a claim for net
losses suffered by Logan Rives, the relator, in producing and
preparing to produce manganese at the instance of the government
for war purposes, under § 5 of the Dent Act (March 2, 1919,
ch. 94, 40 Stat. 1272).
Relator's petition shows that he incurred losses aggregating
$55,204.15, but that the Secretary awarded him only $23,047.36,
refusing to allow him, among other items, $9,600 which he had to
expend in obtaining a release from a contract to buy land
containing manganese, after the land had lost most of its value
because of the Armistice. The mandamus asked is to compel
consideration and allowance of the claim for this particular
item.
The Secretary's answer avers that the relator received and
accepted the $23,047.36 awarded March, 1920, but
Page 267 U. S. 177
refused to waive any right to further award under any subsequent
legislation which might provide for further payment. The answer
further denies that the Secretary refused to consider the claim,
but avers that he did so fully, and rejected it. The relator
demurred to the answer, and, on that demurrer, judgment followed
and the writ issued.
Mandamus issues to compel an officer to perform a purely
ministerial duty. It cannot be used to compel or control a duty in
the discharge of which by law he is given discretion. The duty may
be discretionary within limits. He cannot transgress those limits,
and if he does so, he may be controlled by injunction or mandamus
to keep within them. The power of the court to intervene, if at
all, thus depends upon what statutory discretion he has. Under some
statutes, the discretion extends to a final construction by the
officer of the statute he is executing. No court in such a case can
control by mandamus his interpretation, even if it may think it
erroneous. The cases range, therefore, from such wide discretion as
that just described to cases were the duty is purely ministerial,
where the officer can do only one thing which on refusal he may be
compelled to do. They begin, on one side, with
Kendall v.
United States, 12 Pet. 524, in which Congress
directed the Postmaster General to make some credit entries in an
account found to be just by the Solicitor of the Treasury. This
Court held that the duty was ministerial, with no discretion, and
required the Postmaster General to make the entries. On the other
side is
Decatur v. Paulding, Secretary
of the Navy, 14 Pet. 497,
39 U. S. 499.
Congress there provided for general naval pensions by general act,
and by resolution of the same day granted a special pension for the
widow of Commodore Decatur. She received the pension under the
general law ,and then applied for the special pension, which was
refused by the
Page 267 U. S. 178
Secretary of the Navy on the ground that she was given an
election of one of two funds, and she had elected. She sought by
mandamus to compel the Secretary, who under the law administered
the Naval Pension fund, to allow the special pension. This Court
held that Congress intended the Secretary to construe the statutes
and to allow the pensions accordingly, and that, although the court
might, as a matter of legal construction, differ from his
conclusion, it could not, by mandamus or injunction, constrain him
in his exercise of his discretion. Between these two early and
leading authorities illustrating the extremes are decisions, in
which the discretion is greater than in the
Kendall case
and less than in the
Decatur case, and its extent and the
scope of judicial action in limiting it depend upon a proper
interpretation of the particular statute and the congressional
purpose.
The Dent Act was passed by Congress in an effort to do justice
and equity to the many persons who could not obtain from the
government compensation for supplies or services furnished or
losses incurred in helping the government during the war, because
of a lack of enforceable contracts or equities. As to supplies and
services furnished, there was to be a settlement made by the
Secretary of War, and if this did not satisfy the claimant, he was
given a right under § 2 to sue in the Court of Claims to
recover greater compensation. Section 3 gave the Secretary power to
settle fairly and equitably claims of foreign governments and their
nationals for supplies and services rendered to the American
Expeditionary Forces, whether by contract entered into in
accordance with applicable statutory provisions or not. By §
4, the Secretary was given power to protect subcontractors in his
awards.
By § 5, provision was made not to pay for supplies or
services rendered directly to the government, but to relieve a
class of persons who were invited by the government
Page 267 U. S. 179
to invest money in the production and preparing for the
production of certain metals or materials difficult to obtain and
needed for the war, and who had thereupon incurred expense therein
and had suffered losses because of the coming of the Armistice and
the consequent destruction of the market for such metals.
The said Secretary was to make adjustments and payments in each
case as he should determine to be just and equitable, and the
decision of the Secretary was to be "conclusive and final." There
were five provisos: the first imposed a limit of total expenditure
under the Act. The second limited claims to those filed within
three months after the passage of the Act.
The third proviso declared:
"That no claim shall be allowed . . . by said Secretary unless
it shall appear to the satisfaction of the said Secretary that the
expenditures so made or obligations so incurred by the claimant
were made in good faith for or upon property which contained . . .
manganese . . . in sufficient quantities to be of commercial
importance"
The fourth proviso was:
"That no claims shall be paid unless it shall appear to the
satisfaction of said Secretary that moneys were invested or
obligations were incurred subsequent to April 6, 1917, and prior to
November 12, 1918, in a legitimate attempt to produce . . .
manganese . . . for the prosecution of the war, and that no profits
of any kind shall be included in the allowance of any of said
claims, and that no investment for merely speculative purposes
shall be recognized in any manner by said Secretary."
The fifth proviso declared that the settlement of any claim
under the section should not bar the government through any
authorized agency or any congressional committee thereafter duly
appointed from the review of such settlement, nor the right to
recover any money paid by the government to any party under the
section if the government had been defrauded.
Page 267 U. S. 180
The last paragraph of the section declared "that nothing in this
section shall be construed to confer jurisdiction upon any court to
entertain a suit against the United States," and closed with a
proviso that, in determining the net losses of any claimant, the
Secretary should take into consideration and charge to him the then
market value of any ores or minerals on hand belonging to him, and
the salvage or usable value of his machinery or other appliances
claimed to have been purchased to comply with the request of the
government.
On November 23, 1921, after the first award in this case, §
5 was amended (c. 137, 42 Stat. 322) by adding another proviso that
all claimants who in response to the request of any government
agency mentioned in the Act expended money "in producing or
preparing to produce" manganese, and had mailed their claims in
time
"if the proof in support of said claims clearly shows them to be
based upon action taken in response to such request . . . shall be
reimbursed such net losses as they may have incurred and are in
justice and equity entitled to from the appropriation in said act.
If, in claims passed upon under said Act, awards have been denied
or made on rulings contrary to the provisions of this amendment, or
through miscalculation, the Secretary of the Interior may award
proper amounts or additional amounts."
This amendment was brought about on the recommendation of the
Secretary of the Interior because he had felt obliged, under §
5 as it was, to reject some 600 claims for failure within the time
limit to show a direct personal request or demand upon the claimant
by the government authorities named in the Act and a response
thereto by the claimant, and because the Comptroller had refused to
pay any changed award of the Secretary made after a rehearing or to
correct miscalculation.
Page 267 U. S. 181
It is urged that the refusal of the Secretary to allow the loss
of $9,600 on the real estate contract is in the teeth of the third
proviso, which requires him to allow for expenditures made or
obligations incurred "for and upon property" containing manganese
in sufficient quantities to be of commercial importance. The
Interior Department had held from the beginning that this proviso
did not embrace money spent for real estate or mining rights. The
ruling was based in part, at least, on the legislative history of
the bill, which showed that it originally contained an express
provision for expenditures for real estate as a proper element in
calculating the net losses to be reimbursed, and that this
provision was objected to as involving too speculative a subject
matter, and it was stricken out. The Department's view was that
expenditures "for and upon" property containing manganese and other
metals did not include cost of real estate or mining rights,
because too speculative under the limitations of the fourth
proviso, and were intended to be confined to expenditures for
construction, equipment and machinery in development of such
property.
We are asked to reject this interpretation as wholly at variance
with the natural and necessary meaning of the words, and to confirm
the courts below in enforcing a view more liberal to the
claimant.
The above summary of § 5 clearly shows that Congress was
seeking to save the beneficiaries from losses which it would have
been under no legal obligation to make good if a private person. It
was a gratuity based on equitable and moral considerations.
United States v. Realty Co., 163 U.
S. 427,
163 U. S. 439;
Allen v. Smith, 173 U. S. 389,
173 U. S. 402.
Congress did not wish to create a legal claim. It was not dealing
with vested rights. It did not, as it did with the claims for
supplies and services directly furnished the government under the
first and second sections of the Act, make the losses recoverable
in
Page 267 U. S. 182
a court, but expressly provided otherwise. It dealt with the
subject with the utmost caution. It hedged the granting of the
equitable gratuity with limitations to prevent the use of the
statute for the recovery of doubtful or fraudulent claims or merely
speculative losses. It vested the Secretary with power to reject
all losses except as he was satisfied that they were just and
equitable and it made his decision conclusive and final. Final
against whom? Against the claimant. He could not resort to court to
review the Secretary's decision. This was expressly forbidden. By
the fifth proviso, however, the government was permitted. through
any of its agencies or even by a committee of Congress duly
authorized, to review the settlement by the Secretary and, by
necessary implication, to reverse it. If the government was
defrauded, it was authorized to sue to recover any money paid under
the award.
Congress was occupying toward the proposed beneficiaries of
§ 5 the attitude rather of a benefactor than of a debtor at
law. Congress intended the Secretary to act for it, and to construe
the meaning of the words used to describe the elements of the net
losses to be ascertained and to give effect to his interpretation
without the intervention of the courts. This statute presents a
case of as wide discretion as was held to have been vested in the
Secretary of the Navy in the
Decatur case.
Nor does the amendment of 1921 change the effect of the Act in
this regard. His counsel insist that it was adopted in order to
relieve claimants from previous narrow rulings of the Secretary.
There is nothing in the amendment that indicates the congressional
purpose to do more than it purports to do --
i.e., to
enable the Secretary to entertain claims for losses incurred at the
instance of any government agencies, whether direct and personal or
by public invitation, and to enable the Secretary to grant
rehearings, correct miscalculation, and award additional
Page 267 U. S. 183
amounts. The amendments still left all claims to his sense of
justice and equity.
Two cases upon which the relator relies do not aid him. They
depend on the construction of the particular statute. In
Work
v. Mosier, 261 U. S. 352, we
held that the statutory direction that certain income due minors of
the Osage Indians be paid was clear and positive, and it was not
left to the Secretary of the Interior to vary it --
i.e.,
he was not given discretion finally to construe it. In
Work v.
McAlester, 262 U. S. 200, it
was held that, by virtue of the statute, a lessee had a vested
right to buy the land at an original appraisement, and that the
Secretary had no authority to affect that right by ordering another
appraisement.
Ness v. Fisher, 223 U. S. 683,
Riverside Oil Co. v. Hitchcock, 190 U.
S. 316,
Alaska Smokeless Co. v. Lane,
250 U. S. 549, and
Hall v. Payne, 254 U. S. 343,
were all cases in which it was sought to control and reverse
rulings of the Secretary of the Interior on the ground that he had,
in the administration of the land laws, made a ruling contrary to
law against an applicant for action by him. In each case it was
held that, as the statute intended to vest in the Secretary the
discretion to construe the land laws and make such rulings, no
court could reverse or control them by mandamus in the absence of
anything to show that they were capricious or arbitrary. It was
pointed out that a mandamus could not be made to serve the function
of a writ of error, and the mere fact that the court might deem the
ruling erroneous in law gave it no power to intervene. These cases
are supported by earlier authorities to the same effect.
United States ex rel. Tucker
v. Seaman, 17 How. 225;
Gaines v.
Thompson, 7 Wall. 347;
Litchfield
v. The Register and Receiver, 9 Wall. 575;
United States ex rel. Dunlap v. Black, 128 U. S.
40. All rest upon the
Decatur case.
Compare
United States v. Babcock, 250 U. S. 328,
250 U. S. 331.
There is
Page 267 U. S. 184
nothing in the award by the Secretary in the case at bar which
would justify characterizing it as arbitrary, or capricious, or
fraudulent, or an abuse of discretion. The Secretary's view that it
was not just or equitable to include loss by a land purchase within
the gratuity of the government as defined by the statute must
therefore prevail against mandamus.
Lane v. Hoglund, 244 U. S. 174;
Ballinger v. Frost, 216 U. S. 240;
Garfield v. Goldsby, 211 U. S. 249;
Roberts v. United States, 176 U.
S. 221;
Butterworth v. Hoe, 112 U. S.
50;
United States v. Schurz, 102 U.
S. 378, were all cases in which the Court found that all
the conditions had been fulfilled upon which the relator in the
mandamus was entitled to call upon the officer to do an act
beneficial to the relator, and that the Act was thus a ministerial
duty, as in the
Kendall case.
There is a class of cases in which a relator in mandamus has
successfully sought to compel action by an officer who has
discretion concededly conferred on him by law. The relator in such
cases does not ask for a decision any particular way, but only that
it be made one way or the other. Such are
Louisville Cement Co.
v. Interstate Commerce Commission, 246 U.
S. 638, and
Interstate Commerce Commission v.
Humboldt S.S. Co., 224 U. S. 474.
They follow the decision in
Commissioner of Patents v.
Whiteley, 4 Wall. 522. They are analogous to
Hohorst, Petitioner, 150 U. S. 653;
Parker, Petitioner, 131 U. S. 221;
Ex parte Parker, 120 U. S. 737, and
others which hold that mandamus may issue to an inferior judicial
tribunal if it refuses to take jurisdiction when by law it ought to
do so, or where, having obtained jurisdiction, it refuses to
proceed in its exercise. It is sought to bring the present case
within this class by the averment in the petition that the
Secretary of the Interior has refused to take jurisdiction of the
claim for the loss of $9,600 through the real estate contract. This
averment
Page 267 U. S. 185
is met by a denial in the answer and the affirmative allegation
that the Secretary did consider the claim and disallowed it for
cause deemed by him to be good. This mandamus was granted by the
courts below on demurrer to the answer. Its allegations must be
taken as admitted. Moreover, it is clearly shown by the exhibits to
the pleadings that the Secretary decided that, on its merits, the
claim was not for the kind of loss which Congress intended the
Secretary to reimburse.
Our conclusion makes it unnecessary for us to consider the
contention of the government that the relator here is estopped to
urge the present claim by his acceptance of the award already
made.
Reversed.