Collection of interest by the United States from a national
bank, as a United States depositary, on a fund belonging to a
private litigant which had been paid into the district court and
deposited in the bank for safekeeping, did not create a contract
upon the part of the United States to pay over the interest to the
owner of the fund, even if the United States had no right to the
interest. P.
271 U. S.
217.
Reversed.
Appeal from a judgment of the district court against the United
States in a suit under the Tucker Act.
Page 271 U. S. 214
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TAFT delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Minnesota Mutual Investment Company is a corporation of
South Dakota, doing business in Colorado. It sued the United States
for $571.26, under the Tucker Act, Judicial Code, § 24, par.
20. Its claim arises under the following circumstances: in a cause
pending in the United States District Court for Colorado, the
investment company was plaintiff, and McGirr and others were
defendants. The plaintiff was required to place in the registry of
the court $15,143.92, which the clerk of the court immediately
deposited in the First National Bank of Denver, Colorado,
designated by the court as one of its depositaries. The money
remained in the bank to the credit of the court from June 7, 1918,
until May 6, 1920, when it was returned to the Investment Company.
During that period, the bank paid interest on this deposit of 2
percent per annum, semiannually into the United States Treasury for
the use of the government. The
Page 271 U. S. 215
petition alleges that, for a long series of years prior to this,
interest paid by the bank on such court funds had been added to the
deposit for the benefit of the party adjudged to own it, but that,
shortly before this deposit, the Secretary of the Treasury, by
regulation, required all United States depositaries having court
funds to pay interest at 2 percent to the Treasurer of the United
States for its use.
The petition avers that the United States was not interested in
the sum of money so deposited, had no right, title, or interest
therein, directly or indirectly, and that the interest so paid was
and is the property of the plaintiff, and was received by the
United States for the use and benefit of the plaintiff, and
judgment was asked therefor.
The United States filed a demurrer to the complaint, which was
overruled. It then answered alleging that the United States,
through its proper officers, had entered into a contract concerning
the payment of interest upon all government deposits, including the
court funds, carried with the bank by virtue of its designation as
a depositary of the United States, under the regulations
promulgated by the Secretary of the Treasury under authority
conferred upon him by the laws of the United States; that this
contract consisted of an offer made on behalf of the United States
and its acceptance by the First National Bank by its President, and
that, accordingly, $571.26 was paid to the United States by the
bank; that, in consideration of such payment, the United States
allowed the bank the use of all government deposits held on
deposit, allowed the bank the prestige and advertising connected
with its handling of such government deposits, kept safe in its
custody the collateral security pledged by the bank to secure the
deposits, and supervised the depositary in all matters in
connection with the deposit. Accompanying the answer was the
correspondence claimed to embody
Page 271 U. S. 216
the contract between the United States and the bank. A demurrer
to the answer of the defendant was sustained, and the judgment for
$571.26 followed. Direct appeal to this Court was allowed to the
United States under the Tucker Act (Act of March 3, 1887,
§§ 4 and 9, c. 359, 24 Stat. 505), because taken before
the taking effect of the Act of February 13, 1925, 43 Stat. 936, c.
229, § 14.
Section 995 of the Revised Statutes provides:
"All moneys paid into any court of the United States, or
received by the officers thereof, in any cause pending or
adjudicated in such court, shall be forthwith deposited with the
Treasurer, an Assistant Treasurer, or a designated depositary of
the United States, in the name and to the credit of such court:
Provided, that nothing herein shall be construed to
prevent the delivery of any such money upon security, according to
agreement of parties, under the direction of the court."
Rule 20 of the Rules of the district court of Colorado contains
the following:
"1. All moneys brought into court shall be paid to the clerk of
the court, unless the court shall otherwise direct, and when not
immediately paid to the party entitled, be deposited by said clerk,
in his name of office, with such depositary as may be designated by
law, or by the court, when no place is so designated. The amount so
received, the purpose for which it was paid into court, together
with the fact of the deposit, as herein provided, shall be noted by
the clerk in the civil or criminal dockets of the court in the
particular cause in which it is received. All interest paid on said
deposits shall become a part thereof."
Section 251 of the Revised Statutes provides that the Secretary
of the Treasury may make rules and regulations relative to public
moneys and officers concerned therewith. Section 5153 of the
Revised Statutes, as amended by later acts, provides in effect that
all national
Page 271 U. S. 217
bank associations designated for that purpose by the Secretary
of the Treasury shall be depositaries of public money under such
regulations as may be prescribed by the Secretary and they are to
perform all such reasonable duties as depositaries of public money
as may be required of them. The Secretary is to require them to
give satisfactory security, by the deposit of United States bonds,
for the safe keeping of the public money deposited with them.
The court below found that the Secretary of the Treasury had no
power under these two sections to direct national banks to pay
interest on deposits of court founds to the United States, and that
his authority to make such a regulation for interest extended only
to public moneys, and not to court funds belonging to the parties
to the litigation awaiting adjudication as to ownership or proper
disposition. The conclusion of the court was that the United States
had therefore received interest which should have been paid to the
defendant in error, the Investment Company, and which it may
recover from the United States.
But the Solicitor General argues that, even if the United States
had no right to collect the interest from the bank, no cause of
action was created in favor of the Investment Company against the
United States for this illegal collection, that there was no
contract of the government, express or implied, by reason of that
collection to pay it to the Investment Company, and that without
this, no recovery can be had. This seems to us to be sound
reasoning. An implied contract in order to give the Court of Claims
or a district court under the Tucker Act jurisdiction to give
judgment against the government must be one implied in fact, and
not one based merely on equitable considerations and implied in
law.
Merritt v. United States, 267 U.
S. 338,
267 U. S.
340-341;
Tempel v. United States, 248 U.
S. 121;
Sutton v. United
States,
Page 271 U. S. 218
256 U. S. 575,
256 U. S. 581.
There is nothing in the averments in the pleadings in this case to
show that the officers of the government collected this interest or
that it was received into the treasury for the benefit of the
Investment Company.
The judgment is
Reversed.