Pursuant to the Act of June 15, 1917, empowering the President
"to . . . cancel or requisition any existing or future contract for
the building, production, or purchase of ships or material," the
government took over by requisition the purchasers' rights in
certain private contracts for the manufacture and sale of marine
steam turbines. Before the contracts were performed, it cancelled
them.
Held:
1. That the manufacturer was entitled to just compensation, as
for property taken by eminent domain, not to damages as for breach
of contract. P.
284 U. S.
70.
2. Just compensation is the value of the contracts at the time
of their cancellation. P.
284 U. S.
72.
3. It does not include an allowance of anticipated profits.
Russell Motor Car Co. v. United States, 261 U.
S. 514. Pp.
284 U. S.
70-72.
4. The fact that the contracts, if carried out, would have been
profitable must be given proper weight in determining just
compensation. P.
284 U. S.
70.
5. The Act cited applies expressly to contracts made before its
passage. P.
284 U. S.
73.
6. Such contracts are entered into subject to future exertion of
the power of eminent domain.
Id.
70 Ct.Cls. 51 affirmed.
Certiorari, 283 U.S. 814, to review a judgment fixing
compensation for contracts requisitioned and afterwards cancelled
by the government.
Page 284 U. S. 68
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND delivered the opinion of the court.
Petitioner, a manufacturer of marine steam turbines, prior to
January 12, 1918, had entered into thirteen written contracts with
various firms and corporations for the manufacture of steam turbine
propulsion units for ships. In the early part of 1918, after
petitioner had commenced work under the contracts, the United
States, acting through the Emergency Fleet Corporation,
requisitioned these contracts, and advised the parties that it
would make just compensation for the turbine equipment which the
petitioner was required to complete, and that the Emergency Fleet
Corporation would assume the responsibility of the contracts and
make payment to petitioner.
The present controversy concerns three of these contracts (the
other ten having been fully performed), the first for the
construction of four marine turbine sets at the contract price of
$150,000, the second for the construction of ten marine turbine
sets at the contract price of $735,000, and the third for the
construction of four marine turbine sets at the contract price of
$216,000. Petitioner continued to perform its obligations under
these contracts, as directed by the Fleet Corporation, for about a
year, at which time, following the signing of the Armistice, it
became necessary in the public interest to suspend operations
Page 284 U. S. 69
under the contracts, and upon the several orders of the Fleet
Corporation, petitioner suspended operations, stored the materials
on hand, which had been assembled for the performance of the
contracts, until January 14, 1920, when, by agreement, they were
released from the effect of the requisition and were taken over by
petitioner at an agreed salvage value.
The Fleet Corporation awarded compensation to petitioner, but
the latter thought the award insufficient, and sought by this suit
in the Court of Claims to have the amount of just compensation
determined. The Court of Claims gave judgment in favor of
petitioner for its actual costs and expenditures over the cash
payments received, amounting to $116,231.66, together with $30,000
damages for extraordinary expenses resulting from the stopping of
work, and $15,000 for expenses and rental incident to the storing
of materials during the period after the order to stop work. From
the total of these items, certain deductions, including a payment
by the Fleet Corporation of 75% of the amount which it had awarded,
were made, resulting in an award of $84,074.34, with interest
thereon from August 17, 1920. To this award the court added $8,500,
with interest from March 17, 1919, as the value of the three
contracts at the time of their cancellation and the loss sustained
by the petitioner by reason thereof. According to the findings, the
petitioner, if it had been allowed to complete the performance of
the three contracts, would have realized a profit of over $300,000.
But the court below declined to include any amount for anticipated
profits. 70 Ct.Cls. 51.
The sole question presented for our determination is whether
petitioner was entitled to an allowance of the amount, or any part
of the amount, of these anticipated profits as a part of the just
compensation.
Page 284 U. S. 70
In
Russell Motor Car Co. v. United States, 261 U.
S. 514, the contract involved had been made directly
with the government for the manufacture of certain war supplies.
Following the Armistice, and while the contract was in process of
being performed, the Secretary of the Navy directed its
cancellation. Suit was brought in the Court of Claims to recover
just compensation. That court found that, if the manufacturer had
been permitted to complete the contract according to its terms, a
very large amount would have been earned as profits, but refused to
include in its award any part of these anticipated profits. We
affirmed this determination and held that the statute, which
empowered the President "(b) To modify, suspend, cancel, or
requisition any existing or future contract for the building,
production, or purchase of ships or material," applied to the
government's own contracts, as well as to private contracts, and
that just compensation for the cancellation of such contracts
should include
"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."
A distinction is sought to be drawn between the
Russell
Motor Car Company case and the present case, on the ground
that there, the contract was made directly with the government, and
here they were made between private parties. The question,
therefore, is whether this circumstance alters the rule in respect
of just compensation. In determining that question, the cardinal
point to be borne in mind is that, whether the contract
requisitioned or cancelled be one with the government or one
between private individuals, the person whose property rights are
taken or destroyed is entitled to receive just compensation, not
damages as for a breach. A sufficient ground for the distinction
lies in the fact that, in the one case, the requisition or
cancellation is a
Page 284 U. S. 71
lawful act under the power of eminent domain, while in the
other, the act constituting the breach is unlawful.
In the present case, the government requisitioned the
purchasers' rights in the contracts not for the purpose of putting
an end to the contracts, but of keeping them alive for the benefit
of the government. Its action being in pursuance of law, the
government succeeded to all the rights of the purchasers under the
contracts. The effect was the same as though the contracts had been
assigned by the purchasers with the consent of the manufacturer.
There resulted, by operation of law, a substitution of purchasers,
and the government became possessed of the right to enforce the
contracts as though it had been an original contracting party. In
effect, the old contracts became new contracts between the
government and the petitioner.
See F. Haag & Bro. v.
Reichert, 142 Ky. 298, 301, 134 S.W. 191.
Compare Wiggins
Ferry Co. v. O. & M. Ry. Co., 142 U.
S. 396,
142 U. S. 408;
Chicago, R.I. & P. Ry. Co. v. Denver & Rio Grande R.
Co., 143 U. S. 596,
143 U. S.
608.
In this view, the government cancelled its own contracts, and it
is hard to see why the
Russell Motor Car Company case is
not strictly applicable. Moreover, the Act of June 15, 1917, c. 29,
40 Stat. 182, authorized the President to cancel "
any
existing or future contract," etc., and this language, as we have
held, applies whether the contract is with the government or
between private parties. In either case, cancellation is an
exercise of the power of eminent domain, and the liability of the
government is for just compensation. There is no warrant for saying
that the elements to be considered in fixing just compensation are
different in respect of the two classes of contracts. The
Russell Motor Car Company case dealt with a government
contract, but
Brooks-Scanlon Corp. v. United States,
265 U. S. 106,
involved the requisition of a private contract, and this Court,
holding that the claimant was entitled to just compensation,
defined the term as follows (p.
265 U. S.
123):
Page 284 U. S. 72
"It is the sum which, considering all the circumstances --
uncertainties of the war, and the rest -- probably could have been
obtained for an assignment of the contract and claimant's rights
thereunder -- that is, the sum that would in all probability result
from fair negotiations between an owner who is willing to sell and
a purchaser who desires to buy."
Obviously this does not justify the allowance of anticipated
profits, although, of course, the fact that the contract, if
carried out, would be profitable is one of the circumstances which
naturally would be considered by one seeking an assignment of the
contract, and must be given its proper weight in fixing just
compensation. But that is very different from an
allowance
of anticipated profits as in the case of a breach. Whether the
contract taken or cancelled is one with the government or is a
private contract, the result of the two cases is that just
compensation means the same; "the value of the contract at the time
of its cancellation, not what it would have produced by way of
profits . . . if it had been fully performed."
Russell Motor
Car Co. v. United States, supra, p.
261 U. S.
523.
The court below found that the value of the contracts at the
time of their cancellation and the loss sustained by reason thereof
was $8,500, and in its judgment included this amount as a separate
item. In the course of its opinion, the court said (p. 65) that the
amount of this item was to be determined
"from all of the facts and circumstances in the case which bear
thereon, as shown by the evidence, and [the court] has fixed the
amount thereof in the findings at $8,500.00."
The amount, it is true, seems small, but the evidence is neither
before us nor open for our consideration, and there is nothing in
the findings which would justify this Court in saying that the
court below did not give weight to all proper elements entering
into the determination of the amount of just compensation,
including the fact that large profits would have
Page 284 U. S. 73
resulted from the full performance of the contract. To what
extent, in the opinion of the lower court, the realization of
profits was rendered highly improbable by other facts and
circumstances does not appear, and is not open to speculation. We
perceive no basis for substituting our judgment in the matter for
that of the court below.
The fact that the contracts were made prior to the passage of
the Act of June 15, 1917, does not alter the situation. They were
entered into subject to the power of Congress to enact legislation
authorizing the government to take them over for its benefit, or to
modify, suspend, or cancel them as required by the necessities of
war, and an implied condition to that effect must be read into the
contracts.
See cases cited in
Omnia Commercial Co. v.
United States, 261 U. S. 502,
261 U. S.
511-513. Congress, in the exercise of its lawful powers,
provided by the act for such taking over, etc., and expressly
included "existing" as well as "future" contracts. Whether the
contracts here involved were entered into before or after the
passage of that act therefore becomes immaterial. It is true that,
in the
Russell Motor Car Company case, the contract was
after the statute, and it was said that the contract was entered
into with the prospect of its cancellation in view, since the
statute was binding and must be read into the contract; but it was
not intended thereby, in the face of the precise terms of the
statutory provision, to include within the reach of the implication
only future contracts, and exclude therefrom existing contracts.
The contract there and the contracts here were entered into not
only subject to statutes already in force, but to those which
should thereafter be passed.
Louisville & Nashville R. Co.
v. Mottley, 219 U. S. 467,
219 U. S. 480.
In that case, this Court held that the prohibition of the Act of
February 4, 1887, c. 104, § 2, 24 Stat. 379, as amended,
prohibiting a carrier from charging compensation differing from
that specified in its published tariff, meant that transportation
should be paid for by all alike
Page 284 U. S. 74
and only in cash, and that it had the effect of rendering
invalid a contract, valid when made, for the issue of free
transportation. The court said (p.
219 U. S.
482):
"The agreement between the railroad company and the Mottleys
must necessarily be regarded as having been made subject to the
possibility that, at some future time, Congress might so exert its
whole constitutional power in regulating interstate commerce as to
render that agreement unenforceable or to impair its value. That
the exercise of such power may be hampered or restricted to any
extent by contracts previously made between individuals or
corporations is inconceivable. The framers of the Constitution
never intended any such state of things to exist."
There is nothing in the findings or in the circumstances to
suggest that the manufacturer sustained any injury from the
requisition itself, since the government undertook to carry out the
contracts, and its credit was certainly not inferior to that of the
original purchaser. The injury resulted not from the requisition,
but from the subsequent cancellation of the contracts.
Judgment affirmed.