1. A collector or receiver of public money, under bond to keep
it safely and pay it when required, is not bound to render the
money at all events, but is excused if prevented from rendering it
by the act of God or the public enemy, without any neglect or fault
on his part.
2. Such collector or receiver is a bailee of the government, and
by the common law is only bound to due diligence and only liable
for negligence or dishonesty; but by the policy of the acts of
Congress on the subject, a more stringent accountability is
exacted.
3. The measure of this enhanced accountability is particularly
to be found in the official bond required of these officers, the
condition of which requires the payment of the moneys that come to
their hands as and when directed; the performance of which
condition can only be excused by an overruling necessity.
4. The late rebellion being a public war, the forcible seizure
by the rebel authorities of public moneys in the hands of loyal
government agents, against their will and without their fault or
negligence, was a sufficient discharge from their obligations in
reference to said moneys.
The United States sued Thomas and others as the principal and
sureties on the official bond of the said Thomas, as surveyor of
the customs for the port of Nashville, Tennessee,
Page 82 U. S. 338
and depositary of public moneys at that place. The condition of
the bond was in the usual form, that he should faithfully execute
and discharge the duties of his office according to law and should
well, truly, and faithfully keep safely, without loaning, using,
depositing in banks, or exchanging for other funds than as allowed
by act of Congress, all the public money collected by him or
otherwise placed in his possession and custody till the same should
be ordered by the proper department or officer, to be transferred
or paid out; and when such orders for transfer or payment were
received, should faithfully and promptly make the same as directed,
and should perform all other duties as fiscal agent of the
government which might be imposed by any act of Congress or
regulation of the Treasury Department &c. The breach alleged
was that certain public moneys were collected by Thomas in his
official capacity, and were placed in his possession and custody,
of which a balance of $4,880 remained in his hands on the 27th of
April, 1861, which he did not keep safely, but which he paid out to
persons not entitled thereto, whereby it was wholly lost; and that
although the said sum was ordered by the proper department and
officer to be transferred and paid out, he failed and refused to
transfer or pay it out as so required. The defendants, besides
performance, pleaded seizure of the moneys in question by the rebel
authorities by the exercise of force which Thomas was unable to
resist, and against his will and consent, he being a loyal citizen
endeavoring faithfully to perform his duty. Upon the trial,
evidence was adduced tending to support this plea, and the court
charged the jury that if they believed from the evidence that, at
the time the demand was made by the insurgents for the surrender by
Thomas of the effects in his hands belonging to the government,
there was an organized insurrection in the State of Tennessee and
in the City of Nashville against the government of the United
States with a force sufficient to compel obedience to the orders
and demands of the governor who led and controlled such
insurrection, and that in this state of things the demand was made
upon Thomas to surrender
Page 82 U. S. 339
said effects; and if they further believed that Thomas was
acting in good faith, and surrendered the effects in his hands only
in the honest belief that he would be imprisoned and the effects
seized by force, and had good reason to apprehend that and other
violence to his person; and if they believed that the threatened
force would be applied to compel the surrender, then the court was
of opinion that the seizure and appropriation of the government
effects in his hands would be by public enemies of the United
States, and would relieve him from liability for the same
notwithstanding the condition of his bond; but if they believed
that Thomas was one of the insurrectionists, or willingly
cooperated with them in their lawless acts against the government,
the jury might infer that he was willing that the effects in
controversy should fall into the hands of the rebel authorities,
and he would not be relieved from the obligations of his bond. To
this ruling an exception was taken, and whether the ruling was
correct in law was the point now before this Court.
Page 82 U. S. 341
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case brings up squarely the question whether the forcible
seizure, by the rebel authorities, of public moneys in the hands of
loyal government agents, against their will and without their fault
or negligence, is or is not a sufficient discharge from the
obligations of their official bonds. This precise question has not
as yet been decided by this Court. As the rebellion has been held
to have been a public war, the question may be stated in a more
general form, as follows: is the act of a public enemy in forcibly
seizing or destroying property of the government in the hands of a
public officer, against his will and without his fault, a discharge
of his obligation to keep such property safely, and of his official
bond, given to secure the faithful performance of that duty and to
have the property forthcoming when required?
Page 82 U. S. 342
The question is thus stated in its double aspect, namely first
in regard to the obligation arising from official duty and secondly
in regard to that arising from the bond, because the condition of
the latter is twofold -- that the principal shall faithfully
discharge his official duties and that he shall pay the moneys of
the government that may come into his hands as and when it shall be
demanded of him. It is contended that the latter branch of the
condition has a more stringent effect than the former, and creates
an obligation to pay at all events all public money received.
That overruling force arising from inevitable necessity or the
act of a public enemy is a sufficient answer for the loss of public
property when the question is considered in reference to an
officer's obligation arising merely from his appointment, and aside
from such a bond as exists in this case, seems almost self-evident.
If it is not, then every military commander who ever lost a battle
or was obliged to surrender his ship or fort or other public
property added a civil obligation to his military misfortune. And
as it regards this question, it is difficult to perceive any
distinction between the loss of one kind of property and another.
If the property belongs to the government, the loss falls on the
government; if it belongs to individuals, it falls on them.
The general rule of official obligation as imposed by law is
that the officer shall perform the duties of his office honestly,
faithfully, and to the best of his ability. This is the substance
of all official oaths. In ordinary cases, to expect more than this
would deter upright and responsible men from taking office. This is
substantially the rule by which the common law measures the
responsibility of those whose official duties require them to have
the custody of property, public or private. If in any case a more
stringent obligation is desirable, it must be prescribed by statute
or exacted by express stipulation.
The ordinary rule will be found illustrated by a number of
analogous cases.
It is laid down by Justice Story that officers of courts having
the custody of property of suitors are bailees, and
Page 82 U. S. 343
liable only for the exercise of good faith and reasonable
diligence, and not responsible for loss occurring without their
fault or negligence. [
Footnote
1] Trustees are only bound to exercise the same care and
solicitude with regard to the trust property which they would
exercise with regard to their own. Equity will not exact more of
them. [
Footnote 2] They are not
liable for a loss by theft without their fault. [
Footnote 3] But this exemption ceases when
they mix the trust money with their own, whereby it loses its
identity, and they become mere debtors. [
Footnote 4] Receivers, appointed by the court, though
held to a stricter accountability than trustees, on account of
their compensation, are nevertheless not liable for a loss without
their fault; and they are entitled to manage the property and
transact the business in their hands in the usual and accustomed
way. [
Footnote 5] A marshal
appointed by a court of admiralty to take care of a ship and cargo
is responsible only for a prudent and honest execution of his
commission. [
Footnote 6] "Every
man," says Sir William Scott,
"who undertakes a commission incurs all the responsibility that
belongs to a prudent and honest execution of that commission. Then
the question comes what is a prudent and honest execution of that
commission? The fair performance of the duties that belong to it. .
. . He must provide a competent number of persons to guard the
property; having so done he has discharged his responsibility,
unless he can be affected with fraud, or negligence amounting in
legal understanding to fraud. [
Footnote 7]"
A postmaster is bound to exercise due diligence, and nothing
more, in the care of matter deposited in the post office. He is not
liable for a loss happening without his fault or negligence. Soon
after the
Page 82 U. S. 344
organization of the government post it was attempted to charge
the Postmaster General to the same extent as the common carriers
who had previously carried the mails; and the question was
elaborately argued in the great case of
Lane v. Cotton,
[
Footnote 8] and Lord Chief
Justice Holt strenuously contended for that view; but it was
decided that the postmaster was only liable for his own negligence;
and this case was followed by Lord Mansfield and the whole court,
three-quarters of a century later, in the case of
Whitfield v.
Le Despencer. [
Footnote
9]
In certain cases, it is true, a more stringent accountability is
exacted; as in the case of a sheriff, in reference to prisoners
held by him in custody, where the law puts the whole power of the
county at his disposal, and makes him liable for an escape in all
cases, except where it is caused by an act of God or the public
enemy. [
Footnote 10] The
exception which thus qualifies the severest exaction of official
responsibility known at the common law is worthy of particular
notice. The reason for applying so severe a rule in cases of escape
is probably founded in motives of public safety. Chief Justice
Gibson, in
Wheeler v. Hambright, [
Footnote 11] says: "The strictness of the law in
this respect arises from public policy." Lord Chief Justice Holt,
in his dissenting opinion in
Lane v. Cotton, also held
that the sheriff was responsible in the same strict manner for
goods seized in execution; but he cited no authority for the
opinion, and the general rule of responsibility is certainly much
short of that.
The basis of the common law rule is founded on the doctrine of
bailment. A public officer having property in his custody in his
official capacity is a bailee, and the rules which grow out of that
relation are held to govern the case. But the legislature can
undoubtedly, at its pleasure, change
Page 82 U. S. 345
the common law rule of responsibility. And with regard to the
public moneys, as they often accumulate in large sums in the hands
of collectors, receivers, and depositaries, and as they are
susceptible of being embezzled and privately used without
detection, and are often difficult of identification, legislation
is frequently adopted for the purpose of holding such officers to a
very strict accountability. And in some cases they are spoken of as
though they were absolute debtors for, and not simply custodians
of, the money in their hands. In New York, in the case of
Muzzy
v. Shattuck, [
Footnote
12] the court, after a careful examination of the statutory
provisions respecting the duties and liabilities of a town
collector, came to the conclusion -- contrary to its previous
decision in
Supervisors v. Dorr, [
Footnote 13] -- that he was liable as a debtor,
and not merely as a bailee, for the moneys collected by him, and
consequently that he could not excuse himself, in an action on his
bond, by showing that, without his fault, the money had been stolen
from his office.
Where, however, a statute merely prescribes the duties of the
officer, as that he shall safely keep money or property received or
collected, and shall pay it over when called upon to do so by the
proper authority, it cannot, without more, be regarded as enlarging
or in any way affecting the degree of his responsibility. The mere
prescription of duties has nothing to do with the question as to
what shall constitute the rule of responsibility in the discharge
of those duties, or a legal excuse for the nonperformance of them,
or a discharge from their obligation. The common law, which is
common reason, prescribes that; and statutes, in subordination to
their terms, are to be construed agreeably to the rules of the
common law. [
Footnote
14]
The acts of Congress with respect to the duties of collectors,
receivers, and depositaries of public moneys, it must be conceded,
manifest great anxiety for the due and faithful discharge by these
officers of their responsible duties, and
Page 82 U. S. 346
for the safety and payment of the moneys which may come to their
hands. They are expressly required to keep safely, without loaning,
using, depositing in banks, or exchanging for other funds than as
specially allowed by law, all the public money collected by them,
or in their possession or custody, till ordered by the proper
department or officer to be transferred or paid out; and where such
orders from transfer or payment are received faithfully and
promptly to make the same as directed. [
Footnote 15] To obviate all excuse for casual losses,
it is provided that they shall be allowed, under the direction of
the Secretary of the Treasury, all necessary additional expenses
for clerks, fire proof chests or vaults, or other necessary
expenses of safekeeping, transferring, and disbursing said moneys.
[
Footnote 16] And it is
expressly made embezzlement and a felony, for an officer charged
with the safekeeping, transfer, and disbursement of the public
moneys, to convert them to his own use, or to use them in any way
whatever, or to loan them, deposit them in bank, or to exchange
them for other funds except as ordered by the proper department or
officer. [
Footnote 17] Every
receiver of public money is required to render his accounts
quarter-yearly to the proper accounting officers of the Treasury,
with the vouchers necessary to the prompt settlement thereof,
within three months after the expiration of each quarter, subject,
however, to the control of the proper department. [
Footnote 18] Besides this, all such
officers are required to give bonds with sufficient sureties for
the due discharge of all these duties. [
Footnote 19] And upon making default and being sued,
prompt judgment is directed to be given, and no claim for a credit
is to be allowed unless it has been first presented to the
accounting officers of the Treasury for examination and disallowed,
or unless it be shown that the vouchers could not be procured for
that purpose, by reason of absence from the country, or some
unavoidable accident. [
Footnote
20]
These provisions show that it is the manifest policy of the
Page 82 U. S. 347
law to hold all collectors, receivers, and depositaries of the
public money to a very strict accountability. The legislative
anxiety on the subject culminates in requiring them to enter into
bond with sufficient sureties for the performance of their duties,
and in imposing criminal sanctions for the unauthorized use of the
moneys. Whatever duty can be inferred from this course of
legislation is justly exacted from the officers. No ordinary excuse
can be allowed for the nonproduction of the money committed to
their hands. Still they are nothing but bailees. To call them
anything else, when they are expressly forbidden to touch or use
the public money except as directed, would be an abuse of terms.
But they are special bailees, subject to special obligations. It is
evident that the ordinary law of bailment cannot be invoked to
determine the degree of their responsibility. This is placed on a
new basis. To the extent of the amount of their official bonds, it
is fixed by special contract; and the policy of the law as to their
general responsibility for amounts not covered by such bonds may be
fairly presumed to be the same. In the leading case of
United
States v. Prescott [
Footnote 21] (which was an action on a similar bond to
that now under consideration), the court said:
"This is not a case of bailment, and consequently the law of
bailment does not apply to it. The liability of the defendant,
Prescott, arises out of his official bond, and the principles which
are founded on public policy."
After reciting the condition of the bond, the court adds, with a
greater degree of generality, we think, than the case before it
required,
"The obligation to keep safely the public money is absolute,
without any condition, express or implied; and nothing but the
payment of it, when required, can discharge the bond."
This broad language would seem to indicate an opinion that the
bond made the receiver and his sureties liable at all events, as
now contended for by the government. But that case was one in which
the defense set up was that the money was stolen, and a much more
limited responsibility than
Page 82 U. S. 348
that indicated by the above language would have sufficed to
render that defense nugatory. And as the money in the hands of a
receiver is not his; as he is only custodian of it; it would seem
to be going very far to say, that his engagement to have it
forthcoming was so absolute, as to be qualified by no condition
whatever, not even a condition implied in law. Suppose an
earthquake should swallow up the building and safe containing the
money, is there no condition implied in the law by which to
exonerate the receiver from responsibility?
We do not question the doctrine so strongly urged by the counsel
for the government, that performance of an express contract is not
excused by reason of anything occurring after the contract was
made, though unforeseen by the contracting party, and though beyond
his control -- with the qualification, however, that the thing to
be done does not become physically impossible, as to cultivate an
island which has sunk in the sea. It was thus decided in the
leading case of
Paradine v. Jane. [
Footnote 22] The law on this subject is well
stated by Sergeant Williams, [
Footnote 23] where he says:
"When the law creates a duty, and the party is disabled to
perform it without any default of him, and he has no remedy over,
the law will excuse him; as in waste, if a house be destroyed by
tempest, or by enemies, the lessee is excused; so, in escape, if a
prison be destroyed by tempest or enemies, the gaoler is excused.
But where the party by his own contract creates a duty or charge
upon himself, he is bound to make it good, if he may,
notwithstanding any accident by inevitable necessity, because he
might have provided against it by his contract."
It is contended that the bond, in this case, has the effect of
such a special contract, and several cases of actions on official
bonds have been cited to support the proposition. Those principally
relied on are the cases of
United States v. Prescott, just
cited;
Muzzy v. Shattuck, [
Footnote 24]
Commonwealth v. Comly, [
Footnote 25]
State v.
Harper, [
Footnote 26]
and the recent cases of
Page 82 U. S. 349
Dashiel, Keehler, and Boyden in this Court. It must be conceded
that the language used by the court, not only in the case already
referred to, but in some of the other cases cited, seems to favor
the rule contended for. But in none of them was the defense of
overruling necessity interposed. They were all cases of alleged
theft, or robbery, or some other cause of loss, which would have
been insufficient to exonerate a common carrier from liability.
They all concur in establishing one point, however, of much
importance, that a bond with an unqualified condition to account
for and pay over public moneys enlarges the implied obligation of
the receiving officer, and deprives him of defenses which are
available to an ordinary bailee; but they do not go the length of
deciding that he thereby becomes liable at all events; although
expressions looking in that direction, but not called for by the
judgment, may have been used.
The case of
United States v. Prescott has already been
sufficiently adverted to. The next in order of time was that of
Muzzy v. Shattuck, which was decided the same year, 1845,
and in which the supreme court of New York construed the statutes
of that state as making the town collector a debtor for the amount
of taxes to be collected by him, and held him liable on his bond
notwithstanding the money was stolen. Here again the result arrived
at was correct; but the reasoning by which it was attained may be
fairly questioned. The statutes of the state, however, may have
justified the view which was taken in that case.
The next case is that of
Commonwealth v. Comly, decided
in 1846. That was an action on the bond of a collector of tolls,
and the same defense (of theft) was interposed. Chief Justice
Gibson refers to the case of
United States v. Prescott and
remarks, that
"the responsibility of a public receiver is determined not by
the law of bailment, which is called in to supply the place of a
special agreement where there is none, but by the condition of his
bond."
So in the case of
State v. Harper, which was an action
on the official bond of a county treasurer, conditioned for the
payment of all moneys that should come to his hands for state,
Page 82 U. S. 350
county, or township purposes; and larceny of the money being
pleaded, the court said:
"By accepting the office, the treasurer assumes upon himself the
duty of receiving and safely keeping the public money, and of
paying it out according to law. His bond is a contract that he will
not fail, upon any account, to do these acts,"
and the defense of larceny was overruled.
It is unnecessary to examine the cases further in detail. It
appears from them all (except perhaps the New York case) that the
official bond is regarded as laying the foundation of a more
stringent responsibility upon collectors and receivers of public
moneys. It is referred to as a special contract, by which they
assume additional obligations with regard to the safekeeping and
payment of those moneys, and as an indication of the policy of the
law with regard to the nature of their responsibility. But, as
before remarked, the decisions themselves do not go the length of
making them liable in cases of overruling necessity. On the
contrary, in the last reported case on the subject, that of
Bevans v. United States, [
Footnote 27] MR. JUSTICE STRONG, delivering the opinion
of this Court, says:
"It may be a grave question whether the forcible taking of money
belonging to the United States, from the possession of one of her
officers or agents lawfully holding it, by a government of
paramount force, which at the time was usurping the authority of
the rightful government, and compelling obedience to itself
exclusively throughout a state, would not work a discharge of such
officers or agents, if they were entirely free from fault, though
they had given bond to pay the money to the United States."
These observations show that the particular question raised in
this case has been reserved by the court after its most mature
consideration of the subject.
So much stress has, in almost every case, been laid upon the
bond as forming, either directly or indirectly, the basis of a new
rule of responsibility, that it seems especially important to
ascertain what are the legal obligations that spring
Page 82 U. S. 351
from such an instrument. The learned judges in the great
generality of the remarks made in some of the cases referred to,
with regard to the liability of a receiving officer, and especially
of his sureties, by virtue of his bond, have evidently overlooked
what we conceive to be a very important and vital distinction
between an absolute agreement to do a thing and a condition to do
the same thing, inserted in a bond. In the latter case the obligor,
in order to avoid the forfeiture of his obligation, is not bound at
all events to perform the condition, but is excused from its
performance when prevented by the law or by an overruling
necessity. And this distinction, we think, affords a solution to
the question involved in this case.
The following extract from Coke on Littleton expresses the law
on this subject, which is repeated by Blackstone and other modern
authorities: "In all cases," says Lord Coke,
"where a condition of a bond, recognizance &c., is possible
at the time of making of the condition, and before the same can be
performed, the condition becomes impossible by the act of God, or
of the law, or of the obligee &c., there the obligation
&c., is saved. But if the condition of a bond &c., be
impossible at the time of the making of the condition, the
obligation &c., is single. [
Footnote 28]"
Of course the above rule does not apply to a money bond given
for a debt, where the condition is simply for the payment of a less
sum of money than the penalty; for there, as the books say, the
condition is of the same nature as the obligation itself, and not
collateral to it. [
Footnote
29] The bond in suit is not such a money bond. The condition of
an official bond is collateral to the obligation or penalty; it is
not based on a prior debt, nor is it evidence of a debt; and the
duty secured thereby does not become a debt until default be made
on the part of the principal. Until then, as we have
Page 82 U. S. 352
seen, he is a bailee, though a bailee resting under special
obligations. The condition of his bond is, not to pay a debt, but
to perform a duty about and respecting certain specific property
which is not his, and which he cannot use for his own purposes. In
the case of
Farrar & Brown v. United States, [
Footnote 30] the question being
whether sureties were liable for defaults made prior to the giving
of the bond, the court said:
"For any sums paid to Rector (the principal) prior to the
execution of the bond, there is but one ground on which the
sureties could be held answerable to the United States, and that is
the assumption that he still held the money in bank or otherwise.
If still in his hands, he was up to that time
bailee of the
government, but on the contrary hypothesis he had become a
debtor or defaulter to the government, and his offense was
already consummated."
That is, as custodian of the money he is bailee of the
government -- not a debtor. What makes him a debtor or defaulter is
the very question at issue. When he becomes such, then he and his
sureties are liable until the amount is paid, as we held in the
late case of Bevans, before referred to. Until then, neither he nor
they are liable on the bond.
We think that the case is within the law as laid down by Lord
Coke, and that the receiver, and especially his sureties, are
entitled to the benefit of it, and that no rule of public policy
requires an officer to account for moneys which have been destroyed
by an overruling necessity or taken from him by a public enemy
without any fault or neglect on his part.
Judgment affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
Story on Bailments § 620.
[
Footnote 2]
Ib.; Lewin on Trusts 332, 3d ed.
[
Footnote 3]
Ib.
[
Footnote 4]
Ib. and 2 Story's Equity Jurisprudence § 1270,
and see §§ 1268, 1269; also 2 Spence's Equity
Jurisprudence 917, 921, 933, 937;
Wren v. Kirton, 11 Vesey
381;
Utica Insurance Co. v. Lynch, 11 Paige 520.
[
Footnote 5]
Knight v. Ld. Plymouth, 3 Atkyns 480;
Rowth v.
Howell, 3 Vesey 566; Lewin on Trusts 332, 3d ed.; Edwards on
Receivers 573-599;
White v. Baugh, 3 Clark & Finnelly
44.
[
Footnote 6]
The Rendsberg, 6 Robinson 142.
[
Footnote 7]
6 Robinson 154;
see also Burke v. Trevitt, 1 Mason 96,
100.
[
Footnote 8]
1 Lord Raymond 646.
[
Footnote 9]
Cowper 754;
see Story on Bailments § 463;
Dunlop v.
Munroe, 7 Cranch 242.
[
Footnote 10]
33 Hen. VI, p. 1; Brooke's Abridgment, tit. Dette 22; Dalton's
Sheriff 485; Watson on Sheriffs 140.
[
Footnote 11]
9 Sergeant & Rawle 396.
[
Footnote 12]
1 Denio 233.
[
Footnote 13]
25 Wendell 440.
[
Footnote 14]
Bacon's Abridgment, tit. Statute I, 4.
[
Footnote 15]
9 Stat. at Large 61 § 9.
[
Footnote 16]
Ib. 62, § 13.
[
Footnote 17]
Ib. 63, § 16.
[
Footnote 18]
3
id. 723, § 2.
[
Footnote 19]
1
id. 705; 2
id. 75; 9
id. 60, 61
&c.
[
Footnote 20]
1
id. 514, §§ 3, 4.
[
Footnote 21]
44 U. S. 3 How.
587.
[
Footnote 22]
Aleyn 26; Metcalf on Contracts 212.
[
Footnote 23]
2 Saunders 422(a) note
[
Footnote 24]
1 Denio 233.
[
Footnote 25]
3 Barr 372.
[
Footnote 26]
6 Ohio St. 607.
[
Footnote 27]
80 U. S. 13 Wall.
56.
[
Footnote 28]
Co. Litt. 206(a); 2 Thomas' Co. Lit. 22; Shepherd's Touchstone
872; 2 Blackstone's Commentary 340, 341; Bacon's Abridgment, tit.
Condition (N), (Q); Comyn's Digest, tit. Condition, D, 1.
[
Footnote 29]
1 Rolle's Abridgment, 448; Viner's Abridgment, "Condition," (D,
e);
Panel v. Nevel, Dyer 150(a).
[
Footnote 30]
30 U. S. 5 Pet.
373.
JUSTICES SWAYNE, MILLER, and STRONG dissented. JUSTICE MILLER
for himself saying as follows:
The case of
United States v. Prescott [
Footnote 2/1] arose on a certificate of division of
opinion of the circuit judges, on the question whether
"the felonious taking and carrying away the public moneys in the
custody of a receiver of public moneys, without
Page 82 U. S. 353
any fault or negligence on his part, discharged him and his
sureties, and may be set up as a defense to an action on his
official bond."
This question the court, without dissent, answered in the
negative. The ruling was based, in the opinion of the court, on two
grounds, clearly stated:
1. That the receiver, or other depositary of public funds in
such cases, could not avail himself of the ordinary circumstances
which would discharge a bailee for hire, by reason of an imperative
principle of public policy. This policy was founded in the danger
of collusive defenses which the depositary could easily manage so
as to make a strong case, and which the government could have no
means of rebutting, however false or simulated it might be. And it
was thought better to hold the party to the absolute payment or
delivery of the money, than to open the door to such frauds.
2. That the depositary and his sureties, having given a bond,
the condition of which was an express contract to pay or deliver,
they were bound by that contract, according to the rigid terms
which the law annexes to such covenants or promises.
In the subsequent case of
United States v. Morgan,
[
Footnote 2/2] the same question is
decided on precisely the same grounds.
The case of
United States v. Dashiel [
Footnote 2/3] was decided with merely a reference
to the doctrine of the two cases just cited.
The case of
United States v. Keehler [
Footnote 2/4] asserts the same doctrine and applies
it to an action on a postmaster's bond, who had paid the money to
an agent of the Confederate States on an order made by the
insurrectionary government directing him to do so.
When the case of
United States v. Dashiel came before
the Court, I was not satisfied with the doctrine of the former
cases. I do not believe now that on sound principle the bond should
be construed to extend the obligation of the depositary beyond what
the law imposes upon him, though
Page 82 U. S. 354
it may contain words of express promise to pay over the money. I
think the true construction of such a promise is to pay when the
law would require it of the receiver, if no bond had been given;
the object of taking the bond being to obtain sureties for the
performance of that obligation. Nor do I believe that prior to
these decisions there was any principle of public policy recognized
by the courts, or imposed by the law, which made a depositary of
the public money liable for it, when it had been lost or destroyed
without any fault of negligence or fraud on his part, and when he
had faithfully discharged his duty in regard to its custody and
safekeeping. Such were my opinions when, as a member of the court,
I took part in the decision of
United States v. Dashiel.
But either no other judge shared those opinions, or, if anyone did,
he felt bound by the two previous decisions. I therefore
acquiesced.
I understand the opinion in the present case to be directed to
two points: 1. mainly to undermining the ground on which the prior
decisions on this subject rest, and 2d. to establishing a
distinction between this case and those.
As regards the first point. If the opinion or judgment of the
court were based upon a frank overruling of those cases, and an
abandonment of the doctrines on which they rest, I should acquiesce
in that, though I did not in conference approve the judgment. But
if the opinion of the court is to be construed as permitting those
cases to stand as law while the principles on which alone they can
be defended are weakened by its argument, I must express my dissent
from that view of the case. And still more strongly do I dissent
from the distinction attempted to be drawn between this case and
those. If a theft or a robbery in time of profound peace can be so
easily simulated, and the collusion can be so successful, that
public policy requires that no such defense be listened to, I leave
it to any ordinary understanding to say how much more easily the
pretense of force by the rebels can be arranged and proved by
consenting parties, and how much more difficult for the government
to disprove such collusive arrangements than in the other case
mentioned.
Page 82 U. S. 355
The Congress of the United States, recognizing the law as laid
down in the former decisions of this Court, provided by the Act of
March 3, 1865, for such cases of hardship as it thought worthy of
relief. Unless, therefore, the doctrine be reviewed and placed on
such basis of sound principle as would do justice in all cases, I
see no reason to make exceptions in favor of persons who, like the
present defendant, holding by virtue of his office the money of the
United States, delivered it into the hands of its enemies, without
the application of the slightest personal violence, or a moment's
imprisonment, or any attempt to seize his person or property, on
the ground that they were able to do these things and threatened to
do them. Such excuse, easily made, easily proved, hard to be
confuted, is, in my judgment, much weaker than that of theft
admitted to be without fault or fraud on the part of the
depositary.
[
Footnote 2/1]
44 U. S. 3 How.
578.
[
Footnote 2/2]
52 U. S. 11 How.
154.
[
Footnote 2/3]
71 U. S. 4 Wall.
182.
[
Footnote 2/4]
76 U. S. 9 Wall.
83.