From the repeal of the joint resolution of April 15, 1870, 16
Stat. 673, authorizing the Postmaster-General to adjust the
accounts of George Chorpenning, and from the prohibition in the Act
of March 3, 1871,
id., 515, directing that no part of the
money thereby appropriated for the use of the Post Office
Department shall "be applied to the payment of what is known as the
Chorpenning claim," the implication is clear that nothing more was
to be paid to him on account of said claim without further
authority from Congress.
MR. JUSTICE SWAYNE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellant rests his claim upon the Act of Congress of March
3, 1857, 11 Stat. 521, and the resolution of Congress of July 15,
1870, 16 Stat. 673.
Under the act of 1857, Postmaster-General Brown, on the 25th of
May and the 30th of June, 1857, awarded to the claimant three
several sums of $30,000, $49,842, and $29,590.95, which were paid
to him. He received them under protest.
Thereafter he filed his petition in the Court of Claims,
averring
Page 94 U. S. 398
that he was entitled to further compensation and damages under
the act.
The Court of Claims held that the action of the
Postmaster-General, and the payment and receipt of the sums
awarded, were final and conclusive between the parties, and the
petition was dismissed.
Chorpenning v. United States, 3
Ct. of Cl. 140. The claimant appealed to this Court. While the
appeal was pending, Congress passed the resolution of July 15,
1870. Under that resolution, Postmaster-General Cresswell found
there was due to the claimant the further sum of $443,010.70.
Before anything further was done, Congress, by a resolution of the
9th of February, 1871, 16 Stat. 702, repealed the resolution of the
15th of July, 1870, under which the last adjustment was made, and
by the Act of March 3, 1871, 16 Stat. 519, directed that no part of
the money thereby appropriated for the use of the Post Office
Department should "be applied to the payment of what is known as
the Chorpenning claim."
Upon analyzing the resolution of 1870, it is found to contain
the following provisions:
1. The Postmaster-General was authorized to "investigate and
adjust" anew the claims of George Chorpenning under the first
section of the act of 1857, "on the basis of compensation allowed
by said act for regular mail service."
2. "And the claim growing out of the curtailment and annulment
of his contract on route No. 12,801, on the basis of his agreement
with the Postmaster-General for the service, to be settled as
provided for the services named in said act."
3. "And the right of appeal from the proceedings of the
Postmaster-General to the Court of Claims" was "reserved and
allowed to the said claimant."
The act of 1857 became defunct by what occurred under it in that
year. It was in no wise revived by the resolution of 1870. It was
only referred to by that resolution for the rules and basis upon
which the new adjustment authorized was to proceed.
The question before us is as to the effect of the repealing
resolution of 1871. In considering that subject, the act of 1857
may be laid out of view, and will not be further adverted to.
The resolution relied upon by the appellant was wholly
Page 94 U. S. 399
unilateral. It contained no stipulation of payment, express or
implied. Congress, for its own reasons, simply directed an
examination and adjustment. It gave no promise and came under no
obligation to the other party, and asked and received none from
him. The government and the claimant stood, and continued to stand,
wholly independent of each other. The government could at any time
before payment recall what it had done, and the claimant was at
liberty up to the same period to refuse concurrence, and assert
aliunde his legal rights, if any he had. Prior to that time, there
could be no vested right and no commitment of either party, not
subject to the exercise thereafter of such discretion, affirmative
or negative, as might be deemed proper. The case presents the same
legal aspect as if it were between individuals. If a merchant
should direct his clerk or other agent to "investigate and adjust
the claim" of a third party upon a prescribed basis, and the
adjustment was made accordingly, can it be doubted that the
merchant might thereafter, because he had come to the conclusion
that the claim was tainted with fraud or had been already fully
paid, or for any other reason, or as a matter of choice, without
assigning any reason, decline to recognize what had been done as of
any validity, and withdraw the authority under which the proceeding
had been taken?
The reason of the right would be that there was no binding
mutuality of assent, no consideration and hence no legal obligation
resting upon either party. The duty devolved upon the
Postmaster-General was wholly ministerial, and in no sense
judicial, or that of an arbitrator. The record discloses no element
of an arbitrament. The adjustment, having been made under a special
law, renders it in no wise different as regards the point we are
considering from those made daily by the accounting officers of the
government, under the general law conferring their powers and
prescribing their duties. The idea that the government is finally
concluded by the results at which they may arrive would be regarded
as a novelty within and without the several departments.
The implication from the repeal of the resolution of 1870, and
the prohibition in the act of 1871, is clear that Congress did not
intend that any thing more should be paid to the
Page 94 U. S. 400
claimant without further authority from that body.
United States v.
Babbitt, 1 Black 55. This case is not
distinguishable in principle from
Gordon v.
United States, 7 Wall. 188. Aside from the views we
have expressed, that adjudication is conclusive as authority
against the appellant.
Our attention has been called by the counsel on both sides to
the clause of the resolution giving the claimant the right of
appeal from the findings of the Postmaster-General to the Court of
Claims. The view which we take of the case renders it unnecessary
to consider that point, and we express no opinion upon the
subject.
Judgment affirmed.