Coudert v. United States

175 U.S. 178, 20 S. Ct. 56, 44 L. Ed. 122, 1899 U.S. LEXIS 1556
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 20, 1899
Docket15
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 175 U.S. 178 (Coudert v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coudert v. United States, 175 U.S. 178, 20 S. Ct. 56, 44 L. Ed. 122, 1899 U.S. LEXIS 1556 (1899).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McKenna

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff bases his right of action on the act of March 3, 1887, c. 359, known as the Tucker Act, 24 Stat. 505, and the following facts:

In November, 1863, the United States vessel Granite City seized the Spanish bark Teresita, the property of Raphael Madrazo, in the Gulf of Mexico as a blockade runner. Proceedings were instituted for her condemnation and forfeiture in the District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana. By order of the court, dated August 23, 1864, she and her cargo were sold by the United States marshal, and the proceeds of the sale, amounting to the sum of $10,359.20, after deducting costs and other charges, were deposited by the marshal in the Eirst National Bank of New Orleans, a special or designated depositary of public moneys of the United States, *179 to await the further order of the court. Judgment was subsequently rendered in favor of the claimant against the United States, from which the latter appealed to the Supreme Court, obtaining a supersedeas pending the appeal. The judgment was affirmed and restitution of the vessel and cargo directed. The Teresita, 5 Wall. 180.

Pending the appeal to the Supreme Court, the bank failed, and a receiver was duly appointed of its assets. In liquidating its affairs the receiver paid Madrazo during his lifetime, and to' his representatives after his death, dividends amounting in all to $8183.87, the first payment May 1, 1871, the last on September 28, 1882. Madrazo died in Cuba on the 14th of April, 1877, and on the 20th of September, 1888, ancillary letters of administration were issued in the county of New York to the plaintiff in error.

After the payment of September 28, 1882, the receiver had no further funds applicable to the claim. This action was brought September 24, 1888, for the sum of $2175.43, the balance of the proceeds of the sale after deducting the payments made by the receiver.

The Circuit Court rendered judgment for the plaintiff for the amount claimed with interest from September 28, 1882. The Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the judgment, 38 U. S. App. 515, and the case was brought here.

The contention of plaintiff in error is that the deposit of the proceeds of the sale of the Teresita in the First National Bank of New Orleans, then a depositary of the public moneys of the United States, was a payment into the Treasury of the United States, and hence a receipt thereof by the United States, and, “ consequently, a sum of money equal to the whole of such net proceeds must be held to have become payable to the claimant by the United States under the decree of restitution wholly irrespective of any loss of particular assets of the Treasury throug'h the failure of the bank.”

A similar contention was made upon facts very much the same in Branch v. United States, 100 U. S. 673. In that case certain cotton was seized under the Confiscation Act and sold during the progress of a suit for its. condemnation by order of *180 the court, and the proceeds deposited by the clerk to await the further order of the court in the First National Bank of Selma, Alabama, upon a notification of the Secretary of the Interior that such bank had been designated by the Secretary of the Treasury as a depositary of public money. The suit was dismissed and judgment entered in favor of the defendants for costs. Pending the suit the bank failed, and in the proceedings for winding up its affairs a dividend upon the deposit was paid to the court, and then by order paid over to the claimants. A suit was brought against the United States . for the balance of the original deposit upon the ground that the Selma bank was at the time of the deposit a designated depositary of public money and was part of the Treasury of the United States, and that consequently a deposit in it was a payment into the Treasury of the United States, binding the latter to its return if the decision of the court should be against condemnation. To the contention the court answered by Chief Justice Waite: “The position assumed by the appellants is to our minds wholly untenable. The designated depositaries are intended as places for the deposit of the public moneys of the United States; that is to say, moneys belonging to the United States. No .officer of the United States can charge the Government with liability for moneys in his hands not public moneys by depositing them to his own credit'in a bank designated as a depositary. In this case, the money deposited belonged for the time being to the court, and was held as a trust fund pending the litigation. The United States claimed it, but their claim was contested. So long as this contest remained undecided, the officers of the Treasury could not control the fund. Although deposited with á bank that was a designated depositary, it was not paid into the Treasury. No one could withdraw it except the court or the clerk, and it was held for the benefit of whomsoever in the end it should, be found to belong.”

But that case is claimed to be distinguished from the pending one because the Confiscation Act, under which the Branch case was decided, contained no provision for the deposit in the Treasury,pendente Lite, of the proceeds of property seized but not yet JmalVy condemned.

*181 In other words, the argument is that there was no provision in the Confiscation Act which required, a deposit of the proceeds of the sale of property seized, and hence the deposit was the personal act of the officer, neither directed nor authorized by law, and did not charge the United States with responsibility, but that in the pending case, in pursuance of law, the deposit was virtually in the Treasury of the United States and became the property of the United States — “assets of the Treasury” — and subject, as public moneys are subject, to the use of the United States, and that the relation' of debtor and creditor was created between the owner of the property sold and the United States.

The argument concedes, and necessarily, that there must have been authority or requirement of law for the deposit in this case. Was there such authority or requirement ? It is claimed to have been contained in certain statutes of the United States which enabled the Secretary of the Treasury to designate national banks as public depositaries and by the acts of March 3, 1863, 12 Stat. 759, c. 86, and June 30, 1864, c. 174,13 Stat. 308.

The latter acts respectively provided, with some difference of expression and detail, that “ prize property ” may be ordered sold by the court ¿pendente lite, and upon any sale it shall be the duty of the marshal “forthwith to deposit the gross proceeds of the sale with the Assistant Treasurer of the United States nearest the place of sale, subject to the order of the court in the particular case.” This direction of the statutes was not complied with. Its practical and legal alternative, it is contended, was complied with by a deposit of the proceeds of the sale of the Teresita in the New Orleans bank, then a public depositary, which by such designation became the Treasury of the United States.

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Bluebook (online)
175 U.S. 178, 20 S. Ct. 56, 44 L. Ed. 122, 1899 U.S. LEXIS 1556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coudert-v-united-states-scotus-1899.