Guttman v. United States

9 Ct. Cl. 60
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedOctober 15, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 Ct. Cl. 60 (Guttman v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guttman v. United States, 9 Ct. Cl. 60 (cc 1873).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hunt

delivered the opinion of the court:

The appellants presented their petition to the Court of Claims, asking to be allowed the value of fifty-six oxen, alleged to have been captured by a band of hostile Indians, and which were totally lost to them. The United States demurred to the claim as set forth, and the Court of Claims sustained the demurrer.

The claim was based upon the statute of 1849, entitled “An act to provide for the payment of horses and other property lost or destroyed in the military, service of the United States.”

A contract was entered into on the 25th day of July, 1864, between the United States quartermaster, Hodges, on the part of the United States, and Stuart, one of the claimants, of the other part. By the first article of the contract it was agreed that Stuart “should receive such military stores and supplies as may be offered or turned over to him for transportation, and to transport the same with all possible dispatch” between the points specified.

By the second, article it was agreed that Stuart should transport “ any number of pounds of military stores and supplies from and between one hundred thousand pounds and ten million pounds in the aggregate.”

The tenth article was as follows :

“Article X. That the said Andrew Stuart shall be furnished with a suitable escort for the protection of the supplies, should he be required to transport in any one train a less quantity than 125,000 pounds, but whenever required to transport 125,000 pounds, or more, then no escort shall be furnished.”

The petition alleges:

“That in the month of July, 1864, while Stuart was proceeding, in execution of said contract, with a train of wagons, from Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, to Fort Union, Hew Mexico Territory, the said train was, on the 12th day of July, 1864, in the vicinity of Oow Creek, Kansas, attacked by a band of hostile Indians, and without any fault or neglect on the part of the [67]*67claimants, or any of them, or of their agents, fifty-sis head of oxen, employed in moving said train, were captured by the said band of hostile Indians, and no part thereof has been recovered.”

Three questions arise upon the case:

1. Was the capture of the property made “by an enemy,” within the meaning of the statute ?

2. Was the property, at the time of its capture, “in the military service of the United States %

3. Does the tenth section, above quoted, impose upon the owner the risk to which the property was exposed ?

So far as it may be necessary, these questions will be considered.

First. The allegations of the petition respecting the character, numbers, nation, or position of the capturing party are quite meager. It is said merely that the train “ was attacked by a band of hostile Indians,” and that the oxen “ were captured by the said band of hostile Indians.” A “ band” means a company of persons, perhaps a company of armed persons, as we may well assume to have been the case in this instance. We have no means of knowing how many persons composed this baud, what was their organization if any, or under what pretense, name, or authority they made the attack and capture. We know only that they were Indians, and that they were hostile. The fact that they were Indians gives no light. Many Indians, both in tribes and as individuals, were friendly to the United States in its late civil contest, as others were hostile. The Indian tribes and individuals are subject to the laws of the United States and of the States in which they are locate!, (The Cherokee Tobacco, 11 Wall., 619.) The claimants do not even state to whom or to what these Indians were hostile. They may have been hostile to the Government of the United States; they may have been hostile, inimical, or unfriendly to the owners of the cattle only. The hostility may have been •from the enmity of an organized community to the United States as a party engaged in war, or it may have been a hostility to the owners of cattle, because they had the cattle, and because the Indians desired the animals for their own use. In the one case the capture would have been that of an enemy, in the other that of marauders and plunderers only. The petition should have been more full and more specific in its state[68]*68ments. The law assumes that these deficiencies in it exist, because the petitioner could not with advantage to his case supply them.

Second. Was the property thus captured in the “ military service of the United States'?’’ By his contract of the 25th of July, 1864, did Stuart enter into the military service of the United States, and was he acting in such military service when his property -was captured, or was he a transporter, a carrier, a contractor merely? By the first article of his contract he undertakes “to transport” “ all such military stores or supplies as may be turned over to him for transportation ” from Forts Eiley and Leavenworth, and the town of Kansas, to New Mexico or Colorado. In the second, fourth, fifth, sixth, eighth, eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth, aud sixteenth articles the duty is clearly pointed out and named as that of transporting and delivering. A contractor or carrier is in no sense a soldier. In. no just sense is he engaged in war, although he may transport the articles used in war. He carries forth and he carries back (§ 13) supplies and stores for those who are engaged in war, but takes no personal part in it. He carries, in the present case, during the period between April and September, of the year 1864, from the points to the points named. There is no allegation that in the month of July, when the capture took place, actual war was going on in Kansas, or in the region between Kansas and New Mexico, or Colorado, or that the train from which the capture was made was a part of a military expedition. The stores, supplies, baggage-trains, the “impedimenta” of an army, are undoubtedly a portion of the army, and those engaged in the management and control of them are in the military service. These are indeed vital to its existence, and their collection and protection are among the most anxious duties of a careful commander.

But the collection and transportation from post to post of stores and supplies, remote from the seat of actual war, not forming a portion of an advancing or retreating army, is quite another thing. These latter duties are those of a^commissary or quartermaster, and not of a commanding officer. They may be performed by soldiers or by civilians, by the army or by contractors. Those engaged in them may or may not form a portion of an army.

That the statute of 1849, under which this claim is made, was [69]*69intended for the indemnity of those engaged in the actual military service of the United States, that is, for enlisted men while in the performance of their duties as such, is plain enough-(9 Stat. L., p. 414.)

Its first section provides for payment for horses killed or wounded in battle, or which shall have been injured or destroyed by dangers of the seas on a United States transport vessel, or which shall have been abandoned for want of forage by order of a superior officer, with certain provisions respecting deductions from future pay, which can only apply to enlisted men. The payment is limited by the words of this section to “ officers, volunteers, rangers, mounted militia-men, or cavalry engaged in.the military service of the United States.”

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9 Ct. Cl. 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guttman-v-united-states-cc-1873.