Hallenbeck v. United States

48 Ct. Cl. 475, 1913 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 50, 1912 WL 1213
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedOctober 20, 1913
DocketNo. 30685
StatusPublished

This text of 48 Ct. Cl. 475 (Hallenbeck 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
Hallenbeck v. United States, 48 Ct. Cl. 475, 1913 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 50, 1912 WL 1213 (cc 1913).

Opinion

Atkinson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case was formerly, heard and disposed of January 13, 1913, a majority of the court deciding that the plaintiff was entitled to recover a judgment against the United States for the sum of $130.50, that being the amount claimed in his petition. Upon motion of defendants for a new trial and for amendment of findings of fact, said motion was allowed, and the court ordered amendments to the findings and directed the dismissal of plaintiff’s petition.

The amended findings show that plaintiff was a rural delivery mail carrier in the State of New York; that he, from July 1, 1907, to December 1, 1909, was paid $810 per year for his services as such carrier, based upon a regulation of the.Post Office Department on the estimated length of the [483]*483route necessary to be traveled daily (except Sundays) in the performance of his duties; that said distance was estimated to be 21§ miles; that plaintiff', of his own motion, in September, 1909, had the route measured, which proved to be 22^ miles in length; that the matter was referred to an inspector of the department, who, on November 11, 1909, reported that said measurement was correct, and from December 1, following, plaintiff was paid on the basis of the increased distance, viz, at the rate of $864 per year. He brings this suit to recover the difference in salary between $810 and $864 per annum from July 1, 1901, to December 1, 1909, which amounts to $130.50.

The only question to be determined is whether, under the laws and regulations governing the rural mail delivery service, the Government is liable for the alleged “ back pay ” for which plaintiff sues.

The act of April 21, 1902 (32 Stats., 107), authorized the Postmaster General to classify the Rural Free Delivery Mail Service and to fix the salaries of carriers not to exceed $600 per annum.

The appropriation act of April 28, 1904 (33 Stats., 429), provided that the salaries of rural mail carriers should not exceed $120 per year on and after July 1, 1904, and the act of March 2, 1901 (34 Stats., 1205), fixed the maximum salaries on and after July 1,1907, at not exceeding $900.

The Postmaster General, acting under the discretion authorized by the act of April 21,1902, sufra, adopted a schedule of the length of the routes as a basis of fixing the compensation of the carriers. For example, on routes not less than 20 miles in length, $600'; on routes not less than 16 and under 20, $500, and so on; but in no event should the compensation exceed the limits fixed by the statutes.

The schedule now in force, as shown by the records of the department, follows:

24 miles and over-$900

22 to 24 miles_ 804

20 to 22 miles_ 810

38 to 20 miles!- 720

16 to 18 miles- 630

14 to 16 miles- 540

[484]*48412 to 14 miles_ 504

10 to 12 miles_1_ 46S

8 to 10 miles_ 432

6 to 8 miles___ 396

It appears that in laying out free-delivery mail routes fixed lines of travel are followed. The lengths of the routes are arrived at by careful estimates made by agents of the department, and it has never been the custom of the department to fix absolutely the length of the routes; but as in the case at bar, when an exact measurement has been made and verified, it has invariably been adopted. Hence it can not justly be contended that the Government presumes to guarantee the precise length of any delivery route. Distances are fixed upon the best information obtainable, and carriers are paid accordingly. This course was adhered to in the case now in hearing.

Subsequent to April, 1906, the practice of the Post Office Department in adjusting the salaries of rural delivery carriers upon more careful measurements of the lengths of routes was to make increases in salaries effective the first day of the succeeding month, and in one or more instances, where a route had been found greater than the estimated distance fixed by the department, increased pay was allowed for past service. Inasmuch as the department had not undertaken to determine the exact lengths of rural routes, it is contended that, in cases where distances have been found by actual measurement to be increased, the department would not be justified in allowing increased compensation from a prior date, and this rule is adhered to.

We find nothing in any of the acts of Congress to which we have already referred relating to the salaries of rural delivery mail carriers which prescribes in what manner the same shall be classified or what salaries shall be paid, except that they shall not exceed certain fixed amounts. The matter of fixing and adjusting the same, therefore, is left exclusively to the Postmaster General, who is restricted, as we have shown, only to the maximum salaries fixed by the several statutes.

A careful examination of the departmental regulations fixing the basis of salaries for rural route mail carriers does [485]*485not impress our minds as being inequitable or unreasonable. Had plaintiff’s route been a small fraction below 22 miles in length, his salary would, under the departmental regulations, have been the same as the amount he was paid, because the rate of compensation was the same on routes from 20 to 22 miles in length; and it is likewise the same when the distance is above 22 and under 24 miles. It was shown by actual measurement that the length of plaintiff’s route is one-tenth of a mile greater than 22 miles, and he was paid, since the actual length of the route was ascertained, the same compensation as could be allowed if he were required to travel daily the full 24 miles.

It is contended by plaintiff that there exists an implied contract between the Government and himself guaranteeing, or impliedly guaranteeing, the exact length of the route over which he was required to travel. We can not agree with this contention.

When the plaintiff entered upon his duties as delivery carrier on this particular route in April, 1903, its length was estimated to be 20J miles. In October, 1905, the distance, by scaling from the postal map, was increased to 21f miles, and in September, 1909, by actual measurement, it ivas found to be 22TV miles. During this long period of time plaintiff discharged the duties as such carrier without complaint or protest, and since the true distance was ascertained, as above stated, he has been paid accordingly. It is therefore apparent that he has no legal claim for a higher rate of pay than he has already received under the established regulations of the Post Office Department.

As we have above stated, the route which claimant served was from 20 to 22 miles, “ as shown by the records of the department.” The distance between intervening points along the route of travel is there expressed in miles, half-miles, quarter or eighth of a mile and not in the more accurate measurements of an engineer, which the findings also show are expressed in some instances in so many hundredths of a mile.

In adopting its method of expressing distances it is evident that the department was using the phraseology in [486]

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Bluebook (online)
48 Ct. Cl. 475, 1913 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 50, 1912 WL 1213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hallenbeck-v-united-states-cc-1913.