HANFORD, District Judge.
The plaintiff was hired at Seattle to work for such time as should be required to complete the construction of certain buildings at Nome, Alaska, for use of the United States army. A written contract was entered into between Maj. Bingham, of the quartermaster’s department, and the plaintiff, in which, among other things, it was agreed that the plaintiff should be paid at the rate of $5 for each working day, and that he should have free transportation to Nome from Seattle, and, if he performed his contract faithfully, he should also have free transportation back to Seattle.' It is shown by uncontradicted evidence that the plaintiff worked as long as his services were required, and that he was paid at the rate of $5 per day for every working day from the time of his departure from Seattle until he was discharged. Then, after waiting a short interval for a vessel, he was given free transportation back to Seattle. It is also shown, by uncontradicted evidence that the plaintiff was required to work during the summer season 10 hours per day, and after the days grew shorter the hours of work were reduced to 8and then to 8, hours, and that no extra allowance was made to him for work performed in excess of 8 hours per day. The case.is grounded upon the eight-hour labor law of August 1, 1892 (27 Stat. 340; 2 Supp. Rev. St. p. 62), and article 62, par. 812, of the United States army regulations, providing that “eight hours constitute a day’s work for all mechanics and laborers employed by or on behalf of the United States, except in cases of emergency.” Congress has not, by any express declaration, extended the entire body of the national laws to Alaska, but by special acts has made certain specified laws of congress effective there, and has enacted a complete code of civil and criminal laws especially for Alaska, and it is my opinion that its treatment of Alaska evinces a purpose to govern that district by special local laws, and for that reason I hold that the eight-hour labor law of 1892 is not applicable to work contracted for by the government to be performed in Alaska. The regulations prescribed by the war department, however, were intended to be comprehensive, and to govern the conduct of the army, and all work under the superintendence of its officers, wherever assigned to duty. The paragraph referred to defines what constitutes a day’s work by laborers on works of the United States controlled by the war department, and according to the regulations the contract must be construed as an agreement on the part of Maj. Bingham to pay the plaintiff at the rate of $5 [528]*528per working day of eight hours. In the argument for the United States the district attorney cited as an authority the case of U. S. v. Martin, 94 U. S. 400, 401, 24 L. Ed. 128, in which the eight-hour labor law of 1868 (Rev. St. § 3738) was construed as being merely a directory statute, which did not invalidate a specific contract on the part of a laborer to- work twelve hours per day at a specified rate of wages. I do not consider that case as being an authority in point in this case, for the reason that the army regulations are mandatory, and officers of the army are required to obey them. The court is bound to consider that in making the contract with the plaintiff it was contemplated that a working day should be a lawful working day of eight hours, and more could not be exacted, except in case of an emergency. Therefore all additional hours of labor, when there was no special emergency, were outside of the contract, and the plaintiff is entitled to be compensated therefor, upon the well-recognized principle that when an employer makes a definite promise to pay for specified work at a specified rate, and afterwards changes the specifications so as to require more work, he becomes legally bound to pay extra for the additional work upon a quantum meruit basis. In all matters in which the government occupies the position of a contractor or employer of labor it is bound by the same rules which are binding upon individuals, so that when the government contracted to pay $5 for a working day, and its representative exacted ten hours’ work, there arose an implied obligation to pay extra for the additional two hours of labor. The auditing department of the government has made a decision in a similar case to the effect that the eight-hour labor law of 1892 should be read into the contract, and that the quartermaster could not legally exact ór permit more than eight hours work in a calendar day, and therefore laborers who worked ten hours per day in obedience to the requirements of the officers in charge of the work are to be considered as having voluntarily given the extra hours of work to the government, and, being mere volunteers, such laborers cannot recover compensation for the additional hours; and in support of this contention the case of Hawkins v. U. S., 96 U. S. 689, 24 L. Ed. 607, is relied upon. But when the facts of that case are considered it does not establish any rule which can be fairly applied to the case in hand. In the Hawkins Case there was a contract for furnishing stone for a government building, in which it was specified that no alteration of the contract should be made without the approval of the secretary of the treasury, and without any change in or modification of the contract the agents of the government in charge of the building required the contractor to furnish stone of a different quality, and more expensive, than the specifications called for; and the decision of the supreme court was to the effect that the contract fixed the price which the government promised to pay, and the kind of material which the contractor was obligated to furnish, and, as the contract was not changed by competent authority, he might have stood upon his right to deliver or tender material according to the specifications, and recover the contract price therefor, but he could not hold the government obligated to pay a higher rate than the contract price for material demanded by unauthorized agents. The peculiar circumstances which [529]*529distinguish this case from the Hawkins Case are that the officers in charge of the work upon which the plaintiff was employed represented the government of the United States, and constituted the highest authority to which the plaintiff could appeal while the contract was in force. They had power to discharge him for disobedience, and, by the terms of the contract, if he was discharged all wages previously earned by him were forfeited. He was in a situation where he had to obey his superiors or suffer consequences which would have been severe, and any assumption that he voluntarily donated labor in excess of what his contract obligated him to perform is necessarily false. There are other decisions of the supreme court of the United States which apply the more reasonable rule that the government in its business transactions is bound to deal fairly, and that, where the facts of a transaction to which the government is a party would raise an implied obligation in a similar transaction between private individuals, the government becomes obligated the same as an individual. Clark v. U. S., 6 Wall. 543, 547, 18 L. Ed. 916; U. S. v. Smith, 94 U. S. 214-219, 24 L. Ed. 115; U. S. v. Mueller, 113 U. S. 153-157, 5 Sup. Ct. 380, 28 L. Ed. 946.
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HANFORD, District Judge.
The plaintiff was hired at Seattle to work for such time as should be required to complete the construction of certain buildings at Nome, Alaska, for use of the United States army. A written contract was entered into between Maj. Bingham, of the quartermaster’s department, and the plaintiff, in which, among other things, it was agreed that the plaintiff should be paid at the rate of $5 for each working day, and that he should have free transportation to Nome from Seattle, and, if he performed his contract faithfully, he should also have free transportation back to Seattle.' It is shown by uncontradicted evidence that the plaintiff worked as long as his services were required, and that he was paid at the rate of $5 per day for every working day from the time of his departure from Seattle until he was discharged. Then, after waiting a short interval for a vessel, he was given free transportation back to Seattle. It is also shown, by uncontradicted evidence that the plaintiff was required to work during the summer season 10 hours per day, and after the days grew shorter the hours of work were reduced to 8and then to 8, hours, and that no extra allowance was made to him for work performed in excess of 8 hours per day. The case.is grounded upon the eight-hour labor law of August 1, 1892 (27 Stat. 340; 2 Supp. Rev. St. p. 62), and article 62, par. 812, of the United States army regulations, providing that “eight hours constitute a day’s work for all mechanics and laborers employed by or on behalf of the United States, except in cases of emergency.” Congress has not, by any express declaration, extended the entire body of the national laws to Alaska, but by special acts has made certain specified laws of congress effective there, and has enacted a complete code of civil and criminal laws especially for Alaska, and it is my opinion that its treatment of Alaska evinces a purpose to govern that district by special local laws, and for that reason I hold that the eight-hour labor law of 1892 is not applicable to work contracted for by the government to be performed in Alaska. The regulations prescribed by the war department, however, were intended to be comprehensive, and to govern the conduct of the army, and all work under the superintendence of its officers, wherever assigned to duty. The paragraph referred to defines what constitutes a day’s work by laborers on works of the United States controlled by the war department, and according to the regulations the contract must be construed as an agreement on the part of Maj. Bingham to pay the plaintiff at the rate of $5 [528]*528per working day of eight hours. In the argument for the United States the district attorney cited as an authority the case of U. S. v. Martin, 94 U. S. 400, 401, 24 L. Ed. 128, in which the eight-hour labor law of 1868 (Rev. St. § 3738) was construed as being merely a directory statute, which did not invalidate a specific contract on the part of a laborer to- work twelve hours per day at a specified rate of wages. I do not consider that case as being an authority in point in this case, for the reason that the army regulations are mandatory, and officers of the army are required to obey them. The court is bound to consider that in making the contract with the plaintiff it was contemplated that a working day should be a lawful working day of eight hours, and more could not be exacted, except in case of an emergency. Therefore all additional hours of labor, when there was no special emergency, were outside of the contract, and the plaintiff is entitled to be compensated therefor, upon the well-recognized principle that when an employer makes a definite promise to pay for specified work at a specified rate, and afterwards changes the specifications so as to require more work, he becomes legally bound to pay extra for the additional work upon a quantum meruit basis. In all matters in which the government occupies the position of a contractor or employer of labor it is bound by the same rules which are binding upon individuals, so that when the government contracted to pay $5 for a working day, and its representative exacted ten hours’ work, there arose an implied obligation to pay extra for the additional two hours of labor. The auditing department of the government has made a decision in a similar case to the effect that the eight-hour labor law of 1892 should be read into the contract, and that the quartermaster could not legally exact ór permit more than eight hours work in a calendar day, and therefore laborers who worked ten hours per day in obedience to the requirements of the officers in charge of the work are to be considered as having voluntarily given the extra hours of work to the government, and, being mere volunteers, such laborers cannot recover compensation for the additional hours; and in support of this contention the case of Hawkins v. U. S., 96 U. S. 689, 24 L. Ed. 607, is relied upon. But when the facts of that case are considered it does not establish any rule which can be fairly applied to the case in hand. In the Hawkins Case there was a contract for furnishing stone for a government building, in which it was specified that no alteration of the contract should be made without the approval of the secretary of the treasury, and without any change in or modification of the contract the agents of the government in charge of the building required the contractor to furnish stone of a different quality, and more expensive, than the specifications called for; and the decision of the supreme court was to the effect that the contract fixed the price which the government promised to pay, and the kind of material which the contractor was obligated to furnish, and, as the contract was not changed by competent authority, he might have stood upon his right to deliver or tender material according to the specifications, and recover the contract price therefor, but he could not hold the government obligated to pay a higher rate than the contract price for material demanded by unauthorized agents. The peculiar circumstances which [529]*529distinguish this case from the Hawkins Case are that the officers in charge of the work upon which the plaintiff was employed represented the government of the United States, and constituted the highest authority to which the plaintiff could appeal while the contract was in force. They had power to discharge him for disobedience, and, by the terms of the contract, if he was discharged all wages previously earned by him were forfeited. He was in a situation where he had to obey his superiors or suffer consequences which would have been severe, and any assumption that he voluntarily donated labor in excess of what his contract obligated him to perform is necessarily false. There are other decisions of the supreme court of the United States which apply the more reasonable rule that the government in its business transactions is bound to deal fairly, and that, where the facts of a transaction to which the government is a party would raise an implied obligation in a similar transaction between private individuals, the government becomes obligated the same as an individual. Clark v. U. S., 6 Wall. 543, 547, 18 L. Ed. 916; U. S. v. Smith, 94 U. S. 214-219, 24 L. Ed. 115; U. S. v. Mueller, 113 U. S. 153-157, 5 Sup. Ct. 380, 28 L. Ed. 946. And upon these authorities I hold that the plaintiff is entitled to extra compensation, to be computed at the rate of $5 for eight hours of labor for the aggregate number of additional hours in excess of eight hours per day which he was required to work when there was no special emergency.
In his petition the plaintiff alleges that by virtue of a custom having the force of law the rate of compensation for labor in excess of eight hours per day should be one and one-half times the contract rate, and double the contract rate for work done on Sundays and holidays, but there is an entire failure of proof as to the existence of any such custom'.
The plaintiff is not entitled to wages for the time intervening between the completion of the buildings upon which he was employed and his return to Seattle. The contract does not specify that he should continue to receive wages during the time required for his return to Seattle after completing his work, and there is no implied contract to pay him’ for such time, because he was not then in the service of the government, nor under orders, but was entirely free to engage in other employment at Nome or elsewhere, and could have postponed his return to Seattle indefinitely.
For the reasons stated, the motion of the district attorney for a judgment of nonsuit is denied.