Oregon-Washington Railroad & Navigation Co. v. United States

54 Ct. Cl. 131, 1919 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 102, 1919 WL 1060
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedMay 5, 1919
DocketNo. 33183
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 54 Ct. Cl. 131 (Oregon-Washington Railroad & Navigation Co. 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
Oregon-Washington Railroad & Navigation Co. v. United States, 54 Ct. Cl. 131, 1919 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 102, 1919 WL 1060 (cc 1919).

Opinion

DowNEy, Judge,

reviewing the facts found to be established, delivered the opinion of the court:

This action is for the recovery of various amounts, aggregating $4,288.01, in addition to those paid on account of 176 items of freight transportation furnished to and paid for by the United States. One hundred and fifty-four of these movements were for the War Department of the effects of Army officers changing station, 10 were for the Marine Corps, 1 for the Navy, and the remaining 11 for other branches of the public service. All the payments were made by disbursing officers on vouchers certified to be correct and presented to them by the plaintiff. The vouchers, in addition to other data called for by the prescribed form which is in the findings, including weights and rate, stated the “gross amount” deducted therefrom, the amount deducted [137]*137on account of land grant and, in the final column, the remainder, after such deduction, as the “ amount claimed,” they were all paid in the full amount claimed and such payment was accepted without protest. This action seeks to recover the difference between the amounts thus claimed and paid and the amount the plaintiff would have received had payment been claimed and made at commercial rates without, any deductions on account of land grant, and the claim is for a sum as to each item of transportation in addition to that already claimed and paid as claimed for the same items and is not for any other or different or additional service nor for omitted items. The case therefore involves not only the question of the applicability of land-grant rates to this class of freight transportation, a question already decided adversely by this court, but it involves further questions as to the right, under the circumstances of the case, to now recover amounts not then claimed. The findings are quite full as to the facts, much fuller, we fear, than is justified, for, in an effort to give the plaintiff the benefit of all of its voluminous requests for findings which seemed to even approach propriety, we have likely incorporated matter beyond the proper scope of findings of fact. Some statements are accounted for by the fact that suits by other railroads mentioned are submitted with this one and one set of requests are made applicable to all.

The case seems to us to be clearly within the holding of this court in Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Co. v. United States, 52 C. Cls. 468. The opinion in that case is lengthy, citing quite liberally from the authorities, and we desire to do more than merely refer to it in the usual way as an authority in support of what is said here. We reaffirm what is said in that opinion on the question here involved, call attention to the authorities cited, and to avoid lengthy repetition we treat it not merely as an authority but as a part of this opinion to be supplemented as further consideration and the facts of this case may justify.

The question as to the applicability of land-grant rates-to this class of transportation may be regarded as settled adversely by the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Ry. Co. Case decided by this court February 8,1915. In the opinion [138]*138in the B. & O. Case we called attention to the face that the questions there discussed were not presented to or considered by the court in the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Case, but we did not call attention to the findings in that case on which judgment was rendered, as we perhaps should have done. They are the findings of fact upon which the judgment was rendered, and they show that the amount for which judgment was rendered was the amount of deductions made by the accounting officers of the Treasury from the amounts due for the transportation at ordinary commercial rates, a radically different case from that with which we have here to deal.

This statement prompts the suggestion that in dealing with questions such as we here have for consideration the distinction between disbursing officers and the accounting officers of the Treasury must always be in mind and, one step further, action by neither nor both of these classes of officers must be permitted to obscure the independent right of access to this court. Disbursing officers and accounting officers function along their own particular lines. They are related in that the accounts of the former must be submitted to the latter for settlement and in that a payment by a disbursing officer contrary to the holding of the comptroller as to the propriety of payments from the accountable funds which have been advanced to him will likely subject him to a disallowance by the auditor in the settlement of his accounts, but there is jurisdiction in the accounting officers not possessed by the disbursing officers and a difference in the method of presenting claims. For the purposes of the discussion in the B. & O. Case the distinction was not drawn or required as here.

During the period covered by the transportation involved in this case and for many years theretofore there were three methods finding authority in the law or in regulations or arising out of established governmental practice either of which might have been resorted to by the plaintiff and other railroads to secure compensation for services rendered, viz:

1. Presentment of claim to a disbursing officer for payment. This was the method pursued in this case. It has its chief advantage in that prompt payment is secured. [139]*139Claims presented to a disbursing officer for payment must be upon a prescribed form, properly certified as to correctness by the claimant, and will only be paid when stated in the amount the officer is authorized to pay, since they must be used by the officer as his acquittances in rendering to the auditor his accounts as to expenditures from funds advanced to and charged against him. A disbursing officer will only pay when he understands he is authorized to pay under the decisions of the Comptroller of the Treasury, for such decisions will be applied by the auditor in examining his accounts and payments made in contravention thereof will be disallowed.

2. Presentment to the proper auditor for direct settlement. By this method claims may be presented for any amount or at any rate deemed proper by the claimant, and the auditor may allow or disallow the whole claim, or allow in part and disallow in part. The claimant may appeal to the comptroller for a revision of the action of the auditor in disallowing all or any part of the claim. The decision of the comptroller is conclusive on the executive branch of the government.

3. Suit in the Court of Claims. The Court of Claims has and for many years has had jurisdiction to determine the rights of claimants in cases of the character here involved and to render judgment irrespective of any decision by the Comptroller of the Treasury.

It appears that seven-eighths of the transportation in question in this case was for the War Department and of officers’ effects within the change of station allowance and the discussion has been addressed entirely to this class of transportation. The other, in minor amounts, follows, although as to it we have not been furnished with, but left to our own resources, as to regulations. It may be said that all the cases center around and are presented because of the transportation of Army officers’ effects on change of station.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 Ct. Cl. 131, 1919 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 102, 1919 WL 1060, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oregon-washington-railroad-navigation-co-v-united-states-cc-1919.