Post Master General v. Early

25 U.S. 136, 6 L. Ed. 577, 12 Wheat. 136, 1827 U.S. LEXIS 384
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 15, 1827
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 25 U.S. 136 (Post Master General v. Early) 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
Post Master General v. Early, 25 U.S. 136, 6 L. Ed. 577, 12 Wheat. 136, 1827 U.S. LEXIS 384 (1827).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Marshall

delivered the opinion of the Court, and after stating the case, proceeded as follows:

. The post office department was established at the commencement of the revolution, under the superintendence of a Post Master General, who was authorized to appoint his deputies, and was made responsible for their conduct. Soon a^ter ad°pti°n of the present government, in September, 1789, Congress passed a temporary act, directing that a Post Master General should be appointed, and that his powers, and, the regulations of his office, should be the same as they last were, “ under the resolutions and ordinances of the last Congress.’.’ The power of appointing deputies, therefore, and the responsibility for their .conduct, still remained with the Post Master General.

This, act was continued until the first-day of June, 1792. In February, 1792, an act was passed detailing the duties and powers of the Post Master General, and fixing tl e .rates of postage. It directs his deputies to settle at the end of every three months, and to pay up the moneys in their bands; onfailure to do which, it becomes the duty of the Post Master General “ to cause a suit to be commenced against the person or persons so neglecting or refusing. And if the Post Master General shall not cause such suit to be com- ' menced within three months from the end of every such three months, the balances due from every such delinquent shall be charged to and recoverable from him.” This act was to take effect on the first of June, 1792, and to continue for two years. In May, 1794, a permanent act was passed. It retains the provision requiring the Post Master General to settle quarterly with his deputies, but omits that which makes it his duty to cause suits to be instituted within three months after failure.

In March, 1799, the subject was again taken up, and Congress passed an act, which retains the clause making it the duty of the deputy post masters to settle their accounts quarterly, and reinstates that Which directs the Post Master General to cause suits to be instituted against delinquents ; substituting six months in the place of three, after the expiration of the quarter, under the penalty of being himself chargeable with the arrears due from such delinquent. This *145 act decla'res, that all causes of action arising, under it may be sued before the judicial Courts of the several States, and of the several territories of the United States.

Effect of the act of 1810, taken in connexion with the Judiciary Act of 1815, s. 4. upon the question of jurisdiction,

In April, 1810, Congress passed an act for regulating the post office establishment, which enacts, among other things, that all suits thereafter to be brought for the recovery of debts or balances due to the general post office, should’be instituted in the name of “ the Post Master General of the United States.” This act also authorizes all causes of action arising under it to be sued in the Courts of the States and territories.

In March, 1815, Congress passed “an act to vest more effectually in the State Courts, and in the District Courts of the United States, jurisdiction in the cases therein mentioned.”

This act enables the State Coürts to take cognizance of all suits arising under any law for the collection of any direct tax or internal duties of the United States. The 4th section contains this clause: “ And be it further enacted, that the District Court of the United States shall have cognizance, concurrent with the Courts and magistrates of the several States, and the Circuit Courts of the United States, of all suits at common law where the United States, or any officer thereof, under the authority of any act of ’Congress, shall sue, although the debt, claim, or other matter in dispute, shall not amount to one hundred dollars.” On these several acts the question of jurisdiction depends.

The suit is brought for money due to the United States ;• and, at any time previous to the act of 1810, the'suit for the money, had no bond been taken, might have been brought in the name of the United’ States. It is riot certain that, independent of the bond, it could have been instituted in the name of any other party. The Courts of the. United Slates, had, of. course, jurisdiction. The laws make it the duly of the Post Master General to cause suits to beinstituted,” not to bring them; and it was not until March, 1799, that Congress authorized these suits to be instituted in the State Courts. It is obvious, that, the right to institute them in those Courts, anterior to the passage of that act, was doubled ; at any rate, was not exercised; for it could not have *146 been deemed necessary to give expressly the power to. sue in those Courts, had the power been admitted to exist, and been commonly exercised. We must suppose, then, that these suits were usually instituted in the Courts of the United States ; and no doubt could be entertained on the question of jurisdiction, if they were brought, as they certainly might have been, in the name of the United States.

The act of 1810 directed, that all suits for debts, or balances due to'- the general post office, should be brought in the name of the Post Master -General. The manner in which this change in the style of the suit might affect jurisdiction, was not noticed, and no provision was made for this new state of things. These debts and balances which were due to the general post office, were not due to the officer personally, but to the office, and were to be sued for, and collected for the United States. The money belonged to the nation, not to the individual by whose agency it was to be bi-ought into the treasury. The whole course of opinion, and of legislation, on this subject, is, that, although for convenience, and to save expense to the debtors, recourse maybe had to the State Courts for the recovery of small sums, yet a right to resort to the Courts of the Union in suits for money due to the United States, was never intended to be relinquished. If the effect of any provisión in a statute be to abolish this jurisdiction, it must be an effect which was neither intended nor foreséen. That construction which will produce a consequence so directly opposite to the whoíe spirit of our legislation, ought to be avoided, if it can be avoided without a total disregard of those rules by which Courts of justice must be governed.

If the question had rested solely on the act of 1810,- it is probable that the did of the legislature might have been thought indispensable to the jurisdiction of the federal Courts, over suits brought for the recovery of debts and balances due to the general post office. But it does not rest solely on that act. The act of 1815 contains a clause which does, we think, confer this jurisdiction. It cannot be doubted that this clause vests jurisdiction expressly in the District Courts, in all suits at common law where any officer of the United States sues under the authority of any act of Con *147 gress. The Post Master General is an officer of the United States, who sues under the authority of the act of 1810, which makes it his duty to sue for debts and balances due to the. office he superintends, and obliges him to sue in his own name.

The jurisdiclio» not liH'ileci l0 sums less fjj®" 100 dol“

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Allen v. RMMC, LP
E.D. California, 2023
Eagles v. Gittere
D. Nevada, 2022
Ali Hamza Ahmad al Bahlul v. United States
767 F.3d 1 (D.C. Circuit, 2014)
Cornavaca v. Rios-Mena
18 F. Supp. 3d 105 (D. Puerto Rico, 2014)
Opinion No.
Arkansas Attorney General Reports, 2003
Eldred, Eric v. Ashcroft, John D.
255 F.3d 849 (D.C. Circuit, 2001)
William Herbert Jones v. United States
419 F.2d 593 (Eighth Circuit, 1969)
Application of Island Airlines, Incorporated
384 P.2d 536 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1963)
United States v. One Ford Automobile
292 F. 207 (S.D. Texas, 1923)
Pine Hill Coal Co. v. United States
55 Ct. Cl. 433 (Court of Claims, 1920)
Bonnett v. State Ex Rel. Newer
1915 OK 403 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1915)
United States v. Allen
179 F. 13 (Eighth Circuit, 1910)
Hasson v. City of Chester
67 S.E. 731 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1910)
Layne v. Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co.
67 S.E. 1103 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1909)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 U.S. 136, 6 L. Ed. 577, 12 Wheat. 136, 1827 U.S. LEXIS 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/post-master-general-v-early-scotus-1827.