Smoot v. United States

8 Ct. Cl. 96, 5 Ct. Cl. 490
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJuly 1, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 8 Ct. Cl. 96 (Smoot v. United States) 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
Smoot v. United States, 8 Ct. Cl. 96, 5 Ct. Cl. 490 (U.S. 1874).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Miller

delivered the opinion of the court:

These are cross appeals from the judgment of the Court of Claims.

[104]*104Mr. Smoot claims of the United States a large sum of money for the profits which he might have made out of two contracts with Quartermaster Eakin, for delivering cavalry horses for the use of the army — two thousand five hundred at Saint Louis and two thousand at Chicago. It is neither alleged nor proved that he ever tendered a horse at either place, or attempted otherwise to perform his contract, or that he was ready to do so, or that he owned any horses, or had expended a dollar in preparing to fulfill his contract. The proposition on which claimant; rests his right to these speculative profits is not on account of anything he had done, or offered to do toward performance, or any actual loss suffered, but that after the contract was made, the Cavalry Bureau of the War Department adopted and published rules governing the inspection of horses purchased for that service, differing from those in use at the time the contraet was made. It is not asserted that these rules required a higher or more difficult standard of quality iit the horses, but that the mode in which that standard was to be ascertained was so changed as to impose a greater hardship, or burden, upon the contractor. Nor is it claimed that these new regulations were adopted with special reference to their application to Smoot’s contracts. They were a new regulation of the business of inspection of a general character. The contracts sued on, which are identical, except in the number of horses and the place of delivery, provided for an inspection j but it is argued that the new regulations were not only a departure from those in use when the contracts were made, and imposed an additional burden on the contractor, but that, conceding the right of the Bureau to make proper and reasonable regulations for inspection, these were unreasonable and improper. The two points of difference in the new and the old mode of inspection most earnestly pressed in the argument are:

1. That by the new regulations the horses offered must remain at the expense of the contractor twenty-four hours in the inspection-yard, into which no other person than the inspector and his assistants shall be permitted to enter until the inspection is completed.

2. That all horses presented for inspection that are manifestly an attempt at fraud on the Government, because of in[105]*105curable disease, or any purposely concealed defect whatever, shall be branded on the left shoulder with the letter E.

The argument founded on these rules is presented under two propositions: .

1. That the adoption of them by the Cavalry Bureau rendered it impossible for the contractor to perform his contract, because no owner of horses would sell to him subject to have them branded as a fraud by inspectors of whom he knew nothing, and who might be incompetent or oppressive.

2. That the application of these rules to horses tendered under claimant’s contract abs 'lved him from the obligation of performance, or tender, or offer to perform, and left him at full liberty to sue for the profits which he had done nothing to earn beyond making the contract.

There is in a large class of cases coming before us from the Court of Claims a constant and ever-recurring attempt to apply to contracts made by the Government, and to give to its action under such contracts, a construction and an effect quite different from those which courts of justice are accustomed to apply,to contracts between individuals. There arises in the mind of parties and counsel interested for the individual against the United States a sense of the power and resources of this great Government, prompting appeals to its magnanimity and generosity, to abstract ideas of equity, coloring even the closest legal argument. These are addressed in vain to this court. Their proper theater is the halls of Congress, for that branch of the Government has limited the jurisdiction of the Court of Claims to cases arising out of contracts expressed or implied— contracts to which the United States is a party in the same sense in which an individual might be, and to which the ordinary principles of contracts must and should apply.

It would be very dangerous, indeed, to the best interests of the Government — it would probably lead to the speedy abolition of the Court of Claims itself — if, adopting the views so eloquently urged by counsel, that court, or this, should depart from the plain rule laid down above, and render decrees on the crude notions of the judges of what is or would be morally right between the Government and the individual.

In illustration of this course of observation the proposition that the regulation concerning branding the horses fraudulently [106]*106presented for inspection made it impossible for the contractor to perform bis contract, may be well cited.

As between individuals, the impossibility which releases a man from the obligation to perform his contract must be a real impossibility, and not a mere inconvenience. And while such an impossibility may release the party from liability to suit for non-performance, it does not stand for performance so as to enable the party to sue and recover as if he had performed.

The argument on this branch of the subject in the case before us loses sight of these principles.

There was no impossibility. It is a mere inconvenience. If the contractor has the money and purchases his horses before he offers them for inspection, there is presented no obstruction whatever, by the rules of inspection, in obtaining tbe required number of horses. It is only because he desires to transfer the risk and loss of rejection from himself to the parties of whom he purchases, that he has difficulty. The Government made no agreement with him to protect him in this way. His ability to buy horses that would pass inspection was a part of the responsibility that he assumed, and which it was by no means impossible to perform, if he had the money and was ready to pay when he bought the horses of their original owners. Certainly no such circumstance as this would be set up for a moment in an ordinary suit between individuals as an impossibility, which released the party from his contract.

But suppose the contract had been between private parties, and an epidemic had prostrated every horse in the country with disease for the forty days allowed to buy and deliver sound horses by this contract, will any one assert that this would authorize the contractor to sue for the profits he could have made if no epidemic had occurred, though he neither then or afterward bought, or delivered, or tendered a horse 1 While such a public misfortune might possibly (we do not say it would)' have been a defense to a suit against him for nonperformance, it could be the foundation of no claim on his part to recover as if he had performed.

Perhaps no class of contracts has been more frequently the subject of judicial consideration than those for the future delivery of personal chattels. Such a contract is this. A contract in which the delivery is a condition-precedent to. payment; for the provision is that the delivery is to be at Chicago and [107]*107Saint Louis, and the payment made afterward at Washington; and the time of payment is expressly made dependent upon appropriations made or to be made by Congress.

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Related

Lyons v. United States
30 Ct. Cl. 352 (Court of Claims, 1895)

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Bluebook (online)
8 Ct. Cl. 96, 5 Ct. Cl. 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smoot-v-united-states-scotus-1874.