United States Ex Rel. Boynton v. Blaine

139 U.S. 306, 11 S. Ct. 607, 35 L. Ed. 183, 1891 U.S. LEXIS 2384
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 30, 1891
Docket1149
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 139 U.S. 306 (United States Ex Rel. Boynton v. Blaine) 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
United States Ex Rel. Boynton v. Blaine, 139 U.S. 306, 11 S. Ct. 607, 35 L. Ed. 183, 1891 U.S. LEXIS 2384 (1891).

Opinion

Mr. Chíef Justice' Fuller,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

The writ of mandamus cannot issue in a case where its effect is to direct or control the head of an executive department in the discharge of an executive duty involving the exercise of judgment or discretion. United States ex rel. Redfield v. Windom, 137 U. S. 636, 644. When by special statute, or otherwise, a mere ministerial duty is imposed upon the executive officers of the government; that is, a service which they are bound to perform without further question, then if they refuse, the mandamus may be issued to compel them. United States ex rel. Dunlap v. Black, 128 U. S. 40, 48. The writ goes to compel a party to do that which it is his duty to do without it. It confers no new authority, and the party to be coerced must have the power to perform the act. Brownsville v. Loague, 129 U. S. 493, 501.

In view of these settled principles was the relator entitled • to the writ ?

Upon establishing at the seat of government an executive department to be known as the Department of State, with a Secretary of State as its head, Congress provided:

“ The Secretary of State shall perform such duties as shall from time to time be enjoined on or intrusted to him by the President relative to correspondences, commissions or instructions to or with public ministers or consuls from the United States, or to negotiations with public ministers from foreign states or princes, or to memorials or other applications from foreign public, ministers or other foreigners, or to such other matters respecting foreign affairs as the President of the *320 United States shall assign to the Department, and he shall conduct the business of the Department in such manner as the President shall direct.” Bev. Stat. §§ 199, 202; 1 Stat. pp. .28, 68.

It is contended, however, that, in this instance, the final custody of the money was vested by the act of June 18,-1878, solely in the Secretary of State, and that it was thereby made his duty to distribute and pay the awards to the claimants independently of the direction or control of the President. But the act thus referred to as .the basis of this application, when considered throughout as it must be, not Only does not undertake to impose the payment of these awards as an independent duty upon the Secretary, but specifically subjects such payment to the control of the President. The Secretary of State was, indeed, authorized and required by the first section to receive from Mexico the whole money awarded, and to distribute the same from time to time as the instalments came in, among those in whose favor awards had been made, or to their legal representatives or assigns, but this was accompanied by the restriction, explicitly expressed, out of abundant caution, except as in this act otherwise limited or provided.” And by section five, the payment and distribution were limited, so far as the cases of Weil and La Abra Company iyere concerned, by the request to the President to investigate any charges of fraud as to those claims, and the provision that if he should be.of the opinion “that the honor of the United States, the principles of public law or considerations of justice and equity,” required that the awards, thus-specifically-námed, or either of them, should* be reopened, and the cases retried, it should be lawful for him “ to withhold payment of said awards, or either of them, until such case or cases shall be retried and decided in such manner as the governments of the United States and Mexico may agree, or until Congress shall otherwise direct.”

Payment of the Weil award had been withheld by the President, after an investigation, but the case had not been retried and decided in a manner agreed upon by the United States and Mexico, nor had Congress otherwise directed. How *321 then could Weil or his assignee, the relator, insist upon payment under the first section of the act in disregard of the limitation imposed by the fifth ? On what principle could it be held that the duty was imposed upon the Secretary to pay an award by an act expressly providing that payment should not be made in a specified contingency, which had occurred ? What power had he to do the thing demanded in virtue of legislation which forbade it to be done?

The political trust with which every government is charged, as respects its own citizens, was not the ground of relator’s; contention, but he relied on the act of 1878 as giving him the right to enforce the alleged obligation by judicial proceedings,, and it was essential to the maintenance of his position that the record should bring him within its terms.

The principal propositions urged by counsel are, that “the award made-against Mexico in favor of Benjamin Weil remains a final and. conclusive adjudication in favor of a citizen of the United States against a foreign government that “the United States have not now and never have had any property, right or interest in the original claim or the award, or in the money paid in by Mexico to meet and satisfy it; ” that “ the money so paid is, by the terms of a statute, in the official custody of the Secretary of State; the President of the United States has now no lawful control over it, and never had any lawful control over it, excepting for a temporary purpose during the pendency of a new treaty in the Senate; that control ended when the Senate rejected the new treaty.”

These propositions have already been substantially disposed of by the decision of this court in Frelinghuysen v. Key, 110 U. S. 63, from the principles announced in which we have no disposition to recede. It was there ruled, Mr. Chief Justice Waite delivering the opinion, that there was no doubt as to the conclusiveness of the awards under the convention of July 4, 1868, but that the language of the treaty was to be construed as used in a compact between two nations for the adjustment of the claims of the citizens of either against the-other; that citizens of the United States having claims against Mexico were not parties to the convention; that while the *322

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Bluebook (online)
139 U.S. 306, 11 S. Ct. 607, 35 L. Ed. 183, 1891 U.S. LEXIS 2384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-ex-rel-boynton-v-blaine-scotus-1891.