United States Ex Rel. Midland Loan Finance Co. v. National Surety Corp.

309 U.S. 165, 60 S. Ct. 458, 84 L. Ed. 677, 1940 U.S. LEXIS 1060
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 5, 1940
Docket236
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 309 U.S. 165 (United States Ex Rel. Midland Loan Finance Co. v. National Surety Corp.) 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. Midland Loan Finance Co. v. National Surety Corp., 309 U.S. 165, 60 S. Ct. 458, 84 L. Ed. 677, 1940 U.S. LEXIS 1060 (1940).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Reed

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The question presented is. whether petitioner, 'a private user of the mails, may without the consent of any officer of the United States bring suit on the bond of an acting postmaster for consequential damages resulting from misdelivery of mail. The Circuit Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit affirmed a judgment of the District Court for the District of Minnesota dismissing petitioner’s complaint. 1 We granted certiorari 2 because of an alleged conflict with a decisión of ’this Court 3 and because an important question in the administration of the postal laws was involved.

The complaint alleged that petitioner was engaged in the business of automobile financing in Minneapolis, in the course of which it purchased from automobile déalers the installment notes of buyers secured by their sales contracts. A dealer living at Montgomery, Minnesota, *168 where the respondent Malone was acting postmaster, is alleged to have put into operation a scheme to defraud petitioner by selling it forged notes and contracts, which he sent petitioner along with a fictitious list of credit ref- • erences. Petitioner, before purchasing, followed its usual practice of mailing' letters of inquiry to the references, and after purchasing mailed payment books, insurance certificates, and receipts to the purported makers of the notes. The dealer persuaded the acting postmaster Malone, allegedly in violation of the Postal Regulations, 4 •to turn over to him all letters that arrived in Montgomery in petitioner’s envelopes. Then he sent forged replies to petitioner’s letters and made installment payments out of the money which petitioner had paid him in buying the notes. The dealer thus defrauded the Finance Company of some $34,000. The respondent Malone, on taking office as acting postmaster, had executed a bond for $16,000 to the United States as sole obligee with the respondent Surety Corporation as surety. The condition of the bond was:

“That if the said Patrick J. Malone shall on and after the date he took charge of the post office faithfully discharge all duties and trusts imposed on him as acting postmaster either by law or by the regulations of the Post Office Department, and shall perform all duties as fiscal agent of the Government imposed on him by law or by regulation of the Treasury Department made in conformity with law, and shall also perform all duties and obligations imposed upon or required of him by law, or by regulation made pursuant to law, in connection with *169 the Postal Savings System, then this obligation shall be void; otherwise, of force.”-

In its complaint, without alleging specific authorization from the United States to sue, petitioner asked judgment on the bond for the defaults of Malone as postmaster. At the close of the testimony at the trial motions to dismiss the complaint were made by respondents and' the district judge reserved judgment. After a jury verdict for petitioner the motions were granted. The Court of Appeals affirmed on the ground that a private user of the mails cannot maintain such an action as is here alleged without the consent of the United States, the obligee in the bond, and that no consent was given either by the statutes, expressly or by implication, or by any appropriate officer of the United States.

The respondent gave a- statutory bond in compliance with an enactment of the Congress for the purposes specified in the statute. 5 As the bond is part of an 'integrated system of postal regulations, the determination of the parties authorized to sue upon it is a federal question governed by federal law. 6

We agree with the Court of Appeals that there was no. consent and that such consent is necessary. Consequently there is no • occasion to determine whether the bond was intended to protect private users of the mail from all loss or damage, however ponsequential, occasioned by the postmaster.

The record shows the only effort made to secure consent of an officer was a request to the Attorney General for *170 authority to sue. This was refused. Whether as a matter of right a third party may sue on the instrument for loss' covered by an official bond running only to the statutory obligee depends upon the intention of the legislative body which required the bond. This intention may be evidenced by express statutory language or by implication. This was the rule announced in Corporation of Washington v. Young. 7 There a bond had been given to the Corporation of Washington, a municipality, by the manager of a lottery “truly and impartially- to execute” his duties. Without the city’s consent, the holder of a winning ticket sued on the bond. This Court said:

“No person who is not the proprietor of an obligation, can have a legal right to put it in suit, unless such right be given by the Legislature; and no person can be authorized to use the name of another, without his assent given in fact, or by legal intendment.”

In Howard v. United States 8 this comment was made upon the Young decision:

“That case undoubtedly is authority for the proposition that, generally speaking, an obligation taken under legislative sanction cannot,' in the absence of a statute so providing, be put in suit in the name of the obligee, the proprietor of the obligation, without his consent.” 9 Such'official bonds are often part of a general statutory plan for the operation of governmental activities. While all the activities of a government of course confer benefits on its .citizens, frequently the benefits are incidental *171 .and unenforceable. 10 In the case of an official bond, even if its benefits are not incidental, it may well be that the legislative body is of the opinion that actions on the bond should be limited to the government in order to secure unified administration of claims.

We have recognized a similar need for a single control in regard to a sale bond required by a district court in an equity receivership. This Court in Munroe v. Raphael 11 had before it an injunction granted by a federal district court upon the motion of its receiver to rescind a consent to sue and forbid further proceedings in a suit in a state court in the name of the United States upon a sale bond of the estate in receivership. The sale bond had been given for assets purchased from the receiver. It ran to the United States only ánd guaranteed the payment of a certain percentage of indebtedness to all creditors of the estate.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
309 U.S. 165, 60 S. Ct. 458, 84 L. Ed. 677, 1940 U.S. LEXIS 1060, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-ex-rel-midland-loan-finance-co-v-national-surety-corp-scotus-1940.