United States v. Barlow

132 U.S. 271, 10 S. Ct. 77, 33 L. Ed. 346, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1874
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 2, 1889
Docket31
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 132 U.S. 271 (United States v. Barlow) 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 v. Barlow, 132 U.S. 271, 10 S. Ct. 77, 33 L. Ed. 346, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1874 (1889).

Opinion

Me. Justice Field

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action is brought by the United States to recover from the defendants, subcontractors for carrying the mail, moneys paid to them under a mistake of fact caused by their false representations as to the services. It .appears that on the 15th of March, 1878, one Luke Toorhees entered into a contract -with the United States, represented .by the Postmaster General, to carry the mail over a route designated as No. 38,146, from Garland to Ouray, in the State of Colorado, passing by Lake City and several other placés mentioned, and back, seven times a week, for $19,000 a year, for a term beginning July 1, 1878, and ending Jum. 30, 1882.

*273 On the 28th of September, 1878, Yoorhees made a subcontract with the defendants, Barlow and Sanderson, by. which they agreed to transport the mails over the route, mentioned, for the period designated, and to perform the service required by his contract with the United States, in consideration whereof they were to receive the pay which was or might become due to him. They were recognized and accepted by the Post-Office Department as subcontractors for the service:

The distance between Garland and Lake City was one hundred and fifty miles, and the time prescribed for the service .over it was twenty-seven hours, or five miles and fifty-five' hundredths of a mile per hour. The distance between Lake City and Ouray by the route designated was forty-six miles, and the time prescribed by the contract for the transportation of the mails over it was thirty hours, that is, one mile and fifty-three hundredths of a mile per hour. The portion of this latter line, which lay between a place known as Mineral Point and Ouray, a distance of only ten miles, passed over mountains upon which the mails could be carried only a part of the year —in the winter only by men on snowshoes, and at other times only by pack horses. There was, in consequence, great irregularity in the delivery of the mails upon this portion of the route, and much complaint followed, leading, in October, 1878, to its abandonment and the substitution in its place of a line making a detour around the mountains of one hundred and ten miles, passing by way of Barnum, which afforded a good practicable road easily travelled with wagons.

The present action has grown out of the orders of the Post-Office Department in making this change of line, and expediting the service over it, and providing increased compensation for the additional service. The compensation allowed by the original contract, as mentioned above, was $19,000 a year, which, the distance being one hundred and ninety-six miles, was at the rate of about $96.93 a mile. At that rate the compensation for the additional service was allowed, amounting to $10,663.26 a year.

The time prescribed by the original contract for the service between Lake City and Ouray by way of Mineral Point across *274 the mountains — thirty hours, that is, at the -rate of one mile and fifty-three hundredths of a mile an hour — was owing to the great difficulties attending the crossing of the mountains, as already mentioned. When the line was changed to one making a detour of the mountains by way of Barnum, over a road easily traversable by wagons, it was an obvious duty to the public that the service at the rate of one mile and fifty-three hundredths of a mile per hour should be expedited.

Petitions for a change of that portion of the route which led over the mountains came from officers of the counties of Ouray and Hillsdale, in which the proposed new line was to run, and they represented that over its whole distance there was a wagon road by which the mail could be carried the year round. On the 30th of September, 1878, whilst the Post-Office Department had before it the question of opening a new line between Lake City and Ouray, the defendant Sander-son addressed a letter to the Second Assistant Postmaster General, suggesting that, in lieu of the temporary service ordered between Barnum and Ouray, such service should be made by embracing Barnum in the route No. 38,146 between Garland and Ouray, increasing the distance one hundred and ten miles, “ and expediting the schedule, from the present, at the pro rata rate of seventy-two hours, to thirty-six hours between Lake City and Ouray.” On the same day Sanderson was consulted by the Post-Office Department, or at least was requested to give an estimate, as to the additional number of horses and men which would be required for' the increased expedition proposed,, and in response to the request he wrote to the department the following letter verified by his oath:

“ Washington, Sept. 30, 1878.
“ Hon. Thos. J. Brady,-
Second A.ssH Postmaster General:
“ Sir : To perform the service on route No. 38,146, between Lake City and Ouray, on the present schedule of seventy-two hours, requires twenty-two horses and eleven men, and to perform the. same .service on a schedule-of thirty-six hours it will require (66) sixty-six horses and twenty-two men.
“'(Signed) J. L. Sanderson,
*275 “ Subscribed and sworn to before me' this 30th day of September, 1878.
“ (Signed) J. H. Herron,
“ Notary Public.”

There was no existing schedule prescribing seventy-two hours for carrying the mail between Lake City and Ouray, as assumed by Sanderson. As the schedule of time prescribed in the original contract between those places over the mountains was at the rate of one mile and fifty-three hundredths of a mile an hour, he assumed that rate as the existing schedule for the new and easily traversable line of one hundred and ten miles, which would require at the same slow pace seventy-two hours. Notwithstanding the obvious error of this assumption, the evidence tended to show that the Post-Office Department acted upon his representations and estimates. Having extended the route one hundred and ten miles, and allowed the additional compensation provided by the statute upon such extension, it also allowed compensation for expediting the service on the new line, upon this extravagant estimate, at the rate of $15,994.77 a year. That sum for the increased expedition was regularly paid during the term of the original contract:

It is admitted that no additional horses and men for which this allowance was made were ever employed. Neither the horses nor the men exceeded the number originally employed to perform the service, and the defendant Sanderson testified that no greater number was necessary to perform it within the thirty-six hours, mentioned, and that he never afterwards corrected his estimate, but continued to draw pay from the government as though the additional horses and men were employed.

It appears that the sums thus allowed and paid to the subcontractors for stock and carriers, which were never required and never employed, aggregated- $59,592.98,. constituting the principal item in the amount claimed in this action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 U.S. 271, 10 S. Ct. 77, 33 L. Ed. 346, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1874, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-barlow-scotus-1889.