United States v. Russell

80 U.S. 623, 20 L. Ed. 474, 13 Wall. 623, 1871 U.S. LEXIS 1376, 7 Ct. Cl. 227
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 27, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by84 cases

This text of 80 U.S. 623 (United States v. Russell) 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. Russell, 80 U.S. 623, 20 L. Ed. 474, 13 Wall. 623, 1871 U.S. LEXIS 1376, 7 Ct. Cl. 227 (1871).

Opinion

*229 Mr. Justice Glieeokd

delivered the opinion of the court:

Private property, the Constitution provides, shall not be taken for public use without just compensation, and it is clear that there are few safeguards ordained in the fundamental law against oppression and the exercise of arbitrary power of more ancient origin or of greater value to the citizen, as the provision for compensation, except in certain extreme cases, is a condition precedent annexed to the right of the Government to deprive the owner of his property without his consent. — (2 Kent Com., 11th ed., 339; 2 Story on Const-., 3d ed., 59C.)

Extraordinary and unforeseen occasions arise, however, beyond all doubt, in cases of extreme necessity in time of war or of immediate and impending public danger, in which private property may be impressed into the public service or may be seized and appropriated to the public use, or may even be destroyed, without the consent of the owner.

Unquestionably such extreme cases may arise, as where the property taken is imperatively necessary in time of war to construct defences for the preservation of a military post at the moment of an impending attack by the enemy, or for food or medicine for a sick and famishing army utterly destitute and without other means of such supplies, or to transport troops, munitions of war, or clothing to re-enforce or supply an army in a distant field, where the necessity for such re-enforcement or supplies is extreme and imperative, to enable those in command of the post to maintain their position or to repel an impending-attack, provided ‘it appears that other means of transportation could not be obtained and that the transports impressed for the purpose were imperatively required for such immediate use.

Where such au~ extraordinary and unforeseen emergency occurs in the public service in time of war no doubt is entertained.that the power of the Government is ample to supply for the moment the public wants in that way to the extent of the immediate public exigency, but the public danger must be immediate, imminent, and impending, and the emergency in the public service must be extreme and imperative and such as will not admit of delay or a resort to any other source of supply, and the circumstances must be such as imperatively require the exercise of that extreme power in respect to the particular property so impressed, appropriated, or destroyed.

*230 Exigencies of the kind do arise in time of war or impending public danger, but it is the emergency, as was said by a great magistrate, that gives the right, and it is clear that the emergency must be shown to exist before the taking can be justified. Such a justification may be shown, and when shown the rule is well settled that the officer taking private property for such a purpose, if the emergency is fully proved, is not a trespasser, and that the Government is bound to make full compensation to the owner. — (Mitchell v. Harmony, 13 How., 134.)

Three steamboats owned by the appellee during the rebellion were employed as transports in the public service for the respective periods mentioned in the record, without any agreement fixing the compensation to which the owner should be entitled. Certain payments for the services were made in each case by the Government to the owner, bat he claimed a larger sum, and the demand being refused, he instituted the present suit.

Prior to the orders hereinafter mentioned the steamboats were employed by the owner in carrying private freights, and the findings of the court below show that he quit that employment in each case and went into the public service in obedience to the military order of an assistant quartermaster of the Army. Beference to one of the orders will be sufficient, as the others are not substantially different. Take the second, for example, which reads as follows, as reported in the transcript: “ Imperative military necessity requires the services.of your steamer for a brief period; your captain will report at this office at once in person, first stopping the receipt of freight, should the steamer be so doing.”

Pursuant to that order, or one of similar import in substance and effect, the respective steamboats were impressed into the public service and employed as transports for carrying Government freight for the several periods of time set forth in the findings of the court. Throughout the whole time the steamboats were so employed in the military service they were in command of the owner as master, or of some one employed by him and under his pay and control, and the findings of the court show that he manned and victualed the steamboats and paid all the running expenses during the whole period they were so employed. Unexplained and uncontradicted the findings of *231 tbe court show, a state of facts which plainly lead to the conclusion that the emergency was such that it justified the officers in each case in ordering the steamboat into the service of the United States, as the orders purport to have been issued from an imperative military necessity; and if so, they show beyond all doubt that the officers who issued them were not trespassers, and that the Government of the United States is bound to make full compensation to the owner for the services rendered.

Such a taking of private property by the Government, when the emergency of the public service in time of war or impending public danger is too urgent to admit of delay, is everywhere regarded as justified, if the necessity for the use of the property is imperative and immediate, and the danger, as heretofore described, is impending, and it is equally clear that the taking of such property under such circumstances creates an obligation on the part of the Government to re-imburse the owner to the full value of the service. Private rights, under such extreme and imperious circumstances, must give way for the time to the public good, but the Government must make full restitution for the sacrifice.

Beyond doubt such an obligation raises an implied promise on the part of the United States to re-imburse the owner for the use of the steamboats and for his own services and expenses, and for the services of the crews during the period the steamboats were employed in transporting Government freight pursuant to those orders. Indebitatus assumpsit is founded upon what the law terms an implied j>romise on the part of the defendant to pay what, in good conscience, he is bound to pay to the plaintiff; but the law will not imply a promise to pay unless some duty creates such an obligation, and it never will-sustain any such implication in a case where the act of payment would be contrary to duty or contrary to law. — (Curtis v. Fiedler, 2 Black, 478.)

Tested by those rules it is quite clear that the obligation in this case to re-imburse the owner of the steamboats was of a character to raise an implied promise on the part of the United States to pay a reasonable compensation for the service rendered; and if so, then it follows that the decree was properly made in favor of the jdaintiff', unless it appears that the adjustment of the claim belonged to Congress or to the executive department, and not to the Court of Claims.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 U.S. 623, 20 L. Ed. 474, 13 Wall. 623, 1871 U.S. LEXIS 1376, 7 Ct. Cl. 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-russell-scotus-1871.