United States v. Warfield

170 F. 43, 24 L.R.A.N.S. 312, 24 L.R.A (N.S.) 312
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedMarch 13, 1909
DocketNos. 792, 793
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 170 F. 43 (United States v. Warfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Warfield, 170 F. 43, 24 L.R.A.N.S. 312, 24 L.R.A (N.S.) 312 (4th Cir. 1909).

Opinion

PRITCHARD, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). This case conies before us on a writ of error to the court below. The plaintiff below instituted an action to recover a certain sum claimed to be due by the defendant below S. Davies Warfield on account of certain money placed in his hands as postmaster at Baltimore, and which it is alleged was paid to one John W. Pettit .without warrant of law.

It appears that the vouchers taken by the defendant in error at the time the disbursements were made by him were signed by the clerk, and that in pursuance of the same the money was actually paid to the clerk in each instance. The said clerk had been appointed on the authority of the First Assistant Postmaster General, who also made an allowance to the defendant in error for the payment of such sums to said clerk out of the moneys appropriated by Congress for the support of the Post Office Department with which to pay said clerk. The defendant in error, as his bond required, was simply discharging his duty in the manner he was advised it was proper for him to do by his superior officer, and was obeying the regulations of the Post Office Department as his bond required him to do. There is no claim that the defendant in error fraudulently colluded with others to defraud the plaintiff, or that there was any conspiracy the object of which was [45]*45to secure the payment of said sums to the clerk mentioned. Every dollar of the amount sought to be recovered was paid out, not simply with the knowledge, but by the direction, of the Post Office Department.

Section 388 of the Revised Statutes (U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 218), among other things, provides that:

“There shall be at the seat of government an Executive Department to be known as the Post Office Department, and a Postmaster General, who shall be the head thereof. * * * ”

Section 396 (U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 224) provides that:

“It shall be the duty of the Postmaster General: First. To establish and discontinue post offices. Second. To instruct all persons in the postal service with reference to their duties. * * * Seventh. To superintend the disposal of the moneys of the department. * * * ”

While these duties are imposed upon the Postmaster General, he does not, as a matter of course, perform all such duties personally. He is authorized by law to appoint assistants, and these assistants are designated by him as chiefs of the several branches of the postal service subject only to the supervision and direction of the Postmaster General, and by them the duties assigned are performed. However, their acts are the acts of the Postmaster General when confined within the scope of the duties assigned to them by their chief. Parish v. U. S., 100 U. S. 504, 25 E. Ed. 763.

Among other things, the Postmaster General as the head of the Post Office Department promulgates certain rules known as “postal regulations.” Postmasters are controlled by. the Postmaster General in accordance with these regulations and are instructed with reference to their duties through the First Assistant Postmaster General. Tt is provided by the postal rules and regulations with respect to the dimes of the First Assistant Postmaster General as follows :

“To this office is assigned the general care of postoffices and postmasters and their instructions. The adjustment of salaries of presidential postmaster and the consideration of allowances for clerical hire, rent, fuel, light, furniture and miscellaneous expenditures.”

It should be borne in mind that the bond declared upon by the United States in this case, among other things, contains a condition to the effect that, the obligor shall faithfully perform all the duties imposed upon him by the rules and regulations to which we have just referred. Therefore the defendant in error, being a subordinate of the Post Office Department, was by the condition of the bond required to obey the instructions and directions issued by his superiors.

The learned judge who tried this case below, in discussing this phase of the question, said:

“But tbe numerous reported cases in which this law has been enforced as against parties receiving money illegally paid by a public officer do not cover a case in which innocently and in good faith a disbursing agent, upon an apparently lawful claim and by direction of his superior officer charged with the duty of instructing him, makes a payment in good faith, out of moneys in his hands which should properly and legally be applied to Ihe payment of the claim if it had no concealed element of illegality. I have not found a reported case in which an innocent disbursing agent has been held liable under such eir-[46]*46cumstances. It hardly seems that the financial operations of the government could go on if at the peril of refunding the money every subordinate was required to exercise his own judgment as to whether an apparently legal claim which his superior directed him to pay was to be paid or not. That the person wrongfully obtaining the money should be liable to refund to the government, no matter by what innocent mistake of law or fact he obtained it, is well settled as one of the risks of dealing with the government. * * * But it would seem that the position of an innocent agent who by direction disburses the government’s money should be different, and the responsibility, so far as liability for the disbursement is concerned, should rest where the responsibility to decide is placed by thé-rules and regulations established by law.”

This is an admirable statement of the law pertaining to this controversy, and is supported by numerous authorities, among others being the case of United States v. Sinnott (C. C.) 26 Fed. 8G, in which the court said:

“And even if the disposition of the money received from the sale of lumber was a technical violation of section 3617 or 3618 of the Revised Statutes (U. S. Comp. St. 1901, pp. 2413, 2414), there is no pretense but that the defendant acted in good faith, and the Indians to whom the money really belonged had the benefit of it, and therefore, upon any equitable view of the transaction, he is entitled to be credited with the amount.”

In the case at bar, although the appointee did not work in the post office at Baltimore, yet the whole transaction having been under the authority of the Post Office Department and by its direction, and the money having been paid out and honestly accounted for by the defendant in error, he should not be held liable to the government, although it should appear that appointee was not so engaged in the office at Baltimore, or if, indeed, it be a fact, as alleged, that he was not engaged in government work at all.

Among other things, an issue was submitted to the jury as to whether the defendant in error acted innocently and in good faith and in reliance upon the instructions received from the Post Office Department in the payment of the sums to which reference has heretofore been made. In response-to this issue the jury found that the defendant in error innocently and in good faith, and in reliance upon the letters of July 14, 1898, and of September 20, 1899, really believed that Pettit was performing postal services, in some capacity not in the Baltimore office. Thus it will be seen that the defendant in error at all times acted strictly in accordance with the instructions received from his superior officer.

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Bluebook (online)
170 F. 43, 24 L.R.A.N.S. 312, 24 L.R.A (N.S.) 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-warfield-ca4-1909.