delivered the opinion of the Court.
By Post Roads Act, July 24, 1866, c. 230, 14 Stat. 221-; Rev. Stat. §§ 5263-5266, the United States offered privileges of great value to any telegraph company which should elect to accept its provisions. In return, it required, by .§ 2 of the Act: “ That telegraphic communications between the several departments of the government of the United States and their officers and' agents' shall, in their transmission over the linеs of any of said companies, have priority over all other business, and shall be sent at rates to be annually fixed by the Postmaster-General.” Each, year since the passage of the Act the government rates have been so fixed. For the fiscal years beginning July 1, 1921, and July 1, 1922, they, were fixed for domestic telegrams substantially at 40 per cent of the commercial rate; and for cablegrams at 50 per cent of the commercial rate.
The Western Union accepted the provisions of the Act on June 8, 1867.
Pensacola Telegraph Co.
v.
Western Union Telegraph Co.,
The question whether messages transmitted for the Fleet - Corporation after May 31, 1922, shаll be paid for at the commercial rates or at the lower government ratés is one of statutory construction. The Post Roads Act had been in force, without amendment, more than 55 years before the transactions here involved. Throughout - that period, the rights of the Government and the Western Union concerning the transmission of messages had been governed by the Act, unаffected by any special contract; and there had been á uniform practice in applying it. That practice should be stated before discussing the specific facts relating to the Fleet Corporation. For the
Continuously.since June 8,1867, the Western Union has extended the right of priority in transmission and the' government rate, not only to each of the Great Executive Departments presided over by
a-
member of the- Cabinet (and to the several bureaus, divisions and officers thereof), but also to the Judicial and the Legislative branches, to the government of the District of Columbia, and to the following corporations existing at the time of the passage of the Posit Roads Act: the Smithsonian Institution, ’ organized pursuant to Act of August 10, 1846, c. 178, 9 Stat. 102, and the National Home for Disabled Volunteers, organized pursuant to Acts of March 3, 1865, c. 91, 13 Stat. 509, and March 21, 1866, c. 21, 14 Stat. 10. The .Western Union has alsо extended, from time to time, the same preferences to at least the following minor independent departments established after the date of the acceptance by it of the provisions of the Post Roads Act: Civil Service Commission, Act of January 16, 1883, c. 27, 22 Stat. 403; Interstate Commerce Commission, Act of February 4, 1887, c. 104, 24, Stat. 379, 383; Bureau of American Republics (now the Pan-Amеrican Union), Act of. July 14, 1890, c. 706, 26 Stat. 272, 275; Panama Canal, Act of April 28, 1904, c. 1758, 33 Stat. 429; Federal Reserve Board, Act of December 23, 1913, c. 6, 38 Stat. 251, 260; Federal Trade Commission, Act of September 26, 1914, c. 311, 38 Stat. 717; Inter-American High Commission, United States Section, Act of February 7, 1916, c. 20, 39 Stat. 8; Bureau of Efficiency, Act of February 28,1916,
The extension of the government rate to each of .the above named departments was made by. the Western Union, as a matter of course, upon application therefor by the. Government and has been continued, ever since. The government rate was aрplied to all messages sent on official-business of the Government and chargeable to: any of the departments named, whatever, the nature of its organization, whatever its functions,- and whatever the character of the official business. In extending priority and the lower rates, no distinction has ever been made; between messages sent to persons within the several departments and those outside. And, obviously, the irn-
The Western Union has never questioned the right of the Shipping Board to the government rate on any official messages sent by it. It concedes that all the messages here in quéstion relate to activities which the Shipping Board itself might legally have conducted; that all the messages were sent ón its official business; that the Board was authorized'by Congress to еmploy the Fleet Corporation as its agency to perform the particular activities in connection with which they were sent; -that the messages were not to be paid for out of any segregated portion of "Meet Corporation money; that payment of the commercial rates would involve, indirectly, an additional charge on the public treаsury; -and that, so far a& concerns .the character of -the message or of the business^, the government rate was chargeable for all the messages, if for any-of them. The claim that the government rates ¡do not apply to. messages of the Meet Corporation is rested in part upon the -fact that it is, in -form, a private corporation; in part upon thе fact,that it is an agency of- the Shipping Board, as distinguished from a bureau' or division; in part.'upon the fact that, to a considerable extent,
The Fleet Corporation was organized by the United States Shipping Board pursuant to specific authority conferred by the Act of September 7, 1916, c. 451, § 11, 39 Stat. 728, 731. The legislation concerning it, its relation to the Shipping Board, its character and the scope of. its activities are shown in
The Lake
Monroe,
Since the passage of the Merchant Marine Act, 1920, the Fleet Corporation has been the agency through which the Shipping Board has performed its principal functions. The activities have consisted largely of maintaining and liquidating property acquired for the United States during the World War, of settling claims arising therefrom, and of operating, or causing to be operаted, vessels not disposed of. Besides other activities, the Fleet Corporation
First.
It is argued that the government "rate should be denied because the Fleet. Corporation is a private corporation. In form, it is such. But all of its $50,000,000 capital stock was subscribed and paid for by the Shipping Board on behalf of the United- States. All has been so held by it ever since. ' The United States alone has had a financial interest in its capital stock. The United States alone has contributed the additional money needed from time to time for the conduct of its business. The Fleet Corporation has, of course, -received from others moneys in рayment for property sold, as charter hire, for shipping services, or in settlement of claims. But, as the business of the Fleet Corporation has been conducted continuously at a large loss,' the sums so received did not. supply capital. They served merely to reduce, to that extent, the amount of the deficit being incurred and, hence, the amount of the additional money which the United States was required to contribute.
2
Payment, by the
Second.
It is argued that in sending a message the Fleet Corporation contrаcted on its own behalf; that this contract gave to the Western Union the right to sue the corporation; and that by such contract there was secured the right to rely upon the credit of the corporation and to satisfy the debt out of its properties. All this may be admitted; but it affords no reason for denying that the Fleet Corporation is a department of the United States within the meaning of the Post Roads Act. Actually, the Fleet Corporation had no individual credit.- As an agency of the Shipping Board it had control of certain properties and moneys required in the conduct of its
Third.
It is argued that the Fleet Corporation should be denied the government rate, because it competes, in respect to some of its operations, with privatе shipping. But in operating ships it is performing a function of the Government. The conduct of business in competition
Fourth.
It is faintly argued that the Western Union is entitled to the commercial rates> because; since the Act of June 18,1910, c. 309, § 7, 36 Stat; 539, 544, which broadened the scope of the Act to Regulate Commerce so as to include telegraph companies, telegraph rates are no longer a matter of contract-; that they have the force of' law,
Western Union Telegraph Company
v.
Esteve Brothers & Co.,
Fifth.
It is urged that if the Fleet Corporation, is granted the government rate, it may likewise be claimed by every instrumentality of the Government. Instru-mentalities like the national banks or the federal reserve
Reversed,
Notes
Thus, a Treasury Regulation, adopted April' 2, 1918, provides: “(10). Government telegraph rates, established -conformably to law, are intended to apply to official Government busings exclusively, and no private individual, associatiоn, company, 'or corporation should in any way-be benefited thereby. In cases where it..becomes necessary to use the telegraph on any busineás in the special interest of any private person or persons, in which the Government has no interest, the party for- whom the service is performed will be required to pay for the messages both ways at commercial rates.” T. D. 37588.
For tbe fiscal year ending. June 30, 1921, tbe Shipping Board reported a total excess of outgo over income (exclusive of appropriations) of $188,291,441.05. Annual Report of United States Ship
The total receipts from appropriations and allotments to June 30, 1921, were $3,310,170,576.98. Thé net assets then on hand (after deducting current and capital liabilities, reserves for depreciation, etc.) were $1,929,847,381.84. Thus, the loss to date, as estimated by the Shipping Board, wаs $1,380,323,195.14. Annual Report of United States Shipping. Board, 1921, pp. 309-321. By June 30, 1923, the total appropriated and allotted had grown to $3',491,912,648.01, while the Shipping Board’s estimate of the net worth of the assets belonging to it and its subsidiaries had shrunk to $292,405,200.17, showing a loss of $3,199,507,447.84. Annual Report, 1923, pp. 192-196. The estimates for June 30, 1927, show a net worth of $290,461,593.91, making a net loss of $3,271,021,167.61 on.the total appropriations .($3,561,482,761.52) to that date. Annual Report, 1927, pp. 121-124.
