18 F. 841 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Louisiana | 1884
Naturally the first question to be passed upon is motion to remand to the state court. That the suit is one of a civil nature in equity, where the matter in dispute exceeds, exclusive of costs, the value of $500, and arises under the laws of the United States, is not disputed. That the suit thus comes directly under the provisions of the second section of the act of congress, approved March 3, 1875, is sought to be avoided by the argument that as congress, by section 3833, Eev. St., has authorized the institution and prosecution of all causes of action arising under the postal laws, before the courts of the several states having competent jurisdiction by the law's thereof.
The several orders and findings of the postmaster general relied upon by defendant to justify his action have been set forth. The following legislation contained in Revised Statutes is relied upon to justify the action and exclusive control of the postmaster general in the premises:
See. 3926. “For the greater security of valuable mail matter, the postmaster general may establish a uniform system of registration. But the post-office department or its revenue shall not be liable for the loss of any mail matter on account of its having been registered.
Sec. 4027. “To promote public convenience, and to insure greater security in the transfer of money through the mail, the postmaster general may establish and maintain, under such rules and regulations as he may deem expedient, a uniform money-order system, at all suitable post-offices, which shall be designated as ‘ money-order offices.’
Sec. 3929. “The postmaster general may, upon evidence satisfactory to him that any person is engaged in conducting any fraudulent lottery, gift enterprise, or scheme for the distribution of money or of any real or personal property, by lot, chance, or drawing of any kind, or in conducting any scheme or device for obtaining money through tiie mails by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representation or promises, instruct postmasters at apy post-offices at which registered letters arrive directed to any such person, to return such registered letters to the postmasters at the offices at which they were originally mailed, with the word ‘fraudulent’ plainly written or stamped upon the outside of such letters; and all such letters so returned to such postmasters shall be by them returned to the writers thereof, under such regulations as the postmaster general may prescribe. But nothing contained in this title shall be so construed as to authorize any postmaster or ofher person to open any letter not addressed to himself.
Sec. 4041. “The postmaster general may, upon evidence satisfactory to him that any person is engaged in conducting any fraudulent lottery, gift enterprise, or scheme for the distribution of money, or of any real or personal property, by lot, chance, or drawing of any kind, qr in conducting*847 any other scheme or device for obtaining money through the mails by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations or promises, forbid the pay ment, by any postmaster, to any such person of any postal money ordei drawn to his order or in his favor, and may provide by regulations for the return to the remitter of the sums named in such money orders. But this shall not authorize any person to open any letter not addressed to himself. ”
The effect of these provisions is that as long as the postmaster-general is satisfied that any one is engaged in one of the schemes or enterprises described in the statute, the person so engaged, while ordinary mail is open to him, as to all others, for the receipt or transmission of ordinary mail matter, shall not be entitled to receive through the mail either the registered letters or money orders provided for in the law. See case of Dauphin v. Key, Postmaster General, decided by the supreme court, District of Columbia. And I take it to be equally clear that so long as the postmaster general is not satisfied that any one is engaged in one of the schemes or enterprises described in the statute, so long the use of the registered-letter and money-order systems cannot be refused. In other words, the use of those systems is the right of every person so desiring, uport compliance with the law, and no one can be deprived of this privilege without he lias abused the same, of which abuse, under the law, the postmaster genera] is to determine. In fact, so far as registered letters are concerned, it is a criminal offense for any postmaster to detain unlawfully any mail matter, the posting of which is not prohibited by law. Bev. St. § 3890.
The case of Dauphin v. Key, supra, decides that the foregoing statutes giving authority to the postmaster general to determine upon evidence satisfactory to him whether any person is engaged in one of file schemes or enterprises described, and thereupon to forbid the use of the.registered-letter and money-order systems is constitutional, and that the order of November 12, 1879, is in conformity with the law. To this 1 agree, and I refer to the learned opinion rendered in that case by Justice,Cox, as the organ of the court, as an answer to all the arguments addressed to me on this hearing on the constitutionality of said laws. Every point raised here on that question seems to have been passed on by Justice Cox.
The difficult questions in this case arise after all doubts about the constitutionality of the law and the validity of Postmaster General Key’s first order are resolved. A comparison of the said orders and findings with the law shows that only in that of November 12, 1879, does the postmaster general find “upon evidence satisfactory to him,” or at all, that any person is engaged in any of the schemes or enterprises described in the statute. The order of November 12, 1879, specifically finds that the postmaster general is satisfied from the evidence that M. A. Dauphin is engaged in conducting a scheme or device for obtaining money through the mails by false and fraudulent pretenses, representations, and promises. The order of February 27,
It seems to me to be very doubtful whether the order and finding of February 27,1880, merely suspended the order and finding against-Dauphin of November 12, 1879; it rather appears to amount to an absolute revocation, and, for these reasons, the fair import of the law, is that a deprivation of the registered-letter and money-order system shall only continue while the offending party is engaged in one of the schemes or enterprises described in the statute, and while the postmaster general is satisfied such party is so engaged. As the postmaster- general ceased to be satisfied, and so found and certified, what so natural as that the order, founded solely upon his being satisfied, fell to the ground. The law gives to the postmaster general no authority to suspend action. Upon evidence satisfactory to him, he must act. See Sup’rs v. U. S. 4 Wall. 435. Without evidence-satisfactory to him, the law gives him no right to act. When Postmaster General Key ceased to be satisfied on the evidence submitted, he had no authority to suspend, but he did have authority, and it-was his duty, to revoke, and therefore it is fairly to be presumed that his action of February 27, 1880, was a revocation. If the order was. not revoked in terms, the finding on which it was based was revoked, and the result is necessarily the same. It is true that the present postmaster general, in an opinion found in this'record, decides that-such an order was only a suspension; but his predecessor, also a distinguished lawyer, was of the contrary opinion, and so reported to-the house of representatives, and his report clearly shows that, in his opinion, before Dauphin could be further prohibited, it was nee-
The schemes denounced by the law are, “or schemes for the distribution of money, or of real or personal property, by lot, chance, or drawing of any kind, or in conducting any other scheme or device for obtaining money through the mails by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations, or promises.” The scheme found against complainant, in which it is engaged, and the sole basis of the order against it, is a scheme to evado the orders of the postmaster general in relation to Dauphin’s mail. This is patent on the face of the paper,for the order ends: ‘This order will be revoked whenever the bank gives satisfactory evidence that it has abandoned the above scheme.’ To repeat, the order prohibiting the use of the registered-letter and money-order system to Dauphin is of doubtful validity and force, because it has once been suspended or revoked, and because there is no finding in esse of any postmaster general, upon satisfactory evidence, or upon any evidence, that Dauphin is engaged in any scheme or enterprise denounced by law. The postmaster general did at one túne so find, but he, afterwards, has publicly declared himself not satisfied. Postmaster General Howe and bis successor, tho present postmaster general, have each considered the matter, but each has conspicuously failed to find the fact that would undoubtedly give validity to the prohibitory order. The facts found against the New Orleans National Bank, no matter how reprehensible they may be, are outside of the law, and the order against it, no matter how necessary it may be in order to enforce the orders against Dauphin, is unsupported by law.
To support the right to investigate these orders and determine their force and authority, I deem it necessary to refer only to the decision of Judge Story in the case of The Margaretta, 2 Gall. 515. In that case, which turned upon the authority and conduct of the secretary of the treasury in remitting penalties and forfeitures incurred under the non-importation acts, and where it was declared to he mandatory to the secretary to remit the penalties and forfeitures if the facts of the case were brought within the statute, Judge Story said:
“Tho points involved in this discussion are of peculiar delicacy and embarrassment, inasmuch ás they embrace considerations of the legal power and duties of one of the high officers of the government. It is not the duty of this court, and certainly it is not its inclination, to pry into the conduct of high executive officers with a jealous and scrutinizing eye. The court is, on the contrary, disposed to exorcise towards them every liberality not inconsistent with the principles of law. Let it, however, be recollected that ours is*850 a government of laws and not of men; and that consequently, every act of every officer of the highest as well as of every inferior grade, must be tried by the test of the law, and stand or fall as that has dictated. The power to remit penalties and forfeitures is one of the most important and extensive powers which can be exercised under the government. It vitally affects the rights, the revenues, and the prerogative of the United States. These cannot be waived or extinguished except m the cases and by the persons provided by law. The party, therefore, who sets up a treasury pardon to purge away a forfeiture, must show that such pardon is within the purview of the powers confided to that department. I do not say that everything is to be done with the precision and accuracy of special pleading, or that a rigid adherence to forms is to be exacted.. But there must be a substantial compliance with the requisites of the law; and if, after every reasonable allowance, this cannot be found, the pardon must be adjudged to be inoperative.”
In the present case I think it clear that there has been no substantial compliance with the requisites of the law in forbidding to complainant the use of the registered-letter and money-order systems, and that the defendant in this case has nothing further to justify his withholding of the use of those systems from complainant than the mere naked order of his superior, the postmaster general. Under this state of facts and pleadings, what is the duty of the court ? '
It has been vehemently urged, as well as elaborately and forcibly argued, that the court is absolutely without jurisdiction to control the defendant postmaster, because he is an officer of the executive department, subject to the orders and control of the postmaster general, who is irresponsible to the courts in the exercise of the duties of his office, they being matters of judgment and discretion with him. The power of the courts in the matter of controlling an executive officer in the exercise of his duties is well settled in its extent and boundaries. See Gaines v. Thompson, 7 Wall. 347, for an elaborate opinion by Justice Miller, and a review of the cases from Marbury v. Madison, 1 Cranch, 137, down. See also U. S. v. Schurz, 102 U. S. 378. Where the act of the officer is one of mere mihisterial, duty, it may be controlled or compelled by the courts. Where the act of the officer involves the exercise of judgment or discretion, the courts cannot interfere to compel or prevent.
The case here is to control the acts of the postmaster of the city of New Orleans in matters in which, so far as he is concerned, his duties are mere ministerial acts. The fallacy in the argument made by the learned counsel appearing for the defendant, if there is any fallacy in their argument, is in bringing the postmaster general into the case, and then assuming that he as postmaster general may, in his judgment and discretion, as a naked order, forbid any person the use of the registered-letter or money-order system without finding such person engaged in a use of the mails forbidden by law.
The facts in the case of Teal v. Felton, 12 How. 284, are parallel to the facts in the case made here. There the postmaster, under orders from the postmaster general, which orders, however, were beyond the law, refused to deliver certain mail unless extra postage
“This was not a case In which judgment could be used to determine any fact except by some other evidence than the letter itself, bfor was it one calling for discretion, in the legal acceptance of that term, in respect to officers who are called upon to discharge public duties. What was done by the postmaster was a mere act of his own, and ministerial, as that is understood to be, distinct from judicial. And further, this view of the law disposes also of that point in tiro argument claiming for the postmaster an exemption from the suit of the plaintiff on the ground that ho was called upon, in the act which he did, to exercise discretion and judgment. In Kendall v. Stokes, 3 How. 97, 98, would be found this court’s exposition upon that subject, with the leading authorities in support of it. The difference between the two must at all times be determined by the law under which an officer is called upon to act, and by the character of the act. It is the law which gives the justification, and nothing less than the law can give irresponsibility to the officer, although he may be acting in good faith, under the instructions of Ms superior of the department to which he belongs. Here the instructions exceed the law,” etc.
In the case of Marbury v. Madison, supra, the chief justice commented at some length upon the power of the courts over the action of the executive officers of the government, in the course of which he arrived at the conclusion that it is a question which must always depend upon the nature of the act. He then argues that by the constitution the president is vested with certain political powers, in the exercise of which he is to use his own discretion, and for which he is accountable only to bis country and bis conscience, and that he has officers to aid him in the exercise of these powers who are directly accountable to him. The acts of such an officer, he says, can never, as an officer, be examinable in a court of justice. He holds, however, where an officer is required by law to perform an act, not of this political or executive character, which affects the private rights of individuals, he is to that extent amenable to the courts. See Gaines v. Thompson, supra.
It, seems to me to bo clear that in the present case, the defendant, as postmaster, is required by law to perform acts, not of a political nor of a discretionary character, which affect the private rights of complainant, and that therefore to that extent he is amenable to the court. Besides, it is not conceded that the postmaster at New Orleans is subordinate and dependent upon the postmaster general to the exteut claimed in argument — a mere band or clerk. The postmaster is a sworn and bonded officer, with a tenure of office and duties established by law. In the details and general management of Ins office, in his expenditures, in his employes, and manner of
On the hearing it was argued that the complainant’s bill is frivolous, for want of equity, and complainant is not entitled to equitable relief, because the state of affairs complained of is the result of complainant’s own fault and intermeddling, and within its own power to remedy. On the showing made grave doubts must arise as to whether the hands of complainant are as clean as his should be who comes in a court of equity to invoke the aid of good conscience and equity. I have refrained from giving effect to this phase of this case because of the following considerations : (1) The bank, complainant, by the affidavit of its president, (hereinbefore referred to,) has purged itself of the charge that it was receiving registered letters or money orders for Dauphin, or that it was Dauphin’s agent for any purpose whatever, and there is no proof to the contrary. (2) It is not proved, as charged, for suspicion is not proof, that the bank is receiving registered letters and money orders for the use of the Louisiana State Lottery Company, and, strange to say, there is no proof in this case to show that Dauphin has any connection with the Louisiana State Lottery. (3) It does not satisfactorily appear that Dauphin, in whose difficulties with the post-office department the bank is charged with intermeddling, is inhibited the free and full use of the mails by any valid finding and order of the postmaster general, and now in force.
I have now given my views of the law applicable to this case, and, of course, judgment must go accordingly; therefore, the motion to remand and the motion to dissolve the injunction are overruled and denied. Let judgment be entered accordingly.