8 Watts 453 | Pa. | 1839
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This action, it must be observed, is not against the postmaster-general, but against a deputy, appointed by him to attend to the discharge of the duties appertaining to the post-office located and kept in the city of Pittsburg. Deputy postmasters have nothing to do with the carrying of the mail, by means of which letters, packets, &c., are conveyed and transmitted throughout the Union. The carriers of the mails are not employed by them; nor have they any authority or control whatever over the carriers. The duty of a deputy postmaster is confined to the receiving of letters, 'packetsj &c., brought to his office, and the delivering of such of them as are not to be transported further, to the persons respectively to whom they are addressed, when called for; and after putting such as are to be carried further into the proper mails, in order that they may reach the places and persons to which and to whom they are respectively directed, to the delivering of the mails containing 'the same to the persons appointed and duly authorised to receive and carry them. The business, therefore, of the deputy postmaster would not seem to partake of the nature of a common carrier, but of a wharfinger or warehouse man. Wharfingers and warehouse men, however, though to be paid for their care and attention in keeping the'goods safely, are only responsible, like other interested bailees, for ordinary negligence; and consequently are not liable for
The question whether a deputy postmaster is liable for the neglect or default of his clerks or assistants has never, I believe, been settled by a direct adjudication in any of our courts as yet; but from the relation in which they stand to him, as shown above, and from the design and nature of the post-office establishment, it would seem
The only remaining error is an exception to the charge of the court, in answer to the defendant’s second point, “ that the liability of the defendant could result only from his own misconduct, or from his neglect in not properly discharging the duties of his office, and the loss, if any, must result as a consequence from such neglect or misconduct; and that the law did not require that a postmaster should be always personally present in his office, discharging the business thereof in his proper person.” To require a deputy postmaster to be always present in his office ready to perform the duties of it, either in person himself, or to superintend the performance thereof by his assistants, would be unreasonable and at variance with the reason of his being allowed to have assistants. Assistants are allowed because it would be too onerous, if not wholly impracticable, for the deputy to perform the duties of the office personally himself, or to be at all times personally present when it is requisite that they should be performed. That every deputy postmaster ought to devote a proper portion of his time, either to the performance of the duties of his office himself in person, or to the superintendence of his assistants while employed in performing the same, is a proposition so evident and reasonable in itself, as not to admit of a doubt; and that he may be made liable for losses occasioned through the want of such personal attention on his part, seems to be equally reasonable and just. His absence or want of attention may be such as to amount to culpable negligence, by its tendency to tempt spoliations upon his office; and whenever such is made to appear to be the result/he would doubtless be held answerable for
added:—As it would be preposterous to suppose that an organ of the government can stand, in relation to his office, as a common carrier, the question is, whether the defendant’s assistant was his servant; for, as public functionaries are not answerable for the acts of their subordinates, if he was the servant of the public, the last prop which has been thought to support the action is gone. What is there in the case to make him less than an officer? He was employed by the defendant; but to do what? Not the defendant’s private business, but a part of his official duty, which could not be done by his own hands, and which the ordinances of the department authorised him to do by the hands of another. That the privity which springs from appointment to office, constitutes the relation of master and servant betwixt the immediate parties, is a principle on which no government has been, or can be, constructed: the man is the servant of the party that pays him. The post-office is a department of the government; and the principle would be as applicable to its principal head, as it would be to the head of a branch of it; yet though urged by counsel, it. was disregarded in Lane v. Cotton, and Whitfield v. Lord Le Despencer —authorities which have long settled the question in England, and which ought, in equal circumstances, to settle it here. What is the condition of a postmaster’s assistant as described by Lord Mansfield? “The superior has the appointment of the inferior officers; but they give security to the crown. One requisite is, that they shall take the oath taken by all public officers. Another strong guard is, that they are made subject to heavy penalties; and this is carried so far that what, in the case of a common carrier, or any other person, would be only a breach of trust, is in them declared to be a capital felony.” How inconsiderable the difference here! In that instance, the action was against the postmaster-general, and in this it is against a postmaster, his subordinate, who stands, however, in regard to the nomination of his own subordinates, as the postmaster-general does in England. The principle of that case, therefore, is so far applicable to this, that if the assistants, there, are -public officers despite the dependent nature of their tenure, they are necessarily so here. But nomination by the subordinate postmaster, is in fact subject to the approbation and consent of his superior, who, by virtue of his power of general superintendence, requires that the name, age, and length of service be particularly reported to him; and who, being in effect the depository of the appointing power, might, if he pleased, nominate in the first instance. Would his nominee be the postmaster’s servant? Again: As in the passage quoted, the assistants, like the other officers attached to the
But had the delinquent been the defendant’s servant in the strictest sense, I am not satisfied that the action could have been maintained under any form of pleading. It was a part of the plaintiff’s case that his letter had been purloined—a point towards which he directed the whole force of his evidence—and it is an indisputable principle, that a master, though liable for his servant’s negligences, is not liable for his wilful wrongs. For the position that it is applicable to a case like the present, though I am less confident of it than of the other, we have the authority of Lord Holt, in Jones v. Hart, 2 Salk. 441, who states it, though inaccurately, to have been the foundation of the judgment in Lane v. Cotton, where it was held, he says, “ that case lay against the postmaster, and not
Judgment affirmed.