delivered the opinion of the court.
Congress passed an act, approved July 8,1886, entitled “An act referring to the Court of Claims the claims for property seized by General Johnston on the Utah'expedition for examination and report,” which enacts “that the claims of Joseph C. Irwin and Company, and 0. A. Perry and Company, freighters, for property claimed to have been taken and impressed into the service of the United States in the year 1857, by orders of- Colonel Albert Sidney Johnston, in command of the Utah expedition, as well as for property alleged to have been sold to the government, be, and the same are hereby, referred, with all the papers relating thereto, to the Court of Claims for adjudication, according to law, on the proofs heretofore presented, and such other proofs as may be adduced, and report to the same to Congress.”
In pursuance of this act the parties named therein filed their respective petitions in the Court of Claims, stating the grounds and particulars of their demands for judgment. Judgments were rendered therein in the ordinary form in the case of J. C. Irwin and Company for the recovery of the sum of $21,600, and in the case of Charles A. Perry and Company for the sum of $44,025. From these judgments the United States prosecutes the present appeals.
The facts in the two cases as found by the Court of Claims arе substantially the same. The firm of J. C. Irwin and Company, at the time of the occurrences hereinafter set forth, were engaged in freighting across the, plains by means of wagon trains, and in June, 1857, were under contract to
“ Headquarters Army of Utah,
“ South Pass, October 19, 1857.
“ Sir : The colonel commanding directs me to inform you, in reply to your letter of to-day, that no goods or supplies of any kind vvill be permitted to pass this army for Salt Lake City, or other points occupied by the Mormons, so long as they maintain а.hostile attitude to the government of the United States.”
On the 24th of October an order, was issued prescribing the order of the march, and designating the position to be maintained on the march and in the camp by the plaintiffs’ trains. Plaintiffs did no.t seek or desire military protection, and requested Colonel Johnston to be allowed to proceed on their journey, as they were not, in their opinion, in danger from-the Mormons. This request was denied. Plaintiffs were required to have their teams yoked and ready by ten in the morning, and they often had to stand for two hours in consequence of delay in the general movement. The teams al'ways got into camp late, and consequently were grazed at great disadvantage. They were also limited to a defined and
Two questions were presented on -the part of the United States on the trial of the cases in the Court of Claims, and are renewed in argument here. They are, 1st, that the act of Cоngress of July 8, 1886, referring these claims to the Court of Claims, does not authorize a’ final judgment against the-United States, but only such findings as, being reported to Congress, shall serve as the basis in its discretion for future legislative action; and, 2d, that, supposing the .judgments of the Court of Claims under the act to be final, they -are erroneous, because founded on allowances for 'consequential dam ages to the property of the plaintiffs,-by reason of - detention and delay, not within the limitation prescribed by the act of
In support of the - first proposition, it is argued by the Attorney General that the direction contained in'the act addressed to the Court of Claims to “ report the same to Congress,” taken in connection with the title, which describes it as “ An act referring to the Court of Claims the claims for property seized by General Johnston on the Utah expedition for examination and report,” sufficiently indicates the intention of Congress that the conclusions of the Court of Claims should not be final, but subject to revision at the discretion of Congress. ' But, in our opinion, the controlling words of the act are those which declare that the claims of the parties are thereby referred to the Court of Claims “for adjudication according to 'law.” The force of this phrase cannot be satisfied by anything less than a. formal, regular, and final judgment of the judicial tribunal, to which the matter is submitted, acting upon the acknowledged principles qf law applicable to the circumstances of the case. All such judgments were required by existing law to be reported, to Congress, and the addition of words to the same effect in this statute, while being perhaps unnecessary, does not change the character of the judgments to be reported.
On the second question, however, we are of the opinion that the Court of Claims has erred. The reference made by the statute is limited by its express languagе to a judgment “ for property claimed to have been taken and impressed intq the service of the United States in the year 1857 by orders of Colonel Albert Sidney Johnston, in command of the Utah expedition, as well as for property alleged to have been sold to the government.” Of course there would be ho doubt.as to the lеgality of so. much of the claims as arise upon sales proven to have been made by the plaintiffs to the government of their property', for its use; but in point of fact no such sales are found to have been inade. So far as the judgments embrace allowances for losses consequent upon the refusal of Colоnel Johnston to permit the plaintiffs’ trains to proceed upon their journey, arising from the mere detention and delay
■ The amount found due to the Porters by the accounting officers of the Treasury was appropriated by Congress by the act of February, 1887, heretofore referred to. The facts relied upon by the Attorney General, as justifying the payment in their case, of actual service in the employment of the United States, do not appear in the present cases.
Neither does the conclusion of thé Court of Claims derive support from anything said or decided by this court in the case of
Mitchell
v. Harmony,
As it appears from the findings of the Court of Claims that “ plaintiffs’ animals were often used to aid in hauling government trains, and thus did extra work on insufficient food,” there is perhaps ground for a recovery to some extent under the terms of the act for property taken and impressed into the service of the United States; but we are unable from the findings to determine the amount properly allowable on that account. It becomes necessary, therefore, to reverse the judgments in both cases, and remand them to the Court of Claims for more definite and specific findings; and inasmuch as we have determined that the facts as found by the Court of Claims in the present record do not enable us to determine what property of the plaintiffs was taken and impressed into the service of the United States by Colonel Johnston, the cases may be opened for further proofs on that point.
The judgments a/re therefore reversed, and the causes remanded to the Court of Cla/ims for further proceedings im accordamce with this opinion.
