after making the foregoing statement, ■ delivered the opinion of the court.
It is the contention of the Government that, under the authority of the Postmaster General to require new or additional mail messengers or transfer service, without additional compensation, the contractor might be required to perform the additional service made necessary by the establishment of the Industrial Building branch under the authority of the act of Congress of March 3, 1893, .27 Stat. 732, authorizing the renting of the building to be used for general post office purposes in the city of New York. The findings of fact establish that this Industrial Building branch was more than three miles distant from the general post office, and was intended to anri did transact nearly all of the business north of Fourteenth street. This necessitated the carrying of the mails not only from the
*422
general post 'office to the railroad stations, but to and from the branch station established at the Industrial Building. In order to perform this service under the directions of the department, complainant was required to furnish eighty additional horses, more than thirty additional wagons, and from thirty-three .to fifty additional men, requiring an additional distance to be travelled in wagons, over and above the normal increase, of 311,939 miles for the period from October 5, 1893, to February 6, 1895, and to pay'an increased sum for ferrying the wagons across the North and East Rivers of $9,950.22. Can such' enormous increase of the service required and the expense entailed be exacted of a contractor who had agreed to perform new or additional service of the kind specified without additional compensation? There can be no doubt that the purpose of placing this stipulation in the contract was to require the performance, without additional compensation, of new or additional service which might arise from improved methods in the transaction of the business of the Post Office Department and in the increased demand for service resulting from the growth and development of towns and cities. The contract gave to the Postmaster General very considerable discretion in calling for additional service which might result from these causes, without compensation. This was well illustrated in the case of
Slavens
v.
United States,
“The elementary canon of interpretation is, not that particular words may be isolatedly considered, but that the whole contract must be brought into view and interpreted with reference to the nature of the obligations between the parties, and the intention which they have manifested in forming them. Boardman v. Reed,6 Pet. 328 ; Canal Co. v. Hill,15 Wall. 94 .”
And, upon the same subject, Mr. Justice Bradley, in the case of
Canal Co.
v.
Hill,
“We should look carefully to the substance of the original agreement . . .as contradistinguished from its mere form, in order that we may give it a fair and just construction, and ascertain the substantial intent of the parties, which is the fundamental' rule in the construction of all agreements.”
We cannot believe it possible that the parties to this montract contemplated the establishment of a new postal depart *424 ment in the city of New York, not then authorized by any act 'of Congress, which should so greatly increase the service, requiring more than 300,000 miles of additional transfer service and nearly $10,000 of additional expense for ferrying during the time covered in the suit. The Government, in its* advertisement, had stated the probable additional annual mileage at 6,718.40 miles. This may be presumed to have been a fair and impartial estimate, made for the benefit of those with whom the Government was about to contract, notwithstanding they were warned that it was not conclusive, There is nothing, in the record to show that it was not a reasonable estimate in the light of the facts then known. In "this case, after the contract was entered into, this enormous new service, clearly not intended by either of the parties to be rendered, was required. In this instance we think the limit of reasonable requirement under •the new. and additional service clause was Exceeded and the service required cannot be held to be within the terms of the contract. We find no error in. the Court of-Claims reaching .this, conclusion.
2. The second question involved is as to the right of the contractor to recover because the Government’s advertisement for proposals, instead of stating the number of elevated stations to be served at four, which was, in fact, the number, gave the number of stations at two, thus doubling the number of trips necessary. It is .true that the advertisement required the bidders to inform themselves as to the facts, and stated that additional compensation would not be allowed for mistakes; but,, in the present instance, the Government in its advertisement had positively stated the number of stations at two. The contractor had a right to presume that the Government knew how many stations were to be served; it was a fact peculiarly within the knowledge of the Government agents and upon which, in the advertisement, it spoke with certainty. We do not think, when the statement was thus unequivocal, and the document was prepared for the guidance of bidders for Government service, that the general statement that the contractor must in-. *425 vestigate for himself, and of non-responsibility for mistakes, would require an independent investigation of a fact which the Government had left in no doubt. We think the Court of Claims correctly allowed this item.
3. As to the compensation for the so-called “foot service,” for carrying the mails up and down.the steps at the elevated railroad stations, the delivery 'of the mail at the foot of the steps would not have been sufficient, and the contractor agreed to deliver the mail into the post offices, mail stations and cars. 'The statement of facts shows that the preceding contractor had delivered the mail on the platform of the stations at the door of the cars. We think the contract was not exclusively for wagon service, but, reasonably construed, required the delivery of the mail into the elevated stations in such wise as to be placed in the cars, and consequently required it to be carried upstairs without "kxtra allowance of pay. We find no error in disallowing this claim for extra compensation.
The judgment of the Court of Claims is
Affirmed.
