15 Ct. Cl. 80 | Ct. Cl. | 1879
delivered the opinion of the court:
This case is founded upon transactions which took place after the passage of the Revised Statutes, and must be determined by the law as there found, except so far as it may have been altered by subsequent legislation applicable to the matters now in controversy.
Counsel have cited the earlier acts of Congress, and rested their arguments mostly thereon, as though they were still in force. It was claimed on the part of the defendants that the Revised Statutes, constituting a revision of the previous legislation, are only prima facie evidence of the existing law, evidence which may be overcome by showing that the revision in any particular under consideration is not a correct reproduction •of the former statutes. This is an entirely erroneous view of •Congressional legislation.
The Eevised Statutes are an act of Congress, duly passed by the Senate and House of Bepresentatives, approved by the President, received by the Secretary of State and deposited in the State Department, where alone the originals of all laws of the United States are preserved. (Rev. Stat., § 204; Act December 28, 1874, 18 Stat., ch. 9, p. 294.) They were approved and became the law June 22, 1874. In section 5595 it is enacted that they “ embrace the statutes of the United States, general and permanent in their nature, in force on the first day of December, one thousand eight hundred and seventy-three, as revised and consolidated by commissioners appointed under an act of Congress.”
It was no doubt the desire and understanding of .Congress that the revision should generally reproduce and express the pre-existing laws so far as it was practicable to do so. But it is well known that in the multiplicity of statutes to be revised, the ambiguity of the language of many of them, and the great difficulty and embarrassment encountered in determining the effect of legislation upon earlier acts of the same subjects, the commissioners made numerous errors and omissions. While the act was under consideration by the House of Bepresenta-tives and the committee on the revision of laws, many changes were made in the language of the commissioners7 report, which in some instances may also have altered the law. As early as February 18, 1875, an act was passed entitled “An act to correct errors and to supply omissions in the Revised Statutes of the United States” (18 Stat. L., 316, ch. 80); and on the 27th of February, 18.77, another was passed entitled “An act to perfect the revision of the statutes of the United States, and of the statutes relating to the District of Columbia” (19 Stat. L., 240, ch. 69). By these and other acts several hundred errors and omissions have been corrected. There still remain, however, in the revision many alterations of former laws, which Congress have never yet seen fit to disturb.
In case of ambiguous language in the Bevised Statutes, or uncertainty as to the true construction to be given to the words of any section, previous acts on the same subject may be referred to and examined for light on the object and intent of Congress as shown by the course of legislation, in the same manner as statutes in pari materia relating to the same subject may always be taken, compared, and construed together. But when the language is clear, the latest act, as expressing the latest will of Congress,.must govern and must supersede the pre-existing legislation inconsistent therewith. (Bradshaw v. United States, 14 C. Cls. R., 78; Hann v. United States, 14 id., 305, and other cases above cited.)
As to the printed publications, the first edition is a transcript of the original Bevised Statutes preserved in the Department of State, and is prima facie evidence thereof. ■ If, however, the correctness of the printed copy is drawn in question, the original is the only conclusive evidence of the exact text of the law.
The second edition is neither a new revision nor a new enactment, but is only a new publication. It is a compilation containing a copy of the original Bevised Statutes, like the first edition, with certain specific alterations and amendments made by subsequent enactments of the Forty-third and Forty-
Section 79, referred to in the argument of this case, illustrates the manner in which the second edition was edited. In the original, and of course in the first edition, that section stood thus:
“ Sec. 79. After the fourth day of March, eighteen hundred and seventy-five, no money shall be paid from the Treasury for the publication of the laws in newspapers.”
The Act of February 18, 1875, ch. 80 (18 Stat. L., 317), provided that “ section seventy-nine is amended by striking out in the second line the words 1 no money shall be paid from the Treasury for/ and adding, at the end of the section, the words 1 shall cease.’ The editor incorporated the two together, thus:
“Sec. 79. After the fourth day of March, eighteen hundred and seven ty-five [no money shall be paid from the Treasury for] the publication of the laws in newspapers [shall cease].”
Omitting the words in' italics, this section expresses the law as it has stood since February 18, 1875, when the amendment was enacted.
The act for the preparation and publication of the second or new edition of the Revised Statutes provides that “the printed volume shall be legal evidence of the laws therein contained in all the courts of the United States and of the several States and Territories, but shall not preclude reference to, nor control, in case of any discrepancy, the effect of any original act as passed by Congress since the first day of December, eighteen hundred and seventy-three.” (Act March 2, 1877, ch. 82, 19 Stat. L., 268, as amended by Act March 9, 1878, ch. 26, 20 Stat. L., 27.)
With, these preliminary observations, we will proceed to tbe consideration of tbe law of this case.
Section 3823 of tbe Revised Statutes provides as follows:
“The Clerk.of tbe House of Representatives shall- select, in Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas, and Arkansas, one or more newspapers not exceeding the number allowed by law, in which such treaties and laws of tbe United States as may be ordered for publication in newspapers according to law shall be published, and in some one or more of which so selected all such advertisements as may be ordered for publication in said districts by any United States court or judge thereof, or by any officer of such courts, or by any executive officer of tbe United States, shall be published, tbe compensation for which and other terms of publication shall be fixed by said Clerk at a rate not exceeding two dollars per page for tbe publication of treaties and laws, and not exceeding one dollar per square of eight lines of space for tbe publication of advertisements, tbe accounts for which shall be adjusted by tbe proper accounting officers and paid in tbe manner now authorized by law in tbe like cases.”
Section 3824 requires tbe Clerk of tbe House to notify each bead of tbe several executive departments of tbe papers selected by him, and makes it tbe duty of tbe several executive officers .charged therewith to furnish to such selected papers only, an authentic-copy of tbe publications to be made. Tbe act of February 18, 1875, prohibited tbe publication of tbe laws in newspapers.(Rev. Stat., second ed., § 79), but that is not material, since treaties and public advertisements of tbe deqiart-ments still remained to be published in newspapers.
This did not give the claimant the rig'ht to publish in his newspaper at the expense ' of the government every public notice issued by any executive department, but only such as he had the written authority to publish from the head of such department, since section 3828 expressly so provides. It is as follows:
11 No advertisement, notice, or proposal for any executive department of the government, of of any bureau thereof, or for any office'therewith connected, shall be published in any newspaper whatever, except in pursuance of a written authority for such publication from the head of such department.” * *. *
It is therefore for the claimant to prove his written authority from the Postmaster-General for the publications for which he now seeks compensation.
It appears that on the 14th of April, 1875, the Postmaster-General, acting through his second assistant, requested the claimant in writing to publish an inclosed advertisement, provided it could be done for the sum of $99.37, and directing that if the compensation mentioned was not satisfactory the publication might “ be omitted.”
This was a conditional request ; and unless the terms of the condition were complied with, there was no authority from the Postmaster-General to publish the advertisement in the claimant’s newspaper. The request and the condition precedent were inseparable, and the claimant had no right to act upon the former and disregard the latter.
It must, be observed that the Postmaster-General did not assume to reduce or interfere with the rates established by the Clerk of the House of Eepresentatives. He named a sum in gross, and left it for the claimant to determine whether or not that was the amount to which he would be entitled under those rates. If the sum was found to be in accordance with those
The claimant made no reply, but proceeded to publish the-advertisement; thus tacitly admitting that the sum'named by the Postmaster-General as the condition precedent to the publication was the amount to which he was entitled under the Clerk’s fixed rates or was satisfactory to him. If he intended to claim a larger amount than that proposed, he acted in bad faith towards the defendants, and endeavored to entrap the Postmaster-General into a liability which the latter never intended to incur.
After the publication of the first advertisement the claimant wrote to the Postmaster-General, objecting then, and for the-first time, to the price, but inclosing his bill, made out as-directed, for the sum specified by the department, and adding, “I will, of course, accept any amount allowed us; so please send me check for any amount' allowed, and much oblige,” &c.
Subsequently two other advertisements were published upon like requests, accompanied with like conditions precedent, specifying in each case the gross amount offered as compensation.. The claimant made no objection to these prices, and he has been paid in accordance with them.
■ In our opinion, the claimant is estopped by his own acts from claiming any greater compensation than that specified in the Postmaster-General’s several requests, to which he gave his-tacit assent in advance; and his petition must be dismissed.