delivered the opinion of the Court.
The first and second of these cases are claims for freight, storage and demurrage proved in bankruptcy proceedings by the federal agent, for which the agent asserts priority on the ground that such claims arising during federal control of the railroads in 1918 are debts due to the United States and are preferred by Rev. Stats. § 3466 and by the Bankruptcy Act of July 1, 1898, c. 541, § 64, amended by Acts of February 5, 1903, c. 487, § 14, 32 Stat. 800, and June 15, 1906, c. 3333, 34 Stat. 267. The third is a claim by the United States for amounts paid by the Postmaster General to the bankrupts for bills of exchange and checks drawn, by the bankrupts and unpaid, together with protest fees, &c., as to which priority is asserted on the same grounds. The priority was denied in the first two cases by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit. 1 Fed. (2d) 860;
ibid.
864. But it was allowed in the Second Circuit without any reported opinion, following an earlier case in that Circuit,
In re Tidewater Coal Exchange,
*317
All the three cases depend upon the question whether the Government has a right to the priority it claims. If that is denied the additional inquiries that would be necessary before the federal agent could prevail in the railroad cases need not be gone into. Therefore we take up that first. It may be assumed that the priority must be found if at all in the Bankruptcy Act and in its supposed incorporation of Rev. Stats. § 3466. - That Act, as was said in
Guarantee Title & Trust Co.
v.
Title Guaranty & Surety Co.,
We attach little value to this logical concatenation as against the direct effect of § 64, taken according to the
*318
normal usages of speech. It is incredible that after the conspicuous mention of the United States in the first place at the beginning of the section and the grant of a limited priority, Congress should have intended to smuggle in a general preference by muffled words at the end. The States are mentioned in (5) before the United States, showing that their laws were primarily in mind. The United States seems added to avoid some possibly overlooked case. The ordinary dignities of speech would have led to the mention of the United States at the beginning of the clause, if within its purview. Elsewhere in cases of possible doubt when the Act means the United States it says the United States. We are of opinion that to extend the definition of ‘ person ’ here to the United States would be ‘ inconsistent with the context ’ and therefore is within the exception at the beginning of § 1. We are confirmed in our opinion by the fact that in earlier bankruptcy acts a priority was given to the United States in express terms, and that, for instance in the Act of March 2, 1867, c. 176, § 28; 14 Stat. 517, 530, ‘ Fifth ’, persons entitled to priority by the laws of the United States are mentioned when the United States could not have been meant, having been fully secured by the same section, * Second.’ If it be legitimate to look at them
(Schall
v.
Camors,
Decrees in .786 and 787 affirmed.
Decree in 1085 reversed.
