1. When the United States comes into court to assert a claim, it
so far takes the position of a private suitor that justice may be
done with regard to the subject matter. P
266 U. S.
339.
2. In a collision case wherein libel and cross-libel of the
respective owners had been consolidated and the first libelant had
been ordered under old Admiralty Rule 53 to give security for the
other's damages, the United States intervened, standing on the
first libel, and filed a claim alleging its possession and
ownership of that libelant's vessel at the time of collision, with
a stipulation of the Emergency Fleet Corporation for security in a
specified sum conditioned that the claimant (United States) and the
Corporation should abide all orders of the court and pay the amount
awarded by the final decree. The district court, finding that the
United
Page 266 U. S. 329
state was owner,
pro hac vice, of the vessel claimed,
using it for war service, and that that vessel alone was at fault,
decreed damages against the United States and the Fleet
Corporation, as stipulator, with interest and costs.
Held:
(a) That the district court was empowered to enter the decree,
p.
266 U. S. 339,
since
(b) The subject matter was the collision, rather than the vessel
first libeled, p.
266 U. S.
340;
(c) The reasons against creating government liability for tort
were inapplicable,
id.;
(d) The Government's joinder in the suit carried with it
acceptance of whatever liability the courts might decide to be
reasonably incident to that act, and, for such acceptance, no
statute was necessary, p.
266 U. S.
341;
(e) The stipulation for security, ordered before the United
States made itself a party, was valid,
id.;
(f) Interest and costs can be recovered from the Fleet
Corporation and the United States.
Id.
Questions certified by the circuit court of appeals on an appeal
from a decree of the district court against the United States, as
claimant, and the Fleet Corporation, as stipulator, for damages
resulting from a collision, with interest and costs. The questions
propounded were: (1) was the district court empowered by law to
render the decree entered? and, if that were answered in the
negative, (2) must the Fleet Corporation, as stipulator, respond
for the damages proven? The certificate is reported in full in 295
F. 1020.
Page 266 U. S. 338
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case comes here upon a certificate from the Circuit Court
of Appeals for the Second Circuit stating more at length the
following facts. The Luckenbach Steamship Company, on behalf of
itself and the other owners, libelled the barque
Thekla in
admiralty for a collision with the steamship
F. J.
Luckenbach. The owners of the
Thekla moved under the
old fifty-third admiralty rule for a stay until the libellant
should give security to respond in damages as claimed in the
cross-libel, and filed a claim, stipulation for value, an answer
and a cross-bill against the steamer. On October 7, 1918, the
motion was granted, and the libel and cross-libel were consolidated
and proceeded as one cause. On June 4, 1919, the United States was
made a party libellant upon its motion, and stood on the Steamship
Company's libel. It filed a claim "without submitting itself to the
jurisdiction" of the court, alleging possession and ownership at
the time when the libel was filed. Thereupon, a stipulation
executed by the United States Shipping Board Emergency Fleet
Corporation was filed which recited that the F. J. Luckenbach was
under requisition charter to, and in the possession of the United
States, claimant at the time of the collision; that the liability,
if any, was
Page 266 U. S. 339
that of the United States, acting through the Corporation, the
operator of it, and that the Corporation agreed, in case of default
on the part of the claimant, that execution should issue against
its chattels and lands in the sum of $130,000. The condition was
that the claimant and Corporation should abide by all orders of the
Court, and pay the amount awarded by the final decree. On October
3, 1919, the Steamship Company, on behalf of itself and other
owners, excepted to the cross-libel on the ground that, the
steamship being under charter to the United States, the matters
alleged in the cross-libel were not within the jurisdiction of the
court. At the trial, it appeared that the United States was owner
pro hac vice, as alleged, using the vessel for war
service, and that the
Luckenbach alone was in fault, a
finding affirmed by the circuit court of appeals. A decree was
entered against the claimant and stipulator for the damages,
$120,619.71, with interest and costs.
The first question certified is: was the district court
empowered by law to render the decree entered? In answer, the
government relies upon the proposition established by
The
Western Maid, 257 U. S. 419,
that the collision inflicted no legal wrong upon the
Thekla, and the further proposition that, generally
speaking, a claim that would not constitute a cause of action
against the sovereign cannot be asserted as a counterclaim,
Illinois Central R. Co. v. State Public Utilities Commission of
Illinois, 245 U. S. 493,
245 U. S.
504-505;
see also Nassau Smelting & Refining
Works v. United States, ante, p.
266 U. S. 101, and
that a cross-libel is governed by the same rule,
Washington-Southern Navigation Co. v. Baltimore &
Philadelphia Steamboat Co., 263 U. S. 629.
We do not qualify the foregoing decisions in any way, but
nevertheless are of opinion that the district court had power to
enter a decree for damages. When the United States comes into Court
to assert a claim, it so
Page 266 U. S. 340
far takes the position of a private suitor as to agree by
implication that justice may be done with regard to the subject
matter. The absence of legal liability in a case where, but for its
sovereignty, it would be liable does not destroy the justice of the
claim against it. When the question concerns what would be
paramount claims against a vessel libelled by the United States
were the vessel in other hands, the moral right of the claimant is
recognized.
The Western Maid, 257 U.
S. 419,
257 U. S.
433-434;
The Siren, 7
Wall. 152;
The Athol, 1 Wm.Rob. 374, 382. The doubt in
this case arises not from the absence of a maritime lien, but from
the fact that the counterclaim is not against the
Thekla
libelled by the United States, but for affirmative relief against a
different vessel, the
F. J. Luckenbach. There certainly is
a strong argument for regarding this claim as standing no better
than those dealt with in the cases cited by the government. But we
are of opinion that this is to construe the submission of the
United States too narrowly. A collision involves two vessels. The
trial of such cases in the ordinary course is upon libel and
cross-libel, consolidated under authority of statute. Rev.Stats.
§ 921;
The North Star, 106 U. S.
17. If both parties were in fault, the entire damage
would be divided equally between them, and it could not be argued
that the United States could avoid the consequences of the rule
although the damage to the other vessel might bar its recovering
anything. This shows that the subject matter is the collision,
rather than the vessel first libelled.
Bowker v. United
States, 186 U. S. 135,
186 U. S. 139.
The libel in such a case is like a bill for an account, which
imports an offer to pay the balance if it should turn out against
the party bringing the bill.
Colombian Government v.
Rothschild, 1 Sim. 94, 103;
Goldthwait v. Day, 149
Mass. 185.
The reasons that have prevailed against creating a government
liability in tort do not apply to a case like
Page 266 U. S. 341
this, and, on the other hand, the reasons are strong for not
obstructing the application of natural justice against the
government by technical formulas when justice can be done without
endangering any public interest. As has been said in other cases,
the question of damages to the colliding vessel necessarily arose,
and it is reasonable for the Court to proceed to the determination
of all the questions legitimately involved, even when it results in
a judgment for damages against the United States.
United States
v. The Nuestra Senora de Regla, 108 U. S.
92;
The Paquete Habana, 189 U.
S. 453,
189 U. S.
465-466. We gather that our conclusion accords with the
opinion of the English Courts.
The Newbattle, 10 P.D. 33.
The Tervaete, L.R. P.D. [1922] 259, 272. It is said that
there is no statute by which the government accepted this
liability. It joined in the suit, and that carried with it the
acceptance of whatever liability the courts may decide to be
reasonably incident to that act.
It follows from what has been said, without the need of going
further, that the stipulation ordered before the United States made
itself a party, is valid, and that interest and costs can be
recovered from the Fleet Corporation.
See Sloan Shipyards Corp.
v. United States Shipping Board Emergency Fleet Corporation,
258 U. S. 549.
Interest was allowed against the United States in
Nuestra
Senora de Regla and the
Paquete Habana, supra, and
interest and costs by the judgment affirmed in
Porto Rico v.
Ramos, 232 U. S. 627.
Answer to Question 1: Yes.