1. A Regional Agricultural Credit Corporation, chartered by the
Reconstruction Finance Corporation by authority of § 201(e) of
the Emergency Relief and Construction Act of 1932, and which, under
that statute, is government-financed and managed and empowered to
make loans to farmers and stockmen for agricultural purposes or for
raising and marketing livestock
held subject to suit. Pp.
306 U. S. 392
et seq.
Neither the statute nor the charter explicitly rendered the
Credit Corporation amenable to suit, but, among the corporate
powers granted the Finance Corporation by the Act creating it was
authority "to sue and be sued, to complain and to defend, in any
court of competent jurisdiction, state or federal."
2. Whether a governmental corporation is endowed with the
Government's immunity from suit depends upon the congressional
purpose in creating it. P.
306 U. S. 388.
Immunity is not necessarily to be inferred from the fact that
the corporation is doing the Government's work, or from the
omission of the conventional sue-and-be-sued clause from its
charter.
3. Liability to suit of Regional Agricultural Credit
Corporations, chartered through the Reconstruction Finance
Corporation, is to be inferred from the numerous instances in which
Congress, when creating other corporations for purposes not
relevantly different from those of the Credit Corporations, has
expressly included authority to sue and be sued. This uniform
practice reveals a
Page 306 U. S. 382
definite policy which should be given hospitable scope. Failure
to include express authority to sue and be sue in the exceptional
case of the Credit Corporations is explained by an assumption on
the part of Congress that that authority would pass to them from
the Reconstruction Corporation already endowed with it. P.
306 U. S.
390.
4. Recovery against a Regional Agricultural Credit Corporation
for damages resulting from its negligence in failing to provide
proper care for livestock delivered to it under a contract of
bailment may be had in contract. P.
306 U. S.
394.
5. In the light of recent congressional legislation, liability
of a government corporation empowered generally "to sue and be
sued" is not confined to suits sounding only in contract. P.
306 U. S.
396.
97 F.2d 812 reversed.
Certiorari, 305 U.S. 588, to review the affirmance of a judgment
of the District Court (22 F.Supp. 918) dismissing on demurrer an
action for damages against the two federal corporations above
named. The question brought up by the certiorari concerns only the
claim advanced for the Regional Agricultural Credit Corporation
that it is immune from suit.
Page 306 U. S. 387
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Court took this case for review because an important
question of federal law called for settlement, particularly in view
of a conflict between the court below and the Supreme Court of
Minnesota.
Casper v. Regional Agricultural Credit
Corporation, 202 Minn. 433, 278 N.W. 896. The question is
whether a Regional Agricultural Credit Corporation, in the
circumstances presently to be stated, is immune from suit.
On July 21, 1932, Congress enlarged the powers of the
Reconstruction Finance Corporation (hereafter called
"Reconstruction") established early that year, Act of January 22,
1932, c. 8, 47 Stat. 5, by authorizing it, among other things, to
create regional agricultural credit corporations "in any of the
twelve Federal land-bank districts." Emergency Relief and
Construction Act of 1932, § 201(e), c. 520, 47 Stat. 709, 713.
Each corporation was to have a paid-up capital of not less than
$3,000,000 to be subscribed for by Reconstruction, was to be
managed by appointees of Reconstruction, and was empowered to make
loans to farmers and stockmen for agricultural purposes or for
raising and marketing livestock. Accordingly, on September 10,
1932, Reconstruction chartered the Regional Agricultural Credit
Corporation of Sioux City, Iowa (hereafter called "Regional").
Regional, in due exercise of its powers, entered into so-called
cattle feeding contracts, whereby it undertook to provide
sufficient feed and water for livestock with appropriate security
for rendering these services. Failure through negligence to provide
proper care for cattle delivered under this arrangement, with
resulting damage to the livestock, is the basis of this suit
brought by petitioner, plaintiff below, against Reconstruction and
Regional. Both defendants
Page 306 U. S. 388
demurred on several grounds, of which challenge to the
jurisdiction of the court is alone pertinent here. The District
Court sustained the demurrers and dismissed the suit. 22 F. Supp.
918. The Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed, holding for
Reconstruction because its control of Regional had been transferred
by Executive Order (No. 6084, dated March 27, 1933, effective May
27, 1933) to the Farm Credit Administration prior to the alleged
cause of action, and for Regional because it was found immune from
suit. 97 F.2d 812. Certiorari was granted directed solely to the
latter issue. 305 U.S. 588.
The starting point of inquiry is the immunity from unconsented
suit of the government itself. As to the states, legal
irresponsibility was written into the Eleventh Amendment; as to the
United States, it is derived by implication.
Principality of
Monaco v. Mississippi, 292 U. S. 313,
292 U. S. 321.
For present purposes, it is academic to consider whether this
exceptional freedom from legal responsibility rests on the theory
that the United States is deemed the institutional descendant of
the Crown, enjoying its immunity but not its historic prerogatives,
cf. Langford v. United States, 101 U.
S. 341,
101 U. S. 343,
or on a metaphysical doctrine "that there can be no legal right as
against the authority that makes the law on which the right
depends."
Kawananakoa v. Polyblank, 205 U.
S. 349,
205 U. S. 353.
But because the doctrine gives the government a privileged
position, it has been appropriately confined. [
Footnote 1]
Therefore, the government does not become the conduit of its
immunity in suits against its agents or instrumentalities merely
because they do its work.
United States v. Lee,
106 U. S. 196,
106 U. S. 213,
106 U. S. 221;
Sloan
Shipyards
Page 306 U. S. 389
v. U.S. Fleet Corp., 258 U. S. 549,
258 U. S. 567.
For more than a hundred years, corporations have been used as
agencies for doing work of the government. Congress may create
them
"as appropriate means of executing the powers of government, as,
for instance, . . . a railroad corporation, for the purpose of
promoting commerce among the states."
Luxton v. North River Bridge Co., 153 U.
S. 525,
153 U. S. 529.
But this would not confer on such corporations legal immunity even
if the conventional "to sue and be sued" clause were omitted. In
the context of modern thought and practice regarding the use of
corporate facilities, such a clause is not a ritualistic formula
which alone can engender liability like unto indispensable words of
early common law, such as "
warrantizo" or "to A and his
heirs," for which there were no substitutes and without which
desired legal consequences could not be wrought. Littleton, Tenures
(Wambaugh ed.) §§ 1, 733.
Congress may, of course, endow a governmental corporation with
the government's immunity. But always the question is: has it done
so?
Federal Land Bank v. Priddy, 295 U.
S. 229,
295 U. S. 231.
Cf. Helvering v. Gerhardt, 304 U.
S. 405,
304 U. S.
411-412n. This is our present problem. Has Congress
endowed Regional with immunity in the circumstances which enveloped
its creation? It is not a textual problem, for Congress has not
expressed its will in words. Congress may not even have had any
consciousness of intention. The Congressional will must be divined,
and by a process of interpretation which, in effect, is the
ascertainment of policy immanent not merely in the single statute
from which flow the rights and responsibilities of Regional, but in
a series of statutes utilizing corporations for governmental
purposes and drawing significance from dominant contemporaneous
opinion regarding the immunity of governmental agencies from
suit.
Page 306 U. S. 390
Because of the advantages enjoyed by the corporate device
compared with conventional executive agencies, the exigencies of
war and the enlarged scope of government in economic affairs have
greatly extended the use of independent corporate facilities for
governmental ends. [
Footnote 2]
In spawning these corporations during the past two decades,
Congress has uniformly included amenability to law. Congress has
provided for not less than forty of such corporations discharging
governmental functions, and, without exception, the authority "to
sue and be sued" was included. [
Footnote 3] Such a firm practice is partly
Page 306 U. S. 391
an indication of the present climate of opinion which has
brought governmental immunity from suit into disfavor, partly it
reveals a definite attitude on the part of Congress which should be
given hospitable scope. [
Footnote
4] It is noteworthy that the oldest surviving government
corporation -- the Smithsonian Institution -- has several times
been in the law courts, even in the absence of explicit authority
and although the general feeling regarding
Page 306 U. S. 392
governmental immunity was very different in 1846 from what it
has become in our own day. 9 Stat. 102.
Smithsonian Institution
v. Meech, 169 U. S. 398;
Smithsonian Institution v. St. John, 214 U. S.
19.
Only two instances have been brought to the Court's attention in
which Congress has not explicitly rendered its recent corporate
creations amenable to suit. These are the Regionals and the Federal
Savings and Loan Associations. 48 Stat. 128, 132-134. It is
significant that neither of these classes of corporations was the
direct emanation of Congress or the offspring of a general
incorporation law under Congressional authority.
Sloan
Shipyards v. U.S. Fleet Corp., supra. Each was to come into
being through an organ that had theretofore been created by
Congress. We put the Federal Savings and Loan Associations to one
side, because they are not now before the Court. [
Footnote 5] But the circumstances attending
the origination of Regional make it manifest that it was within the
considerations that have uniformly led Congress to make its
immediate corporate creatures subject to suit. The genesis,
functions, and affiliations of Regional all negative the assumption
that in its operations it was to be without the law.
Reconstruction is the parent of Regional. When creating it,
Congress gave Reconstruction various general corporate powers,
including authority "to sue and be sued, to complain and to defend,
in any court of competent jurisdiction, State or Federal." 47 Stat.
5, 6. When later Congress authorized Reconstruction to create these
Regional Agricultural Credit Corporations, it did so by
Page 306 U. S. 393
outlining in a single section of a comprehensive statute the
broad scope of this added power for Reconstruction. 47 Stat. 709,
713. [
Footnote 6] Congress
naturally assumed that the general corporate powers to which it had
given particularity in the original statute establishing
Reconstruction would flow automatically to the Regionals from the
source of their being. Such, certainly, has been the practical
construction of the Regional Agricultural Credit Corporations in
the instinctive pursuit of their enterprise.
See, e.g.,
Hallenbeck v. Regional Agricultural Credit Corp., 47 Ariz.
477, 56 P.2d 1041;
Regional Agricultural Credit Corp. v.
Elston, Prince & McDade, 183 So. 91.
Cf. Lewis v.
Regional Agricultural Credit Corp., 92 F.2d 1008. To imply for
Regionals a unique legal position compared with those corporations
to whose purposes Regional is so closely allied [
Footnote 7] is to infer Congressional
idiosyncrasy. There is a much more sensible explanation for the
failure of Congress to bring Regional by express terms within its
emphatic practice not to confer sovereign immunity upon these
government corporations. Congress had a right to assume that the
characteristic energies for corporate enterprise with which
Page 306 U. S. 394
a few months previously it had endowed Reconstruction would now
radiate through Reconstruction to Regional.
To give Regional an immunity denied to more than two score
corporations, each designed for a purpose of government not
relevantly different from that which occasioned the creation of
Regional, is to impute to Congress a desire for incoherence in a
body of affiliated enactments and for drastic legal differentiation
where policy justifies none. A fair judgment of the statute in its
entire setting relieves us from making such an imputation of
caprice.
The legal position of Regional is therefore the same as though
Congress had expressly empowered it "to sue and be sued." The scope
of this liability remains to be explored.
Regional claims immunity, in any event, because Congress has not
subjected it to suit "in tort." It is assumed that the present
action is not one upon a contract, express or implied, and
therefore outside the purview of "to sue and be sued." The premise
is not valid, nor does the conclusion follow.
The transaction which gave rise to the controversy was a
bailment of livestock for hire, and the cause of action lack of
reasonable diligence by the bailee. Ever since the fifteenth
century, according to Maitland, there were "actions against bailees
for negligence in the custody of goods intrusted to them, and here
also it was necessary to allege an assumpsit" -- the having
undertaken to do something. Maitland, Equity, Lecture VI, pp. 362,
363; Maitland, The Forms of Action at Common Law, Lecture VI, pp.
68, 69. That Regional's failure properly to feed and water the
livestock entrusted to it by the cattle feeding contract was not a
wrong disassociated from carrying out the very transaction which
brought it into existence is evident from the recognized liability
of the United States itself as lessee and bailee even under the
Page 306 U. S. 395
explicit restrictions of the Court of Claims Acts. [
Footnote 8] Both this Court and the
Court of Claims have sustained actions not dissimilar from the
present. They have recognized that the breach of implied duty of a
lessee "not to commit waste, or suffer it to be committed,"
United States v. Bostwick, 94 U. S.
53,
94 U. S. 68, and
of a bailee not to neglect "to exercise ordinary care and skill,"
Gulf Transit Co. v. United States, 43 Ct.Cls. 183, 199,
are duties that have their source in contract even though the
guilty agents may be merely tortfeasors. To be sure, the common law
fiction of waiving the tort and suing in assumpsit cannot be used
as an evasion of the limited liability created by the Court of
Claims Acts.
Bigby v. United States, 188 U.
S. 400;
United States v. Minnesota Mut. Investment
Co., 271 U. S. 212,
271 U. S. 217.
But where the wrong really derives from an undertaking, to stand on
the undertaking and to disregard the tort is not to invoke a
fictive agreement. It merely recognizes a choice of procedural
vindications open to the injured party.
To assume that Congress, in subjecting these recently created
governmental corporations to suit, meant to enmesh them in these
procedural entanglements would do violence to Congressional
purpose. When it chose to do so, Congress knew well enough how to
restrict its consent to suits sounding only in contract, even with
all the controversies in recondite procedural learning that this
might entail. It did so with increasing particularity in the
successive Court of Claims Acts. 10 Stat. 612, 24 Stat. 505, 28
U.S.C. §§ 41(20), 250(1). In the light of these statutes,
it ought not to be assumed that, when
Page 306 U. S. 396
Congress consented "to suit" without qualification, the effect
is the same as though it had written "in suits on contract, express
or implied, in cases not sounding in tort." No such distinction was
made by Congress, and no such interpolation into statutes has been
made in cases affecting government corporations incorporated under
state law or that of the District of Columbia. [
Footnote 9] There is equally no warrant for
importing such a distinction here. To do so would make application
of a steadily growing policy of governmental liability contingent
upon irrelevant procedural factors. These, in our law, are still
deeply rooted in historical accidents to which the expanding
conceptions of public morality regarding governmental
responsibility should not be subordinated.
Congress has embarked upon a generous policy of consent for
suits against the government sounding in tort even where there is
no element of contract. It has sanctioned suits for patent
infringement, 36 Stat. 851, provided for compensation for the
disability or death of a government employee "while in the
performance of his duty," 39 Stat. 742, authorized payment for
damage to property by the Army Air Service, 41 Stat. 109. These and
other public statutes and many private bills were founded on
considerations thus generalized in a Report of the Senate Committee
on Claims:
"In other words, it may be said that Congress has recognized the
general liability of the Government within maximum amounts for the
negligence of officers and employees of the United States, but the
machinery for determining that liability is defective, and results
in overburdening the Claims Committee of Congress and Congress
itself with the consideration of tort liability claims and with
injuries to the claimants. "
Page 306 U. S. 397
"This proposed legislation is designed to relieve the situation
by utilizing the machinery of the Accounting Office and judicial
branches of the Government in the assistance of Congress."
Senate Report No. 1699, 70th Cong., 2d Sess., p. 4.
See
also Senate Report No. 658, 72d Cong., 1st Sess., p. 3.
Acting on these views, Congress passed a general court of claims
bill, which, however at the close of the session, failed of
enactment by President Coolidge's pocket veto. H.R. 9285, 70th
Cong., 2d Sess.; 70 Cong.Rec. 4836. [
Footnote 10] Congress has thus clearly manifested an
attitude which serves as a guide to the scope of liability implicit
in the general authority it has conferred on governmental
corporations to sue and be sued. We should be denying the recent
trend of Congressional policy to relieve Regional from liability.
This compels us to reverse the judgment of the court below.
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
See Professor Borchard's bibliography in (1934) 20
A.B.A.J. 747, 748, and the collection of authorities in Judge
Mack's opinion in
The Pesaro, 277 F. 473,
rev'd,
271 U. S. 271 U.S.
562.
[
Footnote 2]
See Thurston, Government Proprietary Corporations; Van
Dorn, Government Owned Corporations; McDiarmid, Government
Corporations and Federal Funds; Field, Government Corporations: A
Proposal (1935) 48 Harv.L.Rev. 775; McIntyre, Government
Corporations as Administrative Agencies: An Approach (1936) 4
Geo.Wash.L.Rev. 161.
[
Footnote 3]
The American Legion, 41 Stat. 284, 285; Foreign Banking
Corporations, 41 Stat. 378, 379; China Trade Act Corporation, 42
Stat. 849, 851; Belleau Wood Memorial Association, 42 Stat. 1441;
Federal Intermediate Credit Banks, 42 Stat. 1454, 1455; National
Agricultural Credit Corporations, 42 Stat. 1454, 1462; The Grand
Army of the Republic, 43 Stat. 358, 359; Inland Waterways
Corporation, 43 Stat. 360, 362; The United States Blind Veterans of
the World War, 43 Stat. 535, 536; American War Mothers, 43 Stat.
966, 967; Textile Foundation, 46 Stat. 539, 540; Reconstruction
Finance Corporation, 47 Stat. 5, 6; Disabled American Veterans of
the World War, 47 Stat. 320, 321; Federal Home Loan Bank, 47 Stat.
725, 735; Tennessee Valley Authority, 48 Stat. 58, 60; Corporation
of Foreign Security Holders, 48 Stat. 92, 93; Home Owners' Loan
Corporation, 48 Stat. 128, 129; Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, 48 Stat. 162, 172; Production Credit Corporations,
Production Credit Associations, Central Bank for Cooperatives,
Regional Banks for Cooperatives, 48 Stat. 257, 266; Federal Farm
Mortgage Corporations, 48 Stat. 344, 345; Cairo Bridge Commission,
48 Stat. 577, 581; Port Arthur Bridge Commission, 48 Stat. 1008,
1009; Federal Credit Union, 48 Stat. 1216, 1218; Federal Savings
& Loan Insurance Corporation, 48 Stat. 1246, 1256; National
Mortgage Associations, 48 Stat. 1246, 1253; American National
Theater and Academy, 49 Stat. 457, 458; Federal Housing
Administrator, 49 Stat. 684, 722; Veterans of Foreign Wars of the
United States, 49 Stat. 1390, 1391; Disaster Loan Corporation, 50
Stat. 19; Farmers' Home Corporation, 50 Stat. 527; Marine Corps
League, 50 Stat. 558, 559; Owensboro Bridge Commission, 50 Stat.
641, 645; Southeastern University, 50 Stat. 697, 698; American
Chemical Society, 50 Stat. 798, 799, 800 (
semble); United
States Housing Authority, 50 Stat. 888, 889, 890; Federal Corp
Insurance Corporation, 52 Stat. 72, 73; Niagara Falls Bridge
Commission, 52 Stat. 767, 770.
This list does not include, of course, the government
corporations chartered under general state or District of Columbia
incorporation laws.
Sloan Shipyards Corp. v. U.S. Shipping
Board Emergency Fleet Corp., supra.
[
Footnote 4]
Mr. Justice Holmes, on Circuit, gave pioneer expression to
inferences to be drawn from legislative policy. "A statute," he
wrote in
Johnson v. United States, 163 F. 30, 32,
"may indicate or require as its justification a change in the
policy of the law, although it expresses that change only in the
specific cases most likely to occur to the mind. The Legislature
has the power to decide what the policy of the law shall be, and if
it has intimated its will, however indirectly, that will should be
recognized and obeyed. The major premise of the conclusion
expressed in a statute, the change of policy that induces the
enactment, may not be set out in terms, but it is not an adequate
discharge of duty for courts to say: we see what you are driving
at, but you have not said it, and therefore we shall go on as
before."
See also Taft, C.J., in
United Mine Workers v.
Coronado Coal Co., 259 U. S. 344,
259 U. S.
385-389; Sutherland, J., in
Funk v. United
States, 290 U. S. 371,
290 U. S. 381;
Cardozo, J., in
Van Beeck v. Sabine Towing Co.,
300 U. S. 342,
300 U. S.
350-351; Lord Birkenhead, L.C., in
Bourne v.
Keane, [1919] A.C. 815, 830; Landis, Statutes and the Sources
of Law, Harvard Legal Essays, p. 213. Stone, The Common Law in the
United States (1936), 50 Harv.L.Rev. 4, 13; Landis, Statutes and
the Sources of Law, Harvard Legal Essays, p. 213.
[
Footnote 5]
It is to be noted that the progenitor of these Associations --
the Federal Home Loan Bank Board -- is not itself a corporation.
But see Sloan Shipyards Corp. v. U.S. Fleet Corp., supra,
in which the Fleet Corporation was found subject to suit although
Congress authorized its creation through the President.
[
Footnote 6]
Section 201(e) of the statute, providing for Regional
Agricultural Credit Corporations, covers less than half a page of a
fifteen-page statute.
[
Footnote 7]
See, e.g., Federal Land Banks, 39 Stat. 360, 363; Joint
Stock Land Banks, 39 Stat. 360, 374; Federal Intermediate Credit
Banks, 42 Stat. 1454, 1455; National Agricultural Credit
Corporations, 42 Stat. 1454, 1462; Production Credit Corporations,
Production Credit Associations, Central Bank for Cooperatives,
Regional Banks for Cooperatives, 48 Stat. 257, 266; Federal Farm
Mortgage Corporations, 48 Stat. 344, 345; National Mortgage
Associations, 48 Stat. 1246, 1253. Congress itself recognized the
identity of purpose in these various corporations. 48 Stat. 267,
268. Note, too, that Production Credit Corporations, successors to
Regional Agricultural Credit Corporations, are subject to suit. 48
Stat. 257, 266.
[
Footnote 8]
The Act of February 24, 1855 (10 Stat. 612), establishing the
Court of Claims allowed suit for claims "upon any contract, express
or implied. . . ." The Act of March 3, 1887 (24 Stat. 505) allowed
suits for claims "upon any contract, express or implied . . . or
for damages, liquidated or unliquidated, in cases not sounding in
tort. . . ."
See 28 U.S.C. §§ 41(20),
250(1).
[
Footnote 9]
The cases are collected in Thurston, Government Proprietary
Corporations (1935) 21 Va.L.Rev. 351, 378
et seq.
[
Footnote 10]
That objections to the administrative features of the bill were
the probable reasons for the veto is indicated by a memorandum of
Attorney General Sargent, for which
see McGuire, Tort
Claims against the United States (1931) 19 Geo.L.J. 133, 134,
135.