1. In a suit in a Federal District Court against respondent in
his official capacity as Paymaster General of the Navy, petitioner
obtained a judgment directing respondent to pay her the death
gratuity provided by 34 U.S.C. § 943 for the widow of a member
of the naval service. After respondent had retired and his
successor had taken office, an appeal was taken in respondent's
name. Six months having elapsed since respondent's retirement
without any effort's being made to have respondent's successor in
office substituted as a party, the Court of Appeals ruled that the
action had abated, and it vacated the judgment and remanded the
cause to the District Court with directions to dismiss the
complaint.
Held: this was a proper application of § 11(a) of
the Judiciary Act of 1925, 43 Stat. 936. Pp.
340 U. S.
16-22.
(a) Section 11(a) of the Judiciary Act of 1925 made survival of
the action dependent on a timely substitution. P.
340 U. S.
19.
(b) This was a declared policy of Congress, not to be altered by
an agreement of the parties or by some theory of estoppel. P.
340 U. S.
19.
(c) The application of § 11(a) did not turn on whether the
judgment rendered prior to the death or resignation of the official
was for or against the plaintiff. P.
340 U. S.
19.
(d) Section 11(a) is not limited to actions brought against
officials for remedies which could not be obtained in direct suits
against the United States. P.
340 U. S.
20.
(e) An action is nonetheless pending within the meaning of
§ 11(a) though an appeal is being sought -- even when, as in
this case, the appeal was taken after the retirement of the
official, and therefore without authority. Pp.
340 U. S.
20-21.
(f) Since the suit had abated in the District Court, there was
no way of substituting the successor on remand of the present case.
Therefore, vacating the judgment of the District Court was the
proper procedure for the Court of Appeals. P.
340 U. S.
21.
2. Since the absence of a necessary party and the statutory
barrier to substitution "involve jurisdiction," 28 U.S.C. §
2105 did not prohibit this Court's review of the ruling below on
abatement. Pp.
340 U. S.
21-22.
85 U.S.App.D.C. 428, 179 F.2d 466, affirmed.
Page 340 U. S. 16
No substitution of parties having been made under § 11(a)
of the Judiciary Act of 1925, 43 Stat. 936, within six months after
his retirement, the Court of Appeals vacated a judgment against
respondent in his official capacity of Paymaster General of the
Navy. 85 U.S.App.D.C. 428, 179 F.2d 466. This Court granted
certiorari. 339 U.S. 951.
Affirmed, p.
340 U. S.
22.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioner sued in the District Court for a death gratuity under
the Act of June 4, 1920, 41 Stat. 824, as amended, 34 U.S.C. §
943, claiming as the widow of a member of the naval service.
Respondent, the defendant in the suit, was Paymaster General of the
Navy. The relief asked was mandamus to compel him to pay the
widow's allowance. The District Court held for petitioner, ordering
respondent to pay her the amount of the allowance. That judgment
was entered January 30, 1948.
75 F. Supp.
902. On March 18, 1948, notice of appeal was filed in the name
of Rear Admiral W. A. Buck, Paymaster General of the Navy. On March
1, 1948, however, Buck had been retired and Rear Admiral Edwin D.
Foster had succeeded him in the office.
Section 11(a) of the Judiciary Act of 1925, 43 Stat. 936, 941,
provided that,
". . . where, during the pendency of an action . . . brought by
or against an officer of the United States . . . and relating to
the present or future discharge of his official duties, such
officer dies, resigns, or otherwise ceases to hold such office, it
shall
Page 340 U. S. 17
be competent for the court wherein the action, suit, or
proceeding is pending, whether the court be one of first instance
or an appellate tribunal, to permit the cause to be continued and
maintained by or against the successor in office of such officer
if, within six months after his death or separation from the
office, it be satisfactorily shown to the court that there is a
substantial need for so continuing and maintaining the cause and
obtaining an adjudication of the questions involved. [
Footnote 1]"
Neither party made any effort within the six months period
[
Footnote 2] to have Buck's
successor in office substituted for him. The Court of Appeals
therefore ruled that the
Page 340 U. S. 18
action had abated; it then vacated the judgment and remanded the
cause to the District Court with directions to dismiss the
complaint. 85 U.S.App.D.C. 428, 179 F.2d 466.
The complaint in this case makes no claim against Buck
personally. Therefore, we put to one side cases such as
Patton
v. Brady, 184 U. S. 608,
dealing with actions in assumpsit against collectors for taxes
erroneously collected. The writ that issued against Buck related to
a duty attaching to the office. The duty existed so long and only
so long as the office was held. When Buck retired from office, his
power to perform ceased. He no longer had any authority over death
gratuity allowances. Moreover, his successor might on demand
recognize the claim asserted and discharge his duty. For these
reasons, it was held that, in absence of a statute, an action aimed
at compelling an official to discharge his official duties abated
where the official died or retired from the office. [
Footnote 3]
See
Secretary of Interior
v. McGarrahan, 9 Wall. 298,
76 U. S. 313;
United States v.
Boutwell, 17 Wall. 604,
84 U. S.
607-608;
Warner Valley Stock Co. v. Smith,
165 U. S. 28,
165 U. S. 31;
United States ex rel. Bernardin v. Butterworth,
169 U. S. 600.
Congress changed the rule. It provided by the Act of February 8,
1899, 30 Stat. 822, that no action by or against a federal officer
in his official capacity or in relation to the discharge of his
official duties should abate
Page 340 U. S. 19
because of his death or resignation, and it provided a period in
which substitution could be made. [
Footnote 4]
See LeCrone v. McAdoo, 253 U.
S. 217; H.R.Rep. No.960, 55th Cong., 2d Sess.
The rule was again changed by § 11 of the Judiciary Act of
1925. The provision that no action should abate was eliminated. It
was provided that the action might be continued against the
successor on the requisite showing within the stated period. The
revision effected a substantial change. The 1925 Act made survival
of the action dependent on a timely substitution.
Defense
Supplies Corp. v.Lawrence Co., 336 U.
S. 631,
336 U. S.
637-638.
And see Ex parte La Prade,
289 U. S. 444,
289 U. S. 456.
Thus, where there was a failure to move for substitution within the
statutory period, the judgment below was vacated and the cause was
remanded with directions "to dismiss the cause as abated."
[
Footnote 5]
United States
ex rel. Claussen v. Curran, 276 U.S. 590-591;
Mathues v.
United States ex rel. Cunningham, 282 U.S. 802. This was a
declared policy of Congress not to be altered by an agreement of
the parties, [
Footnote 6] or by
some theory of estoppel. Nor did the application of § 11 turn
on whether the judgment rendered prior to the death or resignation
of the official was for or against the plaintiff. The inability of
one who no longer holds the office to perform any of the
official
Page 340 U. S. 20
duties would indeed only be emphasized by the rendition of the
coercive judgment.
It is argued that § 11 should be read as covering only
those "actions brought against officials for remedies which could
not be got in a direct suit against the United States." Such a
reading requires more than a tailoring of the Act; it requires a
full alteration. Section 11 applies to
"an action . . . brought by or against an officer of the United
States . . . and relating to the present or future discharge of his
official duties."
Many actions against an official relating to the "discharge of
his official duties" would in substance be suits against the United
States. If the rule of abatement and substitution is to be altered
in the manner suggested, the amending process is available for that
purpose.
Section 11, by its terms, applies only during the pendency of an
action. But an action is nonetheless pending within the meaning of
the section though an appeal is being sought,
see Becker Steel
Co. v. Hicks, 66 F.2d 497, 499;
United States ex rel.
Trinler v. Carusi, 168 F.2d 1014, as was implicit in
Mathues v. United States ex rel. Cunningham, supra. For,
in that case, a writ of habeas corpus, denied by the District
Court, had been granted by the Circuit Court of Appeals. While the
case was in the Circuit Court of Appeals, the time expired for
substituting the successor of the custodian against whom the
prisoner had brought the action. Yet, as noted above, the Court
applied § 11, vacated the judgments, and ordered the
proceeding dismissed as abated.
There is a difference in the present case by reason of the fact
that the appeal was taken by Buck after his retirement, and
therefore without authority. The judgment concerned the performance
of official duties for which Buck was no longer responsible. Hence,
he was not in position to obtain a review of it.
See Davis v.
Preston, 280 U. S. 406. In
the
Davis case, this Court
Page 340 U. S. 21
dismissed a writ of certiorari granted under such circumstances.
The argument is that the Court of Appeals should have done no more
in the present case. The difference is that the
Davis case
was a suit against the Federal Agent under the Federal Employers'
Liability Act, 35 Stat. 65, in which a judgment was rendered
against him. An Act of Congress made special provision for
substitution in those cases. [
Footnote 7] The Court, however, held that this statute did
not affect in any manner the appellate jurisdiction of this Court.
But that Act preserved those judgments against abatement by reason
of the death or retirement of the Federal Agent, and allowed
substitution at any time before satisfaction of the judgment.
Therefore, on remand of the cause in the
Davis case, the
successor Federal Agent could be substituted, and the judgment
enforced against him. On remand of the present cause, there would
be no way of substituting the successor, as the suit had abated in
the District Court. Vacating the judgment of the District Court was
therefore the proper procedure.
Nor is there any barrier to our review of this ruling on
abatement by 28 U.S.C. § 2105, which prohibits a
Page 340 U. S. 22
reversal by the Court of Appeals or this Court for error in
ruling upon matters in abatement "which do not involve
jurisdiction." The absence of a necessary party and the statutory
barrier to substitution go to jurisdiction.
Petitioner loses her judgment, and must start over.
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
Rule 19(4) of the Rules of this Court provides that, in such
cases,
"the matter of abatement and substitution is covered by section
11 of the Act of February 13, 1925. Under that section, a
substitution of the successor in office may be effected only where
a satisfactory showing is made within six months after the death or
separation from office."
[
Footnote 2]
This section was repealed as of September 1, 1948, 62 Stat. 992,
1000. It is argued that, since that date was the date on which the
6 months statutory period for substitution in this case expired,
and since the repealing Act preserved any rights or liabilities
existing under any of the repealed laws (
id., 992), §
11 governs this case. We need not reach the effect of the repealing
Act. For the Court of Appeals, during the period material to our
problem, had in force its Rule 28(b), which provided that abatement
and substitution were governed by § 11 of the 1925 Act.
Rule 25(d), Rules of Civil Procedure, now provides:
"When an officer of the United States, or of the District of
Columbia, the Canal Zone, a territory, an insular possession, a
state, county, city, or other governmental agency, is a party to an
action and during its pendency dies, resigns, or otherwise ceases
to hold office, the action may be continued and maintained by or
against his successor, if within 6 months after the successor takes
office it is satisfactorily shown to the court that there is a
substantial need for so continuing and maintaining it. Substitution
pursuant to this rule may be made when it is shown by supplemental
pleading that the successor of an officer adopts or continues or
threatens to adopt or continue the action of his predecessor in
enforcing a law averred to be in violation of the Constitution of
the United States. Before a substitution is made, the party or
officer to be affected, unless expressly assenting thereto, shall
be given reasonable notice of the application therefor and accorded
an opportunity to object."
[
Footnote 3]
An exception was a suit to enforce an obligation of the
corporation or municipality to which the office was attached.
See Thompson v. United States, 103 U.
S. 480,
103 U. S. 483,
as explained in
United States ex rel. Bernardin v. Butterworth,
supra, at
169 U. S. 603,
and in
Murphy v. Utter, 186 U. S. 95,
186 U. S.
101-102.
[
Footnote 4]
See note 5
infra.
[
Footnote 5]
Under the earlier Act, the passage of the period within which
substitution could be made resulted in the proceeding being "at an
end."
LeCrone v. McAdoo, supra, at p.
253 U. S. 219. The
practice of this Court was therefore to dismiss the writ, leaving
undisturbed the judgments below.
LeCrone v. McAdoo, supra;
United States ex rel. Wattis v. Lane, 255 U.S. 566;
Payne
v. Industrial Board, 258 U.S. 613;
Payne v. Stevens,
260 U.S. 705.
[
Footnote 6]
In
United States ex rel. Claussen v. Curran, supra, and
Mathues v. United States ex rel. Cunningham, supra, the
Solicitor General had expressed willingness for the successor to be
substituted though the statutory period had expired.
[
Footnote 7]
The Act of March 3, 1923, 42 Stat. 1443, provided in part:
"That section 206 of the Transportation Act, 1920, is amended by
adding at the end thereof two new subdivisions to read as
follows:"
" (h) Actions, suits, proceedings, and reparation claims, of the
character described in subdivision (a), (c), or (d), properly
commenced within the period of limitation prescribed, and pending
at the time this subdivision takes effect, shall not abate by
reason of the death, expiration of term of office, retirement,
resignation, or removal from office of the Director General of
Railroads or the agent designated under subdivision (a), but may
(despite the provisions of the Act entitled 'An Act to prevent the
abatement of certain actions,' approved February 8, 1899), be
prosecuted to final judgment, decree, or award, substituting at any
time before satisfaction of such final judgment, decree, or award
the agent designated by the President then in office."
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, with whom MR. JUSTICE JACKSON joins,
dissenting.
Natural professional interest in trying to dissentangle the
legal snarl presented by this case would not justify me in
enlarging my dissent from the Court's views. But the state of the
law regarding litigation brought formally against an official but
intrinsically against the Government is so compounded of confusion
and artificialities that an analysis differing from the Court's may
not be futile.
At the outset, it is desirable to dispel a misconception
regarding the legislation on abatement of suits in the federal
courts. In 1899, Congress for the first time made provision for the
continuance of a suit involving official conduct which abated by a
succession in office during pendency of the suit. 30 Stat. 822. By
§ 11 of the Judiciary Act of 1925, Congress again dealt with
this problem. 43 Stat. 936, 941. The Court finds that the provision
of the 1925 Act "effected a substantial change." It does this on
the basis of the analysis of the first enactment made in
Defense Supplies Corp. v. Lawrence Warehouse Co.,
336 U. S. 631,
336 U. S.
637-638. According to what was there said, the Act of
1899 had a categorical command that "no action shall abate," which
was eliminated in 1925. So to interpret the relation between the
1899 and the 1925 provisions is to misread legislation by quoting
out of context and disregarding authoritative legislative
history.
Page 340 U. S. 23
So far as concerns the legal effect upon the pendency of an
action due to change in the occupancy of an office, a reading of
the provisions of the 1899 and 1925 Acts can leave not a shadow of
doubt as to their identity of purpose and procedure for its
accomplishment. The difference between the two acts is a matter of
English, and not of law. In both, Congress assumed that a
proceeding by or against an officer of the United States in
relation to his official conduct would abate unless within a time
certain the court authorized continuance of the proceeding by or
against the successor in office. Only the phrasing of this rule
differs. In the 1899 Act, Congress said that such an action shall
abate unless leave is given for its continuance; in the 1925 Act,
Congress said that, unless leave is given for the continuance of
such a suit it is at an end. To say, as we said in
Defense
Supplies Corp. v.Lawrence Warehouse Co., that the 1899 Act
"categorically" provided that "no action shall abate" is a
mutilating reading. The dominant thought of an enactment controls
the primary import of isolated words. To find that the 1925 Act
"eliminated" this provision has significance only if what is meant
is that certain words of the 1899 Act were "eliminated," while the
thought was retained. The full texts of the two provisions, set
forth in the margin, speak for themselves. [
Footnote 2/1] What emerges is that the two enactments
have essentially the same function regarding
Page 340 U. S. 24
the abatement and mechanism for securing survival of an action
by or against an officer of the United States. The only difference
is that the thought is expressed more felicitously in the later
enactment, as would be expected from Mr. Justice Van Devanter, who,
as is well known, was the chief draftsman of the Judiciary Act of
1925.
The range of the 1899 Act was changed in 1925, which may have
stimulated its redrafting. The change concerned not in the
slightest the legal consequences to pending suits where the
occupancy of an office of the United States was involved. The only
modification made by the 1925 Act, apart from cutting down the time
for substitution
Page 340 U. S. 25
to six months from twelve, was to extend the Act of 1899 so as
to permit the substitution of successors of state and local
officers as well as those of federal officials. The legislative
histories of the 1899 and 1925 enactments, confirming the face of
the legislation, demonstrate that the two enactments were conceived
for the same purpose, were intended to have the same consequences,
and are to be given the same significance, excepting only that the
1925 Act extended the range of applicability.
The Act of 1899 was a response to this Court's suggestion.
See United States ex rel. Bernardin v. Butterworth,
169 U. S. 600,
169 U. S. 605.
[
Footnote 2/2] This was likewise
true of the Act of 1925.
See Irwin v. Wright, 258 U.
S. 219,
258 U. S.
223-224. [
Footnote 2/3]
The opinion in that case was rendered on March 20, 1922, but, while
it was in the bosom of the Court, having been submitted on January
24, Chief Justice Taft sent to Senator Cummins a
resume of
what was known as the "Judges' Bill," which became the Act of 1925.
As to the matter
Page 340 U. S. 26
here under discussion, the Chief Justice said that the proposed
bill
"extends the right now given by statute, to substitute the
successors of certain officers of the United States where the
latter have died, resigned, or otherwise vacated their offices
pending suit, so as to embrace the successors of officers of the
District of Columbia, the Canal Zone, and the Territories and
insular possessions of the United States, as well as of a State or
political subdivision or agency thereof."
Confidential Committee Print entitled "Jurisdiction of Circuit
Courts of Appeals and of the Supreme Court," Senate Committee on
the Judiciary, 67th Cong., 2d Sess. 4. The formulation of what was
thus summarized by Chief Justice Taft is the present § 11, and
that formulation was in the Judges' Bill from the time it was
introduced in the two Houses by Senator Cummins and Congressman
Walsh, respectively, on February 17, 1922. [
Footnote 2/4]
Page 340 U. S. 27
The correctness of the result in
Defense Supplies Corp.
v.Lawrence Warehouse Co., supra, does not depend on the
misconceived relation indicated in its opinion. But it ought not to
form a part of the chain of reasoning in disposing of this case.
Therefore, insofar as § 11 of the Act of 1925 [
Footnote 2/5] is relevant to our present problem,
we must reject the notion that, while, under the 1899 Act such an
action as this, brought against Paymaster General Buck, "did not
abate," the 1925 Act eliminated this "command."
This brings us to the circumstances of the case. The petitioner
claims to be the lawful widow of a naval officer. She brought this
action to recover a death gratuity allowance, amounting to $1,365,
payable under the Act of June 4, 1920, 41 Stat. 824, as amended, 34
U.S.C. § 943. Jurisdiction was alleged under the Tucker Act,
24 Stat. 505, as amended, and other statutes. Nominally, the action
was for mandamus to compel Buck, the Paymaster General of the Navy,
to make payment. The District Court refused to grant relief by
mandamus, but, in accordance with modern practice, granted what it
thought to be the proper remedy. The judgment, after enjoining Buck
from persisting in his refusal to make payment, concluded:
". . . and the defendant is directed to pay the plaintiff
Thirteen Hundred and Sixty-five Dollars ($1,365.00) which is the
amount equal to six months' pay at the rate received by the
deceased at the time of his death. "
Page 340 U. S. 28
The District Court judgment was entered on January 30, 1948.
Admiral Buck was retired as Paymaster General on March 1. Notice of
appeal was, nevertheless, filed in his name by Government attorneys
on March 18. The issue of abatement was not raised until the
Government attorney called the fact of Buck's retirement to the
attention of the Court of Appeals upon oral argument, which
occurred after the six-month period for substitution had passed.
The Court of Appeals vacated the judgment of the District Court and
remanded with directions to dismiss the complaint as abated.
1. I agree with the Court that this was not a personal action
against Admiral Buck, and that the judgment was not against him as
an individual. That suits against a collector of revenue for
illegal exactions under the Revenue Acts are deemed personal
actions enforceable as such against the collector is an anomalous
situation in our law which calls for abrogation, instead of
extension. For the history of these actions,
See Cary v.
Curtis, 3 How. 236, and
United States v.
Nunnally Investment Co., 316 U. S. 258.
[
Footnote 2/6]
2. The starting point, then, is recognition of the fact that
this was a suit to secure a money claim due from the United States,
enforced against the officer who was the effective conduit for its
payment. In short, this was a representative suit, and the crucial
question, I submit, is the reach of the representative character of
the suit.
The intrinsic, and not merely formalistic, answer to this
question is, of course, entangled with the doctrine of sovereign
immunity from suits. In scores of cases, this Court
Page 340 U. S. 29
has had to consider when a suit, though nominally against one
holding public office, is in fact a suit against the Government,
and, as such, barred by want of the sovereign's consent to be sued.
See Larson v. Domestic and Foreign Commerce Corp.,
337 U. S. 682. The
subject, it has been recognized, is not free from casuistry because
of the natural, even if unconscious, pressure to escape from the
doctrine of sovereign immunity which -- whatever its historic basis
-- is hardly a doctrine based upon moral considerations. The trend
of deep sentiment, reflected by legislation and adjudication, has
looked askance at the doctrine.
See Keifer & Keifer v.
R.F.C., 306 U. S. 381,
306 U. S.
390-392. If astuteness has been exercised to deny the
representative character of an official in order to avoid his
identification as the sovereign
ad hoc, it runs counter to
the rational administration of justice not to find an official the
sovereign
ad hoc and the suit against him, in effect, a
suit against the sovereign when sovereign immunity is not
circumscribed thereby.
Under the Court of Claims Act, 12 Stat. 765, as amended, the
plaintiff here could have gone to the Court of Claims. [
Footnote 2/7] By the Act of march 3, 1887,
24 Stat. 505, as amended, she could have brought suit in the
District Court. When the sovereign has in fact, given consent
formally to be sued as such on the very claim and to allow, in the
same court and by the same procedure (trial without a jury),
precisely the same relief as was sought and obtained against the
official in his representative capacity, it would needlessly
enthrone formality to deny the intrinsic nature of the suit to be a
suit against the sovereign. And that is this situation. Certainly
those charged with the duty of defending the interests of the
United States so
Page 340 U. S. 30
conceived it. By denominating Admiral Buck as "Paymaster General
of the Navy" in his notice of appeal, the United States Attorney
recognized that Paymaster General Buck was, as it were, merely an
alias for the United States, the real client of the United States
Attorney. The Government, indeed, has consistently recognized that
justice does not call for abatement of the suit. Both here and
below, it has disavowed a desire for abatement. Of course, if it
were a fixed rule of law that a suit such as this should die when
the nominal defendant dies, the Court would have to bow to it,
however harsh and futile the rule. It required legislation
represented by Lord Campbell's Act to make tort liability survive
the death of the victim. But it is not the controlling policy of
the law that such actions die upon change of officeholders. The
policy of the law is to the contrary, even as to suits which could
not be brought against the Government directly. So also, it has
long been the policy of our law to look behind an officeholder
nominally a party litigant in order to find that, for all practical
purposes, it is a suit against the Government, and therefore not
maintainable. Justice should be equally open-eyed in order to find
behind the nominal official defendant the United States as the real
defendant.
This seems to me to be the spirit of the decision in
Thompson v. United States, 103 U.
S. 480. To be sure, Mr. Justice Bradley there
differentiated his identification of an officer of a municipality
with the municipality from the situation of an officer of the
United States because normally the Government could not be sued.
But when the Government does allow itself to be sued for the same
cause of action for which suit was brought against him who, for the
purposes of the litigation, is the United States, the reason for
the differentiation disappears.
The differentiation remains in actions brought against officials
for remedies which could not be got in a direct
Page 340 U. S. 31
suit against the United States. These are the situations in
which substitution cannot come into play automatically, and involve
recourse to the remedial legislation of 1899 and 1925 in their
present form. This gives ample scope to the legislation and, at the
same time, avoids treating procedural requirements as tyrannical
commands satisfying no other end except sterile formality.
Accordingly, I would recognize that the judgment of the District
Court is, in effect, a money judgment against the United States,
and would allow the Government's notice of appeal the force it was
intended to have as an effective instrument whereby the United
States might obtain a review of that judgment. It would be nothing
novel in the observance of decorous form by courts to note as a
matter of record that the name of the Paymaster General of the Navy
is now Fox, and to proceed with the appeal on that basis. [
Footnote 2/8]
A final question has to be faced -- a question which should, in
logic, have been treated first, for it concerns the
Page 340 U. S. 32
power of this Court to decide the case. Section 2105 of 28
U.S.C. provides:
"There shall be no reversal in the Supreme Court or a court of
appeals for error in ruling upon matters in abatement which do not
involve jurisdiction."
I agree with the Court that this statute is not applicable, but
not on the ground that lack of substitution is a question of
"jurisdiction." Section 2105 relates only to the modern equivalent
of a common law plea in abatement, which was made in the trial
court before issue was joined on the merits of the case. [
Footnote 2/9] It can have no effect upon a
decision by an appellate court that a suit has abated.
[
Footnote 2/1]
Chapter 121 of the Laws of 1899, 30 Stat. 822, provided:
". . . That no suit, action, or other proceeding lawfully
commenced by or against the head of any Department or Bureau or
other officer of the United States in his official capacity, or in
relation to the discharge of his official duties, shall abate by
reason of his death, or the expiration of his term of office, or
his retirement, or resignation, or removal from office, but, in
such event, the Court, on motion or supplemental petition filed at
any time within twelve months thereafter, showing a necessity for
the survival thereof to obtain a settlement of the questions
involved, may allow the same to be maintained by or against his
successor in office, and the Court may make such order as shall be
equitable for the payment of costs."
Section 11 of the Judiciary Act of 1925, 43 Stat. 936, 941,
provided:
"(a) That where, during the pendency of an action, suit, or
other proceeding brought by or against an officer of the United
States, or of the District of Columbia, or the Canal Zone, or of a
Territory or an insular possession of the United States, or of a
county, city, or other governmental agency of such Territory or
insular possession, and relating to the present or future discharge
of his official duties, such officer dies, resigns, or otherwise
ceases to hold such office, it shall be competent for the court
wherein the action, suit, or proceeding is pending, whether the
court be one of first instance or an appellate tribunal, to permit
the cause to be continued and maintained by or against the
successor in office of such officer, if within six months after his
death or separation from the office it be satisfactorily shown to
the court that there is a substantial need for so continuing and
maintaining the cause and obtaining an adjudication of the
questions involved."
"(b) Similar proceedings may be had and taken where an action,
suit, or proceeding brought by or against an officer of a State, or
of a county, city, or other governmental agency of a State, is
pending in a court of the United States at the time of the
officer's death or separation from the office."
"(c) Before a substitution under this section is made, the party
or officer to be affected, unless expressly consenting thereto,
must be given reasonable notice of the application therefor and
accorded an opportunity to present any objection which he may
have."
[
Footnote 2/2]
"In view of the inconvenience, of which the present case is a
striking instance, occasioned by this state of the law, it would
seem desirable that congress should provide for the difficulty by
enacting that, in the case of suits against the heads of
departments abating by death or resignation, it should be lawful
for the successor in office to be brought into the case by
petition, or some other appropriate method."
[
Footnote 2/3]
"It may not be improper to say that it would promote justice if
Congress were to enlarge the scope of the Act of February 8, 1899,
so as to permit the substitution of successors for state officers
suing or sued in the federal courts, who cease to be officers by
retirement or death, upon a sufficient showing in proper cases.
Under the present state of the law, an important litigation may be
begun and carried through to this court after much effort and
expense, only to end in dismissal because, in the necessary time
consumed in reaching here, state officials, parties to the action,
have retired from office. It is a defect which only legislation can
cure."
Chief Justice Taft used
Irwin v. Wright as an
illustration in his testimony before the House Judiciary Committee
on March 30, 1922. Hearings before House Committee on the Judiciary
on H.R. 10479, 67th Cong., 2d Sess. 7.
[
Footnote 2/4]
See 62 Cong.Rec. 2686, 2737. The language concerning
abatement was the same in the bills introduced in 1922 (S. 3164 and
H.R. 10479, 67th Cong., 1st Sess.), in the bills introduced by
Senator Cummins and Congressman Graham, respectively, in 1924 (S.
2060 and H.R. 8206, 68th Cong., 1st Sess.), and in the statute as
enacted, 43 Stat. 936, 941.
I am partly responsible for the misconception of finding a
substantive change between the significance of the 1899 Act and the
1925 Act, because I joined in
Defense Supplies Corp. v.Lawrence
Warehouse Co., 336 U. S. 631. It
is not by way of extenuating my responsibility that I deem it
pertinent to suggest that the nature and volume of the Court's
business preclude examination of all the judicial and legislative
materials of all opinions in which one concurs. In order that the
energies of the Court may be concentrated on those cases for which
adjudication by this Court is indispensable, I have been insistent
in my view that the Court should be rigorous in limiting the cases
which it will allow to come here. That it may so control its
business, the Congress, by the Act of 1925, gave the Court -- for
all practical purposes -- a free hand.
See Ex parte Republic of
Peru, 318 U. S. 578,
318 U. S.
602-604.
[
Footnote 2/5]
Section 11 of the 1925 Judiciary Act, 43 Stat. 936, 941, was
repealed as of September 1, 1948, 62 Stat. 992, 1000. The repealing
Act, however, preserved any rights or liabilities existing under
the laws repealed. 62 Stat. 869, 992. Since the six-month statutory
period within which substitution can be made expired on September
1, 1948, the repeal of § 11 does not affect the case at bar.
Abatement of actions brought against officials is now governed, in
the District Courts, by Rule 25(d) of the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure, which also provides a six-month period for
substitution.
[
Footnote 2/6]
The problems raised by the personal liability of collectors have
necessitated special legislation.
See I.R.C. §
3770(b), 26 U.S.C. § 3770(b), R.S. § 3220, as amended
(authority to reimburse collectors), and I.R.C. § 3772(d), 26
U.S.C. § 3772(d), 56 Stat. 956 (suits against collectors are
treated as suits against the United States for purposes of
res
judicata).
[
Footnote 2/7]
Campbell v. United States, 80 Ct.Cl. 836;
Hill v.
United States, 68 St.Cl. 740;
Maxwell v. United
States, 68 Ct.Cl. 727;
Thomson v. United States, 58
Ct.Cl. 207;
Phillips v. United States, 49 Ct.Cl. 703.
[
Footnote 2/8]
Davis v. Preston, 280 U. S. 406, was
a suit under the Federal Employers' Liability Act of 1908, 35 Stat.
65, brought to recover for the death of a railroad employee
occurring while the railroad was being operated by the Director
General. The Court held a petition for certiorari ineffective when
taken in the name of an agent of the Government who had retired
from office. A statute there applicable, however, required that the
United States conduct the litigation in the name of a special
agent. 41 Stat. 461. There is no such requirement in the case at
bar, for suit could have been brought against the United States
itself. Since this is true, the Court can scarcely refuse to give
effect to the notice of appeal filed by the Government attorneys in
the name of Buck as Paymaster General.
Mr. Justice Van Devanter discussed only the effectiveness of the
appeal, for the Court was faced with no problem of abatement.
Congress had made clear its policy of protecting suitors against
the pitfalls of abatement by passing the Winslow Act, 42 Stat.
1443, to make certain that the 1899 statute would not prevent
recovery for persons injured or killed during the Government
operation of the railroads. This statute allowed substitution of a
successor agent at "any time before satisfaction of such final
judgment, decree, or award." The broad legislative policy reflected
in the Winslow Act points to a reliance upon substance, rather than
form, in the present case.
[
Footnote 2/9]
The predecessor section, 28 U.S.C. (1946 ed.), § 879, R.S.
§ 1011, as amended, provided:
"There shall be no reversal in the Supreme Court or in a circuit
court of appeals upon a writ of error, for error in ruling any plea
in abatement, other than a plea to the jurisdiction of the court,
or for any error in fact."
Section 22 of the Judiciary Act of 1789, 1 Stat. 84,
provided:
". . . But there shall be no reversal in either court
[
i.e., the Circuit Court or Supreme Court] on such writ of
error for error in ruling any plea in abatement, other than a plea
to the jurisdiction of the court, or such plea to a petition or
bill in equity, as is in the nature of a demurrer, or for any error
in fact. . . ."
The Reviser's Note to § 2105 indicates that "matters in
abatement" was substituted for "plea in abatement" because of the
change in terminology under the Federal Rules.
MR. JUSTICE CLARK, with whom MR. JUSTICE BLACK concurs,
dissenting.
Since the duty sought to be enforced in this action attached to
the office of Paymaster General and rested upon Admiral Buck only
so long as he held the office, it is clear that petitioner's claim
is against Buck in his representative
Page 340 U. S. 33
capacity, not personally. After his retirement, it was not
within his power to comply with the District Court's injunction,
and the judgment ceased to be enforceable against him. [
Footnote 3/1] Consequently, Buck lacked
standing to obtain review of the judgment on appeal. [
Footnote 3/2] Thus, far I agree with the
conclusions of the Court.
But I think that, when the attorney for the Government called to
the Court of Appeals' attention -- after this suit had been pending
there for more than a year -- that the appeal had been taken by
Buck after his retirement, and that no appeal had been perfected by
or on behalf of his successor, the court should have dismissed the
appeal on its own motion. [
Footnote
3/3] That is the action which this Court took in
Davis v.
Preston, 280 U. S. 406
(1930), when review had been allowed at the instance of a federal
officer who, it later appeared, because of separation from office
had
Page 340 U. S. 34
not had standing to petition for certiorari. A unanimous court
dismissed the writ as improvidently granted, stating:
"A motion is now made by Andrew W. Mellon, as Federal Agent, for
his substitution in the present proceeding in the place of Davis.
But the motion must be denied. The succession in office, as now
appears, occurred before there was any effort to obtain a review in
this Court. After the succession, Davis was completely separated
from the office and, without right to invoke such a review. . . .
Therefore, his petition must be disregarded. The time within which
such a review may be invoked is limited by statute, and that time
has long since expired. To grant the motion in these circumstances
would be to put aside the statutory limitation and to subject the
party prevailing in the [court below] to uncertainty and vexation
which the limitation is intended to prevent."
Id. at
280 U. S. 408.
[
Footnote 3/4]
Page 340 U. S. 35
This Court now concludes that
Davis v. Preston is
inapposite because in that case, unlike the situation before us,
applicable legislation prevented abatement of the suit against
Davis following his separation from office. But the point made in
the
Davis case was simply that the succession in office
had preceded Davis' effort to obtain review by this Court, and
pertinent statutes did not enable the former federal officer to
invoke review of a judgment which was of no legal concern to him.
And, in this case, since an appeal was not properly taken within
the time allowed, it does not matter at this time whether the
District Court judgment could be enforced by plaintiff against
Buck's successor, by substitution of the latter as defendant or by
other action. [
Footnote 3/5]
It is the decision of this Court that the failure of the
appellee to substitute the judgment defendant's successor under
§ 11 of the Judiciary Act of 1925 excuses the Government's
prior failure to perfect a valid appeal from a final judgment
against one of its officers. In short, the Court places on an
appellee the burden of correcting his adversary's error. From this
result, I dissent.
[
Footnote 3/1]
Cf. Board of Commissioner v. Sellew, 99 U. S.
624,
99 U. S. 627
(1879);
United States ex rel. Emanuel v. Jaeger, 117 F.2d
483, 488 (1941).
[
Footnote 3/2]
Davis v. Preston, 280 U. S. 406
(1930).
[
Footnote 3/3]
In re Michigan-Ohio Bldg. Corp., 117 F.2d 191 (1941);
United Porto Rican Sugar Co. v. Saldana, 80 F.2d 13
(1935).
Appeal from the District Court in the instant case was governed
by Federal Rule 73 (1946), which provided at all relevant times as
follows:
"(a) . . . When an appeal is permitted by law from a district
court to a circuit court of appeals, the time within which an
appeal may be taken shall be 30 days from the entry of the judgment
appealed from unless a shorter time is provided by law, except
that, in any action in which the United States or an officer or
agency thereof is a party, the time as to all parties shall be 60
days from such entry, and except that, upon a showing of excusable
neglect based on a failure of a party to learn of the entry of the
judgment, the district court in any action may extent the time for
appeal not exceeding 30 days from the expiration of the original
time herein prescribed. . . ."
"A party may appeal from a judgment by filing with the district
court a notice of appeal. Failure of the Appellant to take any of
the further steps to secure the review of the judgment appealed
from does not affect the validity of the appeal. . . ."
"(b) . . . The notice of appeal shall specify the parties taking
the appeal. . . ."
It has been held that, under Federal Rule 73 timely and proper
notice of appeal goes to the jurisdiction of the Court of Appeals,
United Drug Co. v. Helvering, 108 F.2d 637 (1940);
Lamb v. Shasta Oil Co., 149 F.2d 729 (1945);
Marten v.
Hess, 176 F.2d 834 (1949);
Tinkoff v. West Pub. Co.,
138 F.2d 607 (1943);
St. Luke's Hospital v. Melin, 172
F.2d 532 (1949);
Spengler v. Hughes Tool Co., 169 F.2d 166
(1948);
Walleck v. Hudspeth, 128 F.2d 343 (1942);
see
Maloney v. Spencer, 170 F.2d 231, 233 (1948), and that this
requirement cannot be dispensed with by waiver or consent of the
parties.
See Lamb v. Shasta Oil Co., supra, 149 F.2d at
730;
Marten v. Hess, supra, 176 F.2d at 835;
St.
Luke's Hospital v. Melin, supra, 172 F.2d at 533.
Compare
Crump v. Hill, 104 F.2d 36 (1939),
with Piascik v. Trader
Navigation Co., 178 F.2d 886 (1949).
[
Footnote 3/4]
Accord, Nudelman v. Globe Varnish Co., 312 U.S. 690
(1941).
[
Footnote 3/5]
It seems that plaintiff would not be without a remedy which
would give life to her judgment obtained in a court of competent
jurisdiction against a federal officer who, at the time of
judgment, had full authority in the premises. In
Sunshine
Anthracite Coal Co. v. Adkins, 310 U.
S. 381,
310 U. S.
402-403 (1940), the Court said:
"There is privity between officers of the same government, so
that a judgment in a suit between a party and a representative of
the United States is
res judicata in relitigation of the
same issue between that party and another officer of the
government.
See Tait v. Western Maryland R. Co.,
289 U. S.
620. The crucial point in whether or not in the earlier
litigation the representative of the United States had authority to
represent its interests in a final adjudication of the issue in
controversy."