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Merchant Fleet Corp. v. Harwood

U.S.
May 19, 1930
281 U.S. 519 (1930)

Summary

Shipping Board bound by contract as a separate entity

Summary of this case from United States v. Iron Mountain Mines, Inc.

Opinion

CERTIORARI TO THE CIRCUIT COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT.

No. 345.

Argued April 16, 1930. Decided May 19, 1930.

1. The Fleet Corporation held suable on contracts purporting to bind it, made by it in its own name, as a corporation organized under the laws of the District of Columbia, and describing it as representing and acting for and in behalf of the United States, but containing no words purporting to bind the United States or in terms restricting the liability of the corporation. P. 524. 2. The quasi-public character of the Fleet Corporation, and the duties imposed upon it as an agency of the United States by Acts of Congress and Executive Orders, do not except it from the rule that an agent may be bound, notwithstanding his known agency, by contracts that he executes in his own name. Id. 3. There is no basis for presuming that the Fleet Corporation is not to be deemed bound by the contracts into which it enters, merely because it is acting as a public agency; and its liability as measured by their terms is not to be curtailed by the presumption which might be indulged in favor of an individual acting for the Government. P. 525. 4. Section 2(b)(2) of the Merchant Marine Act, which provides that all rights or remedies accruing as a result of contracts previously made under the Emergency Shipping Fund legislation "shall be in all respects as valid, and may be exercised and enforced in like manner, subject to the provisions of subdivision (c) of this section, as if this Act had not been passed," saves the right to sue the Fleet Corporation on its contracts. P. 527. 5. Subdivision (c) of § 2 of the Merchant Marine Act, providing that any person dissatisfied with any decision of the Shipping Board "shall have the same right to sue the United States as he would have had if the decision had been made by the President of the United States under the Acts hereby repealed," if it is applicable to suits on contracts of the Fleet Corporation at most gave an additional remedy against the United States and not a substitute for existing remedies against the Fleet Corporation expressly preserved by subdivision (b)(2), supra. P. 527. 32 F.2d 680, affirmed.

CERTIORARI, 280 U.S. 544, to review a judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals reversing a judgment of the District Court in a suit, brought originally in a state court, against the Fleet Corporation to cancel a contract, for duress and fraud, and to secure an accounting under earlier contracts. The District Court dismissed the bill upon the ground that the only remedy was against the United States, 26 F.2d 116. The Court of Appeals held otherwise, but limited the relief to an accounting under the contract sought to be canceled.

Mr. Claude R. Branch, Special Assistant to the Attorney General, with whom Attorney General Mitchell and Messrs. J. Frank Staley, Erwin N. Griswold, Chauncey G. Parker, General Counsel, Fleet Corporation, and O.P.M. Brown, Special Counsel, Fleet Corporation, were on the brief, for petitioner.

In executing the contract of March 26, 1920, the Fleet Corporation was acting as the agent of a disclosed sovereign principal. Besides disclosing in the description of the parties that it was acting solely in a representative capacity and solely on behalf of its principal, much of the subject matter of the contract relates to matters, such as the cancellation of contracts and the payments of just compensation therefor, with which the Fleet Corporation, under its corporate charter powers, had no concern. Moreover, the authority under which this public agent was acting existed by reason of Acts of Congress and Executive Orders, of which everyone was chargeable with notice.

When a public officer or agent acts in the line of his duty and by legal authority, his contracts, made on account of the Government, are public and not personal. They inure to the benefit of and bind the Government, not the agent. It can not matter that the public agent is a corporation rather than an individual.

In authorizing the President to delegate to such agencies as he might determine the power conferred on him for the production of ships for the use of the Nation in the war emergency, Congress did not intend that the public agents so selected should enter into contracts for the benefit of the United States upon the agents' own personal credit, nor that the enormous sums of public money appropriated were to be expended for the personal account of the agents; nor did Congress intend that such agents should be held personally liable for their lawful acts and engagements while so employed.

The decision of this Court in the Sloan-Astoria cases ( 258 U.S. 549; 295 F. 415) is not authority for holding the Fleet Corporation personally liable in this case, because the only question determined in those cases was the jurisdiction of the District Courts to entertain suits against the Fleet Corporation. The contract in this case differs in many particulars from the contract considered in the Sloan-Astoria cases.

The corporate liability of the Fleet Corporation to account to respondents in this suit, if any exists, must be predicated upon the contract of March 26, 1920, which the court below found was an accord and satisfaction of all prior demands. Since respondents have not asked for a review of that finding, they may not question it before this Court. If the court below was right in holding that the Fleet Corporation had made itself personally liable on the earlier contracts with the Groton Iron Works because of the frame of the earlier instruments, the contract of March 26, 1920, constituted a novation by the United States of any liability which previously may have been incurred by the Fleet Corporation, and the Iron Works accepted the novation in full accord and satisfaction of all its rights arising from the earlier contracts.

If the form of the contracts involved in this case, in the light of the applicable statutory provisions, was not sufficient to exclude liability on the part of the Fleet Corporation, this liability was assumed and taken over by Congress on behalf of the United States, and the remedy provided by statute for the enforcement of this liability is exclusive. Merchant Marine Act.

Mr. Frederick H. Wood, with whom Messrs. Herbert B. Lee, Richard S. Holmes, W.H.L. Edwards, and William W. Robison were on the brief, for respondents.


In this case certiorari was granted, 280 U.S. 544, to review a ruling of the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit that the Fleet Corporation is subject to suit upon a contract which it entered into, acting as an agency of the United States under the Urgent Deficiencies Act of June 15, 1917, ( 40 Stat. 182) as amended.

On June 15, 1917, the Fleet Corporation contracted with Groton Iron Works for the construction of twelve wooden ships, reduced to eight by contract of September 30, 1918. On August 11, 1917, and April 20, 1918, contracts were executed, each for the construction of six steel ships. After the armistice the Fleet Corporation gave directions to suspend work on a part of the steel ships. The Iron Works became financially involved and, the Fleet Corporation having advanced large sums to it, negotiation for a settlement of various differences between the two corporations resulted in the contract between it and the Fleet Corporation of March 26, 1920. This described the Fleet Corporation as "representing and acting . . . for and in behalf of the United States of America (hereinafter referred to as the owner)." It cancelled the earlier contracts, with some exceptions relating to the completion of the steel ships, and settled and released numerous other claims not now important, saving certain claims growing out of a reconciliation of accounts, then in progress, to determine the amount due for certain work on the wooden ships.

The Iron Works, before its bankruptcy, brought the present suit in the Superior Court of Connecticut, which was removed to the District Court for Connecticut, where, respondent, the trustee in bankruptcy, having intervened, the complaint was reframed so as to pray the cancellation of the contract of March 26, 1920, as procured by duress and fraud, an accounting and judgment for such amounts as should be found to be due for breach of the earlier contracts. A fourth separate defense, which alone is presently involved, set up that with respect to all the transactions alleged in the bill of complaint, petitioner acted solely as an agency of the United States, under powers delegated to it by the President under the Urgent Deficiencies Act, and that with respect to those transactions it was under no personal liability and respondent's only remedy was against the United States.

The District Court confirmed findings of a special master, in favor of petitioner, on the issues of fraud and duress and his conclusion that the rights of the parties were fixed by the contract of March 26, 1920, but gave judgment, sustaining the fourth defense and dismissing the complaint. 26 F.2d 116. The Court of Appeals reversed the judgment, holding that the suit might be maintained against the petitioner, but limited the relief to an accounting under the contract of March 26, 1920. 32 F.2d 680.

Concededly, as both courts below and the special master agree, in entering into the several contracts referred to, the Fleet Corporation was acting as an agency of the United States as alleged. But all of the contracts were signed and sealed by the Fleet Corporation, which was referred to as a corporation organized under the laws of the District of Columbia and which promised to pay the stipulated price for the ships and to perform the other obligations of the contracts, in terms imposed on it. They contained no words purporting to bind the United States or in terms restricting the liability of the petitioner.

One acting as a private agent may be bound, notwithstanding his known agency, upon contracts which he executes in his own name. Sprague v. Rosenbaum, 38 F. 386; Guernsey v. Cook, 117 Mass. 548; Brown v. Bradlee, 156 Mass. 28; Sadler v. Young, 78 N.J.L. 594; McCauley v. Ridgewood Trust Co., 81 N.J.L. 86; Jones v. Gould, 200 N.Y. 18. See Worthington v. Cowles, 112 Mass. 30; Kean v. Davis, 20 N.J.L. 425; Cream City Glass Co. v. Friedlander, 84 Wis. 53. Compare Whitney v. Wyman, 101 U.S. 392; Post v. Pearson, 108 U.S. 418. The only question now presented is whether the quasi-public character of the Fleet Corporation and the duties imposed upon it as an agency of the United States by Acts of Congress and Executive Orders, described and considered in earlier opinions of this Court, require a different conclusion with respect to its contracts. Shipping Act of September 7, 1916, c. 431, 39 Stat. 728, 730-732; Urgent Deficiency Act of 1917, supra; Merchant Marine Act of June 5, 1920, c. 250, 41 Stat. 988; Executive Orders No. 2664, July 11, 1917, No. 2888, January 18, 1918, No. 3018, December 3, 1918, No. 3145, August 11, 1919, and see The Lake Monroe, 250 U.S. 246; United States v. Strang, 254 U.S. 491; Sloan Shipyards v. Fleet Corporation, 258 U.S. 549; Skinner Eddy Corporation v. McCarl, 275 U.S. 1; Emergency Fleet Corporation v. Western Union, 275 U.S. 415, 421.

The petitioner contends that there is a strong presumption, which is here controlling, that a public officer or agent is not to be deemed bound as an individual upon his contracts made in behalf of the government in the performance of a public duty, since no one participating in such a contract would be justified in assuming, in the absence of a clearly expressed intention otherwise, that the officer intends to bind himself to defray public expense from his private purse. Parks v. Ross, 11 How. 361; Hodgson v. Dexter Company, 1 Cranch 345; Sheets v. Selden's Lessee, 2 Wall. 177; see District of Columbia v. Camden Iron Works, 181 U.S. 453, 459.

But we need not decide the point or attempt to draw the line where that presumption may be overcome by language of the written contract which falls short of an explicit limitation of the personal liability of the agent. See Hodgson v. Dexter, supra, 364. For in the present case the agent is not an individual and its liability does not involve any expenditure of private funds for the satisfaction of public obligations. Its entire capital stock is government owned. Its funds and property were furnished to it by the government. They and government indemnity are alone the sources from which its obligations will be defrayed.

It was created as a government agency to construct a fleet of vessels to meet a wartime emergency. It was in order better to fulfill that purpose that Congress chose an instrument having the power to contract, as well as all the other powers of a private corporation, but with its every action government-controlled and all its assets supplied from government sources. The advantages of resorting to such powers in meeting the national emergency were urged as grounds for the choice of this particular form of agency, when the Urgent Deficiency bill was pending in Congress. See remarks of Senator Underwood, reporting the bill for the Senate Conferees, 55 Cong. Rec. 65th Cong., p. 3549; see The Lake Monroe, supra, p. 254, Skinner Eddy Corporation v. McCarl, supra, p. 8. There is thus no basis for presuming that the Fleet Corporation is not to be deemed bound by the contracts into which it enters merely because it is acting as such an agency, and its liability as measured by their terms is not to be curtailed by the presumption which, it is urged, may be indulged in favor of an individual acting for the government.

That is the effect of the decision in Astoria Marine Works v. United States Shipping Board Emergency Fleet Corporation, 258 U.S. 549, 569. It was there held that suit might be maintained against the Fleet Corporation in a district court upon a contract in form and in manner of execution like those presently involved and where, as here the Fleet Corporation was described in the contract as "representing the United States of America." It is true, as the petitioner argues, that the precise question at issue was one of jurisdiction of the district court to entertain the suit rather than the Court of Claims, as one against the Government. But the jurisdiction was sustained on the ground that the Fleet Corporation was bound by its contract, even though it acted as an agency of the United States and so was subject to the suit upon it in the District Court. The court said (p. 569): "The whole frame of the instrument [the contract] seems to us plainly to recognize the corporation as the immediate party to the contracts. . . . If we are right in this, further reasoning seems to us unnecessary to show that there was jurisdiction of the suit. The fact that the corporation was formed under the general laws of the District of Columbia is persuasive, even standing alone, that it was expected to contract and to stand suit in its own person, whatever indemnities might be furnished by the United States." See United States v. Wood, 290 F. 115, 263 U.S. 680.

Petitioner also insists that even though the Fleet Corporation is bound by its contracts, the liability has been undertaken by the United States by §§ 2(b)(1), 2(b)(2) and 2(c) of the Merchant Marine Act of June 5, 1920, 41 Stat. 988, which now affords the exclusive remedy for the enforcement of the liability. This legislation repealed, with certain specified exceptions, the Emergency Shipping Fund provisions of the Urgent Deficiencies Act of June, 1917, as amended. Section 2(b)(1) directed that "all contracts or agreements" previously made under the Emergency Shipping Fund legislation "be assumed and carried out by the United States Shipping Board." But § 2(b)(2) saved all rights or remedies accruing as a result of such contracts and provided that they "may be exercised in like manner, subject to the provisions of subdivision (c)" of § 2. Subdivision (c) directed the Board to settle "all matters arising out of or incident to the exercise by or through the President of any of the powers or duties imposed upon the President" by the earlier legislation "and for this purpose the Board, instead of the President, shall have and exercise any of such powers and duties relating to the determination and payment of just compensation." It further provided that "Any person dissatisfied with any decision of the Board shall have the same right to sue the United States as he would have had if the decision had been made by the President of the United States under the acts" repealed.

Petitioner points to no provisions of earlier acts giving to the President power to determine the amount due a contractor under a contract made by the Fleet Corporation, and respondent asserts that the powers of the President referred to in (c) are limited to the award of just compensation. But even if we assume that his powers were not so limited, we think subsection (c) at most, gave an additional remedy against the United States and not a substitute for existing remedies upon contract liabilities expressly preserved by subdivision (b)(2). The words of subdivision (b)(2), saving all existing remedies which "may be exercised and enforced in like manner, subject to the provisions of subdivision (c)," must be taken to preserve the old remedies and to give the new one if the matter is one which the Board is authorized to settle by (c). Any other construction would nullify the saving clause of (b)(2), for if the "decision of the Board" as used in the proviso of (c) embraces settlements of all matters arising out of contracts which, by paragraph (b) (1), it was directed to carry out and in the event that its decision is not accepted, the exclusive remedy is by suit against the United States, then none of the remedies accruing under such contracts and in terms saved by paragraph 2, were preserved.

Affirmed.


Summaries of

Merchant Fleet Corp. v. Harwood

U.S.
May 19, 1930
281 U.S. 519 (1930)

Shipping Board bound by contract as a separate entity

Summary of this case from United States v. Iron Mountain Mines, Inc.

In United States Shipping Board Merchant Fleet Corporation v. Harwood, 281 U.S. 519, 50 S. Ct. 372, 74 L. Ed. 1011, the Fleet Corporation entered into a contract in which it was described as "representing and acting * * * for and in behalf of the United States of America (hereinafter referred to as the owner)."

Summary of this case from United States v. New Amsterdam Casualty Co.
Case details for

Merchant Fleet Corp. v. Harwood

Case Details

Full title:U.S. SHIPPING BOARD MERCHANT FLEET CORPORATION v . HARWOOD, TRUSTEE IN…

Court:U.S.

Date published: May 19, 1930

Citations

281 U.S. 519 (1930)
50 S. Ct. 372

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