These appeals are from decrees dismissing two libels in personam in the admiralty. In the first the libellant, the Admiral Oriental Line, alleged that it had been employed by the respondent, the Atlantic Gulf & Oriental Company, as ship’s agent in the Phillipines, and had had charge of fitting out the steamship, “Elk-ton,” on a voyage out of Pulupandan, on which she was lost with all hands in a typhoon. The “Elkton” was owned by the United States, and had been entrusted to the Atlantic Gulf & Oriental S. S. Co. as ship’s agent under an operating contract. The “Elkton’s” cargo owners sued the Admiral Oriental Line for its loss, and the Line was put to certain expenses in defending the suit, in which it was however successful. It claimed these expenses on the theory that as agent it had paid them upon its principal’s account. The Atlantic Gulf & Oriental S. S. Co. answered and attempted to bring in the United States under the Fifty-Sixth Rule (28 U.S.C.A. following section 723). It alleged that the United States was the principal in the whole venture and as such responsible to its immediate agent, the Atlantic Gulf & Oriental S. S. Co. not only for any expenses to which it was put in its own defense, but for any which it might be compelled to pay to the sub-agent, the Admiral Oriental Line, under decree in the main suit. The second suit was filed directly under the Suits in Admiralty Act (46 U. S.C.A. § 741 et seq.) against the United States by the Atlantic Gulf & Oriental S. - S. Co. for its own expenses in defending itself in the suit by the “Elkton’s” cargo, to which it too had been made a party. Each libellant appealed, and the Atlantic Gulf & Oriental S. S. Co. file'd assignments of error in the suit of the Admiral Oriental Line.
An agent, compelled to defend a baseless suit, grounded upon acts performed in his principal’s business, may recover from the principal the expenses of his defense. We considered the question in Cory Bros. & Co. v. United States,
The contract between the Admiral Oriental Line and the Atlantic, Gulf & Oriental S. S. Co. appointed the Line “General Freight Agents” for all ships which the principal was operating on behalf of the United States in the “Far East.” The Line agreed to have sub-agents at all ports where it had no offices of its own, and to perform all the principal’s duties under its contract with the United States; it was to receive for its services a commission on the gross freights with brokerage. Thus, if Atlantic Gulf & Oriental S. S. Co. was an agent of the United States, the Line was an agent of the Atlantic Gulf & Oriental S. S. Co. We therefore turn to the relations between that company and the United States. These were set forth in a contract whose substance was as follows. The Shipping Board appointed the company “its Agent to manage, operate and conduct the business of such vessel as it * * * may assign to the Agent”, and the company agreed to act as such “in accordance with the directions” of the Board. The company was to “man, equip, victual and supply” the vessels as the Board required, and to pay all expenses and maintain them in seaworthy condition, all on the Board’s account. It was to issue all documents on the Board’s form, appoint sub-agents, collect freights which it must deposit in a bank approved by the Board and in the Board’s name, and for which it was to account on forms prescribed by the Board. For this the company was to be paid in percentages on the gross receipts including salvage; out of these it was to bear its “administrative and general expenses of every nature,” not including brokerage however, or commissions “for agency services rendered at foreign ports.” The company was to furnish a bond for faithful performance of its duties and was forbidden to profit in any way from the services rendered. We find it difficult to see how this contract can be construed as creating anything but a straight agency for operating the Board’s ships. As we have already said, the question at bar turns chiefly upon whose the venture is; upon who stands, to win or lose. The United States not only described itself throughout as owner, but was in that position, letter for letter. It chose, not to charter its ships to the company, but to put them in trade on its own account; why it should not bear the hazard of defending unwarranted suits we cannot see. We have so construed almost identical contracts. Dietrich v. United States S. B. E. F. Corp. (C.C.A.)
This disposes of the merits of the controversies, but not of some procedural difficulties. The causes of action are not cognizable in the admiralty; they .are on all fours with Minturn v. Maynard,
The Atlantic Gulf & Oriental S. S. Company should therefore have recovered upon its libel against the United States, treated as a petition at law under the Tucker Act. ' The Admiral Oriental Line should have recovered upon its libel against the Atlantic Gulf & Oriental S. S. Co., treated as a complaint at law. The Atlantic Gulf & Oriental S. S. Co. should have had a decree upon its intervening petition (treated as an original petition in equity under the Tucker Act), directing the United States to pay the claim of the Admiral Oriental Line.
Decrees reversed; causes remanded with instructions to proceed according to the foregoing.
