Thе bill of complaint in this suit, filed in 3922, charged that the Alien Property Custodian had improperly seized 2,500' shares of treasury stock of the Becker Steel- Company of America and sold it for $20,000. A decree was entered on August 21, 1925, adjudging that the shares were аt the time of the seizure treasury stock belonging to the complainant Becker Steel Company of America and not subject to seizure and sale as the property of an alien, and decreeing that the defendants Frederick C. Hicks, as Alien Property Custodian, and Frank White, as Treasurer of the United States, pay to the complainant the sum of $20,000, being the amount of the proceeds of the sale of the slock. No appeal was taken from this decree. In October, 1925, the Treasurer of the United States paid to the Becker Steel Company $16,112.16, and the complainant, through its solicitors, gave a satisfaction of the decree and the complainant executed a release to Frank Whitе as Treasurer of the United States and Frederick C. Hicks as Alien Prop *498 erty Custodian, as well as other ’public officials, which recited that, although the gross proceeds of the sale of the shares of stock was $20,000, that amount had been reduсed by $3,887.84 through the necessary expense incurred in connection with the sale, leaving the net proceeds returnable to the complainant at $16,112.16.
Prior to the time of the receipt by Becker Steel Company of the cheek for $16,112.-16, its solicitors were informed that, unless the receipt and release as prepared were executed by it and the warrant for the satisfaction of the decree was executed by its solicitors, the cheek for $16,112.16 would not be paid over. The Alien Property Custodian did not have in his custody or control the sum of $20,000 when decreed to be paid by him, for expenses had been already paid out aggregating $3,887.84 in the trust. An account was rendered by the Alien Property Custodian’s office in September, 1931, showing that the expenses in connection with the appraisal, advertising and sale of the stock were the following:
Emery, Booth,'Janny & Varney.....$210.15
American Appraisal Co............ 375.00
Haskins & Sells Audit............. 60.00
Prank Presbrey Co., Advertising ... 311.99.
Prank Presbrey Co., Printing...... 624.33
R. H. Weller..................... 500.00
J. L. Lang....................... 968.75
W. E. Chilton, Leg. Ser.......... 500.00
E. N. Jones, Expenses............. 87.62
C. F. Diehey..................... 50.00
Dist. Nat! Bk. Wash. Dep. Pee .... 200.00
$3,887.84
None 'of the foregoing expenses was incurred or paid at the request of Becker Steel Company.
Frederick C. Hicks, who had been appointed to the office of Alien Property Custodian on April 10, 1925, died on December 14, 1925, and Howard Sutherland was appointed Alien Property Custodian on December 24, 1925. Frank White resigned and ceased to hold the office of Treasurer of the United States on April 30, 1928. He was succeeded in that office by H. T. Tate, who resigned in January, 1929, and on January 18, 1929, Walter O. Woods was appointed. More than six months elapsed between the appointment of Howard Sutherland and Walter O, Woods to their respective offices, of Alien Property Custodian and Treasurer of the United States and February 8,1932, when Becker Steel Company moved in this suit to substitute Howard Sutherland as Alien Property Custodian in the place of Frederick C. Hicks and Walter O. Woods as Treasurer of the United States in the place of Frank White and to require the Alien Property-Custodian to pay to the Becker Steel Company the sum of $3,887.64, with interest thereon from February 20, 1919.
At the time of the signing оf the receipt and satisfaction, the Supreme Court had not rendered the decision in Henkels v. Miller,
The survival of actions, suits, or proceedings is governed by the Act of Congress of February 13, 1925 (28 U. S. C. § 780 [28 USCA § 780]) which provides that:
“Where, during the pendency of an action, suit, or other proceeding brоught by or against an officer of the United States, * * 81 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 аction, 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 аfter 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 *499 cause and obtaining an adjudication of the questions involved.”
Paragraph 4 of Rule 19 of the Supreme Court of the United States (28 USCA § 354) likewiso deals with the survival of actions against officials, and provides that:
“Where a public officer, by or against whom a suit is brought, dies or ceases to hold the office while the suit is pending in a federal cоurt, either of first instance or appellate, the matter of abatement and substitution is covered by section 11 of the Act of February 13, 1925 (§ 780 of this title). Under that section a substitution of the successor in office may be effected only where a sаtisfactory showing is made within six months after the death or separation from office.”
It seems unnecessary to discuss all the various objections leveled at Judge Goddard’s decree. It is enough that neither Howard Sutherland, the Alien Property Custodian, nor Walter O. Woods, the Treasurer of the United States, was made a party to this suit, and that the time within which either might be joined had expired prior to the making of the motion to bring them in. Obviously, whatever the merits of the controversy, no effective reliеf could be granted without their presence.
The correctness of the decree by the court below depends on whether the suit was “pending” when the motion for substitution was made. If it was, the motion came too late, because it was nоt made “within six months after * '* * (the) * * * separation from office” of the prior incumbents —the time limit which the statute prescribes if the suit is not to abate.
It is to be noticed that no cause of action is asserted against the officials, sought to be substituted, on any theory that they have funds in their possession belonging to the Becker Steel Company which they are wrongfully withholding. The proceeds of the stock sold by the former Alien Property Custodian to the extent of $16,112.16 was turned over to Becker Steеl Company, and the remaining $3,887.84 was paid by the former Treasurer of the United States to third parties who performed services in connection with the sale by the Alien Property Custodian. Under such circumstances, recovery from any succeeding official would not be based upon his personal acts, but upon a responsibility imposed upon him in his official capacity for the acts of a predecessor.
Prior to 1899, an action against an officer of the United States as such abated on the ending of his term. Gorham Mfg. Co. v. Wendell,
Ample authority exists for holding that, though a Una] judgment has been entered, the cause is still pending until the judgment is satisfied. This is the general rule in New York and in many of the other states of the Union.
In New York, the Constitution of 1846 (article 14, § 5) provided that jurisdiction of all suits and proceedings pеnding in the Courts of Common Pleas should become vested in the Supreme Court. In Wegman v. Childs,
In Mitchell
&
Rammelsburg Furniture Co. v. Sampson (C. C.)
The appellant cites various decisions, such as Midkiff v. Colton (C. C. A.)
The complainant has little grievance on the merits. Instead of litigating its rights, it settled with the Alien Property Custodian and waited for years before making its motion, hoping that the decision of the Supreme Court in Escher v. Woods,
We hold that this suit was “pending” until the judgment was satisfied, that under such circumstances it could only be maintained against the present officials if revived pursuant to statute, and that the time to effect a revivor had elapsed when the motion before Judge Goddard was made. His decree is accordingly affirmed.
