191 P.2d 372 | Or. | 1948
Action by Chester Bowles, Administrator, Office of Price Administration, against Harry Mittleman and Helen Rena Mittleman, doing business as Sovereign Hotel Apartments, to recover statutory damages for overceiling rents allegedly collected by defendants in violation of the provisions of applicable rent regulations. Philip B. Fleming, Administrator, Office of Temporary Controls, filed a motion asking that he be substituted as plaintiff in the place and stead of Chester Bowles, Administrator of the Office of Price Administration, which motion was denied, and the action was dismissed, and Philip B. Fleming, Administrator, etc., appeals.
AFFIRMED. This action was commenced on the 14th day of December, 1944, by Chester Bowles, Administrator of the Office of Price Administration, against *128 Harry Mittleman and Helen Rena Mittleman, doing business as Sovereign Hotel Apartments, to recover statutory damages for overceiling rents allegedly collected by defendants in violation of the provisions of the applicable rent regulations. It was brought pursuant to § 205 (e) of the Emergency Price Control Act (56 Stat. 23) as amended by 58 Stat. 632 (50 U.S.C. App. Supp. V, 901 et seq.), which provides as follows:
"If any person selling a commodity violates a regulation, order, or price schedule prescribing a maximum price or maximum prices, the person who buys such commodity for use or consumption other than in the course of trade or business may, within one year from the date of the occurrence of the violation, except as hereinafter provided, bring an action against the seller on account of the overcharge. In such action, the seller shall be liable for reasonable attorney's fees * * * plus whichever of the following sums is the greater; (1) Such amount not more than three times the amount of the overcharge, or the overcharges, upon which the action is based * * *, or (2) an amount not less than $25 nor more than $50, as the court in its discretion may determine; * * * For the purposes of this section the payment or receipt of rent for defense-area housing accommodations shall be deemed the buying or selling of a commodity, as the case may be; and the word `overcharge' shall mean the amount by which the consideration exceeds the applicable maximum price. If any person selling a commodity violates a regulation, order, or price schedule prescribing a maximum price or maximum prices, and the buyer either fails to institute an action under this subsection within thirty days from the date of the occurrence of the violation or is not entitled for any reason to bring the action, the Administrator may institute such action on behalf of the United States within such one-year *129 period. If such action is instituted by the Administrator, the buyer shall thereafter be barred from bringing an action for the same violation or violations. Any action under this subsection by either the buyer or the Administrator, as the case may be, may be brought in any court of competent jurisdiction. * * *"
Chester Bowles, plaintiff in the action, resigned as Administrator of the Office of Price Administration, and Paul A. Porter succeeded him as Administrator on February 26, 1946. Thereafter, and on December 12, 1946, Paul A. Porter, Administrator of the Office of Price Administration, resigned, and the President of the United States, by Executive Order 9809, abolished the Office of Price Administration, created the Office of Temporary Controls, and appointed Philip B. Fleming as Administrator thereof, and vested him with all the functions of Administrator of the Office of Price Administration.
On February 10, 1947, Philip B. Fleming, Administrator of the Office of Temporary Controls, filed a motion in the circuit court asking that he be substituted as plaintiff in the place and stead of Chester Bowles, Administrator of the Office of Price Administration. The court denied the motion and dismissed the action. From this order Philip B. Fleming, Administrator of the Office of Temporary Controls, has appealed.
After this appeal was taken, and on August 19, 1947, Frank R. Creedon, Housing Expediter, Office of Housing Expediter, filed a motion in this court requesting that he be substituted as appellant "in the place and stead of Philip B. Fleming, Temporary Controls Administrator, Office of Temporary Controls," and thereafter and on the 6th day of February, *130 1948, a petition was filed by Tighe E. Wood, Housing Expediter, asking the court to substitute him as appellant in the place and stead of Philip B. Fleming, Administrator, Office of Temporary Controls. No action has been taken on these two last-mentioned motions.
The circuit court relied on the provisions of § 780 of Title 28, U.S.C.A., (43 Stat. 941) in denying the motion for substitution of party plaintiff and in dismissing the action. This section, so far as material here, is as follows:
"Where, during the pendency of an action, suit, or other proceeding 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 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." (Italics supplied.)
The enactment of the foregoing section was prompted by a suggestion made by the court in United States, ex rel. Bernardinv. Butterworth,
"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."
The court, in Fix, Collector of Internal Revenue, v.Philadelphia Barge Co. et al.,
"The act [§ 780] is purely remedial, designed to remove what this court in the Butterworth case called an `inconvenience.' Failure to comply with the statute forecloses the particular remedy therein provided; it does not destroy the right. There is a clear difference between the action and the cause of action. Revival of the action is necessary because that does not survive the death or resignation of the officer by or against whom it has been brought; but the cause of action may survive, depending upon its nature and the applicable rule. [Citing numerous authorities.] The vice of the ruling below, and of the argument here in support of it, is the failure to give effect to this distinction. The present bond runs to each successor, as it ran to the original obligee and with like effect; and, notwithstanding the termination of the latter's possession of the office, the cause of action which arose in his favor survives for appropriate enforcement by his several successors."
It was held by the District Court "that since one suit, brought by a successor of the original obligee, had abated by reason of the failure of the government to make substitution under the act of 1925 [§ 780], there resulted an abatement of the cause of action as well as of the writ." On the basis of such ruling, final judgment was entered against the collector, which judgment was affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals, and reversed by the Supreme Court.
We think that the appellant, in much of his argument, confuses abatement of the underlying cause of action with abatement of the particular action being prosecuted. It is not here contended by respondents *133 that the cause of action against them has abated but that the particular remedy provided by § 780, supra, for the substitution of the successor to Chester Bowles, as party plaintiff, has been foreclosed by failure to make application therefor within the time specified by statute. In this connection it will be noted that such application was not made until more than eleven months after the resignation of Chester Bowles as Price Administrator, whereas § 780 permits the cause to be continued "if within six months after his * * * 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."
We are concerned principally with the question whether a suit or action brought by "an officer of the United States", especially by the Administrator of the Office of Price Administration, "and relating to the present or future discharge of his official duties" survives upon his death or retirement from office unless there has been a compliance with the provisions of § 780, supra. A suit or action brought against an officer of the United States presents a somewhat different question. It has been consistently held by the United States Supreme Court that, in the absence of a statute providing for continuation against his successor, a suit or action against a federal officer abates upon his death or retirement from office. Anno., 102 A.L.R. 945; Anno.,
Section 205 (e) of the Emergency Price Control Act, hereinbefore quoted, empowers the administrator of the Office of Price Administration to institute an *134 action on behalf of the United States against the "seller" to collect "not more than three times the amount of the overcharge, or the overcharges, upon which the action is based * * *, or (2) an amount not less than $25 nor more than $50, as the court in its discretion may determine". Pursuant to the foregoing provisions of the act, all actions for overcharges have been brought by and in the name of the Administrator of the Office of Price Administration, or by his successors in office. The 2d Revised General Order No. 3, issued by Chester Bowles, Administrator, and effective September 7, 1944, provides that any attorney employed by the Office of Price Administration is authorized "to institute and/or intervene in, and to conduct appropriate civil actions or proceedings in the name of the Price Administrator". 9 Federal Register 11137.
The filing in the circuit court of the motion for the substitution of Philip B. Fleming, Temporary Controls Administrator, Office of Temporary Controls, and the filing in this court of the motions for the substitution as party plaintiff (1) by Frank R. Creedon, Housing Expediter, and (2) by Tighe E. Wood, Housing Expediter, are an acknowledgment that actions for overcharges are to be brought and prosecuted to final determination by the Price Administrator or his successor or successors in office, and that upon the separation of the Price Administrator, or any of his successors, from office, his successor should be substituted as party plaintiff. The Office of Temporary Controls, of which Philip B. Fleming was appointed Administrator by the President, was created by Executive Order 9809 (11 F.R. 14281) which order provides, among other things, that the "functions hereby vested in the Administrator shall be deemed to include the *135 authority to maintain in his own name civil proceedings relating to matters heretofore under the jurisdiction of the Price Administrator (including any such proceedings now pending)." Executive Order 9841 (12 F.R. 2645), which terminated the Office of Temporary Controls and transferred the functions thereof to the Housing Expediter, empowered the Housing Expediter to "institute, maintain, or defend in his own name civil proceedings in any court * * * relating to the matters transferred to him, including any such proceedings pending on the effective date of the transfer of any such function under this order."
Matters relating to the administration of the Emergency Price Control Act are under the control of the Administrator. The institution of actions of the nature of the one here involved is not under the supervision of the Department of Justice, but under the direction of attorneys employed by the Administrator.
The wording of § 780, supra, is clear and unambiguous and would appear to require no construction. The section applies to suits and actions brought by an officer of the United States as much as it does to suits and actions brought against an officer. In either instance in order for the suit or action to survive it must 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", which showing must be made within six months after the death or separation of the officer from his office. When Mr. Bowles instituted this action he did so as "an officer of the United States" and such action related "to the present or future discharge of his official duties". We fail to see how any officer of the United States can legally institute an action in his own name, although it may be for the *136 benefit of the United States, without doing so in discharge of his official duties.
In Bowles v. Seigel,
"* * * It seems clear that, when an officer of the Government institutes an action relating to his duties as such officer, his successor is charged with the responsibility of determining whether or not such action should be continued, and if he so determines, it is his duty to make the showing required by the rule so that he may be substituted and may continue the action, and that, if he does not do so, the action cannot be continued and maintained. Certain decisions which support this view are cited in the margin."
The same question arose in Bowles v. Ohlhausen,
"Plaintiff argues that the real party plaintiff is the Office of Price Administration, that it is immaterial in whose name as Administrator an *137 action is brought, and that the need for an abatement act is limited to situations involving the personal delinquency of government officers. I agree with the soundness of this reasoning, but I must conclude, not that this action does not abate, but that the act of Congress went beyond the need which it was passed to meet and has therefore led to a most unfortunate result in this case. For it cannot be denied that the statute applies to a proceeding brought by an officer of the United States, that this suit is a proceeding brought by Chester Bowles, Administrator of the Office of Price Administration, who is an officer of the United States, and that under the statute, the successor of Chester Bowles must within six months, show the court that there is substantial need for continuing the action in his name. Failure to comply with the statute abates the action.
"* * * If Congress had chosen a different solution to the problem of abatement of suits by government officers, or had chosen a different entity as party plaintiff in government suits to enforce the Price Control Act, this case could have been decided on the merits instead of on a technicality. And it should not be overlooked that alertness on the part of plaintiff's counsel in complying with the statute could have avoided this result. But I cannot read out of the statute the phrase which so clearly brings within its operation suits `by * * * an officer of the United States' relating to the `discharge of his official duties.'"
In the case of Porter v. Koike,
Fleming, Temporary Controls Administrator v. Mohawk Wrecking Lumber Co., and Raley, et al. v. Fleming, Temporary ControlsAdministrator,
See also generally on the matter now under discussion the following: Porter v. Woodruff,
We shall now consider some of the authorities relied upon by the appellant. In Bowles v. Goldman,
In Porter v. Maule,
The question of substitution was not involved in Bowers v.American Surety Co.,
The foregoing authorities relied upon by appellant, in support of his contention that it was not necessary that Bowles's successor be substituted as party plaintiff within six months of Bowles's separation from the Office of Price Administrator, do not involve that question for the reason that in all the cases involving a substitution of Bowles's successor the substitution was made within the six-months period.
Since this case was submitted the appellant has called our attention to Fleming v. Goodwin,
It is further argued by appellant that the duty of bringing actions under the Emergency Price Control Act for treble damages devolved upon the Office of Price Administration and therefore the action did "not abate upon the retirement from office of" Bowles or his successor. In support of this contention numerous *142 authorities are cited to the effect "that if the action be brought against a continuing municipal board it does not abate by a change of personnel." None of the cases cited, however, were brought by or against an officer of the United States. Moreover, there is nothing in the law to indicate that it was the duty of the Office of Price Administration to bring this action.
The appellant in the oral argument before this court for the first time contended that the law of the state of Oregon relating to survival and abatement of actions was controlling here. We cannot concur in this contention. Section 780, supra, refers to officers of the United States and is not limited to cases in the federal court. Lyman Flood Prevention Ass'n v. City of Topeka,
In our opinion the circuit court did not err in refusing to substitute Philip B. Fleming as plaintiff in lieu of Chester Bowles and in dismissing the action. To hold otherwise would be to ignore all of the provisions of § 780, supra, and the interpretation which has been placed by the courts upon the provisions of that section.
Other matters have been discussed by respondents but, due to the conclusion that we have reached, it is unnecessary to decide them. One of them involves the question whether Philip B. Fleming could prosecute this appeal when he was not a party to the action in the circuit court. We express no opinion on that question.
The judgment appealed from is affirmed. None of the parties to this action shall recover costs or disbursements. § 205 (c), Emergency Price Control Act, (56 Stat. 23). *143