In Mаy, 1945, Chester A. Bowles, as Administrator of the Office of Price Administration, bro'ught this suit against defendants charging violation of the maximum price regulations in the sale of certain commodities above maximum prices and seeking to recover treble damages on account of such violatiоn. On February 26, 1946, Paul Porter succeeded Bowles as Price Administrator and served until December 12, 1946, whereupon he was, in turn, succeeded by Philip B. Fleming as Temporary Controls Administrator, who served until June 1, 1947. Neither Porter nor Fleming ever applied to the court to be substituted plaintiff for Bowles. The Presidеnt, on April 23, 1947, by Executive Order 9841, 50 U.S.C.A. Appendix, § 601 note, 12 F.R. 2645, terminated the Office of Temporary Controls as of June 1, 1947, and issued Executive Order 9842, 50 U.S.C.A. Appendix, § 925 note, 12 F.R. 2646, effective June 1, 1947, under which the Attorney General was authorized in the name of the United States to conduct, initiate, maintain or defend actions under the Emergency Price Control Act, 50 U.S.C.A.Appendix, § 901 et seq.
The first application for substitution was made June 5, 1947, at which time the United States Attorney moved to substitute the United States as plaintiff. Thereupon, defendants, on June 10, 1947, moved to-“dismiss or abate” the action on the ground that, inasmuch as Porter as successor to Bowles had failed and neglected within six months after he took office as Price Administrator to show satisfactorily to the court that there was need for maintaining and continuing this cause of action and to *37 move to be substituted as plaintiff, the action had abated. On June 10, the Government’s motion to substitute and defendants’ motion to dismiss or abate the action came on for hearing before Judge Shaw who granted the Government’s motion but made no ruling upon defendants’ motion. Thereafter, the cause was transferred to the calendar of Judge Camрbell, who took under consideration the motion of defendants to dismiss, and, on January 8, 1948, vacated the order allowing the United States to be substituted as party plaintiff because Bowles’ successor had not applied for substitution within the time limited by 25(d) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A. held that the action had thereupon abated and dismissed it. This appeal followed.
Rule 25(d) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provides that “When an officer of the United States * * * or other governmental agency * * * is a party to an action and during its pendency * * * ceases to hоld 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.” In granting defendants’ motion to dismiss or abate the action, Judge Campbell held that, in view of the fact that Porter, as successor to Bowles, ‘had held office for more than six months and had never applied for substitution as plaintiff, theMaction had abated; that thereafter it could not be revived by appointment of a successor and that, for this reason, the defendants’ motion to dismiss should be granted. Thus it is apparent that the only basis for the dismissal upon which the District Court acted was the premise that by the failure of the successor of the original plaintiff to apply for substitution within the period prescribed by the rule, the action had abated and could not, therefore, be maintained by any successor agency or by the United States.
The Government suggests that it was improper for Judge Campbell to set aside the order of substitution previously granted by Judge Shaw; that Judge Shaw’s order had become “the law of the case,” and should not have been set aside by another Judge later sitting in the same cause.
This court in Connett v. City of Jerseyville, 7 Cir.,
Defendants contend that the order of dismissal was a ruling upon a matter in abatement which may not be reversed by this court for the reason that Section 2105 of the new Judicial Code, 28 U.S.C.A. § 2105, provides that “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.” Except for changes in phraseology, this section is a substantial reenactment of Section 879, Title 28 U.S.C.A.
“Abatement at law is the overthrow or destruction of a pending action
*38
apart from-the cause of action.” 1 C.J.S., Abatement and Revival, § 1. It is “The overthrow of an action *
* *
which defeats the action for the present, but does not debar the plaintiff from commencing it in a better way.” Bouv. Law Diet., Rаwle’s Third Revision, page 7. This seems to us to be the sense in which the word “abatement” is used in this statute. In McHie v. McHie, 7 Cir.,
The sole issue presented to the District Court by defendants’ motion to “dismiss or abate” the action was whether the ■ action had abated due to the failure of Bowles’ successor to make timely application for substitution. In deciding this issue, we think the court was unquestionably ruling upon a matter in abatement which did not involve jurisdiction. As the Supreme Court said in Fix, Collector of Internal Revenue v. Philadelphia Barge Co.,
In view of the fact that the Supreme Court might disagree with this conclusion, we think it proper to determine the correctness of the ruling below, for, although there is some disagreement in the decisions, we think the District Court -correctly held that the action had abated.
As previously noted, Rule 25(d) provides that when an officer of the United States 'is a party to an action, and ceases to hold office, the act-ion may be continued by or against his successor, if within six months after the successor takes office a substantial need for continuing the action is shown. This rule contains in substance the provisions of the Act of February 13, 1925, 28 U.S.C.A. § 780. That statute was enacted originally in 1899 to avoid the effect of the decision in United States v. Butterworth,
169
U.S.
600,
The Government seeks to avoid the rule by insisting that it applies only to cases involving personal actions against governmental officers, and not to actions brought by such officers f-or the ultimate bеnefit of the United States; that the United States was always the “real party in interest,” and, *39 consequently, no substitution was required. But, in the Fix case, it could as truly have been said that the United States was the “real party in interest,” in that any recovery on the bond would have inured to the benefit of the United States and not to the Collector personally. The same is true of most actions brought by an agent or arm of the United States government. In other words, to argue that the Administrator was only a nominal plaintiff; that the United States was the real party in interest, and hence that there was no need for the Administrator’s successors to comply with the rule, is to beg the question. The fact remains that the Emergency Price Control Act provided that such actions were to be instituted and maintained by the Administrator, and the plain language of the rule calls for its application to those cases.
Recent decisions of the Supreme Court fortify our conclusion. In Fleming, Temporary Controls Administrator, v. Mohawk Wrecking and Lumber Co.,
In the face of this pronouncement, we are not justified in saying that the six months substitution provision was intended as a gesture of futility. The rule clearly applied, it was not complied with, and so the action abated. Bowles v. Ohlhausen, D.C.Ill.,
The Government has cited cases as being contrary to this conclusion. Examination of these cases shows that in United States v. Koike, 9 Cir.,
In. view of the expressions of the Supreme Court in the cases of Fix v. Philadelphia Barge Co., supra; Fleming v. Mohawk Wrecking & Lumber Co., supra, and Defense Supplies Corporation et al. v. Lawrence Warehouse Co., supra, we think the cases cited by the government are not persuasive, and that the District Court correctly held that the action had abаted.
For the reasons expressed earlier in this opinion, the appeal is dismissed.
Notes
For other cases holding that the action does not abate, in which the courts relied upon the opinion in Fleming v. Goodwin, supra, see Ralph D’Oench Co. v. Woods, 8 Cir.,
