delivered the opinion of the Court.
S. S. Unicoi was a vessel owned by the United States Maritime Commission and operated for it by respondent under a contract covering this and other vessels. The contract 1 recites that it was made pursuant to § 707 (c) of the Merchant Marine Act of 1936 (49 Stat. 2009, 46 U. S. C. § 1197 (c); see § 704, 46 U. S. C. § 1194), the Commission having advertised the line for charter and having failed to receive satisfactory bids. Respondent is a private corporation, none of whose stock is owned directly or indirectly by the United States.
The deceased was a United States customs inspector. While boarding the vessel on his official duties in July 1938, a rung of the ladder which he was climbing broke. The injuries which resulted caused his death. At the time of the injury the vessel was docked at a pier in New York City.
*577
Petitioner, the widow, sued as administratrix to recover damages for the benefit of herself and the children. That suit was brought in the New York Supreme Court but removed to the federal District Court. Respondent moved to dismiss on the authority of
Johnson
v.
Emergency Fleet Corp.,
We agree with the court below that this was a maritime tort over which the admiralty court has jurisdiction.
Vancouver S. S. Co.
v.
Rice,
*578
Emergency Fleet Corp.
v.
Lustgarten,
Our conclusion, however, is that that position is untenable and that the Lustgarten case so far as it would prevent a private operator from being sued under the circumstances of this case must be considered as no longei controlling.
*579 There is ample support for the holding in the Johnson case that § 2 of the Suits in Admiralty Act was intended to provide the only available remedy against the United States or its wholly owned corporations for enforcement of maritime causes of action covered by the Act. But there is not the slightest intimation or suggestion in the history of that Act that it was designed to abolish all remedies which might exist against a private company for torts committed during its operation of government vessels under agency agreements.
Sec. 1 of the Suits in Admiralty Act provides that no vessel owned by the United States or a governmental corporation or “operated by or for the United States, or such corporation” shall be “subject to arrest or seizure by judicial process in the United States or its possessions.” That section was designed to avoid the inconvenience, expense and delay resulting from the holdings in
The Florence H.,
It is contended, however, that if the judgment against respondent stands, the United States ultimately will have to pay it by reason of provisions of the contract between respondent and the Commission. It is therefore urged that the United States is the real party in interest. We do not stop to interpret the contract. Even if we assume, without deciding, that the Commission has contracted to reimburse the respondent for such expenditures, it does not affect the result in this case. The right of the private operator to recover over from the United States would be a matter of favor, not of right, in many cases. For apart from any express contract the agent’s right of exoneration or indemnity has not been thought to extend to situations where his liability was based on his own fault. 4 Williston, Contracts (1936 ed.), § 1026. Hence we cannot conclude that, in all cases where a private operator of a government vessel under an agency agreement is sued, the United States would as a matter of law ultimately be liable to pay in absence of an express provision for exoneration. It is hard to believe that Congress had any such notion when *583 it passed the Suits in Admiralty Act. To attribute that idea to it would be to give the Act a construction which would in practical effect encourage the assumption by the United States of the obligations of private persons. 3
Moreover, if petitioner had a cause of action against respondent, it is difficult to see how she could be deprived of it by reason of a contract between respondent and the Commission. Immunity from suit on a cause of action which the law creates cannot be so readily obtained. Cf.
Guaranty Trust & S. D. Co.
v.
Green Cove R. Co.,
We hold that the Suits in Admiralty Act did not deprive petitioner of the right to sue respondent for dam *585 ages for his .maritime tort. Whether a cause of action against respondent has been established is, of course, a different question, as the issues involved in Quinn v. Southgate Nelson Corp., supra, indicate. The Circuit Court of Appeals did not reach that question. Accordingly we reverse the judgment and remand the cause to it.
Reversed.
Notes
Respondent was designated as a managing agent for the Commission as owner “to manage, operate, and conduct the business of the Line ... for and on behalf of the Owner and under its supervision and direction.” Respondent agreed “to man, equip, victual, supply and operate the vessels, • subject to such restrictions and in such manner as the Owner may prescribe” and “to conduct its operations with respect to the vessels ... in full compliance with the applicable provisions of law.” Respondent agreed “subject to such regulations or methods of supervision and inspection as may be required or prescribed” by the Commission to “exercise reasonable care and diligence to maintain the vessels in a thoroughly efficient state of repair, covering hull, machinery, boilers, tackle, apparel, furniture, equipment, and spare parts.” Respondent did not share in profits but was entitled to reimbursement for expenses under a provision of the contract which stated: “The Owner agrees to pay to the Managing Agent the actual overhead expenses of the Managing Agent determined by the Owner to have been fairly and reasonably incurred and to be properly applicable to the management and operation of the Commission’s vessels under this agreement.”
As to the liability of public officials see generally
Dunlop
v.
Munroe,
The provision in § 8 of the Suits in Admiralty Act that any final judgment “rendered in any suit herein authorized” shall be paid “by the proper accounting officers of the United States” must be taken to refer only to judgments against the United States or its wholly owned corporations since under our construction the Act does not control or affect actions in personam against private operators.
Cf. Clyde-Mallory Lines v. The Eglantine, ante, p. 395, in which we held that the United States by appearing in an action for libel in rem against a government vessel for damages suffered during its operation by the United States could invoke the two-year statute of limitations contained in § 5 of the Suits in Admiralty Act, even though the United States had sold the vessel to a private operator. In that case we were dealing with § 4 of the Act which expressly provides for such an appearance in that type of case and which states that “thereafter such cause shall proceed against the United States in accordance with the provisions of this Act.” Accordingly we stated, “The conclusion is inescapable that there is no practical difference between suits against the government as owner of the vessel and against the government as the party in interest when it voluntarily appears to defend its lately sold property against tort liability.”
