delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question presented here is whether the Federal Housing Administration is subject to garnishment for moneys due to an employee. The Supreme Court of the State of Michigan held that it was.
In 1930 -respondent obtained final judgment in Mich-
igan against one Heffner and one Brooks. In 1938 petitioner was served with a writ of garnishment issued by the Michigan court.
2
Petitioner appeared and filed an answer and disclosure stating that Brooks was no longer connected with it due to his death subsequent to service of the writ but admitting that it owed Brooks at the time
The problem here is unlike that in
Buchanan
v.
Alexander,
Since consent ’to “sue and be sued” has been given by Congress, the problem here merely involves a determination of whether or not garnishment comes within the scope of that authorization. No question as to the power of Congress to waive the governmental immunity is present. For there can be no doubt that Congress has full power to endow the Federal Housing Administration with the government’s immunity from suit or to determine the extent to which it may be subjected to the judicial process.
Federal Land Bank
v.
Priddy,
295 U. S.
As indicated in Keifer & Keifer v. Reconstruction Finance Corp., supra, we start from the premise that such waivers by Congress of governmental immunity in case of. such federal instrumentalities should be liberally construed. This policy is in line with the current disfavor of the doctrine of governmental immunity from suit, as evidenced by the increasing tendency of Congress to waive the immunity where federal governmental corporations are concerned. Keifer & Keifer v. Reconstruction Finance Corp., supra. Hence, when Congress establishes such an agency, authorizes it to engage in commercial and business transactions with the public, and permits it to “sue and be sued,” it cannot be lightly assumed that restrictions on that authority are to be implied. Rather if the general authority to “sue and be sued” is to be delimited by implied exceptions, it must be clearly shown that certain types of suits are not consistent with the Statutory or constitutional scheme, 3 that an implied restriction of the general authority is necessary to avoid grave interference with the performance of a governmental function, or that for other reasons it was plainly the purpose of Congress to use the “sue and be sued” clause in a narrow sense. In the absence of such showing, it must be presumed that when Congress launched a governmental agency into the commercial world and endowed it with authority to “sue or be sued,” that agency-is not less amenable to judicial process than a private enterprise under like circumstances would be.
Clearly the words “sue and be sued” in their normal connotation embrace all civil process incident to the commencement or continuance of legal proceedings. Garnishment and attachment commonly are part and
Our conclusion is strengthened by the legislative history of the many recently created governmental agencies or corporations. It shows that in but few instances was a proviso added to the “sue and be sued” clause prohibiting garnishment or attachment. 10 The fact that in the run of recent statutes no such exceptions were! made and that in only a few of them were any special prohibitions included adds corroborative weight to our conclusion that such civil process was intended.
Up to this point, however, .petitioner does not raise its major objections. Rather it grounds its claim to immunity from garnishment largely on statutory construction and on matters of policy. As to the former, it relies heavily on the fact that the authority to “sue and b'e sued” excludes cases unrelated to the Administrator’s own duties or liabilities since the statute provides that the “Administrator shall, in carrying out the provisions of this title [Title I] and titles II and III” be authorized to
But petitioner strongly urges considerations of policy against this conclusion and stresses the heavy burdens which would be imposed on such governmental instru-mentalities if garnishment were permitted. It asserts that the task of preparing answers, disclosures and returns to numerous garnishment processes in the courts of each of the states would appreciably impede the federal functions of such an agency. It points- to various state legislation regulating and restricting garnishment against public bodies and concludes that if immunity of public bodies from garnishment is to be abrogated, it should be done , by legislation so that the remedy could be appropriately molded to fit the needs of government.
In our view, however, the bridge was crossed when Congress abrogated the immunity by this “sue and be sued” clause. And no such grave interference with the federal function has been shown to lead us to imply that Congress did not intend the full consequences of what it said. Hence, considerations of convenience, cost and efficiency 12 which have been urged here are for Congress which, as we have said, has full authority to make such restrictions on the “sue and be.sued” clause as seem to it appropriate or necessary.
There is some point made of the fact that suit was brought against the Federal Housing Administration rather than against the Administrator. But when the
Petitioner claims that execution should not have been allowed under the judgment. The Act permits the Administrator “to sue and be sued in any court of competent jurisdiction, State or Federal.” Whether by Michigan law execution under such a judgment may be had is, like the availability of garnishment,
Federal Land Bank
v.
Priddy, supra,
a state question. And so fár as the federal statute is concerned, execution is not barred, for it would seem to be part of the civil process embraced within the “sue and be sued” clause. That does not, of coprse, mean that any funds or property of the United States can be held responsible for this judgment. Claims against a corporation are normally collectible only from corporate assets. That is true here. Congress has specifically directed that all such claims against the Federal Housing Administration of the type here involved “shall be paid out of funds made available by this Act.” § 1. Hence those funds, and only those, are subject- to execution. The result is that only those funds which have been paid over to the Federal Housing Administration in accordance with § 1 and which are in its possession, severed from Treasury funds and Treasury control, are subject to execution. Since no consent to reach government funds has been given, execution thereon would run counter to
Buchanan
v.
Alexander, supra.
To conclude otherwise would be to allow proceedings against the United States where it had not waived its immunity. This re
Affirmed.
Notes
Garnishment of wages due an employee of the United States Shipping Board Merchant Fleet Corporation was disallowed in
McCarthy
v.
United States Shipping Board Merchant Fleet Corp.,
60 App. D. C. 311;
Mich. Stat. Ann. (1938) § 27.1855 et seq.
Cf.
Porto Rico
v.
Rosaly,
See Shinn, Attachment & Garnishment, Chs. I, XXIII. As to garnishment of wage claims, see Sturges & Cooper, Credit Administration and Wage Earner Bankruptcies, 42 Yale L. Journ. 487, 503 et seq.
Cf.
Williams
v.
T. R. Sweat & Co.,
Col. Code Civ. Proc., ch. 7, § 129; Deering’s Calif. Code Civ. Proc., § 543.
N. Y. Civ. Prac. Act, § 684; Purdon’s Penn. Stat. § 2994. In Michigan no garnishment for money owing the principal defendant on account of labor performed by him shall be commenced until after judgment has been obtained against such principal defendant. Mich. Stat. Ann., § 27.1855.
In
Weston
v.
City Council of Charleston,
“The term is certainly a very comprehensive one, and is understood to apply to any proceeding in a court of justice, by which anindividual pursues that remedy in a court of justice, which the law affords him. The modes of proceeding may be various, but if a right is litigated between parties in a court of justice, the proceeding by which the decision of the court is sought, is a suit.”
Central of Georgia Ry. Co.
v.
Andalusia,
As respects the forty government corporations listed in Keifer & Keifer v. Reconstruction Finance Corp., supra, pp. 390-391, where Congress included the authority to “sue' and be sped,” express prohibition against attachment and garnishment was provided in only two instances. They are the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation (52 Stat. 72, 73) and the Farmers’ Home Corporation (50 Stat. 527).
While the record shows that Brooks had been “connected” with the petitioner it does not show the nature of the debt due him. The brief which petitioner filed below, however, recited that Brooks was an íployee; and no defense was interposed that the claim did not arise under Title I of the Act.
Cf. Fortas, Wage Assignments in Chicago, 42 Yale L. Journ: 526; Nugent, Hamm, Jones, Wage Executions for Debt, Bull. No. 622, Bureau of Lab. Statistics, U. S. Dept. of Labor.
Fifth Annual Report, Federal Housing Administration (1938), p. 157.
See
Nashville, C. & St. L. Ry. Co.
v.
Wallace,
