In these tiwo cases the same plaintiff ■sues, in the first, the United States and Pioneer Contracting Co., Inc. (called Pioneer), and in the second, the Government alone, for the value of timber alleged to have been owned by plaintiff apart from the land and which was destroyed in the process of 'building or repairing levees on the Mississippi River.
In both cases, motions to dismiss, on substantially the same grounds, were filed, save in the first there was the additional contention that the Government could not be joined as a defendant with Pioneer. Thereafter, the plaintiff was allowed to dismiss its complaint as to this defendant. Otherwise, the grounds of the motions to dismiss are:
(1) That plaintiff was not domiciled in the Western District of Louisiana. (This plea to the jurisdiction was by agreement of counsel waived); and
(2) The petition does not state a claim upon which relief can be granted, including the contention there can be no recovery for the timber because it was not assessed for taxes by the State of Louisiana and its subdivisions.
Counsel for the Government concedes that private persons are permitted to" sue the United States in two types of cases: (1) Subsection (a) of Section 1346, Title 28 U.S.C.A., The Tucker Act; and (2) Subsection (b) of Section 1346, Title 28 U.S.C.A., The Federal Tort Claims Act; but claim these demands fall into neither category, but are controlled by the provisions of Section 702(c) of Title 33, U.S.C.A., The Flood Control Act. In Tilden v. United States, D. C.,
Attention is also directed by counsel for the Government to the decision of the State Supreme Court in Dickson v. Board of Cbmmissioners of Caddo Levee District,
As held in the Tilden case, supra, it is-believed complainant alleges a cause of action which should be tried on its merits..
The motions to dismiss will be overruled.
