GRACE LINE, Inc., Libelant-Appellee, v. UNITED STATES of America, Respondent-Appellant.
No. 5, Docket 24416
United States Court of Appeals Second Circuit
Decided May 6, 1958
255 F.2d 810
Argued Nov. 6, 1957.
Clearly the principle of res judicata is not applicable. Nor is the claim asserted in the libel in this case barred by collateral estoppel. Such an estoppel by judgment prevents subsequent litigation only of those issues that were actually litigated and determined in the earlier action, but has no effect on those questions which might have been but were not previously litigated and determined. United States v. International Building Co., 345 U.S. 502, 73 S.Ct. 807, 97 L.Ed. 1182.
For these reasons I would reverse the decree appealed from, deny the motion to dismiss the libel, based on the exceptions and exceptive allegations, and permit libelant to proceed.
Kirlin, Campbell & Keating, New York City (Walter P. Hickey, L. DeGrove Potter and Clement C. Rinehart, New York City, of counsel), for libelant-appellee.
George Cochran Doub, Asst. Atty. Gen., Paul W. Williams, U. S. Atty., S. D. New York, New York City, Paul A. Sweeney, Washington, D. C., Benjamin H. Berman, New York City, and Herman Marcuse, Washington, D. C.,
Before SWAN, MEDINA and WATERMAN, Circuit Judges.
MEDINA, Circuit Judge.
In form the decree in admiralty from which the government appeals was entered pro confesso on motion of the libelant Grace Line, Inc., based upon exceptions and exceptive allegations addressed to the sufficiency of the answer, which asserted payment of the claim sued upon.
It is alleged in the libel that between December 31, 1954 and February 16, 1955 Grace carried six shipments of ore for the United States for which freight charges in the amount of $10,732.22 became due and payable. The validity of this freight claim is not disputed. But the United States paid only $2,490.75, and the remaining $8,241.47, for which the judgment pro confesso was entered, was withheld and applied by the Comptroller General against the freight bill because of damages alleged to have been suffered by the United States in a wholly unrelated series of transactions, during the period from December 14, 1952 to April 6, 1953, in connection with which it is claimed that some of the goods transported by Grace were delivered in a damaged condition and some were lost.
The bills of lading under which the 1952-1953 shipments were made provided that “the Carrier shall be discharged from all liability in respect of * * * every claim whatsoever with respect to the goods unless suit is brought within one year after delivery of the goods or the date when the goods should have been delivered * * *.” The bills also incorporated by reference the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act,
Grace‘s libel in the court below claimed that freight was due under the 1954-
On this appeal the government urges several grounds for reversal. Its first contention is that the Comptroller General‘s withholding and applying of funds due a creditor because of the creditor‘s alleged indebtedness to the United States results in the discharge of “mutual debts” and thus constitutes “payment“; and that an admiralty court must always consider payment as a defense to a libel. The government bases this argument on the provision in
The specific issue on this first phase of the case is: what did the Congress mean by
The semantics of the government approach here is in terms of the defense of “payment.” But the underlying thesis must be that the Congress intended to by-pass the process of adjudication and provided in lieu thereof a unilateral decision by the Comptroller General. We can find nothing in the statute to warrant any such inference. It is not provided that the withholding shall constitute payment or a discharge of the debt, nor does the general context, nor any word or phrase therein, indicate that the normal processes of adjudication are to be overridden. Indeed, there is no dispute about the right of the government to proceed, as it often does, to reduce its claim to judgment if it can. Moreover, in the view of the Comptroller General,2 and under the cases,3 the withholding by the Comptroller General is subject to judicial review; and no legislative history has been brought to our attention which supports the contention that administrative action by the Comptroller General in withholding money
The statutory scheme, such as it is, constitutes no more than a method for co-ordinating the claims and debts of the various government departments and agencies.
The government cites Section 322 of the Transportation Act of 1940,
The statute on which the government relied in Western Pacific expressly reserved the right to the United States to deduct any overpayment from any subsequent bills, and this additional time was given to the government solely because the General Accounting Office was required to pay the carrier‘s bills “upon presentation * * * prior to audit or settlement * * *.” Of course, if the Comptroller General already had the power, under the previously enacted
Thus it is abundantly clear to us, and we so hold, that the unilateral withholding and applying of money allegedly due the United States on a disputed claim against a creditor does not constitute payment of that creditor‘s claim against the United States.5
Had we agreed with appellant‘s view that the period of limitations had not run against the government damage claim one might suppose, from the arguments advanced in appellant‘s brief, that it might be a hardship for the government to pay the Grace claim only to sue for the recovery of the same funds or a part thereof in an action against Grace on the damage claim. But the applicable procedure is clearly set forth in
Appellant also attacks the ruling of Judge Herlands to the effect that appellant‘s damage claim was unrelated to the claim for the unpaid balance of freight charges alleged in the libel and hence was not within the admiralty jurisdiction, which only extends to set-offs arising out of the same transaction as that on which the libel is based. But this is the well settled admiralty practice, as Supreme Court Admiralty Rule 50,
The first point made by appellant on this phase of the case need not long detain us. The substance of this point is that the real controversy between the parties was the damage claim which we have already determined was time barred, and that Grace has limited the government‘s assertion of this claim “by artificial methods of framing (its) * * * libel.” In other words, although Grace has not received the balance due for its freight charges, and asserts in its libel only its claim for the payment of this balance, appellant argues that there is really no dispute about the validity of the claim for freight charges, that this is a purely fictitious issue and that the claim is made in admiralty to foreclose the assertion by appellant of its unrelated damage claim. But there is nothing in this, nor do the cases relied on by appellant so hold. In each of these cases the state of the pleadings was such that the issues litigated and decided were properly before the court. Kreitmeyer v. Baldwin Drainage District, D.C.S.D. Fla., 2 F.Supp. 208, 210, affirmed sub nom. Florida National Bank of Jacksonville v. Hemphill, 5 Cir., 68 F.2d 785; Eastern Transportation Co. v. Blue Ridge Coal Co., 2 Cir., 159 F.2d 642;
In the case at bar the subject-matter of the libel was the alleged debt of the United States to Grace arising out of the 1954-1955 shipments, and there is no relationship whatever between this claim asserted in the libel and the claim asserted by the government. No amount of pleading can alter the fact that in this case there is no affirmative defense raised by the government, but rather an attempt to interpose a set-off which is barred by established admiralty procedure.
Appellant‘s other points are equally unpersuasive. It is idle to cite the numerous general statements in the authorities to the effect that admiralty practice is “nontechnical, flexible and plastic,” and to emphasize the liberality of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and the modern tendency to discard procedural impediments to the administration of justice in the courts. There must be rules to govern such matters as joinder of parties and claims, set-offs, counterclaims and third party practice; and here we have a rule which has stood the test of time and has been applied again and again. We are not at liberty to disregard or overrule it.
Appellant also contends, in this connection, that, even if the admiralty rules prevent the pleading of unrelated set-offs, such a procedural limitation is overcome by the statutory plan which gives the General Accounting Office the “substantive right” to withhold and apply money due a creditor. This argument that the admiralty procedural rule deprives the government of a substantive right is untenable The substantive right of the government in the case at bar is its claim for damages resulting from Grace‘s alleged mishandling of the 1952-1953 shipments. The admiralty rule respecting set-offs is merely part of a congeries of procedural provisions, including the statutes establishing the government‘s right to withhold and apply, which do not affect the substantive rights of the parties in the case at bar.
Appellant also argues that, even if the strict admiralty rule respecting set-offs is to be applied in this case, the 1952-1953 and 1954-1955 shipments were “merely fragments of a single vast overall transaction” between Grace and the United States. However, the only connection between the shipments during the two separate periods is that both were undertaken by the same shipper, Grace, and, in our view, this alone cannot bring the dealings within the concept of a single transaction. Thus we hold that the court below correctly sustained Grace‘s exception to the government‘s pleading of its unrelated set-off.
The final point with which we must deal is the trial court‘s award of interest at 4% per annum from the date of the decree until the decree is paid, on the composite amount of the sum sought in the libel plus interest at 4% per annum on this amount from the date of filing the libel until the date of the decree. Appellant argues that the court below lacked the power to award this “compound interest.” However, Section 3 of the Suits in Admiralty Act,
Affirmed.
WATERMAN, Circuit Judge (concurring).
I concur with the majority in affirming the judgment of the District Court. I disagree with my colleagues, however, in their characterization of the Government‘s position with respect to the defense of “payment.” I do not under-
HAROLD R. MEDINA
UNITED STATES CIRCUIT JUDGE
