delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Court took this case for review because an important question of federal law called for settlement, particularly in view of a conflict between the court below and the Supreme Court of Minnesota.
Casper
v.
Regional Agricultural Credit Corp.,
On July 21, 1932, Congress enlarged the powers of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation (hereafter called “Reconstruction”) established early that year, Act oí January 22,1932, c. 8, 47 Stat. 5, by authorizing it, among other things, to create regional agricultural credit corporations “in any of the twelve Federal land-bank districts.” Emergency Relief and Construction Act of 1932, § 201 (e), c. 520, 47 Stat. 709, 713. Each corporation was to have a paid-up capital of not less than $3,000,000 to be subscribed for by Reconstruction, was to be managed by appointees of Reconstruction, and was empowered to make loans to farmers and: stockmen for agricultural purposes or for raising and marketing livestock. Accordingly, on September 10, 1932, Reconstruction chartered the Regional Agricultural Credit Corporation of Sioux City, Iowa (hereafter called “Regional”). Regional, in due exercise of its powers, entered into so-called cattle-feeding contracts, whereby it undertook to provide sufficient feed and water for livestock with appropriate security for rendering these services. Failure through negligence to provide proper care for cattle delivered under this arrangement, with resulting damage to the livestock, is the basis of this suit brought by petitioner, plaintiff below, against Reconstruction and Regional. Both de
*388
fendants demurred on several grounds, of which challenge to the jurisdiction of the court is alone pertinent here. The District Court sustained the demurrers and dismissed the suit.
The starting point of inquiry is the immunity from unconsented suit of the government itself. As to the states, legal irresponsibility was written into the Eleventh Amendment; as to the United States, it is derived by implication.
Monaco
v.
Mississippi,
Therefore, the government does not become the conduit of its immunity in suits against its agents or instru-mentalities merely because they do its work.
United States
v.
Lee,
Congress may, of course, endow a governmental corporation with the government’s immunity. But always the question is: has it done so?
Federal Land Bank
v.
Priddy,
*390
Because of the advantages enjoyed by the corporate device compared with conventional executive agencies, the exigencies of war and the enlarged scope of government in economic affairs have greatly extended the use of independent corporate facilities for governmental ends.
2
In spawning these corporations during the past two decades, Congress has uniformly included amenability to law. Congress has provided for not less than forty of such corporations discharging governmental functions, and without exception the authority to-sue- and-be-sued was included.
3
Such a firm practice is partly
*391
an indication of the present climate of opinion which has brought governmental immunity from suit into disfavor, partly it reveals a definite attitude on the part of Congress which should be given hospitable scope.
4
It is noteworthy that the oldest surviving government corporation — the Smithsonian Institution — has several times been in the law courts, even in the absence of explicit authority and although the general feeling regard
*392
ing governmental immunity was very different in 1846 from what it has become in our own day. 9 Stat. 102.
Smithsonian Institute
v.
Meech,
Only two instances have been brought to the Court’s attention in which Congress has not” explicitly rendered its recent corporate creations amenable to suit. These are the Regionals and the Federal Savings and Loan Associations. 48 Stat. 128, 132-134. It is significant that neither of these classes of corporations was the direct emanation of Congress or the offspring of a general incorporation law under Congressional authority. Sloan Shipyards v. U. S. Fleet Corp., supra. Each was to come into being through an organ that had theretofore been created by Congress. , We put the’Federal Savings and Loan Associations to one side, because they are not now before the Court. 5 But the circumstances attending the origination of Regional make it manifest that it was within the considerations that have uniformly led Congress to make its immediate corporate creatures subject to suit. The genesis, functions, and affiliations of Regional all negative the assumption that in its operations it was to be without the law.
Reconstruction is the parent of- Regional. When creating it, Congress gave Reconstruction various general corporate powers including authority “to sue and be sued, to complain and to defend, in any court of competent jurisdiction, State or Federal.” 47 Stat. 5, 6. When later Congress authorized Reconstruction to create these Regional Agricultural Credit Corporations, it did so by
*393
outlining in a single,section of a comprehensive statute the broad scope of this added power for Reconstruction. 47 Stat. 709, 713.
6
Congress naturally assumed that the general corporate powers to which it had given particularity in the original statute establishing Reconstruction would flow automatically to the Regionals from the source of their being. Such, certainly, has been the practical construction of the Regional Agricultural Credit Corporations in the instinctive pursuit of their enterprise. See, e. g.,
Hollenbeck
v.
Regional Agricultural Credit Corp.,
To give Regional an immunity denied1 to more than two score corporations, each designed for a purpose of government not relevantly different from that which occasioned the creation of Regional, is to impute to Congress a desire for incoherence in a body of affiliated enactments and for drastic legal differentiation where policy justifies none. A fair judgment of the statute in its entire setting relieves us from making such an imputation of caprice.
The legal position of Regional is, therefore, the same as though Congress had expressly empowered it “to sue and be sued.” The scope of this liability remains to be explored.
Regional claims immunity in any event because Congress has not subjected it to suit “in tort.” It is assumed that the present action is not one upon a contract, express or implied, and, therefore, outside the purview of “to sue and be sued.” The premise is not valid, nor does the conclusion follow.
The transaction which gave rise to the controversy was a bailment of livestock for hire, and the cause of action lack of reasonable diligence by the bailee. Ever since the fifteenth century, according to Maitland, there were “actions against bailees for negligence in the custody of goods entrusted to them, and here also it was necessary to allege an assumpsit” — the having undertaken to do something. Maitland, Equity, Lecture VI, pp. 362, 363; Maitland, The Forms of Action at Common Law, Lecture VI, pp. 68, 69. That Regional’s failure properly to feed and water the livestock entrusted to it by the cattle-feeding contract was not a wrong disassociated from carrying out the very transaction which brought it into existence, is evident from the recognized liability of the United States itself as lessee and bailee even under the
*395
explicit restrictions of the Court of Claims Acts.
8
Both this Court and the Court of .Claims have sustained actions not dissimilar from the present They have recognized that the breach of implied duty of a lessee “not to commit waste, or suffer it to be committed,”
United States
v.
Bostwick,
To assume that Congress in subjecting these recently created governmental corporations to suit meant to enmesh them in these procedural entanglements, would do violence to Congressional purpose. When it chose to do so, Congress knew well enough how to restrict its consent to suits sounding only in contract, even with all the controversies in recondite procedural learning that this might entail. It did so with increasing particularity in the successive Court of Claims Acts. 10 Stat. 612; 24 Stat. 505; 28 U. S. C. §§ 41 (20), 250 (1). In the light of these statutes it ought not to be assumed that when *396 Congress consented “to suit” without qualification, the effect is the same as though it had written “in suits on contract, express or implied, in cases not sounding in tort.” No such distinction was made by Congress, and no such interpolation into statutes has been made in cases affecting government corporations incorporated under state law or that of the District of Columbia. 9 There is equally no warrant for importing such a distinction here. To do so would make application of a- steadily growing policy of governmental liability contingent upon irrele-yant procedural factors. These, in our law, are still deeply rooted in historical accidents to which the expanding conceptions of public morality regarding governmental responsibility should not be subordinated.
Congress has embarked upon a generous policy of consent for suits against the government sounding in tort even where there is no element of contract. It has sanctioned suits for patent infringement, 36 Stat. 851, provided for compensation for the disability or death of a government employee “while in the performance of his duty,” 39 Stat. 742,' authorized payment for damage to property by the Army Air Service. 41 Stat. 109. These and .other public statutes and many private bills were founded on considerations thus generalized in a Report of the Senate Committee on Claims:
“In other words, it may be said that Congress has recognized the general liability of the Government within maximum amounts for the negligence of officers and employees of the United States, but the machinery for determining that liability is defective and results in overburdening the Claims Committee of Congress and Congress itself with the consideration of tort liability claims and with injuries to the claimants.
*397 “This proposed legislation is designed to relieve the situation by utilizing the machinery of the Accounting Office and judicial branches of the Government in the assistance of Congress.” Senate Report No. 1699, 70th Cong., 2d Sess., p. 4. See also Senate Report No. 658, 72d Cong., 1st Sess., p. 3.
Acting on these views, Congress passed a general court of claims bill, which, however, at the close of the session failed of enactment by President Coolidge’s pocket-veto. H. R. 9285, 70th Cong., 2d Sess.; 70 Cong. Rec. 4836. 10 Congress has thus clearly manifested an attitude which serves as a guide to the scope of liability implicit in the general authority it has conferred on governmental corporations to sue and be sued. We should be denying the recent tre'nd of Congressional policy to relieve Regional from liability. This compels us to reverse the judgment of the court below.
Reversed.
Notes
See Professor Borchard’s bibliography in (1934) 20. A. B. A. J. 747, 748, and the collection of authorities in Judge Mack’s opinion in
The Pesaro,
See Thurston, Government Proprietary Corporations; Van Dorn, Government Owned Corporations; McDiarmid, Government Corporations and Federal Funds; Field, Government Corporations: A Proposal (1935) 48 Harv. L. Rev. 775; McIntyre, Government Corporations as Administrative Agencies: An Approach (1936) 4 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 161.
The American Legion, 41 Stat. 284, 285; Foreign Banking Corporations, 41 Stat. 378, 379; China Trade Act Corporation, 42 Stat. 849, 851; Belleau Wood Memorial Association, 42 Stat. 1441; Federal Intermediate Credit Banks, 42 Stat. 1454, 1455; National Agricultural Credit Corporations, 42 Stat. 1454, 1462; The Grand Army of the Republic, 43 Stat. 358, 359; Inland Waterways Corporation, 43 Stat. 360, 362; The United States Blind Veterans of the World War, 43 Stat. 535, 536; American War Mothers, 43 Stat. 966, 967; Textile Foundation, 46 Stat. 539, 540; Reconstruction Finance Corporation, 47 Stat. 5, 6; Disabled American Veterans of the World War, 47 Stat. 320, 321; Federal Home Loan Bank, 47 Stat. 725, 735; Tennessee Valley Authority, 48 Stat. 58, 60; Corporation of Foreign Security Holders, 48 Stat. 92, 93; Home Owners’ Loan Corporation, 48 Stat. 128, 129; Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 48 Stat. 162, 172; Production Credit Corporations, Production Credit Associations, Central Bank for Cooperatives, Regional Banks for Cooperatives, 48 Stat. 257, 266; Federal Farm Mortgage Corporations, 48 Stat. 344, 345; Cairo Bridge Commission, 48 Stat. 577, 581; Port Arthur Bridge Commission, 48 Stat. 1008, 1009; Federal Credit Union, 48 Stat. 1216, 1218; Federal Savings & Loan Insurance Corporation, 48 Stat. 1246, 1256; National Mortgage Associations, 48 Stat. 1246, 1253; American National Theater and Academy, 49 Stat. *391 457, 458; Federal Housing Administrator, 49 Stat. 684, 722; Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States, 49 Stat. 1390, 1391; Disaster Loan Corporation, 50 Stat. 19; Farmers’ Home Corporation, 50 Stat. 527; Marine Corps League, 50 Stat. 558, 559; Owensboro Bridge Commission, 50 Stat. 641, 645; Southeastern University, 50 Stat. 697, 698; American Chemical Society, 50 Stat. 798, 799, 800 (semble).; United States Housing Authority, 50 Stat. 888, 889, 890; Federal Crop Insurance Corporation, 52 Stat. 72, 73; Niagara Falls Bridge Commission, 52 Stat. 767, 770.
This list does not include, of course, the government corporations chartered under .general state or District of Columbia incorporation laws. Sloan Shipyards v. U. S. Fleet Corp., supra.
Mr. Justice Holmes, on Circuit, gave pioneer expression to inferences to be drawn from legislative policy. “A statute,” he wrote in
Johnson
v.
United States,
It is to be noted that the progenitor of these Associations — the Federal Home Loan Bank Board — is not itself a corporation. But see Sloan Shipyards v. U. S. Fleet Corp., supra, in which the Fleet Corporation was found subject to suit although Congress authorized its creation through the President.
Section 201 (e) of the statute, providing for Regional Agricultural Credit Corporations, covers less than half a page of a fifteen-page statute.
See, e. g., Federal Land Banks, 39 Stat. 360, 363; Joint Stock Land Banks, 39 Stat. 360, 374; Federal Intermediate Credit Banks, 42 Stat. 1454, 1455; National Agricultural Credit Corporations, 42 Stat. 1454, 1462; Production Credit Corporations, Production Credit Associations, Central Bank for Cooperatives, Regional Banks for Cooperatives, 48 Stat. 257, 266; Federal Farm Mortgage Corporations, 48 Stat. 344, 345; National Mortgage Associations, 48 Stat. 1246, 1253. Congress • itself recognized the identity of purpose in these various corporations. 48 Stat. 267, 268. Note, too, that Production Credit Corporations, successor to Regional Agricultural Credit' Corporations are subject to suit. 48 Stat. 257, 266.'
The Act of February 24, 1855 (10 Stat. 612), establishing the Court of Claims allowed suit for claims “upon any contract, express' or implied . . The Act of March 3, 1887 (24 Stat. 505) allowed suits for claims “upon any contract, express or implied ... or for damages, liquidated or unliquidated, in cases not sounding in tort. . . .” See 28 U. S. C. §§ 41 (20), 250 (1).
The cases are collected in Thurston, Government Proprietary Corporations (1936) 21 Va. L. Rev. 351, 378, et seq.
That objections to the administrative features of the bill were the probable reasons for the veto is indicated by a memorandum of AttomeyTGeneral Sargent, for which see McGuire, Tort Claims against the United States (1931) 19 Geo. L. J. 133, 134, 135.
