MARKHAM, ALIEN PROPERTY CUSTODIAN, ET AL. v. CABELL
No. 76
Supreme Court of the United States
Decided December 10, 1945
326 U.S. 404
Argued October 19, 1945
It follows from my view of the case that the Board‘s order should be modified by striking from it Paragraph 1 (b) together with the words “and (b)” from Paragraph 2 (b), and as so modified enforced. Accordingly, I think the judgment of the Court of Appeals, enforcing the Board‘s order, should be modified in these respects and, as thus modified, affirmed.
The CHIEF JUSTICE and MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER join in this opinion.
Mr. Paul A. Freund argued the cause, and Acting Solicitor General Judson, Assistant Attorney General Wechsler, Messrs. M. S. Isenbergh and Raoul Berger were on the brief, for petitioner.
Mr. Hartwell Cabell, with whom Mr. Charlton Ogburn was on the brief, for respondent.
Messrs. George Whitefield Betts, Jr. and George Yamaoka filed a brief as amici curiae, urging affirmance.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Respondent, an American citizen, brought this suit against the Alien Property Custodian and the Treasurer of the United States to recover from the assets of the Assicurazioni Generali di Trieste e Venezia, an Italian
If § 9 (e) is applicable here, the suit may not be maintained since the debt was not in existence on October 6,
In the first place, § 9 (e) disallows recovery “to any person who is a citizen or subject of any nation which was associated with the United States in the prosecution of the war, unless such nation in like case extends reciprocal rights to citizens of the United States.” When it is recalled that § 9 (e) was first added to the Act in 1920, it seems tolerably clear that the words “was associated with the United States in the prosecution of the war” refer to World War I. The use not only of the past tense but
The United States, however, contends that such a construction of § 9 (e) would gravely interfere with the efficient administration of alien property controls in accordance with policies adopted by Congress in relation to World War II. It points out that by virtue of amendments to § 5 (b) of the Trading with the Enemy Act which were made on December 18, 1941 by the First War Powers Act (55 Stat. 839, 50 U. S. C. App., Supp. IV, § 616), the Executive is now armed with far more comprehensive power over alien property and the property of other foreign interests than in World War I. Now there is the “freezing” or “blocking” of foreign funds aimed at the immobilization of foreign assets in the United States by prohibiting,
We have concluded that however meritorious these considerations are, they raise questions of policy for Congress. We are concerned only with the right to sue on a debt under § 9. Congress granted that right to some claimants and withheld it from others. Whether its choice was wise or not is not for us to say. The right to sue, explicitly granted by § 9 (a), should not be read out of the law
It is true that § 5 (b) gave a broader grant of authority to the Executive than had existed under the original Act.5 As respects the seizure of property it provides:
It is said that the survival of the privilege of satisfying debt claims as a matter of right out of vested property is inconsistent with the new power granted the Executive by § 5 (b) to make any affirmative use of the property that the national interest in time of war might require. But we are here concerned solely with the right to sue on a debt, not with the right to sue to reclaim property nor with any question concerning the satisfaction of any judgment which may be obtained. We only hold that the right to sue on a debt granted by § 9 (a) has not been wholly withdrawn and that § 9 (e) is not applicable to this class of claims. We cannot see that the allowance of
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.
MR. JUSTICE BURTON, concurring.
A review of the development of the Trading with the Enemy Act from its inception in 1917, early in World War
It originated as H. R. 4960, June 11, 1917, drafted in the form of permanent legislation. Its purposes were explained by House and Senate Committees in terms suited to permanent legislation.1 Before its passage, several amendments were inserted which limited specific sections of the Act to “the present war,”2 but none of these so limited § 9 or the Act as a whole. Other sections were limited by references made to specific nations and still others by references to specific dates. Later amendments added other provisions confined to World War I. However, no general limitation ever has confined the Act as a whole or its main structural provisions to a specific war, specific nations or specific dates. In this way the Act has met the immediate needs of its time and also has stood ready to meet additional wars and additional enemies. The beginning of World War II in 1941 accordingly found
By its terms, its nature and its history, § 9 (e)3 from its inception has related solely to World War I. Its relation to World War I is apparent on its face. Its first clause refers to a restriction on the allowance of a debt “to any person who is a citizen or subject of any nation which was associated with the United States in the prosecution of the war.” These words, enacted in 1920 (41 Stat. 977, 980) and reenacted in 1923 (42 Stat. 1511, 1514), refer to any nation “associated” with us in World War I. “Associated” was then a word of art. Its second clause reads, “nor in any event shall a debt be allowed under this section unless it was owing to and owned by the claimant prior to October 6, 1917.” This refers to the effective date of the original Trading with the Enemy Act. This date provides a reasonable test for debts to be al-
Section 9 (e) as thus earmarked prescribes a natural limitation upon claims to be allowed against enemy property seized in World War I. As such it is reasonable. It is not possible, however, that Congress intentionally chose this indirect way of saying that American creditors may assert just claims against assets of debtors whose properties were seized in World War I, but not against assets of debtors whose properties might be held in custody by the Alien Property Custodian as a result of future wars.
The legislative history emphasizes this. The original Trading with the Enemy Act, when enacted, October 6, 1917 (40 Stat. 411), contained two kinds of provisions. The general structure of the Act was in terms of permanent legislation. Section 2 in defining terms refrained from reference to the war then in progress or to specific nations or fixed dates. For example, it provided that:
“The words ‘the beginning of the war,’ as used herein, shall be deemed to mean midnight ending the day on which Congress has declared or shall declare war or the existence of a state of war.
“The words ‘end of the war,’ as used herein, shall be deemed to mean the date of proclamation of exchange of ratifications of the treaty of peace, unless the President shall, by proclamation, declare a prior date, in which case the date so proclaimed shall be deemed to be the ‘end of
the war’ within the meaning of this Act.” ( 50 U. S. C. App., § 2 (c) .)
Sections 3 (a), (b) and (c) dealt in like terms with general procedure for trading under Presidential license in time of war. Section 5 (b) dealt with the regulation of foreign exchange, coin export, transfers of credit, etc. Section 6 authorized the President to appoint an official to be known as the Alien Property Custodian. Section 9 provided for the assertion of property claims and debt claims on behalf of any person not an enemy or ally of enemy against certain assets in the possession of the Custodian.
On the other hand, certain other provisions were, from the beginning, earmarked as temporary provisions. For example, § 3 (d) referred to certain censorship to be established “during the present war.” Section 4 (a) referred to certain German insurance companies. Section 4 (b) referred to “the present war.” Similar references to “the present war” occurred in §§ 11, 13 and 14.
Section 9 is typical. Originally it was all of a general and permanent nature. It has been amended nine times. Its first paragraph has been preserved, with slight changes, as § 9 (a) in the form of permanent legislation. On the other hand, many new subsections of § 9, including § 9 (e), contain provisions suited only to transactions growing out of World War I. The first amendment to § 9 was that of July 11, 1919 (41 Stat. 35). This threatened to confuse the situation. It inserted in the first paragraph a proviso referring to (41 Stat. 36) “all property heretofore determined by the President to have been held . . . for the benefit of a person who was an enemy or ally of enemy” and to “territory of any nation associated with the United States in the prosecution of the war which was occupied by the military or naval forces of Germany or Austria-Hungary, or their allies.” (Italics supplied.) On June 5, 1920, however, the second amendment (41 Stat. 977)
It is argued that to exclude the defense which is claimed to be supplied by § 9 (e) against debts payable out of property vested in the Custodian during World War II, under § 5 (b), as amended by the First War Powers Act, December 18, 1941 (55 Stat. 839), will result in inequities. For example, it is urged that § 5 (b) was amended in 1941 to permit vesting in the Custodian of property of “any foreign country or national thereof.” However, § 9 (a) has not been amended correspondingly to permit the assertion of claims to the payment of debts out of the property of a foreign national as distinguished from that of an “enemy or ally of enemy.” From this it is argued that Congress should not be regarded as having intended to create such inequities, if there be such, between creditors of “enemies” and those of other “foreign nationals,” through the passage of the First War Powers Act; and that, therefore, Congress must be regarded as having intended that § 9 (e) eliminate all creditors’ claims under § 9 (a) against property of enemies and of allies of enemies, unless filed or claimed before March 10, 1928.
This amounts to an argument that because subsequent legislation has produced inequitable results, therefore pre-existing legislation should be reinterpreted so as to
Furthermore, the interpretation now urged to offset inequities would create other inequities. For example, the proposed interpretation would result in an inequity to the respondent in the present case. He is an American citizen with an admittedly good claim for about $7,000 earned in 1935, against an enemy corporation, assets of which in the hands of the Alien Property Custodian are ample to pay the claim. The claimant filed his claim within the one year prescribed in the order vesting the assets of the enemy company in the Custodian.6 The claimant is now met with a defense that he cannot recover because he failed to file his claim before March 10, 1928, which was seven years before it was earned and fourteen years before the assets had been vested in the Custodian with whom he is asked to file his notice. The decision as to the existence of inequities under the 1941 amendment and as to the best way to deal with them lay with Congress in 1941 and still lies there.
The Act never has had a termination clause and was expressly excluded from the Joint Resolution of March 3, 1921 (41 Stat. 1359), which declared that certain acts of
In this status § 9 (a) and other permanent portions of
On March 11, 1942, the President issued Executive Order 9095, 7 Fed. Reg. 1971, establishing in the Office for Emergency Management of the Executive Office of the President, the Office of Alien Property Custodian, at the head of which there again would be an Alien Property Custodian appointed by the President. By Executive Order 9142, April 21, 1942, 7 Fed. Reg. 2985, expressly acting under the Constitution and laws of the United States, and in particular under Title I of the First War Powers Act, the President transferred “for the continuance of the present war and for six months after the termination thereof” to “the Alien Property Custodian provided for by Executive Order No. 9095,” everything that had been transferred to the Attorney General by Executive Order 6694 of May 1, 1934, or to the Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Claims Division of the Department of Justice under Executive Order 8136, May 15, 1939, 4 Fed. Reg. 2044.
On July 6, 1942, Executive Order 9095 was amended by Executive Order 9193, 7 Fed. Reg. 5205. The Alien Property Custodian “provided for by Executive Order No. 9095,” as amended by Executive Order 9193, was thus given the powers of the Trading with the Enemy Act as fully as in World War I and also additional powers pro-
For these reasons, § 9 (e) does not present a ground for dismissal of the complaint which depends upon § 9 (a) and the decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals should be affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, having concurred in the Court‘s opinion, also joins in these views.
Notes
“No money or other property shall be returned nor any debt allowed under this section to any person who is a citizen or subject of any nation which was associated with the United States in the prosecution of the war, unless such nation in like case extends reciprocal rights to citizens of the United States: Provided, That any arrangement made by a foreign nation for the release of money and other property of American citizens and certified by the Secretary of State to the Attorney General as fair and the most advantageous arrangement obtainable shall be regarded as meeting this requirement; nor in any event shall a debt be allowed under this section unless it was owing to and owned by the claimant prior to October 6, 1917, and as to claimants other than citizens of the United States unless it arose with reference to the money or other property held by the Alien Property Custodian or Treasurer of the United States hereunder; nor shall a debt be allowed under this section unless notice of the claim has been filed, or application therefor has been made, prior to the date of the enactment of the Settlement of War Claims Act of 1928 (Act March 10, 1928, ch. 167).” (Italics supplied.)
December 21, 1921 (42 Stat. 351), amending § 9 (a) to permit suits to be brought eighteen months instead of six months after the “end of the war.” The amendment did not insert any calendar date relating to World War I although peace had been declared July 2, 1921. The words “end of the war” must, therefore, be given their general meaning applicable to all wars as provided in the definitions in § 2, supra;
December 27, 1922 (42 Stat. 1065), amending § 9 (a) to permit suits to be brought 30 months instead of 18 months after the “end of the war“;
March 4, 1923 (42 Stat. 1511), reenacting the whole § 9. In § 9 (a) it omitted all limitation on the time within which suits might be brought. It added new subsections especially adapted to World War I claims such as a restriction against claims on behalf of citizens of the United States naturalized since November 11, 1918;
May 7, 1926 (44 Stat. 406), adding §§ 9 (b) (3A) and (3B) as to citizens of Germany, Austria, Hungary or Austria-Hungary;
March 10, 1928 (45 Stat. 254–279). This was the “Settlement of War Claims Act of 1928.” It dealt expressly with World War I. It was concerned with such subjects as the “Mixed Claims Commission” and “The Tripartite Claims Commission.” It amended the Trading with the Enemy Act in many details as to World War I claims and added many new provisions as to those claims. It added subsections to § 9. In § 9 (e) it inserted the clause which required that notices of claims must have been filed or applications for claims must have been made before the enactment of the Settlement of War Claims Act of 1928;
August 24, 1937 (50 Stat. 748), amending § 9 (e) by inserting the proviso as to arrangements which will be regarded as meeting the requirements of reciprocal rights.
“Section 5 (b) of the Trading With the Enemy Act has been continued down to the present time. The existing system of foreign property control (commonly known as freezing control) is based on that subdivision as last amended on May 7, 1940. That subdivision of section 5 as it is now in effect, however, does not give the broad powers to take, administer, control, use, liquidate, etc., such foreign-owned property that would be given by section 301 of the bill.
“At present the Government exercises supervision over transactions in foreign property, either by prohibiting such transactions or by permitting them on condition and under license. It is, therefore, a system which can prevent transactions in foreign property prejudicial to the best interests of the United States, but it is not a system which can affirmatively compel the use and application of foreign property in those interests.
“Section 301 remedies that situation by adding to the existing freezing control, in substance, the powers contained in the Trading With the Enemy Act with respect to alien property, extending those powers, and adding a flexibility of control which experience under the original act and the recent experience under freezing control have demonstrated to be advisable. The provisions of section 301 would permit the establishment of a complete system of alien property treatment. It vests flexible powers in the President, operating through such agency or agencies as he might choose, to deal with the problems that surround alien property or its ownership or control in the manner deemed most effective in each particular case. In this respect the bill avoids the rigidity and inflexibility which characterized the alien property custodian law enacted during the last war. The necessity for flexibility in legislation on this subject is accentuated by the vastness of the alien property problem confronting the Government today. At the peak of his activity, the Alien Property Custodian of the last war administered property valued at something over $500,000,000. Today there is over $7,000,000,000 worth of property already subject to the existing control.”
And see S. Rep. No. 911, 77th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 2. S. 1940, H. R. 4840 and H. R. 5031 were introduced in the 78th Congress. H. R. 1530 was introduced in the 79th Congress, January 16, 1945. See Hearings on H. R. 4840 before Subcommittee No. 1 of the Committee on the Judiciary of the House of Representatives, 78th Cong., 2d Sess., Serial No. 18, June 9–15, 1944.For example, on March 9, 1933 (48 Stat. 1), § 5 (b), relating to foreign exchange, export or hoarding of coin, etc., was amended as a part of the legislative program to meet the national emergency in banking. The amendment thus applied the power of the President under this Act to the internal conditions of the country rather than to its international relations. This was supplemented by Executive Order 6560, January 15, 1934, 31 C. F. R. § 127.0.
Following the transfer of the office of the Alien Property Custodian to the Department of Justice, § 9 (e) received a slight amendment on August 24, 1937. (50 Stat. 748.) See note 4 supra. Additional responsibility under the Act was placed upon the Attorney General or the Assistant Attorney General in charge of Claims on May 15, 1939. Executive Order 8136, 4 Fed. Reg. 2044. On April 10, 1940, the President issued Executive Order 8389, 5 Fed. Reg. 1400, which, under authority of § 5 (b), extended control over property in which Norway or Denmark or any national thereof had an interest. This action was confirmed and further supplemented by the Act of May 7, 1940 (54 Stat. 179). This was substantially extended to many other nations by Executive Order 8785, June 14, 1941, 6 Fed. Reg. 2897; Proclamation No. 2497, July 17, 1941, 6 Fed. Reg. 3555; Executive Order 8832, July 26, 1941, 6 Fed. Reg. 3715; Executive Order 8839, July 30, 1941, 6 Fed. Reg. 3823; Executive Order 8900, September 15, 1941, 6 Fed. Reg. 4795; Executive Order 8963, December 9, 1941, 6 Fed. Reg. 6348.
Each of the Vesting Orders cited in the Court‘s opinion provides: “Any person, except a national of a designated enemy country, asserting any claim arising as a result of this order may file with the Alien Property Custodian a notice of his claim, together with a request for a hearing thereon, on Form APC-1, within one year from the date hereof, or within such further time as may be allowed by the Alien Property Custodian. Nothing herein contained shall be deemed to constitute an admission of the existence, validity or right to allowance of any such claim.” The amended complaint in this case alleges, “A notice of this claim dated and verified January 19th, 1943, was filed with the Alien Property Custodian on or about that date and by him assigned the number F-38-98-1. An amended and supplemental notice of the claim dated and verified May 1st, 1944, has, at the suggestion of the Alien Property Custodian, been executed and filed and a new number, to wit, 280 has been assigned thereto.”
