delivered the opinion of the Court.
After an investigation in which appellant’appeared, appellee James V. Forrestal, while Under Secretary of the Navy, determined thаt the appellant had received a large
We think the government is an indispensable party in this case, and since it has not consented to be sued in the Distriсt Court in this type of proceeding, the complaint was properly dismissed against the government officer.
Minnesota
v.
United States,
Here, the essential allegations and the relief sought do not make out a threatened trespass against any property in the possession of or belonging to the appellant. Nor does the rеcord present any other circumstances that would make the Secretary suable as an individual in this proceeding. Certainly the action which thе Secretary proposed to take is not a violation of any express command of Congress. Cf.
Rolston
v.
Missouri Fund Comm’rs,
Affirmed.
Notes
56 Stat. 226, 245; 56 Stat. 798, 982; 57 Stat. 347; 57 Stat. 564; 58 Stat. 21, 78.
Section 403 (c) (2) of the Renegotiation Act authorizes and directs the Secretary to eliminate excessive profits by, among other things, “withholding from amounts otherwise due to the contractor any amount of such excessive profits.”
Appellant also alleged below that the Secretary had threatened to instruct other contractors to withhold any moneys duе to appellant. A stipulation and affidavit by the parties reveal, however, that this action will in fact not be taken. Any controversy that might have been before the court by virtue of this allegation has, thus, become moot. It can therefore not serve as the basis for the court’s consideration of the constitutional and other questions here in issue.
United States
v.
Alaska Steamship Co.,
This is seen from the prayer for a declaratory judgment, which asks only that the Renegotiation Act be held unconstitutional.
