delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioner, Reconstruction Finance Corporation, took mortgages and assignments of real and personal property of a corporation, including its trade-marks and trade names, as security for a loan. On a sale by the trustee in bankruptcy of the debtor, petitioner purchased the property. A new corporation undertook to use the trade-marks and petitioner sought an injunction. Decree went against petitioner. Defendants’ application for costs and additional allowance was denied.
Rule 54 (d) of the Rules of Civil Procedure provides that “costs against the United States, its officers, and agencies shall be imposed only to the extent permitted by law.” This provision was merely declaratory and effected no change of principle.
The Reconstruction Finance Corporation is a corporate agency of the government, which is its sole stockholder. 47 Stat. 5; 15 U. S. C. 601. It is managed by a board of directors appointed by the President by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. The Corporation has wide powers and conducts financial operations on a vast scale. While it acts as a governmental agency in performing its functions (see
Pittman
v.
Home Owners’ Loan Corp.,
We have had recent occasion to consider the status, in relation to suits, of a regional corporation chartered by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation and we have set forth the general principles which we think should govern in our approach to the particular question now presented. Keifer v. Reconstruction Finance Corporation, 306 U. S. *84 381. In the Keifer case we did not find it necessary to trace to its origin the doctrine of the exceptional freedom of the United States from legal responsibility, but we observed that “because the doctrine gives the government a privileged position, it has been appropriately confined.” Hence, we declared that “the government does not become the conduit of its immunity in suits against its agents or instrumentalities merely because they do its work.” Id., p. 388. Recognizing that Congress may endow a governmental corporation with the government’s immunity, we found the question to be “Has it done so?” That is, immunity in the case of a governmental agency is not presumed. We sought evidence that Congress had intended that its creature, considering the purpose and scope of its powers, should have'the immunity which the sovereign itself enjoyed, and we noted the practice of Congress as an indication “of the present climate of opinion” which had brought governmental immunity from suit into disfavor. Accordingly, being unable to find that Congress had intended immunity from suit we denied it.
It was with a similar'approach that we decided in
Federal Housing Administration
v.
Burr,
These decisions chart our course. The Reconstruction Finance Corporation is expressly authorized to sue and be sued. It has availed itself of that authority to bring the defendants into court to answer the charge of trademark infringement. The defendants have successfully resisted the charge and the question is whether they should be denied the usual incidents of their success. We apply the principle that there is no presumption that the agent is clothed with sovereign immunity. We look as in the
Keifer
and
Burr
cases to see whether Congress has endowed petitioner with that immunity and we find no indications whatever of such an intent. We apply the farther principle that the words “sue and be sued” normally include the natural and appropriate incidents of legal proceedings. The payment of costs by the unsuccessful litigant, awarded by the court in the proper exercise of the authority it possesses in similar cases, is manifestly such an incident. The additional allowance made by courts of equity in accordance with sound equity practice is likewise such an incident.
Sprague
v.
Ticonic
Bank,
The judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals is
Affirmed:
