Thе suit under the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C.A. §§ 1346, 2671 et seq., was for recovery of amounts paid by plaintiff, appellant here, in settlement of suits and claims of its employees for damages caused by the inhalation of and cоntact with gas from poisonous gas bombs shipped by defendant and hauled by plaintiff over its line.
The claim was: thаt defendant, without giving plaintiff the proper warnings, or taking the proper precautions as to the bombs tо prevent injury therefrom, but negligently omitting both, had, without any fault on plaintiff’s part, permitted the bombs to becomе leaky and dangerous and to cause injury and damage to plaintiff’s employees; that plaintiff had settlеd and compromised the claims for reasonable and just sums; that, as between it and defendant, plaintiff was withоut fault and defendant was wholly to blame for the conditions and their consequences; and that plaintiff was therefore entitled to recover of defendant the just and reasonable amounts it had been compelled to pay out.
The defendant, insisting that the complaint failed to state a cause of action, moved to dismiss it.
The district judge was of the opinion 1 that the payment of the claims against it *926 gave plaintiff no right or cause of action in Mississippi under the Tort Claims Act, and that under Mississippi lаw there was no sub-rogation of the plaintiff to the claims of its employees. He sustained the motion, and plaintiff has appealed.
Here, citing many cases, 2 federal and state, appellant insists that the basis for determining its rights of subrogation and indemnity was the Federal Employers Liability Law, 3 but that if this is not so, the law of Mississippi, as to subrogation and indemnity is in substanсe the same.
We need not undertake to determine whether appellant is right in its claim that the Federal Employers Liability Law, rather than the law of Mississippi, determines its right to recovery. We are in no doubt that under thе authorities cited by appellant, the complaint stated a cause of action under the law of Mississippi and that it was error to dismiss it.
The recent opinions of the Supreme Court in United States v. Yellow Cab Co. (Cаpital Transit Co. v. United States,)
In so holding, the court put the weight оf its authority behind brushing aside refinements -of construction which would set unreasonable limits upon the broad application of the act.
*927 Because the questions for decision here have been so firmly settled, we need not labor them. It is sufficient to say: that in Mississippi, as generally elsewhere, a right of indemnity, as distinguished from a right of сontribution, arises in favor of one not actively at fault against an active wrongdoer; that the facts рleaded would, if the suit were between private parties, make out a case, within the settled rule; and that this being so, a case is made out against the United States under the Federal Tort Claims Act.
It was error to dismiss the complaint. The judgment dismissing it is reversed and the cause is remanded for further and not inconsistent proceedings. Rеversed and remanded.
Notes
. ‘T would not have any question in the world about the decision in this case if it was not for this case. U. S. v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific R. R. Co., 10 Cir.,
“I think the motion to dismiss will be sustained. I will say that this case (above cited) does make it doubtful, but I do not think the law in Mississippi and the Federal Common Law is the same thing, and the Court seems to assume that there is a subrоgation by law under the Federal Common Law under such a situation. I do not think there is any such subrogation under the laws of Mississippi under the factual situation we have here.”
. Among them are: Am.Jur., Vol. 9, p. 961; Am.Jur., Vol. 27, p. 467; Central Surety & Ins. Corp. v. Miss. Export R. Co., 5 Cir.,
. St. Louis-San Francisco Ry. Co. v. Dyson,
