Baker v. Federal Crop Ins. Corp.

407 P.2d 841, 241 Or. 609, 1965 Ore. LEXIS 449
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 17, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 407 P.2d 841 (Baker v. Federal Crop Ins. Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker v. Federal Crop Ins. Corp., 407 P.2d 841, 241 Or. 609, 1965 Ore. LEXIS 449 (Or. 1965).

Opinion

SLOAN, J.

After plaintiffs received a judgment for crop losses which the jury had found were covered by a crop insurance policy issued by defendant, the trial court awarded attorney fees to plaintiffs pursuant to OBS 736.325. This appeal only challenges the validity of *611 the award of attorney fees. Defendant, as a corporation wholly owned hy the Federal government, claims that governmental immunity protects it from the attorney fees award. Except for the claim of immunity, the case would he controlled hy OES 736.325.

The general rule has been, and we think still is, that “Absent some valid federal law to the contrary, a governmental corporation is not the ‘United States’ for purposes of suit;* and being given the capacity to sue and he sued is placed ‘upon an equal footing with private parties as to the usual incidents of suits in relation to the payments of costs and allowances.’ ”* (*Footnotes omitted). 6 Moore’s Federal Practice (2d ed 1953) §54.75, page 1343. More will be said of this later. Defendant argues that if even this is the accepted rule, it is not a corporation in the sense intended hy the statement of the rule.

It is of first importance to examine the status of defendant as a governmental agency. This can only he found hy examination of the creating and amend7 ing acts of the Federal Congress. The statutes, as they exist for our purposes are found at Title 7, § 1501 *612 USCA, et seq. Defendant corporation was initially created in 1938 for the Congressionally declared purpose of improving the economic stability of agriculture by a sound system of crop insurance. It was created as an agency of the Department of Agriculture. All of the capital stock of the corporation was subscribed by the United States. The Board of Directors consisted of the manager of the Corporation, two other persons who were to be employees of the Department of Agriculture and two persons experienced in the insurance business, who were not to be employed by the government. The Corporation, acting through the Board, was given broad powers, similar to powers that are generally assumed by a private corporation. Included is the power to sue and be sued in any court of record of a state having general jurisdiction or in any United States District Court. Though originally confined to the Federal District Courts, a 1947 amendment of the “sue and be sued” provision extended jurisdiction to state courts. This amendment has a significance that will later be mentioned.

Other sections of the act provide for the losses to be insured against; the power of the Board to fix premiums and provisions for adjustment and payment of claims. The last mentioned section, 7 USCA 1508 (c), contains the following language relative to an unpaid claim:

“In the event that any claim for indemnity under the provisions of this chapter is denied by the Corporation, an action on such claim may be brought against the Corporation in the United States district court, or in any court of record of the State having general jurisdiction, sitting in the district or county in which the insured farm is located, and jurisdiction is conferred upon such *613 district courts to determine such controversies without regard to the amount in controversy: Provided, That no suit on such claim shall he allowed under this section unless the same shall have been brought within one year after the date when notice of denial of the claim is mailed to and received by the claimant.”

The quoted language is in addition to the general power before mentioned, to sue and be sued. It is noted that time is the only express limitation found in this authority to sue for an unpaid claim.

In Keifer & Keifer v. Reconstruction Finance Corp., 1939, 306 US 381, 59 S Ct 516, 83 L Ed 784, the opinion by Mr. Justice Frankfurter makes footnote reference to some forty similar corporations, including this defendant, that Congress had created to that date. The question in the case was the immunity of the Regional Agriculture Credit Corporation. The Regional Agriculture Credit Corporations were organized by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation by authority of an Act of Congress. The authorizing Act made no provision for immunity. The particular action was against one of the corporations upon a claim that the corporation had negligently cared for plaintiff’s cattle. Even absent an express provision withdrawing immunity, the court held that the corporation was amenable to the action. The court paid particular attention to the fact that in creating the forty corporations the Congress had withdrawn immunity in all but two. The court emphatically held that the immunity of the United States as such did not extend to these corporations. It was said that this policy had endured for more than a hundred years.

In addition to the denial of immunity found in the *614 Keifer case, we think the language of the decision would place defendant in the same category as all of the other government owned corporations.

It is then necessary to find the limits, if any, of Congressional withdrawal of immunity.

In three other particularly pertinent cases the Supreme Court has, with the same emphatic expression, denied immunity to similar government corporations and has imposed no limits on their status as a litigant. One, Sloan Shipyards Corp. v. United States S. Bd. E. F. Corp., 1922, 258 US 549, 42 S Ct 386, 66 L Ed 762, was decided prior to the Keifer case. It must he recognized that the Act which created the United States Shipping Board Emergency Fleet Corporation permitted the corporation to be organized under the corporation laws of the District of Columbia. However, as the opinion states the status of the corporation had been enlarged and changed so that it was argued to the Court that it was entitled to the immunity of the sovereign. The court held that: “In general the United States cannot be sued for a tort, but its immunity does not extend to those that acted in its name.” 258 US 549, 568, 42 S Ct 386, 388, 66 L Ed 762, 768. The opinion has become recognized as a significant statement of the limitations of the sovereign immunity doctrine.

Federal Housing Administration v. Burr, 1940, 309 US 242, 60 S Ct 488, 84 L Ed 724, held that the FHA was subject to garnishment proceedings issued by a state court. In a unanimous opinion by Mr. Justice Douglas the court,, in language important to the case before us, said:

“* * * Hence, when Congress established such an agency, authorizes it to engage in commercial *615 and business transactions with the public, and permits it to ‘sue and be sued,’ it cannot be lightly assumed that restrictions on that authority are to be implied.

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Bluebook (online)
407 P.2d 841, 241 Or. 609, 1965 Ore. LEXIS 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-federal-crop-ins-corp-or-1965.