WILBUR K. MILLER, Circuit Judge.
This appeal requires consideration of the Treaty of Peace with Hungary and the Trading with the Enemy Act.
The principal question is whether those measures require the Alien Property Custodian
to seize and liquidate certain blocked assets of a Hungarian corporation and to pay from the net proceeds thereof an American citizen’s prewar debt claim theretofore allowed under § 34 of the Act, the creditor having also attached the blocked assets in a state court suit against the foreign debtor; or whether the Custodian is under a legal duty to unblock the frozen assets of the Hungarian corporation for the benefit of its American creditor by licensing him to enforce collection there
from through his state court attachment. A second question, the answer to which depends upon the answer to the first, is whether this is a suit against the United States to which it has not consented.
Executive Order No. 8711 (6 Fed. Reg.
1443),
issued March 13, 1941, under the authority of § 5(b) of the Act, prohibited the transfer of property in this country owned by Hungarian nationals except when licensed by the Secretary of the Treasury. The Order blocked the assets of United Incandescent Lamp and Electrical Company, Ltd., a Hungarian corporation which was then and still is substantially indebted to Jacques Codray, an American citizen. In 1944, acting under § 5(b), the Alien Property Custodian seized or vested an account owed United by a New York corporation and collected thereon the sum of $37,457.35.
In 1950, Codray’s claim filed with the Custodian under § 34 of the Act was allowed to the extent of $56,620.50, and the sum of $28,560.83 was paid to him from the proceeds of the United asset.
The appellant later discovered that two New York banks were holding for United certain assets said to be worth more than $200,000. He sued the Hungarian corporation in a New York state court on January 9, 1951, attached the property held by the two banks, and thereafter, on January 22, 1951, applied to the Office of Alien Property
for a license authorizing the New York sheriff to take possession of the attached frozen assets. The application was denied “for the reason that it involves property in which there is a Hungarian interest, the disposition of which is subject to the determination of over-all governmental policy.”
On May 2, 1952, the New York state court awarded Codray judgment against United in the sum of $62,434.66. Claiming he had acquired an interest in the frozen assets through the attachments and the subsequent judgment, so that he is entitled to have his judgment debt paid therefrom, Codray sued the Attorney General in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, praying that that official be required to
“*
* * at his election either
issue a license to the plaintiff authorizing the satisfaction and payment of his judgment against United or vest the property blocked in the name of United and pay and satisfy plaintiff’s judgment against United in accordance with the aforesaid Determination and Representation
of the defendant.”
The Attorney General moved to dismiss on the ground that the action was one against the United States which had not consented to be sued, that the court lacked jurisdiction over the subject matter, and that the complaint failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. He also moved for summary judgment, with supporting affidavits which set out in detail the problems concerning blocked Hungarian assets which were posed by the Treaty of Peace with Hungary and that nation’s subsequent course of conduct. Codray also moved for summary judgment on the basis of the pleadings and the Attorney General’s supporting affidavits. The District Court dismissed the action as being against the United States, unconsented to by it. Codray appeals.
The Attorney General contends this is a suit against the United States as it seeks to compel an officer to act affirmatively and officially in behalf of the government; and that since the United States has not consented to be sued, the action was properly dismissed by the District Court. The appellant argues, however, that Congress has directed the Custodian to vest and liquidate all
blocked Hungarian assets, and to pay from the proceeds the claims of prewar creditors allowed under § 34 of the Act; that it is therefore the Custodian’s duty to vest and liquidate United’s blocked assets, and then to pay his claim which has already been allowed under § 34. If that be true, this is an action against a recalcitrant official to force him to perform a statutory duty, and is not a suit against the government.
In support of his theory, appellant contends for two propositions: (a) that Article 29 of the Treaty of Peace with Hungary
commands the Custodian to vest and liquidate all Hungarian assets; and (b) that the Article requires him then to dispose of the proceeds in accordance with the Trading with the Enemy Act. We need not consider the validity of appellant’s proposition (a) because in any event proposition (b) that the proceeds are required to be devoted first to the payment of prewar debt claims under § 34 of the Act, must be rejected. The Article contains no such injunction but is clearly to the contrary. It provides that Hungarian assets shall be devoted to the payment of the claims of the United States and its nationals against Hungary and its nationals. By express provision, the word “claims” includes, but is not limited to, debts. Obviously, the Article must somehow be implemented by provision for the determination of all claims, both governmental and individual, and for decision as to priority.
The Trading with the Enemy Act, which antedates the Treaty, was not intended to, and does not, provide procedures for those purposes. It deals only with individual debt claims and with the disposition of assets vested
under the Act.
The vesting contemplated by Article 29 is not the statutory vesting, but has a much broader purpose.
To construe the Article as requiring that Hungarian assets be applied first to the payment of individually owned debt claims, as appellant would have us construe it, would amount to judicial legislation. It would be a de
termination that debt claims such as Codray’s have priority over claims of the United States and over individual claims not based on debts. We have no authority to make that determination. Impatient individual creditors cannot now assert rights under Article 29. They must wait until implementing machinery has been set up by appropriate governmental action. It follows that the Article does not confer upon Codray the right to compel the Custodian to vest United’s assets and pay his claim therefrom.
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WILBUR K. MILLER, Circuit Judge.
This appeal requires consideration of the Treaty of Peace with Hungary and the Trading with the Enemy Act.
The principal question is whether those measures require the Alien Property Custodian
to seize and liquidate certain blocked assets of a Hungarian corporation and to pay from the net proceeds thereof an American citizen’s prewar debt claim theretofore allowed under § 34 of the Act, the creditor having also attached the blocked assets in a state court suit against the foreign debtor; or whether the Custodian is under a legal duty to unblock the frozen assets of the Hungarian corporation for the benefit of its American creditor by licensing him to enforce collection there
from through his state court attachment. A second question, the answer to which depends upon the answer to the first, is whether this is a suit against the United States to which it has not consented.
Executive Order No. 8711 (6 Fed. Reg.
1443),
issued March 13, 1941, under the authority of § 5(b) of the Act, prohibited the transfer of property in this country owned by Hungarian nationals except when licensed by the Secretary of the Treasury. The Order blocked the assets of United Incandescent Lamp and Electrical Company, Ltd., a Hungarian corporation which was then and still is substantially indebted to Jacques Codray, an American citizen. In 1944, acting under § 5(b), the Alien Property Custodian seized or vested an account owed United by a New York corporation and collected thereon the sum of $37,457.35.
In 1950, Codray’s claim filed with the Custodian under § 34 of the Act was allowed to the extent of $56,620.50, and the sum of $28,560.83 was paid to him from the proceeds of the United asset.
The appellant later discovered that two New York banks were holding for United certain assets said to be worth more than $200,000. He sued the Hungarian corporation in a New York state court on January 9, 1951, attached the property held by the two banks, and thereafter, on January 22, 1951, applied to the Office of Alien Property
for a license authorizing the New York sheriff to take possession of the attached frozen assets. The application was denied “for the reason that it involves property in which there is a Hungarian interest, the disposition of which is subject to the determination of over-all governmental policy.”
On May 2, 1952, the New York state court awarded Codray judgment against United in the sum of $62,434.66. Claiming he had acquired an interest in the frozen assets through the attachments and the subsequent judgment, so that he is entitled to have his judgment debt paid therefrom, Codray sued the Attorney General in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, praying that that official be required to
“*
* * at his election either
issue a license to the plaintiff authorizing the satisfaction and payment of his judgment against United or vest the property blocked in the name of United and pay and satisfy plaintiff’s judgment against United in accordance with the aforesaid Determination and Representation
of the defendant.”
The Attorney General moved to dismiss on the ground that the action was one against the United States which had not consented to be sued, that the court lacked jurisdiction over the subject matter, and that the complaint failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. He also moved for summary judgment, with supporting affidavits which set out in detail the problems concerning blocked Hungarian assets which were posed by the Treaty of Peace with Hungary and that nation’s subsequent course of conduct. Codray also moved for summary judgment on the basis of the pleadings and the Attorney General’s supporting affidavits. The District Court dismissed the action as being against the United States, unconsented to by it. Codray appeals.
The Attorney General contends this is a suit against the United States as it seeks to compel an officer to act affirmatively and officially in behalf of the government; and that since the United States has not consented to be sued, the action was properly dismissed by the District Court. The appellant argues, however, that Congress has directed the Custodian to vest and liquidate all
blocked Hungarian assets, and to pay from the proceeds the claims of prewar creditors allowed under § 34 of the Act; that it is therefore the Custodian’s duty to vest and liquidate United’s blocked assets, and then to pay his claim which has already been allowed under § 34. If that be true, this is an action against a recalcitrant official to force him to perform a statutory duty, and is not a suit against the government.
In support of his theory, appellant contends for two propositions: (a) that Article 29 of the Treaty of Peace with Hungary
commands the Custodian to vest and liquidate all Hungarian assets; and (b) that the Article requires him then to dispose of the proceeds in accordance with the Trading with the Enemy Act. We need not consider the validity of appellant’s proposition (a) because in any event proposition (b) that the proceeds are required to be devoted first to the payment of prewar debt claims under § 34 of the Act, must be rejected. The Article contains no such injunction but is clearly to the contrary. It provides that Hungarian assets shall be devoted to the payment of the claims of the United States and its nationals against Hungary and its nationals. By express provision, the word “claims” includes, but is not limited to, debts. Obviously, the Article must somehow be implemented by provision for the determination of all claims, both governmental and individual, and for decision as to priority.
The Trading with the Enemy Act, which antedates the Treaty, was not intended to, and does not, provide procedures for those purposes. It deals only with individual debt claims and with the disposition of assets vested
under the Act.
The vesting contemplated by Article 29 is not the statutory vesting, but has a much broader purpose.
To construe the Article as requiring that Hungarian assets be applied first to the payment of individually owned debt claims, as appellant would have us construe it, would amount to judicial legislation. It would be a de
termination that debt claims such as Codray’s have priority over claims of the United States and over individual claims not based on debts. We have no authority to make that determination. Impatient individual creditors cannot now assert rights under Article 29. They must wait until implementing machinery has been set up by appropriate governmental action. It follows that the Article does not confer upon Codray the right to compel the Custodian to vest United’s assets and pay his claim therefrom.
Aside from his reliance upon the Treaty, appellant argues that, since his claim has been allowed by the Custodian, §§ 7(b), 9(a) and 34 of the Act require that official to give him the relief which he seeks.
Section 34 provides that vested property, or the net proceeds thereof “shall be equitably applied by the Custodian in accordance with the provisions of this section to the payment of debts owed by the person who owned such property or interest immediately prior to its vesting * * The section further provides:
“ * * * The Custodian shall not be required through any judgment of any court, levy of execution, or otherwise to sell or liquidate any property or interest vested in or transferred to him, for the purpose of paying or satisfying any debt claim.”
The determination and allowance of Cod-ray’s claim made him eligible to receive payments from the fund' derived from the liquidation of United’s assets then or thereafter vested under the Act; but the allowance did not require that United’s blocked assets be vested for that purpose.
Section 7(b)
does not help the appellant. It expressly recognizes the blocking power by forbidding payment without the license of the President.
By the terms of § 9(a), subject however to enumerated conditions, “Any person not an enemy or ally of enemy claiming any interest, right, or title in any money or other property which may have been” vested in or transferred to the Custodian, or to whom a debt may be owing by an enemy or ally of enemy whose property has been vested in or transferred to the Custodian, may institute a suit in equity
“ * * * to establish the interest, right, title, or debt so claimed, and if so established the court shall order the payment, conveyance, transfer, assignment, or delivery to said claimant of the money or other property so held by the Alien Property Custodian * *
The Custodian must be made a party defendant.
It is apparent that § 9(a) has no application here. It deals with vested assets and not with those that are merely blocked. Moreover, Codray could not proceed under that section even if United’s assets were now vested, because the Supreme Court has held that a blocking order prevents a creditor from thereafter acquiring by attachment an “interest, right or title” in property such as will support a claim against the Custodian under § 9(a) of the Act after the attached asset is later vested.
“Petitioners by their unlicensed attachment could obtain no ‘interest, right, or title’ in this fund recoverable against the Custodian. He may proceed to ad-
We do not find in the sections cited, or elsewhere in the statute, anything which can be construed as a command that the President take affirmative action as to blocking, vesting, unblocking or licensing. In deciding whether or not to take such action, the President determines governmental policy; in acting he acts for the government. So, when Codray sues to compel the Attorney General
to act affirmatively for the government, he is not suing to force an officer to perform a legal duty, but to force him to take governmental action which the statute permits but does not require. In other words, this suit is in effect against the United States. Larson v. Domestic & Foreign Commerce Corp., 1949, 337 U.S. 682, 69 S.Ct. 1457, 93 L. Ed. 1628. As it has not consented to be sued, the action should have been, as it was, dismissed.
Affirmed.