Mellon v. American Flour & Grain Co.

9 Tenn. App. 383, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 101
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 18, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 9 Tenn. App. 383 (Mellon v. American Flour & Grain Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mellon v. American Flour & Grain Co., 9 Tenn. App. 383, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 101 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

*385 DeWITT, J.

This action was begun on March 8, 1921, against the Nashville, Chattanooga and St. Louis Railway and James C. Davis, Director-General of Railroads, for damage to a carload of wheat while in transit between December 9, 1919, and January. 2, 1920.

The Federal Transportation Act of 1920, sec. 206, provided that after termination of Federal control of. railroads (March 1, 1920) suits based on causes of action arising out of the possession, use or operation by the President, of the railroad of any carrier might be brought, against an agent designated by the President for such purpose; and that such action must be brought within two years from the date of the passage of the Act — February 28, 1920.

On March 11, 1920, Walker D. Hines was by the President designated as such agent. On May 28, 1920, he was succeeded by John Barton Payne as such agent. On March 28, 1921, he was succeeded by James C. Davis as such agent. On December 14, 1925, Davis was succeeded by Andrew W. Mellon as such agent. All of them were respectively designated by the President.

On May 30. 1921. when this action was tried before a Justice of the P.eace, the plaintiff, without objection, procured an amendment to the warrant, making James C. Davis, Director-General of Railroads, a party defendant. He was not designated in the warrant as Federal agent. He was the agent designated by the President for purposes of suit on May 30, 1921, when the warrant was amended. At the time he was both Director-General and agent designated by the President, having been appointed to both offices on March 26, 1921. But he was not sued eo nomine as Federal agent designated by the President under section 206 of the Transportation Act.

Upon appeal to the circuit court from a judgment by the Justice of the Peace in favor of the plaintiff, this cause stood upon the trial docket until'July 9, 1927, when it was called for trial. The plaintiff Thompson, trustee in bankruptcy (having been substituted for the original plaintiff) was allowed, over objection, to amend the warrant by striking out the Railway Company as a party defendant; to change the words, "Director-General of Railroads” in the warrant. coming after the name,' "James C. Davis,” to "Federal agent in charge of railroads;” and to substitute Andrew W. Mellon as defendant in the place of James C. Davis and as successor in office of the said James C. Davis.

To the warrant as thus amended defendant Andrew W. Mellon, Federal agent, pleaded the limitation of two years under the Transportation Act and the limitation of six years under the statutes of Tennessee. These pleas were also interposed to another part of the amendment averring that the defendant -was liable under an agree *386 ment made when the car of grain arrived and plaintiff refused, upon inspection, to pay for it, that if plaintiff would unload the car and pay the draft and freight bill and take out, clean and dry the contents and otherwise endeavor to minimize the loss, the agent of the Federal Director would allow and cause to be paid to the plaintiff thirty cents a bushel or $492.50. For this amount, with interest, judgment was awarded by the Circuit Judge sitting without a jury. These pleas were therefore overruled.

For the defendant below it is insisted that the pleas of the statutes of limitation should have been sustained because the condition under which the government consented to be sued was not complied with until July 9, 1927, when the agent designated for that purpose was made a party defendant for the first time, and then beyond the period of limitation for such suit; that although James C. Davis was sued in 1921 he was sued in a different capacity from that in which consent had been given for him to be sued; that this suit is strictly governed by the rule that when the United States Government gives its consent to be sued it has the right to prescribe the terms and conditions upon which it can be sued, and it can be sued only by compliance with such terms and conditions whether reasonable or unreasonable ; that the conditions imposed by Congress must be strictly followed. Hands v. State of Louisiana, 134 U. S., 1, 33 L. Ed., 842; Bailey v. Hines, 131 Va., 421; Vassau v. N. Pac. Ry. Co., 69 Mont., 305, 221 Pac., 1069; The conditions imposed by Congress in respect to such actions must be strictly followed. McElrath v. U. S., 102 U. S., 426, 440, 26 L. Ed., 189; Schillinger v. U. S., 155 H. S., 163, 166, 15 S. Ct., 85, 39 L. Ed., 108; Price v. U. S., 174 U. S., 373, 375, 19 S. Ct. 765, 43 L. Ed., 1000; Davis, Agent v. Donovan, 265 U. S., 257, 263, 44 S. Ct., 513, 68 L. Ed., 1008; Rauch v. Davis, Director-General, 8 Fed. (2nd), 907.

For the plaintiff below it is contended that as the right person, James C. Davis, was sued in the beginning, the proper individual representative of the Government was brought before the court, and the amendment correcting the designation of his official character and substituting his successor with the proper designation did not amount to the institution of a suit against the Government but related back to the date of the original warrant.

In interpreting section 206 of the Transportation Act, it has been uniformly held that a suit against a person who had been the designated agent but who had been succeeded by another could not be maintained because the person designated as agent and then in office was the only one who could be sued; and that any amendment to substitute as defendant the agent actually in office, made after two years from the date of passage of the Act was barred. The wrong person had been originally sued. The amendment after the *387 expiration of the period of two years is held, in these eases, to bring in a new party, not merely to correct a misnomer, Natoli v. Davis, 75 Cal. App., 309; Davis v. Cohen & Co., 268 U. S., 638, 69 L. Ed., 1129; Rauch v. Davis, 8 Fed. (2nd.), 907; Vassau v. Ry. Co. (Mont.), 221 Pac., 1069; Davis v. Griffith, 103 Okla., 137; Mellon v. Ark. Land & Lbr. Co., 275 U. S., 460, 72 L. Ed., 372; Fahey v. Davis, 224 Mich., 371, 195 N. W., 46; Mellon v. Weiss, 270 U. S., 565, 70 L. Ed., 736.

It is insisted that, instead of barring the instant case, the rule of those cases tends to .sustain it because the prime requisite was that the right person be originally sued; that if the right person was so sued the representative of the Government, designated according to law, was before the court. Counsel says; 1 ‘ The cases show that if the right person is sued there is a suit, which is amendable, and that, if the wrong person is sued, and it is sought to substitute another person after the statute has run, the suit is not amendable.”

The decisions cited were based on differences in persons as to tenure of office. The question as to suing the right person without designating his proper official capacity, is not involved. But they do not hold that suit can be maintained against the right person in another capacity than that designated in the Act giving consent to be sued. The Transportation Act, sec. 206, subsection (d) provides that an action against the Director-General of Railroads pending in court on March 1, 1920, could be prosecuted to final judgment only by substituting the agent designated by the President in the place and stead of the Director-General of Railroads.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Tenn. App. 383, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mellon-v-american-flour-grain-co-tennctapp-1929.