Ozanic v. United States

188 F.2d 228, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 3739
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedApril 10, 1951
Docket201, Docket 21931
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 188 F.2d 228 (Ozanic v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ozanic v. United States, 188 F.2d 228, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 3739 (2d Cir. 1951).

Opinion

L. HAND, Chief Judge.

The libellant, Ozanic appeals from a decree in the admiralty, marking “discharged and satisfied” an earlier decree in the same suit which made an award of $100,447.83 in his favor against the United States; Shipping Assets Clearing, Ltd., appeals from an order denying it leave to intervene in the same suit. Ozanic, who had been master of the ship “Petar,” originally brought the suit under the Public Vessels Act 1 to recover for her loss on March 8, 1942, in a collision with a tanker owned by the United States, in which both ships were at fault. At the time of the collision, and when the suit was commenced, a Yugoslav corporation owned the “Petar”; but in December, 1946, the “Praesidium” and National Assembly of Yugoslavia “nationalized” the corporation by proceedings which professed to make the claim “state property”; and it is common ground that it became so. 2 On July 31, 1947, an agreement was executed between the British Government, the Yugoslav Government, the “nationalized” successor of the original corporate owner of the “Petar,” one Bateson and Shipping Assets Clearing, Ltd., which settled the claims of the British Government against the Yugoslav Government, touching shipping transactions, including claims arising out of the disposal by the Yugoslav Government of “the assets of the Yugoslav owners held or situate outside Yugoslavia.” In consideration of the release by the parties of their claims against it, the Yugoslav Government agreéd to assign to Shipping Assets Clearing, Ltd., a number of maritime claims which it held against third persons, among which was the claim in suit; and on August 26, 1947, in implementation of this agreement the Yugoslav Government by a separate instrument assigned the claim to Shipping Assets Gearing, Ltd. On July 19, 1948, the Secretary of State of the United States and the “Deputy Minister of Finance” of Yugoslavia, entered into a general agreement settling the claims of the United States for “Lend-Lease” benefits granted Yugo *230 slavia during the late war. Among other claims against the United States, which the Yugoslav Government agreed to release as part of the consideration for its release by the United States, were five classes of claims of which the fifth was described as follows: “Claims arising out of maritime collisions * * * occurring on and after April 6, 1941, and prior to July 1, 1946.” In reliance upon its assignment in 1947, which therefore antedated this release, Shipping Assets Clearing, Ltd., filed a petition in this suit .on November 30, 1948, for leave to intervene. This petition Judge Rifkind denied in an opinion filed on March 10, 1949, D.C., 83 F.Supp. 4, and on July IS, 1949, Judge Ryan ordered that the final decree in Ozanic’s favor should be marked “satisfied” and that the petition for intervention be denied. This is the order from which Ozanic and Shipping Assets Clearing, Ltd., have appealed. . The appellants’ argument is (1) that the Anti-Assignment Act 3 did not invalidate the assignment of August 26, 1947; (2) that in any event the United States was already charged with notice of it, before the agreement of July 19, 1948; (3) that moreover that agreement did not cover the claim in suit. The United. States answers (1) that the assignment, not being involuntary, was within the Anti-Assignment Act; (2) that it was not charged with notice of the assignment; and (3) that, since the claim was not negotiable, Shipping Assets Clearing, Ltd., as assignee, took subject to any set-offs or counterclaims, including the claims covered by .the agreement of July 19, 1948.

The argument that the assignment to Shipping Assets Clearing, Ltd., was “involuntary” and was therefore not within the Anti-Assignment Act does not appear to us to have basis in the record. Had the assignee represented the expropriated shareholders of the corporate owner of the “Petar,” conceivably it might be passible to regard the assignment as restitution for the original expropriation, as therefore “involuntary,” and within the implied exceptions to the Anti-Assignment Act. Although the appellants in their brief assert that the assignment of the claim to Shipping Assets Qearing, Ltd., was to it “as representative of the Foreign Interests including the shareholders of the original corporate owner of the ‘Petar’,” we can find nothing to indicate that it was for the benefit of. those shareholders. It is true that among the “Managers” wham Bateson represented (and whom we assume Shipping Assets Clearing, Ltd., also came to represent) appear a British corporation and a New York corporation who had represented the original Yugoslav corporation that owned the “Petar”; but that is no indication that the shareholders of that corporation were to be beneficiaries • of the agreement. On the other hand when. we look at the “Foreign Interests” which. Bateson also represented, the appropriate schedule contains no names of shareholders of the original corporation, or any mention whatever of that corporation. There is not a syllable which we can find to suggest that the expropriated shareholders were beneficiaries, or that the assignment of the claim in suit was intended as restitution to them. The general purpose of the agreement apparently was to make a settlement with a number of claimants, including expropriated shareholders “now outside Yugoslavia,” but only those. The argument that a purpose of restitution, if it did exist at all, would make the assignment “involuntary” is doubtful at best; but for it to have any weight it would have to appear that the claim was allocated to-the shareholders of the “Petar,”' and to> them alone. Certainly there was. nothing, of that sort in the agreement.

The other argument to meet the Anti-Assignment Act has more substance; it is that under the Suits in Admiralty Act 4 (whose procedure was carried over into the Public Vessels Act), suits, proceed “according to the principles of law and to the rules of practice obtaining in like cases between private parties”; and that the Act repealed all inconsistent acts. 5 *231 In the admiralty the assignee of a chose of action is recognized as the obligee and may sue in his own name, 6 and it has twice been held that the Suits in Admiralty Act — particularly the repealing section— made inapplicable the Anti-Assignment Act. 7 We do not, however, find it necessary to decide as to this reasoning and arguendo we shall assume that it is sound, because even so we think that Shipping Assets Clearing, Ltd., cannot prevail.

It is true, as the United States argues, that the assignee of a non-negotiable chose in action takes subject to all existing set-offs and counterclaims; 8 and in the case at bar all the claims of the United States against the Yugoslav Government which constituted the consideration for that government’s release of the United States, were in existence when the agreement of 1947 was made. It might therefore appear at first blush that this was an answer to the claim in suit.

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Bluebook (online)
188 F.2d 228, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 3739, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ozanic-v-united-states-ca2-1951.