Kersh Lake Drainage Dist. v. State Bank & Trust Co.
Opinion of the Court
Statement: This appeal is taken to reverse an interlocutory order denying a motion filed in the course of an action brought in aid of the collection of a judgment for $54,655 rendered in the district court in 1935 in favor of the State Bank & Trust Co., against the Kersh Lake Drainage District on account of unpaid certificates of indebtedness issued by the district for the construction of its drainage system. The judgment had been affirmed by this court in Kersh Lake Drainage District v. State Bank & Trust Co., 85 F.2d 643, but thereafter the district claimed that the assessment of benefits against the lands in the district out of which the judgment is payable had been exhausted, and the judgment remained wholly unpaid. The judgment creditor therefore filed this action against the district and district and county officers, alleging that said assessment of benefits had not been exhausted but remained subject to the debts and uncollected, and praying mandatory injunction against the officers authorized by the Arkansas law to compel official action to subject the lands to payment of the judgment debts. On the trial, the issues as to the continued existence of the assessment of benefits, the liability of the lands on account thereof, the obligation of the officers of the three counties in which the drainage district lies to extend upon the tax
The motion filed January 9, 1943, was in the name of the District and presented an attack upon the decree entered by the district court December 22, 1936, affirmed by this court November 23, 1937, and considered by the Supreme Court March 25, 1940. The motion, insofar as it is a motion and not a pleading of fact, reads: “The Kersh Lake Drainage District, by its commissioners, moves the court to wind up the receivership and discharge the receivers in the above entitled cause," (allegations of fact follow and a prayer “for an order winding up the receivership, and restoring the administration of the district’s affairs to the rightful authorities.”) An amendment to the motion added by leave of court reads: “The defendant moves to dissolve the mandatory injunction issued in this cause on December 27, 1936, and to dismiss the case for want of jurisdiction of the court, as a court of equity, over the subject matter of the suit.”
As explanatory of the grounds of the motion there are incorporated in it proceedings had in this litigation in the federal and state courts, including several orders that were made by the district court after the decree of December 22, 1936, containing directions to the District Commissioners in respect to their carrying out the mandate of the decree. It was stipulated on the hearing of the motion, however, that “the propriety of any of the orders referred to in the motion” were not questioned in the proceeding. “The only purpose of referring to the orders [in the motion] is to show the nature of the supervision which the court has exercised over the commissioners and the
The motion as amended having been denied, the district’s appeal is taken to this court under Section 129 of the Judicial Code, 28 U.S.C.A. § 227, which authorizes appeals to this court from an interlocutory order “refusing an order to wind up a pending receivership”, or from an order made upon hearing denying “an application to dissolve or modify an injunction.”
Opinion:
It is apparent that the object of the motion of the district involved in this appeal is to obtain a rehearing in this court of our decision in Kersh Lake Drainage District v. State Bank & Trust Co., 92 F.2d 783. The decree which is attacked by the motion was before this court in its entirety at the time of that decision, and though the particular arguments against the decree which are made upon the motion were not presented on the former appeal, the district appellant in both appeals had its full opportunity to raise the points the first time. The decree has not been altered or amended since this court reviewed it and affirmed it in 1937. It has been analyzed and considered by the Supreme Court of the United States and by the Chancery and Supreme Courts of Arkansas, and no such invalidity as is ascribed to it in the • motion has ever been observed by any of the courts. The judges constituting the court to which this appeal is presented are not the same as those who heard the first appeal. Therefore the decision of 1937 affirming the decree in its entirety is binding upon us and will be adhered to here.
The decree has been executed to a large extent. The county and district officers have fully recognized that the assessment of benefits against the lands remains unpaid in amount sufficient to pay the judgments as established by the decision affirming the decree. The taxes have been extended upon the tax books of the county. The claims of individual land owners to have their lands exempted have been litigated and determined in the state courts. There remains the matter of correction of descriptions and supplying omissions in the decree of foreclosure in the state court and the sale of the lands by the sheriff. We find nothing in the motion or in the arguments in support of it to justify any interference with the foregoing steps that have been taken in execution of the decree or the further action which is indicated as impending to collect the 6% per cent tax.
The decree being one of mandatory injunction contemplating action to be taken in the future, conditions may, of course, arise to justify or necessitate its modification or dissolution. Then upon a showing of such conditions the remedies of Section 129 of the Judicial Code should become available to the parties.
The claim of the appellant district that the decree has by its terms put the drainage district into court receivership and that there is a receivership which ought to be wound up, we find to be without merit. As was apparent when the decree was before this court for review on the former appeal, the decree was drawn in the light of the decision of the Supreme Court of Arkansas in Dickinson v. Mingea, 191 Ark. 946, 88 S.W.2d 807. It was there held that under the Arkansas statutes discussed in the opinion, court receiver-ships to collect taxes were not authorized in Arkansas, but that in a situation such as here involved mandatory injunction should issue in such terms that the officers could be “made [by the court] to discharge their duties. * * * There is therefore no abridgement of the court’s jurisdiction. The commissioners become receivers in effect in that they become subject to' the jurisdiction of the court.” The language of the decree in this case that “the Commissioners are deemed receivers”, was intended to conform to the Arkansas law so declared and the decree accords to the certificate holders as judgment creditors proceeding in the federal court the same rights they would have had in the state courts of Arkansas. “The power * * * conferred upon the state court may be exercised by the federal District Court.” Guardian Savings & T. Co. v. Road Imp. District, 267 U.S. 1, 45 S.Ct. 201, 69 L.Ed. 487.
It is true that orders made by the district court since the decree and set forth in the motion seem on their face to be in form adapted to receivership proceedings, but none of them is here for review or consideration. The conclusion of law made
Affirmed.
The decree was described and considered by the Supreme Court in Kersh Bake D. District v. Johnson, 309 U.S. 485, 60 S.Ct. 640, 84 L.Ed. 881. 128 A.L.R. 386.
Concurring Opinion
(concurring separately)-.
I read the majority opinion to hold that our affirmance in Kersh Lake Drainage District v. State Bank & Trust Co., 8 Cir., 92 F.2d 783, does not purport to create or authorize any receivership for the affairs of the District; that no such receivership can properly be said to exist under the terms of the lower court’s decree, which we affirmed; and that there is accordingly nothing to. constitute the legal subject of a motion for receivership termination. On the basis of this construction, I concur in the affirmance of the order overruling appellant’s motion, which it is here sought to have reviewed.
I believe, however, that another note also should be struck. Under the mandatory injunction decree, which we affirmed in 92 F.2d 783, the district court, in my opinion, could go no further than to compel the commissioners of the District to perform their statutory duties in tax collection and to make application of any properly available tax funds to the satisfaction of the previously entered judgment. The record before us indicates, however, that there have been ancillary orders entered by the district court, which go beyond the scope of the power and the function which I have indicated, and it is these orders which have caused appellant to assume that the court was attempting to carry on a receivership of the District under its mandatory injunction decree, in violation of Act No. 46, Arkansas Acts of 1933 (Pope’s Ark. Dig. § 4591), Drainage District No. 2 v. Mercantile-Commerce Bank & Trust Co., 8 Cir., 69 F.2d 138, and Dickinson v. Mingea, 191 Ark. 946, 88 S.W.2d 807. I think it should be specifically stated that the af-firmance now made carries no approbation of any such or similar orders and no warrant for a repetition of them.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- KERSH LAKE DRAINAGE DIST. v. STATE BANK & TRUST CO. OF WELLSTON, MO.
- Status
- Published