Board of Drainage Com'rs of Pender County Drainage Dist. No. 4 v. Lafayette Southside Bank of St. Louis

27 F.2d 286, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3388
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJune 13, 1928
Docket2706, 2688
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 27 F.2d 286 (Board of Drainage Com'rs of Pender County Drainage Dist. No. 4 v. Lafayette Southside Bank of St. Louis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Drainage Com'rs of Pender County Drainage Dist. No. 4 v. Lafayette Southside Bank of St. Louis, 27 F.2d 286, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3388 (4th Cir. 1928).

Opinion

WADDILL, Circuit Judge.

These two cases so relate to and affect the same subject-matter that they were by consent of the parties heard and argued together upon separate records in this court, and will accordingly be passed upon in a single opinion. Briefly, the cases involve the enforcement of the payment of certain bonds, aggregating $68,500, together with $10,680 interest coupons alleged to be due thereon, issued by plaintiff in error in the first-named ease, the board of drainage commissioners of Pender County drainage district No. 4, and held by defendant in error in that ease. In the first case, No. 2706, the subject of controversy is the right of defendant in error, the Lafayette Southside Bank of St. Louis, to collect this indebtedness, and the second case, No. 2688, arises upon a writ of error to an order of the District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina entered in the first-named case, refusing to admit therein as a party L. J. Poisson, receiver of the above-mentioned drainage district, who had been appointed as such in a proceeding in the state court of North Carolina. Separate assign *289 ments of error were duly filed in each of the causes, and the cases will be considered upon these respective assignments of error in the order named above. The parties will be referred to by their titles in the District Court.

A careful statement of the facts in No. 2706 is necessary to a correct understanding of the questions at issue. The board of drainage commissioners of Pender County drainage district No. 4, defendant below, was organized and existed under the laws of the state of North Carolina, particularly chapter 442 of the Public Laws of 1909, brought forward in Consolidated Statutes of 1919 as sections 5312 to 5382, inclusive, entitled “An act to promote the public health, convenience and welfare by leveeing, ditching and draining the wet, swamp and overflow lands of the state, and providing for the establishment of levee or drainage districts,” etc., and acts amendatory thereof and supplemental thereto. This fact is set up in paragraph 2 of the complaint (page 4 of the record) and admitted in paragraph 2 of the answér of defendant drainage commission (page 13 of record). On or about the 1st day of May, 1922, as set out in paragraph 4 of the complaint, with Exhibit A attached, and admitted in paragraph 4 of its answer, the defendant drainage commission caused to be duly issued its bonds aggregating $68,500, pursuant to the provisions of the statutes of the state of North Carolina above mentioned, entitled as aforesaid, and also pursuant to and in conformity with resolutions and proceedings had and adopted by the said defendant drainage commission, it executed its negotiable promissory bonds, payable to bearer, bearing date of May 1, 1922, numbered, becoming due and in the amounts following:

The bonds thus issued in substance recited that their purpose was to provide a system of drainage in said district No. 4, under and pursuant to, and in strict conformity with, the Constitution and statutes of the state of North Carolina, to promote the public health, convenience, and welfare by leveeing, ditehing, and draining the wet, swamp, and overflow lands of said district. Each bond recited on its face that all acts, conditions, and things required to exist, happen, and to be performed precedent to, and in the issue of said bonds, had happened, existed, and been performed in due time, form, and manner, as required by law; that the amount of the bonds, together with all the indebtedness of the district, did not exceed any limit prescribed by the Constitution or statutes of the state, and that before the issuance of the bonds the assessments of benefits had been duly and regularly made, levied, and imposed upon the lands in the said drainage district, in an amount sufficient to promptly pay the principal and interest on the bonds and all other drainage bonds of said district at ihaturity; that the board of commissioners of Pender County drainage district No. 4 covenanted and agreed with each successive holder of said bonds and coupons thereof that it would promptly enforce and collect the said special assessments; that in the event of any failure, defect, or omission or irregularity in any of the said assessments, it would, in the form and manner prescribed by law, promptly take all steps to correct or supply such irregularity, defect, or omission, and to levy and impose new or ■additional assessments for the purpose of meeting the principal and interest thereon; and that for the faithful performance of the covenants and conditions contained in said bonds the full faith, credit, and revenues of the said district were thereby irrevocably pledged.

Subsequent to the issuance of the bonds and coupons above described, and before the maturity thereof, the same were for value delivered to A. V. Wills & Sons, Incorporated, contractors undertaking the drainage work, and said contractors, in due course and prior to maturity, without any notice of any default or infirmity, if any, therein, duly pledged with the Lafayette Southside Bank of St. Louis, plaintiff below, the said bonds as collateral security for money paid to them and used in carrying out the drainage contract for a sum amounting to $73,487.07, and in default of the payment of the debf for which the collateral was deposited, suck collateral was duly sold and purchased in to meet the amount remaining due on the sum for which it was pledged, namely, $61,775. *290 The plaintiff hank sued as holder of the bonds mentioned, with sundry arrearages of coupons issued for interest thereon, aggregating, as claimed, $9,660.

On May 25, 1925, the complaint was filed in the first-named ease, No. 2706, setting up the cause of action of the plaintiff as herein recited. To this complaint, the defendant drainage commission made answer on July 3, 1925, admitting the execution of the bonds, the creation of the drainage corporation, and the due organization of the same under the laws of the state of North Carolina; that the controversy was one existing between citizens of different states, and the amount, exclusive of interest and costs, exceeded $3,000; and that on or about May 1, 1922, the drainage district bonds were issued payable to bearer, with interest-bearing coupons attached, and that at the date of maturity thereof the amount of eaeh bond was correctly stated as above set forth; and defendant further answered, admitting the execution of the bonds, but denying that .the same were delivered to A. Y. Wills & Sons, Incorporated, contractors, or that they became the owners of the same, but that, on the contrary, the bonds were delivered to and deposited with the Illinois Trust Company of Bast St. Louis, 111., in escrow, to be sold as money was needed to defray the expenses of the operation of the drainage district, including the monthly estimate by the drainage engineers of the work done by A. V. Wills & Sons, Incorporated, contractors.

No further steps seem to have been taken after the filing of the answer aforesaid on July 3, 1925, until on January 22, 1927, on the motion of the defendant drainage commission it was given 60 days in which to file an amended answer, and this amended answer was filed on May 21, 1927. On June 3, 1927, the plaintiff moved to strike out the amended answer and on June 27,1927, an order was entered striking out the same, which order also refused to permit the plaintiff in- error in the second-named case, No. 2688, to intervene and be made a party to the firsLnamed ease, as requested on that date.

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Bluebook (online)
27 F.2d 286, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-drainage-comrs-of-pender-county-drainage-dist-no-4-v-lafayette-ca4-1928.