Dickinson v. Mingea

88 S.W.2d 807, 191 Ark. 946, 1935 Ark. LEXIS 389
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 9, 1935
Docket4-4066
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 88 S.W.2d 807 (Dickinson v. Mingea) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dickinson v. Mingea, 88 S.W.2d 807, 191 Ark. 946, 1935 Ark. LEXIS 389 (Ark. 1935).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Waterworks Improvement District No. 1 of the incorporated town of Sheridan was created by an ordinance of the town council on July 2, 1930. The ordinance was passed pursuant to, and in conformity with,, the laws of the State authorizing that action. Coupon bonds, which the ordinance authorized, were issued totaling $75,000 with interest at 5 per cent., per annum, payable semi-annually. To guarantee the payment of these bonds and the interest thereon, a pledge of the betterment assessments was made.

One of the acts of the General Assembly, pursuant to which the bond issue.was authorized (and in force when the bonds were sold, and delivered) was act No. 64 of the Acts of 1929 (vol. 1, Acts 1929, page 241). This was an act entitled “An act to simplify the system of organizing and ■ administering improvement districts in cities and towns. ’ ’ Section 22 of the act provides that, ‘£ if any bond or interest coupon on any bond issued by any such improvement district is not paid within sixty days after its maturity, it shall be the duty of the chancery court, on application of the trustee for the bondholders or of the holder of any such bond or coupons overdue, to appoint a receiver to collect the taxes of said district.” This section further provides that the proceeds of the taxes and collections made by the receiver “shall ¡be applied, after payment of costs, first, to overdue interest, and then to the payment pro rata of all bonds issued by said board which are then due and payable. ’ ’ It is further provided that the receiver may be directed to institute suits to foreclose the lien of said taxes on said land, and a suit so brought by said receiver shall be conducted in all matters as suits by the board,, and with like effect; and the decrees and deeds therein shall have the same presumption in their favor, with a proviso that when all overdue principal and interest has been paid, the receiver shall be discharged and the management of the affairs of the district resumed by the board of commissioners.

On February 2, 1935,- W: A. Mingea filed a complaint in the chancery court of Grant County, in which the town of Sheridan is located, alleging that he was the owner of $1,000 of the bonds issued by the improvement district, upon which default in paying interest thereon had been made for a period of more than 60 days before the filing of the complaint. He prayed that, for the benefit of himself and of all other bondholders who desire to be made parties, a receiver be appointed to take over the affairs and the assets of the improvement district, with directions to the receiver to collect taxes due-the district, and to foreclose the lien for the delinquent taxes.

On the same day the improvement district entered its appearance, and an order was made appointing receivers who were directed, after taking oath and giving bond, to take possession of the records and assets of the district and to collect taxes and institute suits as prayed. The commissioners of the district were restrained from further action except' to comply with the order by delivery to the receivers, after 'their qualification, of the assets and records of the district. ■

■ On June 15, 1935, a day of the term of the chancery court, a petition was filed ¡by the1 receivers, alleging that they had been offered nine bonds of the district in denominations of $1,000 each due and payable on the-first day of September, 1946, 1947 and .1948. • On: the same day the receivers “were authorized aiid ordered and directed to pay fifty cents on the dollar flat for. said nine bonds óf the said district for $1,000 each with all the interest coupons attached thereto, said payment to be made out of the funds now in the hands-of the receivers) and they are directed to take credit for such expenditures in accordance with the order. ” - ■

On July 10,1935, Glynne Cook Dickinson filed a petition for leave to intervene. She alleged her ownership of bonds Nos. 10, 11 and 12, which mature September 1, 1935, and of bonds Nos. 13,14 and 15, which mature September 1, 1936. She averred default in the payment of the interest thereon since March 1,1933. She alleged the suit was collusive and was filed by the plaintiff, Mingea, “for the purpose of deterring and preventing other bondholders from pur suing, any appropriate 'remedies which they might have against, said district, for the enforcement of its,valid obligations.” It was averred also that the appointment of the receivers Avas void as being in conflict Avith the provisions of act No. 79 of .the Acts of the General Assembly of 1933 (Acts 1933, page 230)...

A demurrer to this pleading Avas'filed, and an answer also, in Avhieh collusion was denied-and- the act 79 aforesaid was alleged to be contrary to-the Constitution of this State and contrary to tlie Constitution of the United States.

The. court heard testimony upon the intervention on July .29, 1935, and. in the course.of the hearing it was agreed that “those men who sold the bonds sold them in good faith to the receivers * *• * at a price which was thought fair to the property owners, and after that action had been approved by the court.” After hearing the testimony, which we think it unnecessary to recite, the court declined to discharge the receivers or to compel them to otherwise account for the money which they had paid for the bonds, and this appeal is from that decree.

Section 1 of act 79 of the Acts .of 1933 reads as follows:

‘ Section 1. Hereafter all taxes in municipal, bridge, ■suburban and road maintenance improvement districts shall be collected at the time and in the manner and by the officers specified in the statutes creating them, or under, which they were organized, and the duty to properly extend and collect such taxes may be enforced by a mandamus, or by a mandatory injunction in. equity, at the instance of any landowner in the district, the trustee in any deed of trust securing the bonds of the district, the holder of any bond as to which the district has defaulted in the payment of interest or principal, or any other creditor of the district. The remedies herein provided for shall be, exclusive, and all laws providing for or authorizing the appointment of a receiver for any such district are hereby repealed, and no court shall appoint a receiver to collect municipal, bridge, suburban or road maintenance district taxes.”

The provisions of a similar act were involved in the recent case of Rodgers v. Carson Lake Road Improvement District No. 6, ante p. 112, in which case it was prayed that receivers for a road improvement district be discharged upon the authority of act No. 46, passed at the same session of the General Assembly of identical import as act 79 except that the former applied only to levee, drainage and road improvement districts, whereas act 79 applies to' municipal, bridge, suburban and road maintenance districts. -In the decree from which that appeal came, the chancellor had discharged the receivers of the road improvement district upon the authority of act-46, but we held that the act was not retroactive in its operation, and did not apply to receivers appointed before the act became effective, as was true in that case, and for that reason we declined to pass upon the constitutionality of act 46 or its effect, if constitutional.

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Bluebook (online)
88 S.W.2d 807, 191 Ark. 946, 1935 Ark. LEXIS 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickinson-v-mingea-ark-1935.