Draver v. Greenshields & Everest Co.

29 F.2d 552, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 2750
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedNovember 9, 1928
DocketNo. 8141
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 29 F.2d 552 (Draver v. Greenshields & Everest Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Draver v. Greenshields & Everest Co., 29 F.2d 552, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 2750 (8th Cir. 1928).

Opinion

LEWIS, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from an order denying a motion to vacate a judgment in an action at law against an irrigation district, made for the purpose of enabling appellants, landowners in said district, to obtain leave to intervene in that action and make defense. The judgment was entered on October 24, 1927, after the district had filed its answer admitting liability for the amount recovered. One week later appellants appeared and moved that the judgment be set aside and tendered their proposed petition in intervention. The law aetion was brought by Greenshields & Everest Company, an Iowa corporation, on September 29, 1927, against the Calamus Irrigation District of Loup County, Nebraska, on nine warrants amounting to $4,500, which the district had issued and sold in December, 1925.

The pleadings in the action on the warrants, the tendered petition in intervention and the tendered record proof show that the proceedings taken to organize the district were regular on their face and complied With the requirements of the Nebraska statute; but appellants’ counsel contends in substance that additional tendered proof in the form of affidavits discloses that the required conditions on which the board of county commissioners is given power to enter its order establishing a district like this did not exist, and although the county board found that the requisite conditions did exist and entered its order creating and establishing the district, still its order is void, because the necessary prerequisite conditions did not in fact exist and the district is not a legal entity.

We have no concern with appellants’ com tention further than to inquire whether it has any application in the present controversy. The fact that appellants might have avoided what was done by an appropriate proceeding instituted for that purpose at the proper time and in the proper forum is not relevant. The question here is, whether purchasers and holders of these warrants, acting in good faith, which is not challenged, were entitled to judgment against the dis-•triet. Section 2881, Nebraska Statutes, authorizes the issuance and sale to the best advantage of warrants on the general fund when there is no cash on hand to pay claims ordered paid out of that fund by the board of directors, and these warrants were issued to be paid out of that'fund. Landowners in the proposed district filed their petition with the board of county commissioners in March, 1925, in which they sought to have the district created for the purpose of irrigating lands’ therein, pursuant to chapter 26, Compiled Statutes of Nebraska 1922. It is not denied that the petition with maps of the territory to be included was also filed with the secretary of the State Board of Irrigation, whose duty it is under the statute to make report thereon to the board of county commissioners. Thereafter, in June, 1925, the county board, acting on the petition, found that the State statute had been complied with and it entered its order creating the district. The order described the boundaries, specified the tracts of land therein contained and found that they were susceptible to irrigation from the Calamus River, all being irrigable from the same proposed system of works. It ordered that an election be held for the district, prescribed the form of notice to be given therefor, the place at which it should be held and fixed the day and the hours within which the poll should be kept open for the election of directors and officers for said district. That election was held and district directors, an assessor and treasurer were elected. Report thereof was made to the county board. It canvassed the votes cast and declared the result, naming in its order the persons who had been elected directors, an assessor and treasurer, and again described the tracts of land within the district that were irrigable. Thereafter the warrants sued on were executed for the disr triet by the president of the board and its secretary, payable to bearer or order and sold for value. Four of the five appellants participated in the organization proceedings, in the election to which reference has been made and in a subsequent election. Relying on the affidavits mentioned above they now say the original petition was not sufficient because the requisite number of landowners having the requisite acreage did not sign the petition, that some who did sign were persuaded' [554]*554or fraudulently induced to do so, that sufficient notice was not given before the county board took action and that other irregularities and omissions occurred.

The Nebraska Irrigation Act was taken from California and both States have held that an irrigation district formed under the Act is a public corporation. Quint v. Hoffman, 103 Cal. 506, 37 P. 514, 777; Lincoln & Dawson County Irr. Dist. v. McNeal, 60 Neb. 613, 83 N. W. 847. Under this Act the petitioners proposed the organization of the Calamus Irrigation District. They induced the board of county commissioners to believe and find the Act had been fully complied with and on that finding the board entered its orders. The district then held elections pursuant to the Act. It necessarily incurred indebtedness in carrying on the organization proceedings, holding elections and for current expenses and compensation of its officers and employes. It issued and sold these warrants and received the proceeds. There can be no doubt that it was and is a body corporate de facto, it acted as sueh under color .of law, and is liable on the debts which it contracted as fully as it would be were it a corporation de jure. The facts in Speer v. Board of County Commissioners (C. C. A.) 88 F. 749, carried the principle now in mind further than need be done here. There, on the assumption that although the corporation was acting as such under an unconstitutional statute, we nevertheless held that it was liable as a de facto corporation to third persons who had dealt with it in good faith in reliance on the validity of its purported corporate existence; shown as here by record proceedings of incorporation; and we see no reason why the doctrine of estoppel should not be applied to those in whose behalf the corporation was acting. The opinion in that case, written by the late Judge Walter H. Sanborn, like many others left by him, is exhaustive, instructive and convincing. We need not attempt to add anything to what is there said nor review the authorities there collected.

It is the settled rule in Nebraska and in other jurisdictions that the legality of the organization of public corporations which are. acting under color of law cannot be raised collaterally, as appellants here are attempting to do, nor by private parties in their own behalf. In State ex rel. Bessel v. Whitney, 41 Neb. 613, 59 N. W. 884, this quotation from Dillon on Municipal Corporations was accepted as a statement of the general rule:

“Where a municipal corporation is acting under color of law, and its existence is not questioned by the state, it cannot be collaterally drawn in question by private parties; and the rule is not different although the constitution may prescribe the manner of incorporation.”

In Dappen v. Weber, 106 Neb. 812, 184 N. W. 952, 187 N. W. 230, the rule was applied to a de facto school district, and it was held that the legality of its organization must be tested by quo warranto and could not be challenged in a collateral proceeding. In State v. Several Parcels of Land, 80 Neb. 11, 113 N. W.

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Related

Loup County v. Rumbaugh
38 N.W.2d 745 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1949)

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Bluebook (online)
29 F.2d 552, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 2750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/draver-v-greenshields-everest-co-ca8-1928.