Groner v. United States Ex Rel. Snower

73 F.2d 126, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 2617
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 25, 1934
Docket9893, 9894
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 73 F.2d 126 (Groner v. United States Ex Rel. Snower) 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
Groner v. United States Ex Rel. Snower, 73 F.2d 126, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 2617 (8th Cir. 1934).

Opinion

STONE, Circuit Judge,

Appellee in these two appeals is the owner of matured bonds of the Hope Drainage District, organized under the statutes of Missouri. Appellants in No. 9893 are the officers of that district. Appellants in No. 9894 are holders of other bonds of the district, both matured an¿ unmatured. Appellee seeure(j a judgment against the district for the paymellt of his bonds and had issued in aid |}lcreof au execution and also a writ of garmgbment against a bank wherein were deposited funds of the district. Motions to quash this execution and this writ of garnishment were before the court below. Al so> appellee, by an ancillary proceeding _ in mandamus against the officers of the district, sought to require payment of his judgment bY them out of the funds on hand in the bank, In tMs latter proceeding, the appellants in No. 9894 were permitted to intervene, selting up their rights in an intervening petition' , Response was made to the alternative bY the officers of the district and apPelleo moved to s1'Tlke 01lt tho abovo mter“ vening petition and, alternately, for luclgmont on tho pleadings as to it. The trial c011rt disposed of all of these matters, as follows: (1) It sustained the motions to quash the execution and to dissolve the garnishment on the ground that the proper remedy wag mandamus and not execution or garnishment; (2) for the same reason, it denie¿ a motion of appellee requiring the garnishee to pay into court the funds of the distriet fn its bands; (3) it- accorded a peremptory writ of mandamus requiring the district to pay in full the matured bonds of app0Hee. From so much of the above judgment as accorded the peremptory writ these two appeals are brought.

Appellee challenged below, and eontinues here to challenge, the right of the other bondholders to intervene. This matter may be shortly disposed of, since their interest jn the main controversy is clear and was wj^bin the sound judicial discretion of the trial judge to permit or to refuse intervention.

The large question-in these appeals is the same and is whether, under the facts here, appellee is entitled to full payment of his bonds from the funds on hand or must share ratably with other bondholders. The conten *128 tion of appellee, upheld by the court, is that he is entitled to full payment. The contention of the district and of the intervening bondholders is substantially the same though somewhat differently stated: That of the distriet is that appellee must share ratably with all outstanding bonds or, if this be not true, with all. unpaid matured bonds; that of the intervening bondholders is that appellee must share ratably with the unpaid matured bonds and there are some statements in the intervening petition which intimate, more or less clearly, that if this be not true he must share ratably with all the outstanding bonds.

The essential facts here shown are as follows: This drainage district was organized under the statutes of Missouri. It issued and sold a total of $294,000 of its bonds in 1923. A definite amount of these bonds came due on February 1, of each year, beginning 1928, and ending 1943; $44,000 of these bonds became due before or by February 1, 1930', and were paid. Appellee owned and obtained the above judgment upon four bonds due February 1, 1931, in the principal amount of $4,000' plus accumulated interest thereon. Of the remaining $246,000 of outstanding bonds, interveners owned $9,000 of the $16,000 in bonds maturing February 1, 1931, and $9,000 of the $17,000 in bonds ma-taring February 1, 1932. At the time of the proceedings in this case all bonds due in 1931 and 1932 were due and, apparently, all were in default. In addition to the above-matured bonds held by them, interveners were holdors of approximately $142,000 of bonds maturing after 1932. At the time of these proceedings the district had on hand only $4,-505.75. In its response the district pleaded as follows: “That due to floods, droughts, decline in value of lands and farm products, coinbined with prevailing conditions of depression, all of which conditions peculiarly and especially affect the bottom lands in said ,. • 2 ü i • -j , ■ . district, the value of lands m said district i vri j? i j j. i and the ability of land owners to pay taxes i j v j „ j j have so declined and decreased that it is lm- . n ,, . possible to collect or enforce the payment & • -j i, . i.,, of any considerable amount of taxes; that there is no market or sale for said bottom land and the payment of assessments thereon cannot be enforced by judgment and sale: that if present conditions continue it will be several years, if at all, before an amount can be realized from taxation equal to the present amount of defaulted obligations; that by reason of such conditions and the decline in value of said lands, the district is now and will be unable to meet its obligation in full and it is and will be impossible to collect or to enforce the payment of a suffieient amount of the benefits assessed against said lands to pay in full all of the bonded indebtedness of said district.”

In intervening petition it was plead-e(j follows: “That if a permanent writ of mandamus is awarded the.funds of the District on hand will be entirely exhausted; that f)6 impossible for the holders of other matured obligations of the District to obtain payment of their claims or any part there-0f for an indefinite period, if at all; that jjas f,een heretofore levied to the full amount permitted under the assessment schedule adopted at the time of the issuaiLee °f said bonds; that under present eonditbns and circumstances the lands in the District subject to taxation are not of sufficient value to pay the tax to which they are now and mil be subjected for the payment of outstanding obligations.”

In reaching his conclusion the trial court relied upon the then latest decision of the Supreme Court of the State of Missouri, State ex rel. Bliss v. Grand River Drainage District, 330 Mo. 360, 49 S.W.(2d) 121. He properly construed that decision to mean that where there is no insolvency of the district shown, a holder of matured bonds is, on presentment and demand, entitled to the full payment thereof even though the collected funds of the district for bond purposes are insufficient to pay all of the then matured bonds. He then proceeded to examine the record to ascertain whether it could therefrom “be said with any degree of certainty that the fund (not the fund collected only, but the fund which may be collected) out 0f which bondholders are to be paid will be insufficient to pay all.” Concluding that the response was insufficient to show such insolyeney and following the ruling in the Bliss Case, he ordered the peremptory writ.

T, , ,, , It seems to us that, assuming a proper „ ,. ,, ,, J . , ,, t>i • finding on the matter of insolvency, the Bliss , . ,, j’ , , decision ■ compelled the result reached by the ... , IT „ . . J ... trial court. However, we are faced here with • , . , , , ,, ,, two decisions which are later than the or-_ . . , „ . ,. , , d®rs+her„e aP?ea ed fr°m a*d 31(3 effeeto£ ™rrvlmg Bllss Case _ These t. */ ^f ^ 6? ®^’(2d)T ®T?’ State ex rel. Drainage District No. 8 of Pemiscot County, Missouri, v. Duncan (Mo. Sup.) 68 S.W. (2d) 679, and State ex rel. Sturdivant Bank v. Little River Drainage District (Mo. Sup.) 68 S.W. (2d) 671.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 F.2d 126, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 2617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/groner-v-united-states-ex-rel-snower-ca8-1934.