In Re Willacy County Water Control & Improvement Dist.

36 F. Supp. 36, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2211
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedDecember 19, 1940
DocketNO. 1; 762
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 36 F. Supp. 36 (In Re Willacy County Water Control & Improvement Dist.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Willacy County Water Control & Improvement Dist., 36 F. Supp. 36, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2211 (S.D. Tex. 1940).

Opinion

ATWELL, District Judge.

On July 30th, 1940, the debtor filed its petition submitting a plan of composition. The plan relates to three groups of indebtedness; the first approximates four items of $1,480,524.29, $1,409,000 of which is a bond issue. Upon this group it proposes to pay thirty-five cents on the dollar.

The second group consists of $20,121.30 plus some judgments and pending litigation. *38 Thirty-five cents on the dollar is also to be paid upon this group.

The third group is not affected by the plan, but it comprises bonds voted in 1934 in the sum of $3,726,000, and held by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation for the WPA. The plan provides for the payment of these bonds after the plan for the first two groups goes through.

There is to be paid to the attorneys who pay all expenses, 2 per cent on the amount of indebtedness composed. This would be in excess of $30,000.

On the 30th day of July, 1940, the plan was approved as having been filed in good faith and in accordance with the requirement of the statute, and a formal hearing was set at Brownsville for October 18th. Between that date and October 18th, certain bondholders sought the right to transfer to the Reconstruction Finance Corporation their holdings upon the payment of thirty-five cents. These applications were granted. Other orders were also entered.

Coats, Schubert, and Haynes seek to intervene to attack the entire bond issues.

In the intervention which they ask to file, they pray an injunction restraining the petitioner from prosecuting tax suits which are already pending, and from filing addB tional tax suits. They also desire a judgment against all parties to this proceeding, cancelling all of the bonds of the district. Likewise, they seek restraint against bondholders asserting their rights under their bonds, and they desire to cancel tax levies, and remove tax-levy cloud from land titles. In addition to the restraint against pending tax suits, they wish them dismissed, and they wish further tax levies enjoined.

They claim that the district originally covered an hundred thousand acres; that the Commissioners optionally deleted seventy thousand acres, which left thirty thousand, in the Old Union irrigation district, and then added one hundred thousand acres without proper notices to the owners of those acres, and changed the name to WiB lacy County Water Control and Improvement District; that the healing act of the Legislature, thereafter, could not, and did not, remedy this illegality. They claim that their lands are situated in the one hundred thousand unauthorized acres, and that their acreage is not benefited by the irrigation, and that as much as fifty thousand of such acreage is not benefited.

They are citizens of Texas, as is also the petitioner.

Neither of them claims to be a creditor of the petitioner, nor to hold any of the bonds involved in the proceeding.

After the application to compose was filed, statutory orders and notices were entered and given, and the case assigned for hearing on October 18th, 1940. The motion to intervene was filed on November 20th, 1940, and the intervention on November 30th, 1940. Such pleading is used for the facts.

Their attempt to enter this court under the guise of an intervention for the destruction of all the bond issues, while appearing to be justified under Rule 24, rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A. following section 723c, which permits an intervention by one who is interested, etc., is extremely doubtful in a case of this sort. That rule gives a timely right which is subordinate to the original suit. The intervenor does not delay the issue.

Rule 24 treats of two sorts of interventions. One is a matter of right, and .the other is permissive. The matter of right intervention grows out of the liberty that the party might be bound by a judgment in the action, and that the representation of his interests by existing parties might be inadequate; and, of course, in any case in which he is likely to be adversely affected by a disposition of property in the custody of the court. A permissive intervention comes out of judicial discretion whenever a federal statute gives a conditional right, or when an applicant’s claim or defense and the main action have a question of law or fact in common. This rule cautions the court to consider whether the proposed intervention will unduly delay or prejudice the adjudication of the rights of the original parties. When the claim or defense of the applicant departs from the field of litigation of the original parties in such a manner as to complicate and delay its determination, leave should be denied. Holtzoff, 1940, pp. 67, 68; Tachna v. Insuranshares Corporation, D.C., 25 F. Supp. 541; United States v. Columbia Gas Co., D.C., 27 F.Supp. 116; Carpenter v. Wabash Ry. Co., 8 Cir., 103 F.2d 996.

There are certain state statutes which validate bond issues, and when the respective steps provided for by the statute are certified to by certain state officers, the public may buy such issues without fear of any question as to their validity.

The power of the court to inquire into indebtedness, which is given by the *39 Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C.A. § 1 et seq., is not such a power as would support a suit against the petitioner by those who seek to intervene. The statute limits the order of the court, under the right to compose indebtedness, to the confirming of the composition, or to the rejecting of the composition and the dismissal of the proceeding. This is mandatory and the court has no further jurisdiction.

So, laying aside the question of timely filing, and the question of the right to hinder or delay the trial, there still remains a most serious obstacle to the intervention, in that it calls for the decision of a matter entirely foreign to this statute, and to this proceeding. It may be that a decision in favor of the sought intervention would be an impingement upon the sovereignty of the state. It will be recalled that the old municipal statute was held .unconstitutional because of the violation of the state’s rights. The present statute does not incorporate such broadness. The jurisdiction of the court is narrowed to the question of composition. All other matters are left to the control of the state which mothered the district. The present act has been held to be constitutional, and seems to be in line with Hoffman v. McClelland, 264 U.S. 552, 44 S.Ct. 407, 68 L.Ed. 845, which ruled that a national court which has not taken over the administration of a trust in a proceeding for its interpretation against a trustee appointed by a state court has not impounded the property so that it can entertain a bill by an attaching creditor to interfere for the protection of his judgment.

The Bankruptcy Act limits the power of the court to the composition of indebtedness and to the carrying on of the usual business transactions, which includes the making of necessary expenditures in connection therewith. Jurisdiction over the governmental affairs of the municipality, or of its property, is limited to such purposes.

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Bluebook (online)
36 F. Supp. 36, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-willacy-county-water-control-improvement-dist-txsd-1940.