Ocean Beach Heights, Inc. v. Brown Crummer Inv. Co.

87 F.2d 978, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 2633
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 22, 1937
DocketNo. 8150
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 87 F.2d 978 (Ocean Beach Heights, Inc. v. Brown Crummer Inv. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ocean Beach Heights, Inc. v. Brown Crummer Inv. Co., 87 F.2d 978, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 2633 (5th Cir. 1937).

Opinions

HUTCHESON, Circuit Judge.

This is another case involving public Obligations ill which the difference between the promise and the ability to pay them is acutely presented as the result of a claim of nonliability asserted by territories which, after the issuance and sale of the bonds, was excluded from the town of Miami Shores in ouster proceedings.1 The suit in support of a judgment in mandamus proceedings the bondholders had obtained against the town, was for injunction to prevent the property owners in the excluded territory from asserting the ouster judgment against or otherwise interfering with, tax levies on their property for the bonds. [979]*979Appellees prevailed below on the ground that, as to the lands in controversy, the town was a de facto corporation, when the bonds were issued and validated; that the ouster proceedings spoke only for the future; it did not, it could not, affect bondholders who were not parties to it or bonds whose issuance or validity was not the subject of it.

Appellants insist that, whatever might be the effect of the ouster judgment standing alone, it does not stand alone here. It has been supplemented, they say its effect heightened and made completely comprehensive by the later judgment in the equity suit of Leatherman v. Alta Cliff Co., 114 Fla. 305, 153 So. 845, 846, enjoining the issuance of tax deeds to property in the excluded territory. And more in that suit the Supreme Court declared that, as to the territory excluded, the town had never had either de jure or de facto existence. Appellees reply that they were parties to neither of these suits; they are not bound by the judgments in them. They point out that the Leatherman decision was based on the ouster suit. They insist that the expression in the opinion in the Leatherman Case, “The ouster of jurisdiction was necessarily based upon the finding and adjudication that there had never been any authority in law for the inclusion of the territory east' of Biscayne Bay within the corporate limits of the town of Miami Shores, and, if there had never been any lawful authority for the inclusion of that territory within the municipality, then the municipality never acquired any de facto or de jure jurisdiction over the lands embraced in that territory,” was not necessary to the decision, nor was it correct as a general statement of law. They urge upon us that, in the inquiry of ouster, the only question for decision was de jure existence; it was not, it could not, have been decided in that case whether there was a corporation de facto, for no such question was for decision in it. Appellants’ brief is largely taken up with citation and discussion of authority on the point that federal courts will follow the construction the highest court of the state gives to its statutes. They argue that the Supreme Court of the state, having declared that, as to the excluded territory, the town never had either de jure or de facto existence, the federal courts must, in a suit on the bonds, hold that though the bonds were, in fact, issued by the town as obligations on the whole of its territory as its boundaries were originally constituted, they are not obligations in law on the excluded territory. We agree with appellees that the judgment in the ouster suit spoke only as to the future, determined only that from and after the ouster the town did not exist de jure in the excluded territory. We agree with them, too, that, while the judgment in that proceeding prevented the town from imposing any new obligations on and from-exercising any further general jurisdiction over it, as a judgment it was without effect upon obligations already fixed and existing against that territory. State ex rel. Fidelity Life Association v. Cedar Keys, 122 Fla. 454, 165 So. 672; State v. Coral Gables, 120 Fla. 492, 163 So. 308, 101 A.L.R. 578; Sparks v. Ewing, 120 Fla. 520, 163 So. 112; City of Winter Park v. Dunblaine, Inc., 121 Fla. 600, 164 So. 366; Payne v. First National Bank (Tex.Com. App.) 291 S.W. 209; Mobile v. Watson, 116 U.S. 289, 6 S.Ct. 398, 29 L.Ed. 620; Shapleigh v. San Angelo, 167 U.S. 646, 17 S.Ct. 957, 42 L.Ed. 310; City of Winter Haven v. Gillespie (C.C.A.) 84 F.(2d) 285. We particularly agree with appellees that it is for this court to determine whether the whole facts in evidence, the acts creating the town, the issuance of the bonds, their validation by court decree under the Florida statute, the conduct of persons in the affected territory, and of the officers of the town toward that territory, support the findings of the court below, that, as to the bonds and the territory in question, a case was made out of a town existing de facto, which was authorized to, and did, issue bonds under circumstances which made them binding obligations on that territory. It is for this court to say whether contrary to the findings of the District Judge, the facts shown of record make out a case of bonds issued in circumstances such that, as to the territory in question, it must be said that it was never even de facto a part of the town, the bonds as to it never had binding force. It is argued by appellants that there is no attack here upon the validity of the bonds, none upon that of the town as a town. The corporation has a de jure existence; the bonds are valid; and the authorities cited above, holding territory which has had a de facto existence as a municipality, to liability for bonds created while it was so acting, have no application here. The bonds in question here, they say, are still obligations of a still existing town. Let the bondholders [980]*980look to the town. But this over simple solution, we think, is not either a just or a legal one. By the undisputed evidence it is made to appear that, though the territory from which the corporation was ousted was only a small part of the whole territory of the town, as its hounds were defined in creating it, its value was, and is, greatly in excess of that of all of the other property in the town combined, and that, if it is relieved from liability on the bonds, the remaining territory will not only be wholly inadequate to service them, but such a burden will be thrown upon it as to be intolerable. Under these circumstances, we think the same question is presented as to the liability of territory excluded from a municipality in ouster proceedings as is presented when a municipality is ousted from jurisdiction over all of its territory, is declared nonexistent as to all. If then, it would have been possible in law for the territory in question to have been incorporated into a municipality, and if by compliance with all required forms there was a real appearance, though not the substance, of the fact, that it had actually been so incorporated, we think that, as to bonds issued under the forms of Florida law and validated under the provision of its statutes, the territory, though excluded by the ouster as to the future from the general jurisdiction of the town, remains a part of it for the purpose of servicing and discharging the bonds. Authorities, supra, and City of Decatur v. Thames Bank & Trust Co. (C. C.A.) 84 F.(2d) 105. It is without dispute in the evidence that, from the time of its formation until the ouster proceeding, the town exerted jurisdiction over the whole territory. It levied and collected taxes from it. It was understood by all concerned that it extended over it. It did, in fact, though not in law, so extend. The town was created under the general laws of Florida (Comp.Gen.Laws Fla.1927, § 2935 et seq.).

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121 F.2d 279 (Fifth Circuit, 1941)
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Bluebook (online)
87 F.2d 978, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 2633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ocean-beach-heights-inc-v-brown-crummer-inv-co-ca5-1937.