Lead Opinion
This is an appeal from a judgment entered in favor of appellees, who were plaintiffs below, in an action on certain bonds owned by them and issued by the appellant Drainage District. The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the lower court. No question is raised as to the sufficiency of the pleadings. The defendant answered plaintiffs’ complaint, which was i.': conventional form, pleading that in a bankruptcy proceeding brought in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas, it had been adjudged in effect that the bondholders of the district, including thе plaintiffs, were entitled to recover in that proceeding the sum of approximately $360 on each $1,000 bond; that under the terms and provisions of said decree, plaintiffs had no valid claim аgainst the defendant but were forever restrained and enjoined from asserting any claim or demand whatever against defendant, except as provided in said decree.
The bankruptcy рroceedings referred to were initiated on June 17, 1935, by filing in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas, a petition for
No appeal was taken by the plaintiffs from the bankruptcy decree above referred to.
The lower court held that the decree in bankruptcy entered March 28, 1936, was void because the court was without jurisdiction of the parties plaintiff or of the subject matter; that the plaintiffs'were therefore entitled to recover the full amount of their bonds, and judgment was entered accordingly.'
The determining question on this appeal is whether the bankruрtcy decree constituted a defense to the maintenance of this action. The act amendatory of the bankruptcy laws under which the proceedings were had, culminating in the abоve-mentioned decree, was, subsequent to the entry of the decree, held to be unconstitutional because it materially restricted the states in the control of their financial affairs. Ashton v. Cameron County Water Improvement Dist.,
Then follows Section 303, which provides that a municipality or other political subdivision may file a petition setting out that the district is insolvent or unable to meet its debts, and submitting a plan of readjustment. The requirements of the petition are described in the аct, and it is provided that upon the filing of such petition, the judge shall enter an order either approving or dismissing it.
Without further detailing the proceedings purported to be authorized by the act, it is sufficient for the purpose of this opinion to state that the proceeding taken was that prescribed by the statute, and if the court acquired jurisdiction, it was because of a compliance with the procedure so prescribed, and not otherwise.
If the decree was void, it could not be successfully pleaded as res judicata. McDonald v. Mabee,
In Security Savings Bank v. Connell, supra, the Supreme Court of Iowa considered a plea of rеs judicata in which the judgments relied upon were based upon laws later declared to be unconstitutional. In the course of that opinion it is said [
Mr. Black, in his work on Judgments, Volume 1, Section 216, supra, states the applicable rule as follows: “But if the alleged jurisdiction of a court to take any particular action is derived from a statute, and that statute is shown to be unconstitutional, the proceedings of the court must be considered void, for as the stream cannot rise higher than its source, no jurisdiction can be derived from a void act.”
The rule laid down by this court in Woods Bros. Construction Co. v. Yankton County, 8 Cir.,
The judgment appealed from is therefore affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting) .
The appellant herein relies upon a judgment rendered by the District Court in a bankruptcy case during the interim between the time the Congress enacted the municipal corporatiоns amendment to the Bankruptcy Act and the time the Supreme Court declared it unconstitutional. The question is, during that interim what was the state of our government in respect to that legislation? I assume thаt as to the acts of the Executive branch of the government founded thereon, they simply lost the sanction of the law when the law was held invalid. Probably the same is true as to administrative or quasi-judiеjal bodies. But it seems to me that our duly constituted courts, sitting in the various districts and circuits throughout the nation, functioning in equity, law or bankruptcy, remained clothed with judicial power, including the power to pass on the constitutionality of the law and that their solemn judgments in all cases, including bankruptcy cases, ought to be given full faith and credit unless appealed from and reversed. The amendment tо the Bankruptcy Act affected very large property rights. I think it ought not to be held that there was a hiatus of govern- ' mental power in respect to them, or that the Supreme Court decision annulling the amendment operated retroactively to render void the final unappealed from judgments of all the courts that had passed on the amendment and adjudicated rights between litigants in respect to it. It ought to be held that government by law is continuous at least in the courts of the nation.
