100 F.2d 156 | 5th Cir. | 1938
The decree appealed from upheld the court’s jurisdiction, and denied that indispensable parties were lacking; gave judgment in favor of the complainant and an intervenor on past-due bonds and coupons against the City of Alvarado, and distributed funds on.hand; and enjoined the City, so long as its taxing power was insufficient to discharge interest and principal requirements each year, from dividing out the tax income as by ordinance it had done, and required an apportionment among the several bond issues according to the principal amounts outstanding on each issue. The City was also enjoined from compromising delinquent taxes unless suit be filed in some court and the compromise ratified by the court; and from valuing property for taxation at less than its true full money value.
The principal facts are that the City has outstanding bonds arising from six issues at different dates to an aggregate of $92,000 principal, and that interest and principal is in default on all save a $5,000 issue of school bonds. Since the bonds were issued the tax values in the City have shrunk about half, and the full taxing power of the City for several years has not been sufficient to run the City, pay the interest and maintain the required sinking funds. In the summer of 1937 the City proposed to refund all save the school bonds referred to above by substituting new bonds for a principal reduced by twenty percent, and. with a very much reduced interest. Ordinances were apparently passed, though they are not in the record, which provided for this refunding, and fixed for 1937 and future years a pro rating of the taxes which the City could levy, which assigned to the City’s current needs one-third and to each bond issue a part of the remainder which was proportioned approximately to the several prin
On the question of federal jurisdiction, the evidence shows that complainant’s bonds payable to bearer were acquired from citizens of Texas, but the provisions of 28 U.S.C.A. § 41(1) render that fact not important. If he really became the owner and bearer of the bonds his citizenship in another State entitles him to enter a federal court. Bullard v. City of Cisco, 290 U.S. 179, 54 S.Ct. 177, 78 L.Ed. 254, 93 A.L.R. 141. He testifies he bought them and gave a note for their purchase price. While the purchase of bonds on a credit may be unusual, it is not incredible. The court did not err in holding Christian to be an owner and not a mere agent to sue.
We are of opinion that the court should not have given the relief, it did without an opportunity to bondholders adversely affected to be heard. It could of course render judgment against the City alone for the indebtedness, and it could proceed ordinarily to enforce payment by requiring the levy of a tax for the purpose. If this would prejudice other creditors they ordinarily would have to intervene for their own protection. But the complainant here in his bill advises the court that the City has other creditors, that its lawful ability to tax is insufficient for all, that a proration is necessary; that the City has made one, but the complainant wishes it rescinded and another made. Whatever advantage the complainant gets by the change must be at the expense not of the City which he sues, but of others having rights similar to his own. Upon a bill thus framed the court ought not to proceed without hearing the real parties at interest. No obstacle appears why they may not be made parties. The Illinois Bankers Life Insurance Company, for instance, had $33,000 of bonds which if unrefunded would, on the theory of proportional sharing in the taxation set up by complainant, have its prorata share. After sacrificing one-fifth of the principal, it would receive one-fifth less taxes. But the sacrifice was made, the City says, on the faith of the ordinance which in effect promised there should be no sacrifice in the taxes afterwards to be paid over. The City thinks that to destroy the ordinance would be unfair to this creditor, entitling it perhaps to a rescission of the bond exchange, and that would deprive the City of the great advantage it now has in the reduction of its debt. The creditor ought to be before the court to say why it proceeded with the exchange of bonds pending this suit, if it did; whether it desires to retain the new bonds and contend for the validity of the ordinance, or to' rescind; that the court may have the full truth and consider the just rights of all parties. In like manner, the owner of the $5,000 school bonds which are said
Reversed and remanded.