The United States of America appeals from an order denying its motion for leave to intervene in an action to recover unsecured personal property taxes.
Defendant Harsh is the operator of a Wherry Act Military Housing Project located on federally owned land at the Marine Corps Supply Center near the town of Barstow. Defendant operates the project under a 75-year lease from the United States executed pursuant to title VIII of the National Housing Act. (12 U.S.C.A. §§ 1748-1748h.) Under the terms of the lease, defendant built 337 family dwelling units for occupancy by those military and civilian personnel designated by the United States. Title to all improvements and personal property installed therein is in the United States. The United States agreed to furnish fire and police protection, if available, and retained the right to regulate the rents charged to the subtenants.
In 1956, the Supreme Court of the United Statеs held that Congress had consented to the taxation by local authorities of a lessee’s possessory interest in a Wherry Act housing project.
(Offutt Housing Co.
v.
County of Sarpy,
“. . . Nothing contained in the provisions of title VIII of the National Housing Act in effect prior to August 11, 1955, or any related provision of law, shall be construed to exempt from state or local taxes or assessments the interest of a lessee from the Federal Government in or with respect to any property covered by a mortgage under such provisions of title VIII; Provided, That, no such taxes or assessments (not paid or encumbering such property or interest prior to June 15, 1956) on the interest of such lessee shall exceed the amount of taxes or assessments on other similar property of similar value, less such amount as the Secretary of Defense or his designee determines to be equal to (1) any payments made by the Federal Government to the local taxing or other public agencies involved with respect to such property, plus (2) such amount as may be appropriate for any еxpenditures made by the Federal Government or the lessee for the provision or maintenance of streets, sidewalks, curbs, gutters, sew *343 ers, lighting, snow removal or any other services or facilities which are customarily provided by thе State, county, city, or other local taxing authority with respect to such other similar property. . . .” (42 TJ.S.C.A. § 1594, note.)
The designee of the Secretary of Defense, in accordance with section 511, supra, determined that Harsh was entitled tо a reduction of $27,759 with respect to assessments for the 1957-1958 tax year. The assessor, however, sent Harsh a tax bill for the full amount of its assessment without any reduction.
The county brought this action to recover taxes and penalties in the amount of $23,099.04. Defendant pleaded that the designee of the Secretary of Defense had determined that defendant was entitled to a reduction of $27,759 in its taxes, that notice of this determination had been served on plaintiff’s board of supervisors, and that plaintiff had refused to comply with this determination.
The United States filed a petition and proposed answer in intervention. It alleged that it had paid more for facilities or services normally providеd by the local taxing agencies than the amount of the taxes levied against defendant’s possessory interest, that the money so paid was in lieu of taxes, and that pursuant to federal law the Secretary of Defense had notified the county board of supervisors of his determination that the local taxes on defendant’s possessory interest must be reduced by $27,759.
Section 387 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides:
“At any time before trial, any person, who has an interest in the matter in litigation, or in the success оf either of the parties, or an interest against both, may intervene in the action or proceeding. An intervention takes place when a third person is permitted to become a party to an action or proceeding between other persons, either by joining the plaintiff in claiming what is sought by the complaint, or by uniting with the defendant in resisting the claims of the plaintiff, or by demanding anything adversely to both the plaintiff and the defendant. ...”
The United States contends that the matter in litigation includes the validity and operation of the federal statute, that it has an interest therein, that it seeks to unite with defendant in resisting plaintiff’s claim, and that it is therefore entitled to intervene. Plaintiff contends that the interest of the United States is not “of such a direct and immediate character that”
*344
the United States “will either gain or lose by the direct legal operation and effect of the judgment’’
(Elliott
v.
Superior Court,
It may be conceded that the outcome of plaintiff’s action will not directly affect the federal fisc. The payments claimed to be in lieu of taxes have been made, if defendant loses it cannot recoup its tax payments from the United States
(cf. General Dynamics Corp.
v.
County of L. A.,
*345 Congress determined that local taxing agencies should not secure windfalls by being permitted fully to tax privately held interests in Wherry Act Military Housing Projeсts when they were also receiving payments from the United States for services ordinarily rendered to taxpayers or being relieved by the United States of the necessity of rendering such services. It concluded that unless such windfalls were prevented, government payments or services would not reduce taxes and thereby allowable rents, but result in the housing projects’ carrying more than their share of the expenses of local government. Such windfalls would subvert the purpose of providing housing for government personnel at reasonable rents.
Defendant’s resistance to the payment of the tax is based squarely on the federal statute, and accordingly, this case directly involves nоt only defendant’s liability to plaintiff, but the validity and operation of federal fiscal policy defined by federal statute. The interest of the United States in sustaining its fiscal policy by securing an adjudication of the validity and correct intеrpretation of its statute is fully sufficient to support its intervention whether or not the judgment will directly and immediately affect its pecuniary interests.
(The Exchange
v.
M’Faddon,
7 Cranch. (U.S.) 116, 146 [
The purposes of intervention are to protect the interests of those who may bе affected by the judgment
(Florida
v.
Georgia, 17
How. (U.S.) 478, 494-495 [
People
v.
Brophy,
The order is reversed. The county shall bear the costs of this appeal.
Gibson, C. J., Shenk, J., Schauer, J., Spence, J., and Peters, J., concurred.
Me Comb, J., dissented.
Notes
The purpose of the 1956 amendment to the National Housing Act was sеt forth in the report of the House Committee on Banking and Currency (H. Rep. No. 2363 on H.R. 11742, 84th Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 48-49) as follows:
“The need for a clarification of this matter has existed since the initiation of the Wherry Act program because of thе doubtful validity and effectiveness of various tax statutes of the States as applied to the interest of the mortgagor corporations where the projects are located on lands owned by the United States. The prоblem has involved the major constitutional question of the right of States to tax the mortgagor’s leasehold interest, and has been complicated by the large variety of statutes in the individual States which local taxing officials havе attempted to apply to the mortgagor’s interests. There has been a substantial amount of litigation on this matter in State and lower Federal courts over the period of the program without uniformly resolving the questions involved. The recent decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Offutt Housing Co. v. County of Sarpy (May 28, 1956), [351 U.S. 253 (76 S.Ct. 814 ,100 L.Ed. 1151 )], upheld the right of local taxing officials in the State of Nebraska to levy certain State and county ‘personal property’ taxes against the lessee’s interest in a title Till project, measured by the full value of the buildings and improvements. However, as a large portion of the projects have not *345 been, subject to State and local taxes, payments in lieu of taxes have frequently been made to local taxing officials in exchange for usual services, such as schools, furnished to the projects. Also, many expenditures have been made by the Federal Government for streets, utilitiеs, schools and other services normally furnished by taxing bodies. As tax payments for a project normally have an ultimate effect on the rentals paid by military and civilian personnel at the military installations, it is important that no payments be made to communities which would constitute a windfall over and above normal taxes. Consequently, it is very important to assure that the project does not duplicate payments for services furnished to it. This duplication would be avoided under the provisions in the bill for deductions from tax payments, as explained above.”
