73 F. 304 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Missouri | 1896
This cause came here by removal from the circuit court of New Madrid county. The complainant now appears by counsel, and moves to remand the cause for the alleged reason that the same does not present a controversy “wholly between citizens of different states,” and is, therefore, not removable to this court. Although the cause is instituted in the name.of the state of Missouri, it is manifest, from the statute under which it arises (Rev. St. 1889, § 8040), that the real party .complainant is the school board, for and in behalf of the common schools of New Madrid county, and, as such, is a citizen of the state of Missouri, within the mean
The bill of complaint shows that, by act of congress approved September 28, 1850, the United States granted to the state of Missouri certain swamp and overflowed lands, to be drained and reclaimed for the ultimate benefit of the public schools of the state; that the state of Missouri afterwards, by different acts of its general assembly, granted such of these lauds as were, located in New Madrid county to that county, to be drained and reclaimed by it, and after-wards sold at not less than $1.25 per acre, the net proceeds (hereof to become a part of the common school fund of that county; that, by (he provisions of such acts, the county court of said county atone, had the right to make the sales and issue patents for (lie lands sold, provided, however, that (his should be done only after full payment of (he purchase price therefor had been made. It: appears that New Madrid county, as a municipality, became vested with the legal title of the swamp and overflowed lands in its territory, in trust for the benefit of the common schools of the county, and that an elaborate scheme was devised by the legislature of the state for the execution of the (rust, so as to secure proceeds of the sale of the lands, in money, for the benefit of the. school fund of the county. It further appears, as averred in the bill of complaint, that said couniv, by and through its county court, committed divers breaches of (rust in handling and disposing of said lands, as follows; That it disposed of large tracts thereof without consideral ion, and particularly without securing the upset price fixed by the acts of the general assembly therefor; that it donated other large tracts of said lands tó a certain alleged corporation, or to its stockholders, ostensibly for the purpose of draining and reclaiming the same, but really as a subsidy only, to secure' the const ruction of a railroad through the comity; that it conveyed other portions thereof to divers persons in order to secure the dismissal of certain suits instituted by them against the county of New Madrid; that the county court required (he payment, in one instance', of #10,000 as partial consideration for a conveyance, and that no part or portion of said sum, or other proceeds of the sale of said lands, was ever turned over to the school fund of said county; that all said transactions were made contrary to law, and in violation of (he trust imposed upon the comity by the act of congress (supra) and the several acts of the general assembly above referred to; that said county, by and through its county court,
It is manifest, from this very general analysis of the bill of complaint, that the county of New Madrid is charged with a direct and willful breach of trust in transferring the title to the lands described in the bill of complaint to the defendants or their grantors, through whom they claim. By virtue of the acts of the general assembly creating the trust above referred to, New Madrid county undoubtedly became a statutory trustee, charged with the duty of so disposing of the swamp and overflowed lands within its territory as to create a fund for the benefit of the common schools of the county. It, and it alone, had the power to act as such trustee, and one of the purposes, if not the main purpose, of the bill of complaint in this case is to restore to the county the legal title to the lands in controversy, and to compel the county to proceed and execute the trust imposed upon it by law. Divers contracts, deeds, and conveyances are alleged to have been made by tlie county in the execution of a scheme to defraud the schools, and deprive them of the lands in controversy. In order to do complete equity in this cause, it will be entirely proper and necessary, in the event the complainant prevails, not only to set aside the deeds and conveyances under which the defendants claim the land in controversy, but to reinvest the title to said lands in the county, with direciions to proceed and execute the trust imposed upon it by law; and, under certain possible contingencies, it may be proper and necessary to require the county to account in this action for a diversion of the trust funds. The county is, therefore, essentially an adversary party to the complainant in this cause. It is a trustee charged with having fraudulently disposed of trust property, and is a necessary party to a suit against the fraudulent grantees to reclaim the same. This proposition has been recognized and asserted in numerous cases in the supreme court of the United States and in the circuit court of appeals, and must be regarded as the settled doctrine of this court. The leading cases are: Barth v. Coler, 9 C. C. A. 81, 60 Fed. 466; Wilson v. Oswego Tp., 151 U. S. 56, 14 Sup. Ct. 259; Thayer v. Association, 112 U. S. 717, 5 Sup. Ct. 355; Peper v. Fordyce, 119 U. S. 469, 7 Sup. Ct. 287; Rust v. Silver Co., 7 C. C. A. 389, 58 Fed.
My attention has been called to an opinion in the case of Missouri v. Alt, 73 Fed. 303 (decided at nisi prius by Judge Thayer), as direct authority in a similar cause for a different conclusion than that reached by me. I have carefully considered the opinion in that case, and it is manifest that the facts there presented to the court were essentially different from the facts shown in the; bill of complaint In this cause. So far as disclosed by the bill, the county of Gape Girardeau was there but a nominal party. Again, in that case it dearly appears that the county was not an adversary party to the complainant. It appears, by (lie opinion, that the county .refused to join as a complainant in the cause, and was therefore made a defendant. For this reason the court held that, in the arrangement of pai'ties for the purpose of determining jurisdiction, the county should be treated, as complainant's counsel obviously treated it, as (he same in interest with complainant, and in no sense an adversary party. The case last referred to is therefore not applicable to the facts of the case now before the court.