269 Mo. 334 | Mo. | 1916
The record before us is very meagre and unsatisfactory, but as the proceedings in the Federal Court by Wills & Sons v. Bates County, prior to the rendition of the- last judgment in said court, are reported in full, in the two cases of Wills v. Bates County. 170 Fed. 812, and Bates County v. Wills, 190 Fed. 522, we will set out some of the facts more in detail, as shown in said
Certain citizens of Bates County aforesaid, organized Drainage District Number One, under article 4, chapter 41, Revised Statutes 1909, known as the “County Court Law.” The county court of said county, acting for the drainage district, let a contract, through Bell, the engineer, to Timothy Foohey & Sons, for the construction of a ditch in said county, divided into three sections. The contract and bond given by the contractors were subsequently approved by the county court. On the day of the execution of said contract, Foohey & Sons assigned and transferred to A. V. Wills & Sons the portion of the contract relating to section numbered 3. Wills & Sons obligated themselves to perform the contract relative to section 3, and the work which was done upon said last named section was performed by them. Separate estimates were made by the engineer of work done by Wills & Sons, as the saíne progressed, to August, 1908, and ninety per cent of the total amount was paid by the county court, ten per cent being reserved.
During the progress of the work and on the 6th day of August, 1908, the records of the county court show that Wills & Sons stated to said court that they found in the land required to be excavated a large amount of stone, which was not covered by the terms of their contract, and that they could not remove the same under said agreement. It was finally agreed between Wills & Sons and the county court, that the work should be continued as formerly, by Wills & Sons, without prejudice as to their right to refuse to move the stone; and without prejudice as to the right of the county to contest the claim of Wills & Sons, in respect to said matter.. Thereafter, Wills & Sons removed said material from the ditch, except the stone, which they insisted they were not required to remove; the county court insisting that they ivere required, under the contract, to remove same.
On April .3, 1909, Wills & Sons brought suit in the Federal Court against Bates County and Drainage Dis
“Without entering into any detailed discussion, I am ,of opinion that the demurrer is well taken as to defendant drainage district. The whole scope and tenor of the statute under which the contract was made indicate that it was'made, in effect, under orders of the county court of Bates County, in pursuance of a power conferred upon it by the Legislature. ... I am therefore unable to see that any judgment could be rendered against the drainage district for the work done by plaintiffs. The demurrer, therefore, on behalf of the drainage district is well taken.”
The county’s separate demurrer to the petition was overruled. It then filed an answer, denying liability, and claimed therein that plaintiffs, under the contract, were required to remove all the material from the ditch, including stone; that they had not done so; and that the engineer had not given any estimates for unpaid work.
At the trial but little evidence was offered, for the reason that the trial court expressed the view that the agreement of August 6, 1908, constituted a new contract which entitled plaintiffs to recover the full amount of the balance due for the work which they had performed, and directed a verdict in favor of plaintiffs and against the county for that amount. Judge Munger, upon the county’s appeal from the above judgment, held that:
“The judgment in this case awarded them the entire amount, and to the extent that it exceeded ninety per cent was clearly erroneous . . . The evidence does not show that the fund applicable for the payment was exhausted or was insufficient to pay for the completion of the work.” [190 Fed. l. c. 529.]
Before the second trial, Drainage District Number One had reorganized under the Act of 1913, as a circuit court district, and this was pleaded by the county as a defense in the last trial before the district court, but the court held that the county was still the proper party to be sued, instead of the district.
Upon the last trial, the jury assessed the damages of Wills & Sons at $42,609.08, and assessed the defendant’s damages at $11,610.77, and thereupon judgment was entered in said court as follows:
“It is therefore considered, ordered and adjudged that the plaintiffs A. V. Wills, W. V. Wills and Emmett Wills have and recover of and from the defendant Bates County, Missouri, $30,998.31, so found to be due, together with their costs herein expended, and have execution therefor, the same to be paid and discharged from and out of the funds raised or to be raised by benefit assessments upon and against the lands in Drainage District Number One, Bates County, Missouri.”
From this judgment an appeal was taken by defendant to the United States Circuit Court of Appeals, where the case is still pending.
It appears from the record and briefs on ’file that the first funds raised by the district by bond issue amounted to $356,000, and that they were issued in the construction of the drainage system.
It is averred in the petition; in respect to the money sued for, that:
“This fund was a part of a fund of $170,000 that had been raised by a second-bond issue for the doing of additional work, not yet completed, in digging ditches, building bridges, and repairing dikes and other works for the reclamation of lands in the district.”
The defendant’s return, in this case, among other things, alleges, that:
“It is admitted that the funds raised from the bond issue from which the construction work done by Wills & Sons was to be paid had been entirely exhausted, leav*342 ing no money in that fund out of which to pay the judgment in their favor, but it is averred that the second fund was raised for the purpose of deepening original ditch and doing new work in the system, but that the work contemplated im the plan for reclamation and for the doing of which the second-bond issue was made had been completed, leaving the amount in dispute as a surplus, and that out of this surplus the drainage district was intending to do maintenance work. That Wills & Sons were claiming; that this surplus was applicable to the payment of their claim, and that pending the appeal from that judgment the money could not be safely turned over by defendant.”
Relator was sworn as a witness, and testified, that:
“The board of supervisors has had charge of the defense of the case in the United States» court, since the reorganization. I remember Mr. Chastain told me if the board would put up a bond to hold the county harmless, the county court would turn the money over, but that would not get us anywhere. If we had the money, we would go ahead and finish the ditch.”
The evidence is undisputed that ever since the reorganization of Drainage District Number One and before the last trial in the United States court, the drainage district, through its- board of supervisors, has had charge of the defense of the Wills case now pending in the Court of Appeals.
The trial court found the issues herein for defendant; denied the writ of mandamus and entered its judgment in behalf of respondent.
Relator appealed the case to this court.
“The first contention made here upon the part of the county is that it in no manner is liable upon the contract, that the contract was not one made by the county for and on its behalf, but was a contract of the drainage district, and that the drainage district alone is liable. Viewing the legislation of the State relative to these drainage districts, we think it apparent that drainage districts were merely political subdivisions of the county for the special purposes of drainage, and were not at the time the contract was entered into created corporations capable of suing and being sued. The whole proceeding for the establishment of drainage districts, construction of ditches, assessing property therefor, and providing the funds to pay for construction, was vested in the county court. The statute expressly required that the engineer should make the contract for and on behalf of the county.
“We think it apparent that the contract in question was a special contract of the county, differing from its general contracts, in that the funds for the payment of the enterprise were to be collected from the portion of the county only that derived special benefit from the im*344 provement; that the district formation was for the purpose of designating the territorial part of the county to be assessed for the payment thereof.”
It is undisputed that since the reorganization of the drainage district, the latter, through its board of supervisors, has had the entire control and management of the Wills case now pending in the Federal court. At the last trial, when judgment was entered against the county, the drainage district had charge of the case, and in the name of the county urged that it was a necessary and proper party to defend the case, but the Federal court overruled this contention, and decided that the county was still the proper party to defend the action. The drainage district, in the name of the county, appealed from the last judgment of the Federal court, and still has the management and control of the defense in said cause. The above judgment, among other things, recites, that it is “to be paid and discharged from and out of the funds raised or to be raised by benefit assessments upon and against the lands in Drainage District Number One, Bates County, Missouri.”
Said district, in view of the facts aforesaid, was just as much bound by the above judgment as Bates County. Whenever a party is interested in the subject-matter of pending litigation, and is placed in the control and management of the defense therein, he is just as much bound by the judgment in the cause, as the real defendant, in whose name the defense is made. [Titus v. Development Co., 264 Mo. l. c. 249; Wilson v. Drainage District, 257 Mo. l. c. 283; Davidson v. Real Estate & Investment Co., 249 Mo. 474, 503; Landis v. Hamilton, 77 Mo. 554; Wood v. Ensel, 63 Mo. 193-4 ; Strong v. The Phoenix Ins. Co., 62 Mo. l. c. 299; Harvie v. Turner, 46 Mo. l. c. 448; State to use v. Coste, 36 Mo. 437-8; Sturdivant Bank v. Huters, 87 Mo. App. 539-40; State ex rel. Reeves v. Barker, 26 Mo. App. 487.] If the drainage district had been joined as a defendant, in the action now pending in the Federal Court of Appeals, and judgment had been rendered against it as well as the county, it would he too plain for argument that the
We express no opinion as to the rulings of the Federal Court in the case now pending therein.
In State ex rel. v. Williams, 221 Mo. l. c. 254, Gantt, J., speaking for the Court in Banc, quoted with approval from the opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States, in Covell v. Heyman, 111 U. S. 176, as follows:
“These courts do not belong to the same system so far as their jurisdiction is concurrent; and although they co-exist in the same space, they are independent, and have no common superior. They exercise jurisdiction, it is true, within the same territory, but not in the same plane; and when one takes into its jurisdiction a specific thing, that res is as much withdrawn from the judicial power of the other, as if it had been carried physically into a different territorial sovereignty. To attempt to seize it by a foreign process is futile and void. The regulation of process, and the decision of questions relating to it, are part of the jurisdiction of the court from which it issues.”
“Jealous as the States are, and of right ought to be, of the powers reserved to them in our dual form of government, it is still the duty of the officials of the State to recognize those powers which have been granted to the Federal Government by the States in the formation of our Constitution, and to uphold and respect them so long as the Federal authorities keep within the orbits prescribed for them by the organic law.”
The principles announced by the Court in Banc in the Williams case, supra, have never been overruled or modified, and, hence, preclude the relator from maintaining this action.
IY. On the record in this cause, the conclusion reached by the circuit court is -correct and should be sustained.
The judgment below is accordingly affirmed.
The foregoing opinion of Bailey, C.,
is hereby adopted as the opinion of the court.