delivered the opinion of the court.
By act of its General Assembly in 1886 amended in 1888 the State of Louisiana created the Tensas Basin Levee District for the purpose of providing a system of levees and other works to aid in protecting the lands within its boundaries from floods and overflow. The act provided for the appointment of a Levee Board of Commissioners to have charge of the affairs of the District and Constituted this Board a corporation, with power to sue and be sued, and to sell, mortgage, pledge and otherwise dispose of lands which the State donated and caused to be conveyed to the Board.
In 1898 the Levee Board sold to the Tensas Delta Land Company, Limited, a large acreage of the land thus acquired and executed conveyances for it.
Eleven years later, in 1909, suit was brought by the Attorney General of Louisiana in the name of the State, claiming that the sale of 1898 was fraudulent and void and praying that it should be set aside and that the State should be decreed to be the owner of the property.
After the dismissal’of the suit of the State the Levee Board brought suit against the Tensas Basin Land Company, Limited, in a District Court of Louisiana upon the same cause of action stated in the prior petition which case was removed to the United States District Court for the appropriate district. The petition was there given the form of a bill in equity, and as amended, a demurrer to it by the defendant was sustained. On appeal this decision was reversed and the case was remanded for further proceedings, but before the time allowed for answer had expired the defendant appeared and informed the District Court that $100,000 had been paid in settlement of the case agreed upon between the parties and moved the court to dismiss the suit. This motion was filed on July 22,1913, and a rule was forthwith issued to the plaintiff to show cause on the first day of the next term of the court (October 20th) .-why the motion should not be granted. ■ The return of service of this rule shows personal service on the Attorney General as Solicitor for the Levee Board and acknowledgment of service by the Board itself.
On August 5 the Board, appearing by its President, answered the rule to show .cause, averring that it had “apprised its attorney of record” (the Attorney General of the State) “of the said settlement” and, admitting the allegations of the motion, prayed that the suit be forthwith dismissed at its cost.
The Attorney General for the State, not satisfied with the settlement, on October 6th filed a motion, which he signed “R. G. Pleasant, Attorney General, State of Louisiana and Attorney of Record for Complainant.” In this
The motion to dismiss carné on for hearing on October 20th. but the court deferred consideration of it until the next day and caused a telegram to be sent to the Attorney General in order that he might have full opportunity to be present and be heard, but he did not appear in person or by representative, and thereupon the court heard the evidence and “ordered, adjudged and decreed that the said compromise ... be and the same is recognized by this court as having the effect of the thing adjudged and as settling all the issues involved in this case,” and dismissed the suit.
It cannot escape notice that there is no allegation contained in any paper filed by the Attorney General that the Levee Board in compromising the controversy and suit did not act in perfect good faith, nor is there any challenge of the character or competency of the members of the Board.
After this entry of dismissal no further action was taken by the Attorney General until on the 6th day of the following April when he presented to the District Court a “petition of the United States of America on the relation of the State of Louisiana” praying that the State be permitted to intervene and appeal from the judgment ratifying the compromise and dismissing the suit.
The District Court denied this petition for leave to
The Circuit Court of Appeals denied this petition assigning two reasons for its action, viz:
(1) Because the Supreme Court of Louisiana, on full consideration, had decided that the State was without real or beneficial interest in the lands in controversy, which decision must be controlling in that court; and
(2) Because the State was not a party to the record in the District Court “and one who is not a party to a record and judgment is not entitled to an appeal therefrom.”
This decision is now here for review on certiorari.
This plain statement of the history of this litigation so argues against the claims of the petitioner as to make them in appearance, at least, unsubstantial to the point of being frivolous.
The Supreme Court of Louisiana, considering the statutes of its own State, held, in the case in which the State sought to set aside for fraud the same sale of the same lands involved in this litigation, 126 Louisiana, 59, that the “Legislature vested the absolute title to the lands in controversy in the Board of Commissioners of the Tensas Levee District, with full power to sell the same on such terms as the Board might deem proper. The Legislature also vested in said board full power to sue and be sued, and to stand in judgment, in all matters relating to their gestión and trust.” “Most assuredly,” also says the court, “the Legislature has divested the State absolutely of all beneficial interest in said lands, and transferred the same to the said Board of Levee Commissioners,” and as it “has vested the power to sue and be sued in the Board of
•This decision determining the effect of the state statutes, where no claim of federal right was involved, is accepted as conclusive by this court and unless it has been modified by statute (there has been no modifying decision) the application of the State to intervene and to appeal was properly denied.
To the seemingly insurmountable barrier to the claims of the petitioner presented by this Supreme Court decision we must add that the State was not at any time a party to this record and that its first application for leave to intervene and to appeal was long after the term at which the decree of dismissal was rendered and within a few days of the expiration of the time within which even “a real party in interest” would have been allowed an appeal.
With exceptions not even remotely applicable to a case such as we have here it has long been the law as settled by this court that “no person can bring a writ of error [an appeal is not different] to reverse a judgment who is not a party or privy to the record,”
Bayard
v.
Lombard,
Two statutes of Louisiana are relied upon by counsel for petitioner to avoid the obvious and seemingly conclusive result of these decisions by this court and by the Supreme Court óf Louisiana.
It is urged in argument that in suits in the United States Courts which originate in Louisiana this statute permits an appeal by strangers to the record “who may allege that they have been aggrieved by the judgment,” and the decision of the Supreme Court of Louisiana in 126 Louisiana, 59, supra, holding that the State cannot “be aggrieved” by this judgment because it is without beneficial interest in the lands which are the subject-matter of this litigation and is without authority to institute a suit for their recovery, is disposed of by saying that it is the practice in Louisiana courts to allow appeals by strangers to the record upon mere allegation of interest, leaving the validity of such allegation to be examined by the appellate court.
This claim cannot be seriously entertained in the face of the long time perfectly settled law that equity suits in federal courts and the appellate procedure in them are regulated exclusively by federal statutes and decisions unaffected by statutes of the States. Textbook citations will suffice: Federal Equity Practice, Street, §§ 97 and 98; A Federal Equity Suit, Simkins, Chapter 1.
The other statute relied upon by the petitioner was enacted by the General Assembly of Louisiana on August 19, 1910, after the decision by the Supreme Court referred to, and reads:
“Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of Louisiana, That it'is hereby made the duty of the Attorney General of the State, upon the request of the Governor to represent the State or any political agency or subdivision
The claim made by the Attorney General for the State now is that this act “withdrew the authority theretofore granted to the Levee Board by section 3 of the Act of 1886 to sue in such cases as this, with all of the rights pertinent to the right to sue, and delegated it, through the Governor, to the Attorney General.”
This is a large repealing effect by implication to be asserted for a statute so worded and apparently so simple, and that such meaning was hot given to it by the present Attorney General’s predecessor in office, who was charged with the execution of the statute at the time this litigation was commenced and almost immediately after its enactment, is clear from these facts appearing of record:
The suit by the Levee Board as petitioner was commenced after this Act of August 19, 1910, was passed and yet the petition, signed by the Attorney General as one of the Solicitors of the Board, alleges that it was commenced by virtue of a resolution adopted by the Board on the fourteenth day of the preceding July (thus reciting an authority adopted pursuant to power which it is now claimed had been withdrawn from the Board). The petition also recites that the Attorney General (predecessor of the present incumbent) appears in the suit pursuant to the authority and direction of the Governor “to represent said Board of Levee Commissioners ... in the prosecution of this suit;” that the board is a corporation with power to sue and be sued, to take title to and to sell lands under the same laws which had been construed by the Louisiana Supreme Court (126 Louisiana, 59) and it prays for a decree “recognizing your petitioner [the Levee Board]
Even in his protest to the District Court against the settlement, the Attorney General appeared “as Attorney of record for the complainant,” the Levee Board, and it was long after term and not until six months, lacking sixteen days, after the decree of the District Court approving the settlement had .been entered, that he left off the character of solicitor for the Board and, appearing for the State, petitioned for leave for it to intervene and appeal from the decision affirming ■ the settlement approved by his former client. Even in this petition no claim is made that the' Board had been deprived of its powers by the Act of August 19,1910, or that it had acted otherwise than in the utmost good faith in making the compromise.
The first time that this astonishing assertion of a repeal by implication by the Act of August 19,1910, appears in the record, so far as we can discover, is in the brief filed by a third Attorney General on April 30, 1917.
This summary of the proceedings in the case out of which the petition we are considering grew shows that the predecessor of the present Attorney General, who was in office when the'Act of 1910 .was passed, and also the Attorney General who succeeded him, both contended, until
This contemporary construction of the act by the two law officers of the State charged with acting under it is persuasive authority as to its true meaning, and, upon full consideration, we think it is the correct interpretation of it.
To this we add that, except in a class of cases to which this case does not belong, the authority of a court to make new parties to a suit, especially after judgment or decree, rests in its sound discretion, which, except for abuse, cannot be reviewed upon an appeal or writ of error. No claim is made of abuse of discretion by the District Court and plainly, if made, it would be groundless, since the judge refusing to permit the State to intervene had before him at
In the original bill the not uncommon allegation of fraud is made, which is denied in the answer. It was entirely proper for the parties to such a litigation, in good faith “balancing the hope of gaining with the danger of losing” to compromise the case and make an end of the controversy and, as we have said, it is not claimed anywhere in the record that the members of the Levee Board, which settled the suit, were not men of character and probity or that they did not act in perfect good faith in concluding the settlement. To these men the state law committed the care of the interests of the inhabitants of the district and within the bounds of their authority honestly exercised their action was conclusive upon the State.
It results that the decree of the Circuit Court of Appeals must be
Affirmed.
