The City of Couer d’Alene and Harold L. Ickes, defendants, present their petitions for the modification of a final decree of the United States District Court of the District of Idaho, entered on September 9, 1935, and make applications to request the Senior Circuit Judge of this Circuit to designate two other Judges to participate in the determination of the petitions pursuant to the provisions of the Act of August 24, 1937.
It appears that the petitions and requests for the assembling of the three Judge Court were first presented to Judge Healy, one of the Circuit Judges, who on August 22, 1938, requested the Senior Judge to designate two other Judges with him to hear the petitions, and the conclusion reached by the Senior Judge was that the hearing of the petitions was not for a three Judge Court, but for the District Court who entered the final decree. The determination of the requests for the assembling of the three Judge Court pursuant to the Act referred to requires a recital of the history of the case and the proceedings had.
On November 24, 1934, a Bill in Equity was filed to restrain defendant City and its officers from pledging, selling or delivering bonds of the City which were purported to be authorized by the ordinance of the City and from applying any moneys of the Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works or entering into a contract for the building of any municipal electric and distribution system, and from selling such bonds until the defendants have provided for an annual tax in addition to all other taxes and sufficient to pay the bonds as required by the Constitution of the State and that the defendants be enjoined from proceeding with or making effective any act in connection with the construction of any such plant, which was heard and after considerable testimony taken, submitted to the Court, who made findings and entered a final decree restraining the defendants as prayed for.
The issues involved and the conclusions there reached by the Court presented questions other than whether the Act of Congress authorized the Federal Administrator of Public Works to act. Thereafter an appeal was taken to the Circuit Court of Appeals by the defendants and the defendant Ickes there moved to remand the cause to the District Court and based the motion upon a new proposed contract with the City different than the original one submitted to the District Court and the Circuit Court of Appeals as appears from' its mandate, dismissed the appeal on April 16, 1936, 9 Cir.,
The petitioners insist however, that the case of Tennessee Electric Power Company v. Ickes et al.,
Again the case of Stratton v. St. Louis. S. W. Ry. Co.,
Apparently differences exist under the Act we are considering as between the modification of an interlocutory injunction, issued while the case was pending and. where a permanent injunction embodied in.
We must keep in mind the further thought, that the facts in the Alabama Power Company Case are different in some respects to those in the instant case as to whether the plaintiff has sustained a legal wrong entitling it to maintain the action, and question of a local character, which do not now involve the constitutionality of the Act of Congress but its application.
If this analysis of the Act of August 24, 1937, when applied to the record in the present case, be correct and sound, it carries with it the conclusion that a determination of the petitions for a modification of a permanent injunction comes under the established rule that a modification of a final decree containing a preventive injunction is inherent in the Court which granted it and may be made where the law has changed or where there is a change in the situation of the parties and complying with the Constitution and laws in existence at the time the modification is made as to meet the ends of justice. United States v. Swift & Co.,
In view of the conclusions reached, the applications for request for designation of three Judge Court will have to be denied.
