Bailey v. West

149 S.W. 511, 104 Ark. 432, 1912 Ark. LEXIS 293
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 149 S.W. 511 (Bailey v. West) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailey v. West, 149 S.W. 511, 104 Ark. 432, 1912 Ark. LEXIS 293 (Ark. 1912).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

Appellees, claiming to be a majority of the adult inhabitants residing within three miles of a certain schoolhouse in the city of Newport, Arkansas, presented their petitions to the county court of Jackson County, praying for an order, in accordance with the statute of this State on that subject, prohibiting the sale or giving away of intoxicants within three miles of said schoolhouse. There were several of the petitions praying for this order, and they were filed at intervals from April 11, to May 4, 1910, the day on which the order of the county court was entered.

The county court entered an order during the period within which the petitions were being filed, directing the clerk not to keep the petitions open to inspection “unless it be satisfactorily shown to the court, or the judge thereof, that such person is such party in interest or otherwise entitled to such view or inspection.”

On May 4,1910, the last petition was filed as before stated, and on that day two or three of the petitioners, as well as the attorney representing the petitioners, came into the county court and asked to be heard in presentation of the petitions. The court proceeded with the hearing, and, after hearing the evidence of witnesses, entered an order in accordance with the prayer of the petitions.

On the same day appellants, A. D. Bailey and H. C. Sanders, who were licensed saloonkeepers within the affected territory, appeared and filed their petition asking to be made parties to the proceeding, that they might remonstrate against the granting of the, order The county court refused to permit them to be made parties, and on a subsequent day of the- term they prayed an appeal to the circuit court, but the county court refused to grant an appeal.

Subsequently they obtained from the clerk of the circuit court an order granting an appeal to the circuit court, and, upon the refusal of the county clerk to send up a transcript of the record and the original papers, issued a rule on him requiring the same to be sent up.

This court held that when a case was brought there for review the circuit court had jurisdiction to require the papers to be brought up for the purpose of determining whether or not the appeal had been properly taken. Jones v. Coffin, 96 Ark. 332.

Appellees, as the original petitioners, appeared in the circuit court, and filed a motion to dismiss the appeal on the ground that appellants were not parties to the proceedings, and therefore had no right to prosecute an appeal from the order of the county court. Upon the hearing of this motion, the court sustained it, and made an order dismissing the appeal. From that order the appellants have prosecuted their appeal to this court.

Appellants contend that when they presented their petition to the county court to he made parties for the purpose of remonstrating, the court was then proceeding to hear the petitions and had not completed the hearing. They introduced proof in the circuit court to sustain that contention. On the other hand, appellees contend, and introduced proof in the circuit court tending to show, that when the petition of appellants was presented to the county court that court had already completed the hearing of the petitions for the prohibition order and had announced its decision and granted the prayer of the petitions.

The decision of the circuit court in dismissing the appeal necessarily implies a finding in favor of appellees on that issue, and therefore we must treat it as settled that when appellants sought to have themselves made parties to the record the county court was through with the hearing of the petitions and had already rendered its judgment.

Appellants make three contentions here; first, that, under the law, they were parties to the proceeding as a matter of right, because they were licensed saloonkeepers and had the absolute right of appeal to the circuit court; second, that if they were not parties to the proceedings under the law proprio vigore, independently of any order entered by the county court, there was an abuse of discretion by the county court in not permitting them to be made parties when they applied for that purpose; and, third, that there was an abuse of discretion by the circuit court in refusing to consider them parties and in refusing to try the case de novo, instead of dismissing the appeal.

In the case of Williams v. Citizens, 40 Ark. 290, this court, speaking through Mr. Justice Eakin, laid down a rule of practice in cases of this kind which has been followed since that time in many cases. There it was said:

“The proceeding contemplated by the statute is not in the nature of a suit between parties. It is a police proceeding for- the better regulation of the internal affairs of counties, for the preservation of morals, and protection of the peace of the citizens. The petition is the only jurisdictional condition upon which the court acts, when satisfied that it contains the names of a majority of the adult inhabitants. The act provides for no remonstrance or counter petition, and the county court is not required to notice them as in any sense evidentiary. It may do so, as calling its attention to the fact that the petition does not contain the names of a majority, but the court is confined to the determination of this point alone. This is not a case where the statute provides for an issue to be made by remonstrants, as in the case of annexation of territory to towns, or the laying out of new roads. The General Assembly does not seem to have contemplated that any citizen, not already licensed, had such a vested interest in the matter of selling liquor near a church or school as required protec don. It is altogether ex gratia that the opponents of the petition were admitted to resist it; although it is doubtless good practice, and facilitates the investigation of the truth. ”

At that time the statute contained an exception in favor of licensed liquor dealers. Hence the reference in that opinion to them. Subsequent to that time the statute was amended as it stands today, without exception in favor of that class, and it has been held by this court that the rendition of a prohibition order operates as a revocation of a license previously granted to sell intoxicants within that territory. State v. Doss, 70 Ark. 312.

In the decisions since the one cited above, this court has uniformly held that an appeal will not lie at the instance of any person unless he is a party to the proceeding. Holmes v. Morgan, 52 Ark. 99; Holford v. Kirkland, 71 Ark. 84; Phillips v. Goe, 85 Ark. 304.

For decisions upon analagous questions, see Turner v. Williamson, 77 Ark. 586, and cases cited.

It follows from these decisions that, under the statute as it now stands, a liquor dealer has no right to appeal, any more than other citizens, unless he makes himself a party to the proceeding. As said in the Williams case, supra, the statute provides for this proceeding as a police regulation, and no person is interested therein save in a public way, and can not be deemed to be aggrieved by the judgment unless he has made himself a party, either as a petitioner or as one remonstrating. Persons are allowed to become parties to records, not as a matter of right, but for the purpose of aiding the court in deciding the issue raised by the presentation of the petition, i.

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Bluebook (online)
149 S.W. 511, 104 Ark. 432, 1912 Ark. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-west-ark-1912.