Bank Ozk v. Robert L. Tanner, as Trustee of the Robert L. Tanner Revocable Trust Dated August 19, 1994
This text of Bank Ozk v. Robert L. Tanner, as Trustee of the Robert L. Tanner Revocable Trust Dated August 19, 1994 (Bank Ozk v. Robert L. Tanner, as Trustee of the Robert L. Tanner Revocable Trust Dated August 19, 1994) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Cite as 2026 Ark. App. 339 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION IV No. CV-23-814
BANK OZK Opinion Delivered May 20, 2026
APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE BOONE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. 05CV-18-214]
ROBERT L. TANNER, AS TRUSTEE OF HONORABLE JOHNNIE A. THE ROBER L. TANNER REVOCABLE COPELAND, JUDGE TRUST DATED AUGUST 19, 1994; AND TANNER FAMILY, LLC, ON AFFIRMED BEHALF OF THEMSELVES AND ALL OTHER TAXPAYERS SIMILARLY SITUATED; OZARK MOUNTAIN SOLID WASTE DISTRICT; BOONE COUNTY TAX COLLECTOR AMY JENKINS; ARKANSAS DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY; AND LESLIE RUTLEDGE, ARKANSAS ATTORNEY GENERAL APPELLEES
WENDY SCHOLTENS WOOD, Judge
Boone County taxpayers successfully challenged an $18 charge that was added to their
ad valorem tax bills in 2018. The purpose of the $18 charge was to repay bonds issued to the
Ozark Mountain Solid Waste District (the “OMSWD”). 1 In this appeal, Bank OZK
1 The OMSWD provided trash-disposal services to Baxter, Boone, Carroll, Marion, Newton, and Searcy Counties, and there were illegal-exaction lawsuits in each of those counties. challenges a garnishment order resulting from the illegal-exaction order entered by the
Boone County Circuit Court. We affirm.
As explained in Summers v. Bank OZK, 2026 Ark. App. 352, ___ S.W.3d ___, which
is also handed down today, Bank OZK filed a complaint in the Pulaski County Circuit Court
for the appointment of a receiver over OMSWD in December 2014. A consent order was
entered in May 2015 appointing a receiver. In April 2017, the Pulaski County Circuit Court
entered an order approving the receiver’s report that recommended OMSWD assess the $18
charge and instructing the receiver to cause the Boone County tax collector to deposit the
proceeds from the charge into an account with Bank OZK annually so that Bank OZK could
act as a payment agent.
Boone County taxpayers filed their illegal-exaction lawsuit in the Boone County
Circuit Court on May 18, 2018. During the pendency of the litigation, the Boone County
Circuit Court entered an order finding that Bank OZK was a necessary party, and the
taxpayers added the bank as a defendant. Bank OZK moved to dismiss, arguing that it was
not a necessary party because “complete relief can be granted among the original parties to
this litigation.” Bank OZK also argued, “Further, all proper claims related to this
determination can be resolved without [Bank OZK], and [Bank OZK’s] absence will not
impair this determination nor leave any other party subject to a substantial risk of incurring
multiple or inconsistent obligations.” On December 17, 2021, the Boone County Circuit
Court granted Bank OZK’s motion to dismiss.
2 In a different order also entered on December 17, the Boone County Circuit Court
held that the $18 charge was an illegal exaction. The order stated that “[a]ny payments of the
$18.00 collected by the Tax Collector or Boone County Treasurer . . . prior to or subsequent
to this Order, if any, should be paid into the Registry of the Boone County Circuit Clerk.”
No party appealed this order. At the time, Bank OZK had already filed the motion for
interpleader in the Pulaski County Circuit Court receivership action discussed in Summers,
and that court had granted the relief.
The Boone County taxpayers served a writ of garnishment on Bank OZK on June 10,
2022. The day before, the Pulaski County Circuit Court had entered an order finding that
none of the six county courts, including the Boone County Circuit Court, had jurisdiction
to determine the legality of the $18 charge, rendering those illegal-exaction orders void. The
Pulaski County Circuit Court further found that the $18 charge was not an illegal exaction,
and the court ordered Bank OZK to pay the interpleaded funds to the OMSWD’s
bondholders (the “PCCC June 2022 Order”).
On October 2, 2023, the Boone County Circuit Court entered a garnishment order
in reliance on both its December 2021 order that found the $18 charge an illegal exaction
and Bank OZK’s representations in its motion to dismiss. The circuit court found that Bank
OZK was in possession of funds derived from OMSWD’s imposition of the $18 charge and
ordered that Bank OZK deliver to taxpayers’ counsel the amount of $559,522.05 plus
accrued interest. Bank OZK appealed this garnishment order.
I. Jurisdiction
3 Related to this appeal, two circuit courts have decided whether the $18 charge was an
illegal exaction: the Boone County Circuit Court found that it was, and the Pulaski County
Circuit Court found that it was not. The garnishment order at issue in this appeal was
entered by the Boone County Circuit Court in reliance on its illegal-exaction finding. Bank
OZK argues that the Pulaski County Circuit Court had priority jurisdiction to determine
the illegal-exaction issue; the Boone County Circuit Court did not have jurisdiction to decide
the issue; the Boone County Circuit Court’s illegal-exaction finding is void; and accordingly,
its garnishment order is void. An order that is void has no legal effect, and a garnishment
cannot be based on such an order. Bloodman v. Bill Fitts Auto Sales, Inc., 2024 Ark. App. 585,
at 5–6, 701 S.W.3d 785, 789. Therefore, we must consider which court had jurisdiction to
determine the illegal-exaction issue.
In Summers, this court held that the Pulaski County Circuit Court did not have
jurisdiction over the Boone County illegal-exaction lawsuit. In light of that holding, the
Boone County Circuit Court had jurisdiction over the illegal-exaction lawsuit, and its order
holding the $18 charge was an illegal exaction is not void. Therefore, the garnishment order
entered by the Boone County Circuit Court is not void.
Bank OZK also argues that the Pulaski County Circuit Court determined who was
entitled to the funds during the interpleader action when it issued the PCCC June 2022
Order. Again, as analyzed in Summers, the PCCC June 2022 Order is void. No rights can be
obtained from a void order. Sutton v. Pickett, 2021 Ark. App. 452, at 9, 638 S.W.3d 313, 319.
Therefore, the Boone County Circuit Court had jurisdiction over the illegal-exaction matter
4 pending in its county and properly exercised its authority to determine who is entitled to the
funds.2
For the reasons stated in Summers, the Pulaski County Circuit Court did not have
jurisdiction to enter the PCCC June 2022 Order that found that there was no illegal
exaction. The Boone County Circuit Court did have jurisdiction to enter its illegal-exaction
order directing the return of the taxpayers’ funds. Accordingly, we reject Bank OZK’s
argument that the Boone County Circuit Court’s garnishment order is void because its
illegal-exaction order was void.
II. Possession of the Funds
Bank OZK argues that the money it holds belongs to the bondholders rather than the
taxpayers; therefore, it does not possess property of any judgment debtor. “A writ of
garnishment is a suit directed to a third party to determine whether the third party possesses
property of the judgment debtor.” Thompson v. Bank of Am., 356 Ark. 576, 582, 157 S.W.3d
174, 178 (2004). Whether a garnishee is in possession of funds belonging to the judgment
debtor is a question of fact. The standard of review when analyzing a factual matter in a
garnishment proceeding is whether the circuit court’s determination was clearly erroneous.
Id. at 580, 157 S.W.3d at 176.
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