Bittle v. Stuart

34 Ark. 224
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 34 Ark. 224 (Bittle v. Stuart) 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
Bittle v. Stuart, 34 Ark. 224 (Ark. 1879).

Opinion

Eakin, J.

Tlie petitioner, W. A. Bittle, is a suitor in a cause pending in the Clark county circuit court, before the Hon. H. B Stuart, judge. He shows that on the third day of June, 1879, the cause was ready for trial and judgment, and that, the court being in session, he moved to proceed with the same. The court refused to do so, on the ground that it no longer had jurisdiction of the case pending, because of the act of the general assembly, which went into force on that day, entitled “An act to attach the territory ■of Clark county to the counties of Dallas and Nevada, and for other purposes.”

Prayer for an alternative writ of mandamus, and that on the hearing he may be commanded to hear and decide said cause and render j udgment. A transcript of the record of the proceedings in said cause, filed with the petition, sustains its allegations.

The response of the judge sets up the act, and disclaims jurisdiction; to which the relator demurs. The validity of the act is the sole question presented.

This act is found printed in the pamphlet Acts of 1879, p. 182, entitled as above. It did not receive the approval of the governor, but, if valid, went into operation by Ms failure to file the same, with his objections, in the office of the secretary of state; and to give notice thereof, by public proclamation, within twenty days after the adjournment of the legislature. (Const, of 1874, sec. 15, of Art. 6.)

Section 1 of the act provides : “ That all that portion of the county of Clark, included in the following boundaries, shall be, and the same is hereby, declared attached to the county of Dallas, viz: Beginning at the mouth of the Missouri river, thence úp said river to the mouth of Terre Noir creek; thence up said creek to the place where the township line between townships seven and eight crosses .said creek; thence west with said township line to Antoine river; thence up said river to the county line between Pike and Clark counties; thence easterly with said county line to Hot Spring county ; thence southerly with said line to the place of beginning.”

Section 2 enacts, “ that all that part of Clark county lying west of the Terre Noir creek, and south of township line between townships seven and eight south, be, and the same is hereby, attached to the county of Nevada.”

Section 8 transfers all the records of Clark county to the custody of the clerk of Dallas county, and makes them records of the latter county.

Section 4 provides that all civil and criminal actions pending in the Clark circuit court shaffi be proceeded with in the circuit court of Dallas county, with leave to parties all resident in the portion assigned to Nevada, to have the cases transferred there from Dallas.

The 6th section provides for the removal of the criminal cases to Nevada, if the defendant resides in the territory assigned to that county.

By section 6, pending administrations and guardianshipsare made transferable to Nevada county, when the administrator or guardian may reside in that portion.

Other sections are directed to the regulation of details, with regard to change of officers, collection of taxes, the-burdens of the old debt, etc., as if the effect of the act, in contemplation of the legislature, was to merge the county of Clark into the county of Dallas, save a portion to be transferred to Nevada.

Nowhere is it expressly said that the county of Clark is abolished — nor that the transfers of territory exhausted all the old territory of Clark county.

The courts take judicial notice of the United States system of land surveys; with the baselines, meridians, townships and ranges thereby established, and the relative positions of the sections in the townships; also of the division of the state into counties, and the boundaries of those counties as described in public acts; and also of the principal geographical features of the state, including the navigable rivers.

The Little Missouri river constitutes the whole southern boundary of the county of Clark, extending from its confluence with the Ouachita up the channel, westwardly to the mouth of the Antoine, which comes in from the north. Thence the western line of Clark county proceeds up the channel of the Antoine, between Pike and Clark counties, to and beyond its intersection with the township line be-' tween seven and eight. Whatever may be the position of the Terre Noir within the county, it is apparent that the portion of Clark assigned to Nevada is definite, or may be made so by a surveyor tracing Terre Noir creek from its mouth to said township line. This is a clean cut of territory, and if the object of the act had been merely to change the boundary between Clark and Nevada counties, it might suffice. But this portion of the act is so inseparably interwoven with the others, by special provisions, and. evident common purpose, that it can not stand alone, ás a mere transfer of territory.

Turning to the portion assigned to Dallas, we arrive at the same point, the intersection of the Antoine with said township line between seven and eight. We are already at “ the county line between Pike and Clark counties,” and need not, as the act directs, go up the river to reach it. Ascending, however, the Antoine continues to form the county line between Pike and Clark counties until it crosses the range line between ranges twenty-three and tweuty-fou'r west, iri township six south; thence, leaving the Antoine, said county line runs due north with said range line to the northwest quarter of township six south, twenty-three west; thence east on the township line two sections; thence north to the northwest quarter of section four, in township five south, range twenty-three west, where it abuts upon the county line of Montgomery county, without touching Hot Spring county at all; and having extended about nine miles, almost due north 1rom the point where it left the Antoine (Acts of 1878, p. 186); thence the county line of Clark, no longer the line between Pike and Clark, runs east, along the southern boundary of Montgomery, to a corner of Hot Spring; thence east and south in a zigzag course, across the Ouachita to the northwest comer of Dallas county; thence south about twelve miles; thence west again to the Ouachita; thence southwardly with said last named river to the mouth of the Missouri, the point of beginning.

This wall appear more plainly by the annexed diagram. (See diagram “A.”)

It is evident at a glance, that the description of the territory assigned by the act to Dallas county will not plat without violence to the language. A line can not possibly run eastwardly from any point of the county line between like and Clark counties on the Antoine river, with said line, since that line, on leaving the river, runs directly north. There is nothing in the language of the act by which to correct the error or reconcile the discrepancy. The act itself does not profess, in terms, to dispose of all of the county of Clark, nor to abolish it. although it does assume to destroy its organization. A line run eastwardly from the point where “ said ” county line leaves the Antoine to Hot Spring county, would leave still in the old county of Clark a considerable territory, but far short of six hundred square miles. .In this view, the act would be unconstitutional. (Sec. 1, Art. XIII.)

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Bluebook (online)
34 Ark. 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bittle-v-stuart-ark-1879.