City of Fort Smith v. Hairston

120 S.W.2d 689, 196 Ark. 1005, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 293
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 24, 1938
Docket4-5200
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 120 S.W.2d 689 (City of Fort Smith v. Hairston) 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
City of Fort Smith v. Hairston, 120 S.W.2d 689, 196 Ark. 1005, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 293 (Ark. 1938).

Opinion

Baker, J.

The city of Fort Smith has a commission form of government, organized under the provisions of act 13 of the Acts of 1913. Section 11 of said act, if valid, imposes an obligation upon the commissioners, as representatives of the city, to make certain allowances for police officers or firemen when such officers or firemen shall have been killed in the actual performance of official duties. Said § 11 contains the following: “Whenever a police officer or a fireman of the city shall be killed in the actual performance of his official duties, the board shall cause to be set aside for the use and benefit of his wife and children, or others necessarily dependent upon him for their support, if any such others survive him, the sum of one thousand dollars, which shall be paid in installments as shall be required, and in the judgment of the board shall be deemed advisable.”

Mrs. Hairston, who will be referred to 'by name, or as plaintiff or appellee, filed a claim with the board of commissioners for one thousand dollars, alleging the death of Mr. Hairston, who was a police officer, and who was alleged to have been killed while in the actual performance of his duties. The appellant, having heard the evidence, considered the claim and denied it. All matters were then brought before the Sebastian circuit court for the Fort Smith district on certiorari. Upon trial that court reversed the findings and order of the board of commissioners and directed that one thousand dollars be set aside for distribution under the provision of aforesaid act. From this judgment of the circuit court comes this appeal.

• There is no substantial dispute in regard to the evidence, and for that reason the facts will be stated as our conclusions of the material part of the evidence without attempting to quote in detail therefrom.

Mr. Hairston was employed by the police department of the city of Fort Smith until his death on September 27, 1936. On that date in the performance of his duties he was called to some kind of a disturbance at a certain point in the city. When he had reached the place of disturbance he was approached by a negro who had a gun in his hand. Mr. Hairston was sitting in a car used by him in going to the place of disturbance, at the time the negro approached. He called to the negro to drop the gun, but the negro refused to do so. He was then shot and killed by Hairston. Immediately following this incident Mr. Hairston left the car, and went to a nearby ice plant to call an ambulance to pick up the negro. He then returned from this duty to the scene of the killing where he immediately fell dead. All of this took place within a short time, possibly not exceeding ten minutes. Because of undisputed facts, we take a statement of the chief of police to the effect that Hairston was not in any manner shot or hurt, and did not suffer any personal violence, but died from heart failure after the shooting and making the telephone call.

A physician who had been treating Mr. Hairston for two or three years on account of- his heart afflctiou told of seeing Mr. Hairston almost every week for observation and advice for a year or two, and stated that Mr. Hairston had a leaky and enlarged heart, and then made this statement as opinion evidence. That if Mr. Hairston was engaged in a shooting affray, and died about ten minutes after the shooting, based on his knowledge of Mr. Hairston’s condition, he would say that the cause of his death was fright. In addition, he stated that he had advised Hairston against going upstairs, walking fast, cranking ears or any such exercise, advising him that any of these things might cause immediate death. He thought Hairston’s death was caused by fright, because fright is really worse than exercise, then he added “at any rate anything to accelerate the heart beat would be dangerous.”

Two propositions are submitted to us for consideration upon this appeal. The first to be determined is whether Hairston was killed within the meaning of act 13 of the Acts of 1913. The second is the validity of said § 11, making provisions for dependents of firemen or police officers when killed in the actual performance of official duties.

Our first impulse upon reading the provision of § 11 of aforesaid act was to declare that its terms were so plain and unmistakable as to not admit of any construction or any interpretation. However, appellee’s expertly prepared brief, together with the authorities cited and the use made of them, have created a doubt which must be disposed of in a proper determination of that issue.

In the settlement of this question, we invoke that time honored canon of construction employed not only by lawyers and courts, but’ most frequently by laymen, although they may not be able to state the wholesome rule; Words and phrases shall be given their ordinary or generally accepted meaning, unless there is something in the context to indicate that another or different meaning was intended. The active verb “to kill”, or the passive verb “to be killed” must generally impart to everyone a meaning, of some kind of external violence. This does not imply that the agency inflicting the violence must be animate, or if animate that death was intended by the act causing it.

' Because' we were impressed by the illustrations employed in the briefs presented on this case we have elected to use the same method of illustration to some extent as indicative of our meaning rather than attempt t,o present the idea by abstract generalities. We do this, because we think said § 11 of the aforesaid act, as it is drawn justifies this process of reaching a proper conclusion.

No one would doubt that, if a fireman upon running to a fire were thrown from a truck, or if he came in contact with a high tension wire, or if a wall or roof engulfed him and destroyed him, his dependents might in-, voke this statute for relief. Nor would any one doubt that if the negro who approached the car where Hairs-ton sat had shot Hairston instead of being killed himself, or if Hairston had been destroyed by some misadventure as he went to the scene or while there, no doubt would ordinarily have arisen about the propriety of relief under the statute. It must, therefore, be apparent, we think, that the object and purpose of this statute was to provide a form of relief for the dependents of police officers or firemen whose death was brought about by some hazard of their employment. If this question may not be so treated, and so determined, then perhaps it must be regarded as a kind of life insurance payable upon the death of such fireman or police officer when such death occurs during the time of their employment.

We think the fact that this was not the intention of the lawmaking body is evidenced by the choice of language used in § 11 aforesaid in the apparent effort to confine and determine liability under certain, fixed conditions, any of which conditions being absent the idea of compensation or liability is excluded. We think the very language used as setting out the conditions under which the board may act in providing for the dependents of the unfortunate police officer or fireman is the best example we know of an accurate expression intended to leave no doubt as to its meaning.

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Bluebook (online)
120 S.W.2d 689, 196 Ark. 1005, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-fort-smith-v-hairston-ark-1938.