Cunningham v. Keeshan

161 S.W. 170, 110 Ark. 99, 1913 Ark. LEXIS 387
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 10, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 161 S.W. 170 (Cunningham v. Keeshan) 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
Cunningham v. Keeshan, 161 S.W. 170, 110 Ark. 99, 1913 Ark. LEXIS 387 (Ark. 1913).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

The General Assembly of 1897, during the extraordinary session of that year, enacted a special statute creating an improvement district designated as the Helena Improvement District, embracing substantially all the territory of that city and certain other contiguous territory on the south, for the purpose of constructing a levee along the Mississippi river in front of the district. At that time there was an old levee running from near the river bank in a westerly direction along Walker Street, which was near the northern boundary of the city. The act of 1897, creating the district, mentions Walker Street in the city of Helena as the northern boundary of the district.- This statute was amended by the act of 1907 enlarging the boundaries of the district so as" to include the balance of the city of Helena lying north of Walker Street, and also outlying territory on the north outside of the city for a distance of about a mile and a quarter, and also additional territory lying south of the district as originally formed. In the district thus enlarged a levee was constructed along the river front from the north to the south end of the district, the levee connecting on the north with the foothills of Crowley’s Ridge, which approaches the river at that point, and with the line-of levee on the south end of the district known as Cotton Belt Levee District No. 1. This levee, if built of sufficient height and strength, would completely protect the lands lying in the district.

After the overflows of the years 1912 and 1913 the General Assembly of 1913 enacted a statute, approved March 24, 1913, Acts of 1913, No. 190, page 791, which authorized the commissioners to enlarge and strengthen the levee, and to levy assessments to pay for the same, and issue bonds for that purpose. The first section of the act of 1913, the construction of which is involved in this controversy, reads as follows:

“The commissioners of Helena Improvement District, being the improvement district organized by Act 9 of the extraordinary session of the General Assembly of 1897, approved May 31, 1897, are authorized and directed to enlarge and strengthen the levee in said district, which begins approximately at the southeast corner of the Walker Street levee, thence in a southerly direction along and adjacent to the Mississippi River to the southern boundary line of said district, together with the necessary canals and drains to make said levee effective and properly drain the district protected by it. Said commissioners are authorized and directed to make said improvement without the formality of a petition signed by a majority in value of the land owners of said district, and without waiting to secure the consent of any number of land owners in said district; the said canals and drains to be constructed, and said levee to be enlarged and strengthened according to plans, of the material and in the manner that the commissioners deem best.”

The commissioners of the district construed the act as authority to enlarge and strengthen the levee along the whole front of the district, and made plans, levied assessments, and are proceeding to issue bonds to that end.

Appellants are property owners in the district, and instituted this action in the chancery court of Phillips County to restrain the commissioners from attempting to do any work on the levee except that part which lies south of Walker. Street, the contention being that the act of 1913 only gave authority to expend money on that part of the levee.

The legality of the proceedings of the commissioners in levying assessments and issuing bonds is assailed on other grounds which will be noticed later.

The principal contention in the case is the one above referred to, namely, that the commissioners are exceeding their authority in expending money in enlarging and strengthening a part of the levee not referred to in the recent statute.

This controversy, as before stated, involves the construction of the language of the act of 1913 to determine whether the law makers intended to give authority to the commissioners to enlarge and strengthen the whole of the levee or whether they meant to separate a portion of the levee and authorize the work to be done on that part alone.

There are certain eleinental rules of construction to be observed in the interpretation of statutes from which we will not depart. One is that, where a law is plain and unambiguous, there is no room left for construction, and neither the exigencies of a case nor a resort to extrinsic facts will be permitted to alter the meaning of the language used in the statute. Even where a literal interpretation of the language used will lead to harsh or absurd consequences, that meaning can not be departed from unless the whole of the statute furnishes some other guide. These rules of interpretation are set forth in the recent case of State ex rel. Attorney General v. Trulock, 109 Ark. 556, and need not be further enlarged upon at this time.

The contention of appellants is that the Legislature, in the enactment of this statute, has not undertaken to deal with the whole of the levee, but to separate one part from the other and authorize work to be done upon that.

The question we have to consider is, whether the language of the whole statute, when fairly construed, refers to the whole of the levee, or to part of it.

The language employed in the statute carries authority ‘£ to enlarge and strengthen the levee in said district, ’ ’ and we are of the opinion that the succeeding words in that paragraph were intended to refer to a description ■of the whole levee, and, though it proves to be an inaccurate description, it does not have the effect of limiting the antecedent words. The word “which” is used as a simple relative pronoun and relates to the term “levee in said district,” and therefore the words which follow must be construed as an attempt at a description of that which precedes. In other words, the lawmakers were not attempting to separate the line of the levee into parts and describe the part which is referred to in granting authority to the commissioners; but they clearly meant, to grant auth'ority to the commissioners to enlarge and strengthen the “levee in said district,” and the error or inaccuracy occurs in their attempt to describe the levee in the whole district.

It is unnecessary to determine how far the word “approximately” can be stretched so as to make it fit the description. We are inclined to think, speaking relatively, that a.point a mile and a quarter north of Walker Street could not be held to be “approximately at the southeast corner of the Walker Street levee;” but it is, as before stated, unnecessary to pass upon that question, for we conclude that this error relates merely to the description of the whole levee, and that it is not fatal to the act, even if it be conceded to be erroneous.

The words “levee in said district” are, of themselves, sufficient description, and everything which follows in that paragraph could very well have been omitted. This furnishes a sufficient reason, if no other existed, for saying that the error contained in the language which follows is not fatal to the description of the subject-matter of the statute.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
161 S.W. 170, 110 Ark. 99, 1913 Ark. LEXIS 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cunningham-v-keeshan-ark-1913.