Ex parte Williams

65 S.W. 711, 69 Ark. 457, 1901 Ark. LEXIS 144
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 29, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 65 S.W. 711 (Ex parte Williams) 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
Ex parte Williams, 65 S.W. 711, 69 Ark. 457, 1901 Ark. LEXIS 144 (Ark. 1901).

Opinion

Riddick, J.,

(after stating the facts). The question raised by the petition filed in this ease and the response thereto is whether the provisions of the act dividing Woodruff county into two districts (Act May 3, 1901) had the effect to take St. Francis county out of the fifth chancery district, and deprive the chancellor of that district of the right to hold a chancery court for that county.

The statute creating the fifth chancery district (Acts 1897, p. 93, as amended by Acts 1899, p. 118) made the counties of Woodruff and St. Francis a part thereof, and provided that terms of the-chancery court should be held in each of said counties, commencing on certain days named in the act. The days named for the convening of the court in St. Francis county are- the second Mondays of May and December of each year. Now, the act after-wards- passed dividing Woodruff county into two districts provided that the chancery court for the Southern district should be held at Cotton ;Plant on the second Mondays of May and December, the same' daj^s fixed by the former statute for the convening of the chancery court in St. Francis county'. This; was, no doubt, the -result of inadvertence on the part of the legislature, for it has been several timos held that under our constitution two circuit courts for the same circuit cannot be convened and held on the same day. Parker v. Sanders, 46 Ark. 229; State v. Williams, 48 Ark. 227; Ex parte Jones, 49 Ark. 110.

If these decisions are correct, we think it follows, for the same reasons, that two chancery courts for different counties in the same chancery district cannot be convened and held on the same day when they are to be held by the same chancellor. This being so, if we hold that portion of the act dividing Woodruff county into two districts which requires a term of chancery court to be convened and held in Cotton Plant in that county on the second Mondays of May and December to be valid, then no chancery court can be held in St. Prancis county, for those are the days fixed for the convening of the court in that county. Parker v. Sanders, 46 Ark. 229.

It is said that jurisdiction to try chancery cases in St. Prancis county would in that event revert to the circuit court. But the legislature having created a chancery district and made St. Prancis county a part of it, we do not think that the act dividing Woodruff county into two districts can be held to have restored jurisdiction to the circuit court of St. Prancis county to try equity cases. To so hold would be to give an effect to the act altogether different from that intended by the legislature. As the circuit court cannot hear equity cases in St. Prancis county, and as two chancery courts in different counties of the same district cannot convene and be held on the same day, we must treat the act fixing a day for holding a chancery court at Cotton Plant as void in part, or the hearing of chancery cases in St. Prancis county will be indefinitely postponed, and suitors will be deprived of rights guaranteed them by the constitution.

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Related

Walton v. State
112 So. 790 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1927)
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101 S.W. 165 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1907)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 S.W. 711, 69 Ark. 457, 1901 Ark. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-williams-ark-1901.