Goodwin v. State

360 S.W.2d 490, 235 Ark. 457, 1962 Ark. LEXIS 600
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 1, 1962
Docket5-2742
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 360 S.W.2d 490 (Goodwin v. State) 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
Goodwin v. State, 360 S.W.2d 490, 235 Ark. 457, 1962 Ark. LEXIS 600 (Ark. 1962).

Opinion

Paul Ward, Associate Justice.

This litigation was initiated to invalidate certain transactions negotiated by H. C. Warren as County Judge of Garland County during the year 1959. In these transactions Warren, acting in the capacity of County Judge, bought numerous expensive pieces of used road building equipment from Paul G. Goodwin on divers occasions, each time delivering to him used county equipment as a down payment. On these occasions Warren executed a purchase contract together with a written note or agreement, bearing interest, for the balance due. These notes or agreements were to be paid in equal installments — some due in 1959 and the others due the following year. These installment notes were then transferred or sold by Goodwin to different banks. Some of the installment payments had been made to the banks by the county.

This suit was filed in the chancery court by the prosecuting attorney and five members of the grand jury (all citizens and taxpayers of Garland County) against Goodwin and the said banks. The plaintiffs, generally speaking, sought to have the contracts (sales, purchases, notes) rescinded and declared null and void; to have Goodwin and the hanks repay the county any money they had received; to have returned to the county any equipment (or the value thereof) turned over to Goodwin; to be reimbursed for all damages and depreciation to equipment sold to Goodwin; to enjoin the present county judge (Warren having gone out of office in February of 1960) from approving any claims based on the installment payments due or to become due; and, to impound for the benefit of the county the equipment purchased from Goodwin. The complaint sets out in detail the above mentioned transactions, identifying by code or name each piece of equipment bought or transferred by Warren (as county judge), but a brief summary, set out below, will suffice for all purposes of this opinion.

(a) On January 12, 1959 contract to buy equipment for $29,500; $6,000 paid by county; balance (including $2,115 interest) $25,615, payable in four equal installments of $6,403.75, due July 1, 1959 — November 15, 1959 —July 15, 1960 — November 15, 1960. This contract was endorsed by Goodwin and transferred to the Bank of Amity on a date and for a consideration unknown to plaintiffs. It is alleged that Goodwin bought the equipment for $17,000 and then sold it to the county for $29,-500. The county has already paid the bank the first two installments or a total of $12,807.50 and the same amount is payable in 1960. The $6,000 down payment represented a trade-in of equipment belonging to the county.

(b) On April 15, 1959 Warren purchased equipment from Goodwin for $21,000; down payment $3,500 (represented by county equipment delivered to Goodwin ); balance due by county (including $1,575 interest), $19,075; payable $2,500 May 15, 1959, and three payments of $5,525 each due April 15, 1960, October 15, 1960, and December 15, 1960. Prior to May 15, 1959 Goodwin endorsed the contract to the First National Bank of Fort Smith — consideration unknown. The county has made the first payment to the bank.

(c) On February 15, 1959 there was a similar transaction between Warren and Goodwin. Equipment was purchased for $31,000 with a down payment of $1,500 (representing county equipment trade-in); the balance (including $2,920.25 interest), $32,420.52 payable in four equal installments, two due in 1959 and two in 1960. The contract was transferred by Goodwin to Elk Horn Bank & Trust Co. of Arkadelphia. The first installment has been paid to the bank by the county. On March 4, 1960 the bank filed a claim for the second payment but it has not been approved by the county judge. Plaintiffs allege that Goodwin purchased the equipment for $19,500 and sold it to the county for $31,000.

(d) Similarly, on January 1, 1959 Warren purchased from Goodwin equipment for $7,600 payable (with $376.20 interest) in three equal installments due in March, August and November of 1959. This contract was assigned to the Bank of Amity. The county made the first payment of $2,658.73 to Goodwin. The other two payments were made to the bank.

(e) On December 11, 1959 Warren executed a contract with Goodwin for the purchase of equipment, consideration being $9,800 with a down payment of $3,000 (representing county equipment trade-in). The balance (including $367.21 interest) of $7,167.21 payable $1,389.07 on June 15, 1960, and $2,389.07 in September and November, 1960. This contract was assigned to. the Bank of Amity, and no claim for payment has been filed with the county.

After the issues were fully developed and presented by able counsel on both sides the chancellor made numerous findings in favor of appellees. These findings will be discussed separately under the five points urged by appellants for a reversal.

1. It is first contended by appellants that the plaintiffs, being the prosecuting attorney for Garland County and members of the grand jury of that county, were not proper parties, and, therefore, had no standing in court to maintain this action. In support of their contention, appellants point ont that the grand jury was in session when this suit was filed, and that all the plaintiffs (except the prosecuting attorney whose duty it was to advise the grand jury) were members of the grand jury, although they were qualified electors and taxpayers. Attention is also called to Sections 43-927 to 43-931, Ark. Stats, which, among other things, require members of the grand jury not to make public what they say or how they vote, and not to disclose evidence given them as jurors. In Collins v. State, 200 Ark. 1027, 143 S. W. 2d 1, the Court said these mandates are for the protection of the jurors. In State v. Fox, 122 Ark. 197, 182 S. W. 906, it was said the proceedings of a grand jury should be kept secret and cannot be reviewed by a trial court on a motion to quash an indictment. Appellants argue that members of the Grand Jury investigated the facts upon which this complaint was based and that they had no legal right to use this information as they are here attempting to do.

We find no merit in appellants’ contention on this point. It is conceded that all five plaintiffs are qualified as electors and taxpayers to maintain this action. The information, or at least most of it, is a matter of public record, and appellants do not point out what, if any, information was obtained otherwise. Even if some of the plaintiff-jurors did obtain some of their information as jurors, we know of no law or rule that would prevent them from using it in an action of this kind to protect the public interest. In 24 Am. Jur. Grand Jury, § 50, page 867, there is a discussion, under the heading “Application of Rule Permitting Disclosure of Evidence,” which contains this statement:

‘ ‘ These illustrations of the extent of the rule requiring secrecy of the grand jury’s proceedings amply sustain the statement, often made, that any person may disclose in evidence what transpired before the grand jury wherever such disclosure becomes necessary for the protection of public or private rights. Indeed, there is authority that a grand juror may, after the grand jury has been discharged and the accused has been taken into custody, disclose to the accused’s counsel the evidence on which the indictment against him was based, in order to enable him to make defense. Statutes sometimes permit an accused person to procure a stenographic record of the testimony taken before the grand jury.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
360 S.W.2d 490, 235 Ark. 457, 1962 Ark. LEXIS 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodwin-v-state-ark-1962.