Ivy v. Edwards

298 S.W. 1006, 174 Ark. 1167, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 602
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 17, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 298 S.W. 1006 (Ivy v. Edwards) 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
Ivy v. Edwards, 298 S.W. 1006, 174 Ark. 1167, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 602 (Ark. 1927).

Opinion

Humphreys, J.

This suit was brought in the chancery court of Benton County by appellant, a resident citizen and real estate property owner in said county, to enjoin W. it. Edwards, county judge of said county, and his successors, and appellees Joe Beasley, W. E. .Patton and Kit Phillips, as commissioners of public buildings in said county, and their successors, from making any contract or taking any further steps toward carrying out the resolutions of the quorum court to build a new courthouse. The questions necessary to a determination of the issues involved on this appeal are, in substance, as follows:

: ' N ¡The quorum court, at its regular term in October, 1926," made-separate specific levies in mills for six county Í|itirp‘fis'éís?':á^g<leg,ating!3% mills, and a levy of 1% mills for .general cqunty . purposes.

.--..>2. ‘ A-motion-was then passed directing the county judge' and á- committee, to be appointed by'him from 'íá'emb’efs 'Of 'the’guofuin court," to, ihake investigation of the question of remodeling the" present courthouse or Building a'newpne, and to report to the quorum court at .9,11 ftdjpnrhed term to be held.

3.'■•■■This' committee was appointed by the county judge, and made the investigation and filed its report at said adjourned term. The report, in substance, stated that the courthouse was in such bad condition that it could not be remodeled; that it was necessary to build a new courthouse; that a new courthouse, fire-proof and modern and of sufficient size and capacity to meet the needs of the county for a great many years, could be built for approximately $200,000, and that such an amount could bo appropriated and paid out of the five-mill levies for general county purposes, leaving sufficient revenue to take care of the general county expenses, and that the couiity would get out of debt from the levies already made for the fiscal year 1927. The committee recommended that a new courthouse be built.

4. The quorum court at such adjourned term, Dec. 1, 1926, took up for consideration and action the matter of making an appropriation and levy for the building of a new courthouse, to be paid for out of successive levies to be made in the year 1927 and the following years, and authorized the building of a new courthouse, and adopted the following resolution and order: “Whereas, the quorum court has under consideration the necessity of building a courthouse for Benton County and the issuance of not exceeding $200,000 of noninterest-bearing warrants of the county for said purposes; and whereas, it is deemed to be to the best interests of the county that provision be made for the issuance of said warrants by the levying of a tax to pay them as they mature: and whereas, it had been calculated, that the amount of money necessary to pay said warrants as they mature in twenty installments of $10,000 each will be realized by levying a tax of one mill; be it Benton County, Arkansas: That a tax of one mill on the dollar of he assessd value of all taxable property within the sais warrants in the total amount of nor exceeding $200,000, maturing serially $10,000 per year for twenty years, beginning in the year 1928; that, during each of the years while ay of said warrants are outstanding and pais thereon, there shall be calculated the amount of money necessary during each of said years to pay the current installment maturing during said years, and a tax at a rate sufficient to raise said sum of money shall be levied by the quorom court, ans shall be assessed and collected during each of said years, and is hereby ordered levied, and is levied in so far as this court is authorized to do so, and said money when collected, shall be used for the purpose named and for no other purpose; and the full faith and credit of Benton Couty is hereby pledged for the payment of the same in the several amounts and in the successive years above stated.

5. Thereafter the following proceedings were had and done in the county court.

(a). the building of (lie courthouse. (b). Thu commissioners reported to tlie court ilmt they liad determined tliat it was necessary to procure a new site and that they had selected and purchased such a site, located on the east side of the public square at Bentonville. (e). The county court approved and conlirmed the finding's of the commissioners and ratified and approved their selection and purchase of a new site. (d). The commissioners also employed A. 0. Clarke as architect and made a contract with him, and his selection and the contract made with him were approved by the county court. The architect submitted plans and specifications for the building- of the courthouse, which were approved by the commissioners and the county court, and the commissioners were ordered to proceed to let a contract for the building as provided by law.

(6). The report made by the committee to the adjourned term of the quorum court, which is an exhibit to the complaint, shows that they held a number of meetings and had before them a number of architects, who examined the present courthouse, and who submitted proposed plans for a new courthouse and estimated costs, and one submitted a plan of remodeling the old courthouse, with estimated cost thereof, and all were of the opinion that it was not practicable or advisable to attempt to remodel the old courthouse. The court details the reasons on which the opinions are based, also details of proposed plans for a new courthouse.

The report of the building commissioners on the question of selecting a new site, which is also made an exhibit to the complaint, also goes into details as to the reasons therefor.

Appellees filed a demurrer to the complaint, which was sustained over the objection and exception of appellant, and, upon his election to stand upon the complaint without amendment, same was dismissed for want of equity, from which is this appeal.

The validity of the order of the quorum court is first assailed upon the ground that said court had no right to appropriate any revenue except that of the current year to build the courthouse. This court ruled, in the case of Kirk v. High, 169 Ark. 152, 273 S. W. 389, 41 A. L. R. 782, that. Amendment No. 11 to the Constitution did not inhibit a county from building a courthouse because it could not be fully paid for in one year, but that it might contract for the construction of a courthouse and appropriate the payment of the cost over a number of years; however, in doing so the other necessary expenses of government must be taken into account, so that the annual payment, together, with the other necessary expenses of government, should not exceed the revenues for the current or any succeeding year. It affirmatively appears from the complaint that, after paying the necessary expenses of government, there would be ample revenue each year derived from the five-mill levy permitted by the Constitution to pay the annual installment to become due upon the proposed contract for the construction of the courthouse.

The validity of the order of the quorum court is next assailed because it does not say, in so many words, “that the sum of $200,000 is hereby appropriated to pay for the building of a new courthouse in Benton County.”

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Bluebook (online)
298 S.W. 1006, 174 Ark. 1167, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ivy-v-edwards-ark-1927.