Jewett v. Norris

278 S.W. 652, 170 Ark. 71, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 307
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 11, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 278 S.W. 652 (Jewett v. Norris) 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
Jewett v. Norris, 278 S.W. 652, 170 Ark. 71, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 307 (Ark. 1926).

Opinion

Smith, J.

The question for decision in this case is whether the Fort Smith District of Sebastian County has the authority to issue bonds to pay its outstanding indebtedness under the authority of Amendment No. 11 to the Constitution. So much of this amendment as we need -to consider here reads as follows: “Provided, however, to secure funds to pay indebtedness outstanding at the time of the adoption of this amendment, counties, cities and incorporated towns may isue interest-bearing certificates of indebtedness or bonds with interest coupons for the payment of which a county or city tax, in addition to that now authorized, not exceeding three mills, may be levied for the time as provided by law until such indebtedness is paid.”

The insistence of appellant, who is a -citizen and taxpayer of the Fort Smith District of Sebastian County, is that the Fort Smith District is neither county, city nor incorporated town within the meaning of the amendment, and that the authority was not conferred on such district to issue bonds to pay its outstanding indebtedness existing at. the time the amendment was adopted.

The 'Constitution of -1874 contains a unique provision in regard to Sebastian County. It reads as follows: “Sebastian County may have two districts and two county seats, at , which county, probate and circuit courts shall bo held as may be provided by law, each district paying its own expenses. ’ ’ Section 5 of article 13.

The history of this section of the Constitution is set out in the brief filed on behalf of the district in the present litigation. ' It is as follows: An act was passed by the General Assembly of 1861, which provided that, for the purpose of holding circuit and probate courts, Sebastian County should be divided into two judicial districts, and defined the jurisdiction of these courts within the territorial limits. At the 1871 session of the General Assembly an amendatory act was passed, which, in addition to providing for separate judicial districts for that county, also provided that each district of the county should pay its own expenses, and should separately assess, levy and collect its taxes, and should have county and quorum courts in each district for this purpose.

The validity of both the original and the amendatory acts was questioned, but that involving the amendatory act of 1871 was first decided in the ease of Patterson v. Temple, 27 Ark. 202, and the amendatory act was declared unconstitutional. In the case of Ex parte Jones, 27 Ark. 349, the original act was upheld. Both decisions were rendered at the December, 1871, term of the Supreme Court, and thus the law stood when the Constitution of 1874 was written and adopted.

Obviously the purpose of the provision of the Constitution set out above was to make valid and constitutional subsequent legislation like that which had been stricken down when the amendatory act of 1871 above referred to was declared unconstitutional. This section of the Constitution permitted the division of Sebastian County into two districts, and provided that when this was done each district should pay its own expenses.

Pursuant to this authority there was passed at the first session of the General Assembly which convened after the adoption of the Constitution of 1874 two acts making effective this permission to create the two districts, each bearing and paying its own expenses. The first act was approved January 12, 1875 (Acts 1875, page 86), and the second February 3, 1875 (Acts 1875, page 135).

Section 1 of the first of these acts provided that the boundaries of the two districts should remain as they were until the ensuing April term of the county court to be convened at Greenwood, the county seat, at which time the county court should define the boundaries of said districts, and that after such order had. been made “the .jurisdiction of said county court shall cease in said county, and said jurisdiction shall be transferred to the district county courts of said districts, respectively, as hereinafter provided.”

Section 2 of this act provided that the circuit, chancery, county and probate courts of said county should be held at the county seats of their respective districts, and that the authority and. territorial jurisdiction of said courts “shall extend-over the respective districts, the same and in like manner as if said districts were respectively constitutional counties of this State.”

Section 10 of the act provides that the said districts shall respectively defray all expenses “accruing within and on account of their respective districts, as if separate and distinct counties,” with a provision that both districts should remain liable for any outstanding indebtedness of Sebastian County, and the further provision that neither district should be liable for any debt or liability that might thereafter be incurred by the other district.

■Section 11 provided for the keeping of separate records in the two districts, and by § 12 it was provided “that the county court of said respective districts shall be composed of the county judge of Sebastian County and a majority of the justices of the peace within their respective districts, and‘shall be subject to the same regulations respectively as other county courts of this State, as if separate and distinct counties. ”

Section 13 provided that, as to all matters not within the provisions of the act, the county of Sebastian should be one entire and undivided county.

As has 'been said, this act—which might be called an enabling act—was amended at the same session of the General Assembly, and complete provision was made whereby the fiscal affairs of the respective districts might be as completely separated and administered as if the districts were in fact separate counties.

Section 3 of this second act reads as follows: “That so much of section twelve of said act as enacts that the county judge of said county and a majority of the justices of the peace of each of said districts shall compose the county court of said districts, is hereby repealed, and that the county judge of said county shall be the probate judge of each of said districts, and the county judge for each of said districts, except that for the purpose of levying the county taxes for either of said districts, and for making appropriations for the county expenses, in either of said districts, the county court for said districts shall be composed of the county judge and the justices of the peace of said districts respectively.”

Other sections of this second act provided for the separate assessment, levy and collection of taxes, that of each district being levied, assessed and collected without reference to the action taken by the other.

Sebastian County has now proceeded for more than fifty years under the authority of these acts passed pursuant to the power contained in the section of the Constitution set out above, and the Fort Smith District of the county now proposes to pay off its outstanding indebtedness by an issue of bonds under the authority of Amendment No. 11 to the Constitution set out above.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
278 S.W. 652, 170 Ark. 71, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jewett-v-norris-ark-1926.