Jones, Mayor v. Leighton

142 S.W.2d 505, 200 Ark. 1015, 1940 Ark. LEXIS 169
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 29, 1940
Docket4-5935
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 142 S.W.2d 505 (Jones, Mayor v. Leighton) 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
Jones, Mayor v. Leighton, 142 S.W.2d 505, 200 Ark. 1015, 1940 Ark. LEXIS 169 (Ark. 1940).

Opinion

Griffin Smith, C. J.

The city council of West Helena, by resolution, found that neither B. E. Leighton nor M. C. Conner had subscribed to the statutory oath of office 1 as commissioner of street improvement district No. 3. The positions were declared vacant. The circuit court enjoined the council from making new appointments during pendency of litigation. By certiorari the commissioners sought review. On hearing the resolution was set aside. The mayor, city clerk, and members of the board of aldermen, have appealed.

Two alleged errors are assigned: (1) The circuit court did not acquire jurisdiction because no order for a writ of certiorari was made; therefore none was issued by the circuit clerk, and no certified record of the proceedings of the city council was before the court. (2) Conceding (while denying) that proceedings before the council and its resolution were certified, the record was not sufficient to justify the action taken by the circuit court.

Validity of the district, sale of its bonds, etc., are not questioned. Appellees contend they were named commissioners March 5, 1928; that April 2 the requisite number of property-owners authorized them to proceed with the improvements contemplated,, and that they have continued to act.

First. — Record Before the Court. We agree with appellants that the circuit court did not direct issuance of a writ of certiorari. There was no command that the documents be brought up. On the contrary, the express direction is that “. . . all matters pertaining to the formation of the district ... be segregated and preserved [by the city clerk] and held in readiness to be used in evidence in the trial of this cause. ’ ’

The council’s action in removing the commissioners had nothing to do with creation of the district.

Direction that the records be segregated and preserved was issued July 6, 1939. August 16 the city clerk filed certain records, and by agreement of counsel copy of the minutes of the council meeting of June 30, 1939, was introduced.

In the motion for a new trial the fifth assignment is that: “The court erred in granting the writ of certiorari and in quashing the proceedings of the city council.”

While final hearing was not until October 18, all records were before the court, and the cause proceeded as though they were brought up in response to certiorari. Although jurisdiction of the subject-matter cannot be conferred by consent, procedure may be waived. Rightor v. Gray, 23 Ark. 228, holds that formality of issuance of a writ of certiorari may be dispensed with where the matter sought to be certified is before the court. In that case, however, there was allocatur of the writ, for the opinion says: ‘ ‘ The circuit judge, at chambers, indorsed on the petition an order to the clerk of the probate court to transcribe and certify the record of the proceedings therein to the circuit court.” At the ensuing term the parties appeared, and by consent the transcript accompanying the petition was made the return of the clerk on the writ of certiorari. In the opinion it was said that the .judge should have ordered the clerk to issue ithe writ, “Then the matter would have been regularly before the circuit court for adjudication. The party, however, waived the writ and return,, and submitted the matter to the court for adjudication, upon the transcript, exhibited, with the petition for certiorari, and though this was an irregular practice, the court perhaps acquired jurisdiction of the subject-matter thereby.”

Appellants cite Marshall, Administrator, et al., v. Ramsauer, 30 Ark. 532, where it was said: “In the ease before us, so far as appears from the transcript, . . . no writ has been issued, and, of course, no return. The transcript which has been copied and sent up to this court does not even appear to have been filed, and is, in fact, no part of the record in this case. Until the records sought to be set aside and quashed are brought before the court in obedience to the writ, there is no case before it.”

In McKay et al. v. Jones et al., 30 Ark. 148, the court said: “The greatest extent to which we have gone in sustaining the jurisdiction of the circuit court in cases of certiorari has been to permit the parties, by consent, to waive the necessity of a writ and try the case upon a transcript filed.” Rightor v. Gray was cited as authority.

There is the following comment, in Phillips v. Desha, 58 Ark. 250, 24 8. W. 249: “The writ was ordered but not issued. It was not waived, if it could be waived. There was no such record before the court as the law requires upon proceedings by certiorari.”

Although in the case at bar the court’s order clearly discloses a failure to direct issuance of the writ, the petition contained a prayer for certiorari and for a restraining order.

The question which does not seem to have been decided is whether the circuit court can acquire jurisdiction of the subject-matter without directing issuance of the writ where the matter sought to be reviewed is action of a city council.

Cases cited by appellants and appellees are not entirely in point. In the Rightor-G-ray case issuance of the writ was directed, and in the Marshall case there was a similar order. So, in the Phillips-Desha case.

The view appears to have been expressed in the McKay case that “. . . the parties, by consent [may] waive the necessity of a writ.” Whether this language would have been used if the court had not directed issuance of the writ it is impossible to say.

Section 2865 of Pope’s Digest confers upon circuit courts power “. . . to issue writs of certiorari to any officer or board of officers, city or town council, or any inferior tribunal of tbeir respective counties, to correct any erroneous or void proceeding or ordinance, and to hear and determine the same.”

Section 2866 of the Digest is: “Affidavits may be read on such applications, and evidence dehors the record may be introduced by either party on, the hearing. The record of any such inferior judicial tribunal shall be conclusive as far as the s.ame may extend, but the acts of any executive officer or board of such shall only be prima facie evidence of their regularity and legality.”

The circuit court, we think, acquired jurisdiction of the subject-matter when the petition for certiorari was filed. Any other construction would permit the court to create its own jurisdiction by merely signing an order. Thereafter, procedural matters could be waived.

In McAllister v. McAllister, ante p. 171, 138 S. W. 2d 1040, power of the circuit court of Washington County to review, on certiorari, action of the city council of Fayetteville in removing civil service commissioners was reviewed. In the opinion it was said: “. . . when the council enacted [the resolution discharging the commissioners] it was acting in a legislative capacity as distinguished from .judicial or quasi-judicial.”

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Bluebook (online)
142 S.W.2d 505, 200 Ark. 1015, 1940 Ark. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-mayor-v-leighton-ark-1940.