Lee County v. State ex rel. Phillips County

36 Ark. 276
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 36 Ark. 276 (Lee County v. State ex rel. Phillips County) 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
Lee County v. State ex rel. Phillips County, 36 Ark. 276 (Ark. 1880).

Opinion

statement.

Eakin, J.

On the seventeenth of January, 1880, the county of Phillips, as relator, filed in the circuit court of Lee county, a petition for a writ of mandamus, against the latter, setting forth the provisions of an act of the general assembly, to create the county of Lee, approved April 17, 1873, and showing:

. That on the fifteenth of September, 1873, in pursuance of the act, the board of supervisors of the relator ascertained the exact amouut of its indebtedness at the time of the passage of the act; and the proportion of it which would fall upon that part of its territory taken to make the county of Lee; which estimate and apportionment was duly transmitted to the clerk of the supervisors of Lee county. The amount so ascertained to be payable by Lee county, being $60,3.12.70.

That the said board of supervisors of Lee county found the said estimate and apportionment to be correct, but refused to recognize its liability upon more than the sum of $11,539.39, which it' paid. That, upon appeal from this finding and decision, it was finally decided that the amount of the indebtedness of Phillips county, properly devolving upon Lee, under the act, was nearly as claimed; that is, upon railroad bonds, $48,753.33; floating debt, $11,539.39; and, it was further decided, that said railroad bonds-were bearing 6 per cent, interest per annum, and were not yet due.

It is further shown in the petition that said contested debt is due from Phillips county in 1891, upon which ithas paid interest since April 17,1873, amounting up to April, 1880, to the sum of $84,000,.of which Lee county should have paid the proportion of 23| per cent., or $19,880. It charges that said county, although required by the act and authorized by the constitution, to levy a tax to pay said indebtedness, has refused to make any provision therefor.

The prayer is that the counjy court of Lee be required, annually, at the proper time, to levy a tax, not exceeding five mills on the dollar, to repay said sum of $19,880, and the interest on 23f per centage of the total of the railroad bonds (being $200,000 in all), and to provide for the payment of the same proportion of the principal at maturity, and for further relief.

A general demurrer, upon several grounds of an argumentative character, was overruled; and, defendant resting, a peremptory mandamus was ordered, and Lee county appealed.

OPINION.

The facts which underlie this case, and a statement of the most important provisions of the act of 1873, creating Lee county, may be found in the case of Phillips Co. v. Lee Co., 34 Ark., 240, and need not be repeated.

The first objection made, is that the petition shows no demand upon Lee county to proceed in the discharge of its duty. This leads to the inquiry of what that duty was, for which we must look alone to the statute. The legislature, as was determined when the case of Phillips County v. Lee County, supra, was here before, had the power to leave the 'old counties burdened with the whole of their respective debts without any aid whatever from the new county of Lee. It did not choose to do so, however’, but provided what it considered an equitable arrangement of the burden. Of this, Lee county on the other hand, can not complain. In short, neither county has contracted rights against the other, to prevent the free exercise of legislative will, and each must find its obligations and its relief in the act itself; save, that the rights of the old creditors against the old counties must remain intact and unimpaired. Beríag under the gegis of the federal constitution they can not be-impaired.

Section 6 of the act, after prescribing the mode of ascertaining the proportion of the debt of each old county, to devolve upon Lee, being that followed by Phillips, provides : that if the copy of the records and proceedings, so ascertaining the debt and proportion, to be sent to the board of supervisors of Lee county, be found by said board to be correct, the same shall be entered of record by said board (now the county,court) “and the same shall thenceforth become and be the-debt of Lee county, to be paid by the inhabitants thereof and owners of property therein, in such manner and at such times as the said board of supervisors may determine.” .

Lee County: Its liability to parent counties.

It can not be considered as the intention of this act to create a debt directly from Lee county to the creditors of old counties by way of novation, exonerating the former debtors pro tanto. The debts remain valid in full against the original counties, and the creditors may look to them alone. The provision is wholly in relief of the old counties by way of compensation for their loss of resources. Hence the legislature was under no constitutional restrictions in determining the measure or terms of the relief, inasmuch as it was entirely within its option to afford any. The language of the statute, unembarrassed by constitutional provisions is to be construed according to its plain import, as matter of grace, springing from a sense of justice and fair dealing.

Thus construed it, at once, imposed upon the new county as a condition of its existence, a debt to each of the old counties contributing territory, for a fair proportion of tide existing debt of each, to be ascertained and fixed in a manner prescribed, and to become definite when so ascertained, but then to take efiect by relation. Then followed, upon this, an obligation to pay it, by resort to the usual method, which is by taxation. But in doing this the new county was not ordered to act promptly, to the full extent of her powers. That might be onerous and unjust, inasmuch as the debt from the old counties to their creditors might not be due, and even those due might be so large as to make an immediate tax for a full payment of the proportion, too onerous for the tax-payers, subjecting them to harsher measures than they would have incurred by remaining in the counties, which would have had a larger discretion in distributing the burden over several years. It was prudently provided therefore that the “inhabitants” and “owners of -property” in the new county should pay these obligations “in such manner” and “at such times” as the board of supervisors might determine.

Demand essential,

Upon the other hand, however, the intention is very clear to give substantial, relief to the old counties, which would not be done by allowing to the new county an .unlimited discretion as to the time and manner of discharging its obligations. This would be trifling and illusory. It should proceed to provide some reasonable mode for the discharge in a reasonable time, of the burden imposed, as a condition of its existence, upon its inhabitants and owners of property, and the courts have power to enforce the performance of the duty; judging, themselves, of the reasonable nature of the delay, or of the mode. If the new county should unreasonably refuse to act, it may be set^in motion by mandamus; and if, in acting, it should fail to provide means of payment, and a time therefor, such as would appear reasonable, its action may be corrected by any proper supervisory proceeding.

Such being the nature and bearing of the act, the question of the importance of a demand, before mandamus, becomes clearer.

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Bluebook (online)
36 Ark. 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-county-v-state-ex-rel-phillips-county-ark-1880.