Neal v. Shinn

49 Ark. 227
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 49 Ark. 227 (Neal v. Shinn) 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
Neal v. Shinn, 49 Ark. 227 (Ark. 1887).

Opinion

Cockrill,' C. J.

1. Circuit Courts: May be opened on third day of term: Election of special Judges. The question presented upon the threshold in the consideration of this case, goes to the validity of the term of the Circuit Court at which the proceedings were had. The term as fixed by statute began on the first Monday in November, but the court was not opened until the Wednesday following, when the Judge of the circuit appeared, opened and held the term of court at which the proceedings complained of were had. If the court was held at a time not authorized by law, its proceedings are void. Brumley v. State, 20 Ark., 77; State v. Williams, 48 id., 227. The decision of this case may, therefore, reach beyond the single question of the election to change the location of the county seat. It in* volves the legality of all the judgments rendered and proceedings had at the November term, 1886, of the Pope Circuit Court. The Legislature undertook by act of February 21st of the present year to validate the proceedings of this term, but whether the act can have the desired effect, aside from other considerations, depends upon the solution of the question whether the Legislature can authorize the Judge to appear and open the court on the third day of the term, after a failure of the practicing attorneys to preserve the term for him by the election of a special Judge to preside in his absence, as provided by section 21, article 7, of the Constitution. If the Legislature is without power to authorize the Judge to appear on the third day and then for the first time cause the court to be opened, it is apparent they could not breathe judicial life into his acts done at such a time, by a retroactive act, because that would be doing by indirection what could not be done directly. If they are not prohibited from empowering the Judge to appear on the third day and open court, notwithstanding no special Judge had been previously chosen, the curative act was unnecessary, because the provision of the old Revised Statutes which authorized the Judge to appear and open court as late as the third day would then stand intact unaffected by the constitutional provision, and would afford legislative authority for the action of the Judge in opening court at the time disclosed by this record. The construction of the constitutional provision referred to must, therefore, furnish the solution of the question. If it contains no limitation upon its exercise, the power resides in the Legislature to authorize the Judge to open court at any time within the period fixed for the term, and in that event, the statute referred 1o is not inconsistent with any provision of the Constitution of 1868 or 1874, and has not been abrogated by either. Both instruments continue in force all previous laws not inconsistent with their provisions. Sec. 1, Schedule Const. 1874.; art 15, sec. 16, Const., 1868.

The provision is as follows :

“Whenever the office of Judge of the Circuit Court is vacant at the commencement of a term of such court, or the Judge of said court shall fail to attend, the regular practicing attorneys in attendance on said court may meet at 10 o’clock a. m., on the second day of the term, and elect a Judge to preside at such court, or until the regular Judge shall appear.”

It is not here affirmed in terms that the General Assembly shall not authorize the court to be opened by the regular Judge after 10 o’clock of the second day in the event no special Judge is chosen. Negative words are not necessary, however, to create a prohibition. Every positive direction contains an implication of what is contrary to it, and affirmative words may imply a negative of what is not affirmed; but such an implication is not as readily drawn in the construction of a State Constitution as it is in dealing with a statute. Vance v. Austell, 45 Ark., 400. The reason is “ the Constitution of a State is not a grant of enumerated powers. * * * We look to it not so much to see whether a contested enactment is authorized, but whether it is prohibited.” Vance v. Austell, supra. For the General Assembly may exercise unlimited legislative power unless a restraint express, or necessarily implied in the prohibited powers, is found in the fundamental law; and this power is not to be cut off by inference save where the inference is too strong to be resisted. Scales v. State, 47 Ark., 476. But if the prohibition is plain, whether express or implied, no argument of'hardship, or inconvenience, or public exigency, has any weight to deter the courts from checking assumed legislative power.

The main purpose of the provision in question was to provide a ready remedy for the continuation of a term of the Circuit Court in the absence of the regular Judge. Without this provision any term of a Circuit Court might fail for want of power to create a special Judge, and great inconvenience would follow. No provision for special Judges to hold terms of courts in the absence of the regular Judge existed in this State prior to the adoption of the Constitution of 1868, (Crusou v. Whitley, 19 Ark., 99,) which contained a provision substantially the same as that now under consideration. It asserts the right of the practicing attorneys in attendance to prevent the possibility of a lapse of the term by the selection of one of their number to take the place of the absent Judge, and by implication prohibits the Legislature from taking the power away. But it is not mandatory upon the attorneys to put their power of creation into exercise. The language is permissive only — they may elect (Edwards v. Hall, 30 Ark., 31), and the penalty of an absolute lapse of the term is not imposed for a failure to do so. The provision recognizes the right of the regular Judge to appear at any time during the term and assume his judicial duties, if a special Judge has set and kept the machinery of the court in motion. We are aware of no canon of construction which would justify the conclusion that a denial of the legislative power to authorize the Judge to open court after the second day when no special Judge has been chosen, is necessarily implied because the right to do so is preserved to him if a special Judge has been chosen. An implied prohibition against depriving him of the right to appear in the one case, cannot logically be construed as an implied restraint upon the power to grant him the right in the other. Sedgwick Const. & St. Law, 418, n. (a); Purcell v. Smitd, 21 Iowa, 540; State v. Tait, 22 id., 140. This power of the Legislature had never been recognized as an evil that needed correction. We find nothing in the provision to indicate the intention of imposing a restraint upon the law-making power in this respect.

The statutory provsions referred to are as follows :

“ Sec. 17. If any court shall not be held on the first day of the term, such court shall stand adjourned, from day to day, until the evening of the third day.
“Sec. 18. If at that time the court shall not be opened, such court shall stand adjourned until the next regular term, and all cases, civil, penal and criminal, shall stand adjourned over until the next term of such court.” Gould’s Digest, chap. 50.

Construing these provisions as in pari materia with the Constitution (Billingsley v.

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Bluebook (online)
49 Ark. 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neal-v-shinn-ark-1887.