Patterson v. Temple

27 Ark. 202
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 27 Ark. 202 (Patterson v. Temple) 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
Patterson v. Temple, 27 Ark. 202 (Ark. 1871).

Opinion

Bennett, J.

On the 17th day of April, 1871, Newton J. 'Temple, Prosecuting Attorney for the third judicial district, filed, in the Circuit Court of Sebastian county, .an application for a mandamus to compel "William Patterson, as Clerk of the various courts of said county* to omit removing any of the books, records, papers, etc., to Greenwood, in said county, as he was required to do, under the act of the General Assembly, approved March 28, 1871, alleging said act is void, because its various provisions are in violation of the Constitution of the United States.

Said application, also, alleging that Eort Smith is the only county site of Sebastian county, and the only legal place to hold courts.

Defendant filed an answer with a demurrer clause. . The answer sets up the act of the General Assembly; denies the jurisdiction of the court, and denies that Fort Smith ever was the county seat of Sebastian county; sets forth the facts in relation to said county seat history, and filed copies, duly authenticated, of the orders and judgments of the County Court in relation to the same.

The plaintiff filed a demurrer to the answer of the defendant.

Upon the hearing, the court overruled the demurrer to the application, and sustained the demurrer to the answer,, and granted mandamus as prayed for.

Defendant appealed.

The principal question in the case is, whether the act of the General Assembly, entitled an “act to amend an act entitled an act to establish separate courts in the county of Sebastian,” is unconstitutional and void.

The act, above entitled, provides for two separate and.distinct judicial districts within the limits of Sebastian county p provides for the holding of two separate and distinct Circuit Courts, one to be styled “ the Circuit Court of the county of Sebastian, for the.Fort Smith district,” the other to be styled, “the Circuit Court of the county of Sebastian, fo^tlio Greenwood district;” and provides that judgments rendered in each shall only be liens upon the real estate in the district where such judgments and decrees are rendered.

It also provides for separate Probate Courts, and the-organization of two County Courts ; that papers and records of the estates of deceased persons, within the territorial limits-of each district, shall be kept, either at Greenwood or Fort Smith. The fact, as to which place such record shall be kept,, to be determined by the former residence of such deceased person ; provides for the separate assessment of property, the-separate levying and collection of taxes; provides for a division of the indebtedness of the county in proportion to the taxable property of each.district; provides for separate and distinct records of all matters pertaining to the public welfare,, in each district; also, provides that a change of venue may be taken from one district to the other in the same manner as-though these districts were separate and distinct constitutional counties of the State.

It is claimed, upon the part of the appellee, that the act 'of the General Assembly has effectually and completely abrogated the corporate existence of the county of Sebastian, and has, in fact, created two counties, each of which is less in territorial area than six hundred square miles, and is therefore in derogation of Sec. 1, Art. 15,' of the Constitution, which says: “ No county now established by law shall ever be reduced by the establishment of any new county or counties to less than six hundred square miles ; nor shall any new county be hereafter established which shall contain less than six hundred square miles.”

In the consideration of the case, now before us, we are to-set out with the presumption that every State statute, the objects and provisions of which, are among the acknowledged powers of legislation, is valid and constitutional, and that presumption is not to be overcome unless the contrary is clearly demonstrated. Fletcher vs. Peck, 6 Cranch, 87; Ex parte McCollum, 1 Cowen, 564; Morris vs. The People, 3 Denio, 381.

According to our republican theory, the whole power of government resides primarily in the people of the State. This power is usually denominated legislative, judicial and executive or administrative ; the power to make laws, to interpret, them and judge of their application, and to execute or administer them when thus made and interpreted.

The people, .by their organic or fundamental law, have transferred these powers and distributed them into three departments. By this organism of government, each department has annexed to it, in the exercise of its functions, certain restraints and limitations, a violation of which renders their acts, to the extent of the violation, inoperative and void. When the legislative power is exercised, (and it has its several duties marked out and prescribed by the law to which they owe their origin,) it is not only essential that the will of the law-makers be expressed in due form of law, but that they should have expressed their determination in the mode and within the prescribed limits, as pointed out by the instrument which invests them with that power.

With the foregoing considei’ation in view, we will proceed to the examination of the objections urged against the law in question, which aré founded upon its 'supposed incompatibility with the Constitution, the first of which is stated as above.

Blackstone defines a. county to be a civil division of a State or kingdom for political and judicial purposes, formerly governed in England by an earl or count, from whom it derived its name. 1 Blk. Com., 113, 116.

Kent says: “A county is a public corporation, created by the government for political purposes, and invested with subordinate legislative powers, to be exercised for local purposes connected with tbe public good, and -such powers are in general subject to tbe control of tbe Legislature of the State.” 2 Kent Com., 275.

The county court was sometimes, anciently, termed the county. United States Digest — County.

' The territory of a State, for its more .convenient jurisdiction and government, has been divided into counties, towns, and villages, to each of which has been delegated portions of. the political and civil power of the State. They have been organized into separate and distinct communities or bodies politic, and are clothed with extensive authority, legislative, executive and judicial, for the purposes of local government. The amount of political authority so delegated, its distribution and arrangement fin the different communities, vary. The powers and privileges conferred upon counties are more limited and simple in their operation than upon towns. But though the amount and distribution differs, the nature of the power conferred on each, and the object of granting them, are the same. They belong exclusively to the class that relate to the general concerns of the people, in. their public, civil and political interests, in a word, to the good government of the place. It is only necessary to look into the internal organization, of the counties, villages and cities, as defined and regulated by law, to confirm the general correctness of these observations.

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27 Ark. 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patterson-v-temple-ark-1871.