Penn v. Tollison

26 Ark. 545
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 26 Ark. 545 (Penn v. Tollison) 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
Penn v. Tollison, 26 Ark. 545 (Ark. 1871).

Opinion

McGluRE, C. J.

This cause was before this court, at the October term, 1859, but the question then involved, is not at all similar to the one now presented. From an examination of the case, before presented, it appears that Mrs. Tollison filed her bill to enforce a vendor’s lien against certain lands in Crittenden county. In June, of 1856, she obtained a decree for $8,603 66, and the Planters’ Bank of Tennessee, a decree for $2,811 65, and the lands described in the bill were ordered sold, for cash, to satisfy these decrees.

On the first of September, 1856, the lands were offered for sale, and Mrs. Tollison became the purchaser. The master and commissioner made his report of sale at the November term of 1856. To the report the defendant filed exceptions and moved the court to set aside the sale. The exceptions' were overruled and the sale confirmed. To the over-ruling of the exceptions^ and the confirmation of the sale, the defendant excepted and appealed to this court. This court reversed the decree of confirmation, set aside the sale and ordered the property sold.

' On remanding the cause, Mrs. Tollison filed a supplemental bill, in which she sets up the proceedings in the original decree, the sale, that it was set aside, and that since the rendition of the original decree, she has been compelled to pay $2,678 48 to the Receiver of the Real Estate Bank, in satisfaction of a prior lien, that the Penns were bound to discharge, and'which she was compelled to pay to prevent a sale of the lands; that she has paid $601 36 taxes on said land, which she asks may be decreed to be a lien against said lands. To this bill she makes Benjamin W. Ellis, the administrator of James D. Penn, deceased, a party, and also the following named persons: Benjamin W. "Williamson, Martha 0. Penn, Littleton Penn (an infant) Josiah Deloach, Olive Deloach (his wife), James Penn, and the Planters’ Bank of Tennessee. At the September term, 1861, service was had on Littleton Penn (an infant) by publication-, and the cause was set down for hearing at the next term.

The late rebellion seems to have interrupted the administration of justice in the courts, and as appears by the record, no further proceedings were had in the case until after the 27th day of August, 1866. The cause was tried by a special judge, and it was decreed that the complainant recover of the defendants the sum of $8,605 66, with interest thereon from the date of the rendition of the original decree, and the further sum of $1,339 87,. and in default of payment within ninety days, that the commissioner sell the same to the highest bidder, etc. The Hon. J. J. Clendennin granted an appeal and supersedeas, and thus the case now stands in this court.

The counsel for the appellants raise many questions, not only to the decree rendered on the supplemental bill, hut as to the decree rendered on the original bill. We will first consider the point urged against the decree upon the supplemental bill. Notice of the pending of the supplemental bill was made by an order of publication, at the September term, 1861, on Littleton Penn, a minor, during the rebellion, and proof of publication was filed at the November term, 1861.

Counsel for the appellants ask, “will the court hold this service good, or null and void to all intents and purposes ? If the latter, then the infant appellant was never in court on the case made by the supplemental bill.” This question involves the validity of service, and the authority of courts acting in this State from March 4, 1861, to March 13, 1865. The counsel for the appellee say, that the question of the validity of service and the authority of the courts in this State, in September, of 1861, and during the rebellion, is settled by the case of Hawkins v. Filkins, 24 Ark. 286.

Since the decision of the case of Hawkins v. Filkins, 24 Ark., 286, the people of the State of Arkansas have framed and -adopted a Constitution, the phraseology of which is not exactly the same as the provision existing at the time, and construed by the court alluded to, and for this reason the question is not res adjudícala, as counsel intimate.

The Constitution of 1864 declared that, “all the action of the State of Arkansas, under the authority of the Convention that assembled at Little Rock, on the 4th of March, 1861, its ordinances or its Constitution, whether legislative, executive, judicial or military, was and is hereby declared null and void. Provided, that this ordinance shall not be so construed as to affect the rights of individuals, or to change county boundaries or county seats, or to make invalid acts of justices of the peace, or other officers, in their authority to administer oaths, or to take and certify acknowledgments of writing or in the solemnization of marriage.” This language, we 'say, received construction in the case of Hawkins v. Filkins, 24 Ark., 286, but .the language of the Constitution we are called upon to construe, cannot be made to conform to tbe course of reasoning, laid down in that case. The material difference, in the two-Constitutions, consists of the difference of the provisos. In the. Constitution of 1864, the proviso is, that the ordinance “shall not be so construed as to affect the rights of individualsThis language, it is admitted, is not very definite as to just what “rights of individuals” were intended to be protected. But not so, as to the Constitution of 1868. It pi’ovides that the ordinance “shall not be so construed as to affect the rights of private individuals, arising under contracts between the 'parties.”

The rule laid down in the case of Hawkins v. Filkins, 24 Ark., 286, is, “If the ordinance is consistent in its provisions and unambiguous in its language, the intention of the Convention is-to be ascertained and carried into effect according to the ordinary meaning of the language used.” This rule will be strictly adhered to in the case now before us.

In construing the provisions in the Constitution of 1864, the-court said, in the case of Hawkins v. Filkins, 24 Ark., 286, the “rights of individuals,” sought to be preserved, extended to and included the right to sue and pursue all the remedies known to the law for the enforcement of civil rights, and protected, and was intended to protect rights acquired by the action of courts organized under the Constitution of 1861. Keeping this-decision in view, now let us turn to the proviso in the Constitution of 1868, and see if the construction placed on the proviso in the Constitution of 1864, can be reconciled with the-language used in the Constitution of 1868, and if it cannot, then we must seek for the uintention of the Convention” according to the ordinary meaning of the language used.

The Constitution of 1868 declares that the only “rights” sought to be protected, are such as grew out of u contracts between the parties,” and that all other action of the legislative, executive, judicial or military arm of the State government,, save acts changing county boundaries, county seats, acts of justices of the peace in administering oaths, certifying the acknowledgment of deeds or the solemnization of marriages, is absolutely null and void. The mere fact that the Convention of 1868, in framing the Constitution, did not follow the-exact language used in the proviso of the Constitution of 1864,, is, to our minds, a circumstance going to show that they did not acquiesce in the construction placed on that clause of the Constitution of 1864, by the court in the case of Hawkins v.

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Bluebook (online)
26 Ark. 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/penn-v-tollison-ark-1871.