S. M. Williamson & Co. v. Shelton

11 S.W.2d 882, 158 Tenn. 166, 5 Smith & H. 166, 1928 Tenn. LEXIS 137
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 11 S.W.2d 882 (S. M. Williamson & Co. v. Shelton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S. M. Williamson & Co. v. Shelton, 11 S.W.2d 882, 158 Tenn. 166, 5 Smith & H. 166, 1928 Tenn. LEXIS 137 (Tenn. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Swiggart

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Complainant, S. M. Williamson & Company, is the owner of land located within the boundaries of a Drainage District, created by judgment of the County Court of Fayette County, and including lands in Fayette, Tipton and Shelby Counties, known and designated as the Beaver Dam Drainage District of Fayette, Shelby and Tipton Counties. The land included within the District is described in the report of an engineer, upon the faith of which the District was organized, "as being subject to overflow by Beaver Dam Creek, and lies in close proximity to the creek, along its course from a point in F'ay *169 ette County to a point in Shelby County, where the creek empties into the Loosahátehie River.

Complainant’s land lies in Shelby County. At the time the District was organized, and the assessment made by the county court, complainant was the owner of a mortgage or deed of trust on the land, executed by the then owner, J. A. Phillips. Complainant subsequently purchased the land for its own protection, when default was made and the mortgage or deed of trust was executed.

The bill seeks to remove the assessment made by the county court for the benefit of the Drainage District, as a cloud upon complainant’s title, and upon various grounds seeks a decree that the organization of the District was wholly illegal and void, and that proceedings in the county court subsequent to the organization of the District and essential to the legality of the assessment were conducted in such irregular and unlawful manner as to render the assessment void. The Chancellor dismissed the bill on demurrer, and complainant has appealed.

The various attacks on the validity of the assessment, as made by the bill, are summarized on the brief filed by complainant in this court, and we have found it convenient to consider the bill as thus summarized, rather than by specific reference to the formal assignments of error.

(1) It is first contended that the organization of the Drainage District is void because proceedings and orders essential to its legal existence were had.in the county court on days when the court was not and could not have been lawfully opened.

The District was organized by the county court under the provisions of the Acts of 1909, chapter 185, and amendments thereto.

*170 ■Section 15 of this act requires the county court clerk to keep a full and complete record of all proceedings incident to the organization and development of a drainage district, including all orders made by the county court, in a separate record book, provided for the purpose and known as the ‘ Drainage Record. ’ ’

This provision of the statute was complied with by the County Court Clerk of Fayette County, so that the proceedings with respect to the Drainage District are not entered on the regular minute book of the county, and certain conflicts with respect to the adjourning orders appear in the two record books.' As an instance of this conflict, the Drainage Record recites that the court w;as opened pursuant to adjournment on February 19', 1920, on which day the order was entered creating and organizing the District. The regular minute book of the county court recites that the county court was adjourned on February 16, 1920, until February 20, 1920.

The Chancellor held that if such conflict should be deemed material, the entry on the regular minute book could not be held to control the entry of the Drainage Record that the court was opened on February 19th, “pursuant to adjournment,” and that the conflict would be resolved in favor of the validity and regularity of the proceeding’s entered on the “Drainage Record.”

This holding of' the Chancellor is attacked as placing a strained construction on the recitation of the order; and it is urged that litigants had a right to rely on the recitation of the regular minutes that the court was adjourned to a day .certain, and that no orders would be entered in the meantime. This argument is rendered ineffective, in so far as the essential orders are concerned, by which the District was established and the assess- *171 meats apportioned, by the fact that these orders were entered on a day fixed in a notice by publication, as required by statute.

(2) We are of the opinion, moreover, that the orders of the county court must be sustained as valid, under the provisions of the Acts of 1911, chapter 3, that the county court held by the county judge or chairman, in the several counties authorized to elect a county judge or chairman, “shall be deemed always open for the transaction of any business and the exercise of any jurisdiction conferred upon the County Judge or Chairman or upon the monthly courts held by him under the existing laws.” This act is assailed as unconstitutional on the ground that its caption was amended after it had passed two readings in the House of Representatives, by the addition of the words ‘ ‘ or chairman, ’ ’ which had not been a part of the caption when it was placed on first and second readings in the House. .

It is contended that the amendment materially added to the scope of the bill, and that, therefore, the bill should have been passed on three readings after amendment, as held in State ex rel. v. Baseball Club, 127 Tenn., 292.

A statute should be given that construction which will save it, rather than one which will destroy it, when the language used is susceptible to such construction.' The language of the caption “the county courts held by the county judges”'may well have been used to designate the monthly court as distinguished from the quarterly county court, and given this interpretation, we think the caption before amendment would have been sufficient to support the body of the act as finally passed.

(3) By the Act of 1876, chapter 70, abolishing the quorum court in the several counties, and vesting the *172 powers of that court in the county chairman, it is provided : “ and said Chairman is further invested with all the powers, and with the same jurisdiction, and authority wherewith county judges are now invested.”

There is no distinction in our statutes between a county court presided over by a county judge and a county court presided over by a chairman; and the monthly county court.is frequently referred to in the decisions of this court as “the court held by the-county judge or chairman.” The phrase is descriptive of the court, distinguishing it from the quarterly county court. So, we think a statute vesting jurisdiction in “the county court held by the county judge” would confer the same jurisdiction upon the county court held by a chairman.

(4)

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Bluebook (online)
11 S.W.2d 882, 158 Tenn. 166, 5 Smith & H. 166, 1928 Tenn. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/s-m-williamson-co-v-shelton-tenn-1928.