Thomas v. Burke

121 S.W. 1060, 91 Ark. 595, 1909 Ark. LEXIS 238
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 18, 1909
StatusPublished

This text of 121 S.W. 1060 (Thomas v. Burke) 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
Thomas v. Burke, 121 S.W. 1060, 91 Ark. 595, 1909 Ark. LEXIS 238 (Ark. 1909).

Opinion

McCurroch, C. J.

This is an appeal from the judgment of the circuit court of Miller County refusing to make an order prohibiting the sale or giving away of intoxicating liquors within three miles of a school house in the city of Texarkana. The county court had refused to make the order prayed for, and an appeal was taken to the circuit court. The case was heard in the circuit court on oral evidence. The petition was in due form prescribed by law, and described the house which was to mark the center of the prohibited area as “the Public School Building situated on block 34, in the city of Texarkana, Miller County, Arkansas.”

The first point to which attention should be directed was that raised by appellees (persons who were permitted by the court to appear and make themselves parties for the purpose of remonstrating against granting the prayer of the petition) whether or not the appeal from the judgment of the county court was properly granted. The record shows that the petitioners, which of course means all of them, prayed an appeal to the circuit court, and that the affidavit for appeal was made by B. B. Thomas, one of the petitioners and appellants.

The appellees filed a motion in the circuit court to dismiss the appeal on the ground that Thomas had never been an inhabitant of the territory in question; that he was only temporarily there at the time the petition was signed and presented to the county court, and that he had removed to a distant part of the State before the case came up for hearing in the circuit court. The court overruled the motion to dismiss the appeal, and we think that was a correct ruling.

It is unnecessary for us to decide, in passing on this ruling-of the court refusing to dismiss the appeal, whether or not Mr. Thomas was in fact an inhabitant of the three-mile area within the meaning of the statute. He did, in fact, sign the petition, and was entitled to be heard, with the other petitioners, when the county court considered the matter; and when the court by its judgment denied the prayer of the petition, he was one of the persons aggrieved by the judgment within the meaning of the statute, and he, as well as the other petitioners, was entitled to prosecute an appeal to the higher court. In other words, the right to take an appeal depended2 not on the right of the petitioners to the relief prayed for, but on the right to be heard in the appellate court when relief was denied in the inferior court; and when Mr. Thomas signed the petition which was filed in the county court, he became a party to that record, and was guaranteed the right of' appeal by the Constitution and laws of the State, as much as any other petitioner, even though it should finally be decided that he was not eligible as a petitioner. Of course, if Thomas had been the only person who took an appeal, and it appeared on the hearing that he was not eligible as a petitioner, and therefore had no interest in the further prosecution of the case, the question would arise as to whether or not t’he court should consider the case and grant the relief solely on his request. But no such question arises on the record, as it shows that all of the petitioners appealed/and the, affidavit was made by Thomas as one of the parties aggrieved.

There are only two other questions in the case necessary for us to decide. One is this: The school house named in the petition is less than three miles distant from the State line, and the circuit court held that “all of the adult- inhabitants residing within the radius of three miles of such center must be counted in ascertaining the total number of adult inhabitants within said district, irrespective of the State line.” This court has decided to the contrary, and the ruling of the circuit court is incorrect. Lindley v. State, 90 Ark. 284.

The remaining question is as to the correctness of the court’s declaration of law and finding of fact concerning the designation of the school house which was to mark the center of the proposed prohibition territory. The petition, as already shown, named “the Public School Building situated on block 34, in the city of Texarkana, Miller County, Arkansas,” as the center of the proposed territory. There was no conflict in the evidence on this branch of the case, and it is'undisputed that there'are two buildings on block 34, both used for public school purposes. The two buildings .are situated about thirty feet apart' (or about 100 to 150 feet from center to center), and are under the supervision of the same superintendent and the same corps of teachers. In other words, there are two buildings, about thirty feet apart, used in conducting one school by one- superintendent and corps of teachers. One of the buildings is shown to be the main building, situated near the center of the block, and the other, which is a smaller one, is referred to as the “annex.”

Upon this showing-, the court found that there were two public school buildings on block 34, and that the petition failed to designate the particular one which was to form the center of the -proposed area. This was one of the grounds on which the court denied the prayer of the petition.

The statute prescribes that “whenever the adult inhabitants residing within three miles of any school house, academy, college, university or other institution of learning, of of any church house in this State, shall desire to prohibit the sale or giving away of any vinous, spirituous or intoxicating liquors of any kind,” etc., and a majority thereof shall petition the county court of the county “wherein such institution of learning or church house is situated,” said court shall make an order, etc. Kirby’s Digest, § 5129. This phase of the statute has never been passed on by the court except in the following cases, which do not reach to the particular question now under consideration: Williams v. Citizens, 40 Ark. 290; State v. Bailey, 43 Ark. 150; Gazola v. State, 45 Ark. 458; Lindley v. State, supra.

In Williams v. Citizens, supra, the petition named as the center of .the proposed area two churches situated about two hundred yards apart. This court held that that rendered the proceedings void. Judge Eakin, speaking for the court, said:

“Two points, as centers of circular areas, cannot be designated in the same petition, signed without distinction, by a majority of the adult inhabitants living within three miles of both points, or of either one or the other point. In the first case the area would be less than one with a radius of three miles, and in the second case it would be greater. The statute confers no authority to make such an order as would result in either case. Every adult inhabitant residing within three miles of any particular school house, church, etc., should be counted in determining the majority, that is in theory, and as nearly practically as possible, and no one living more than three miles from that particular house should be. This cannot be effected by designating two or more distinct buildings more or less widely separated, without any indication of one as the center for all. Where they are close together, it would probably make little difference, but embarrassments would grow as the distance widened, and the court cannot fix the limits within which the practice would be permissible.”

The next two cases cited above arose upon indictments for selling liquor within three miles of two churches, and the court, citing the Williams case, held that the orders were void.

In Lindley v.

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Related

Williams v. Citizens
40 Ark. 290 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1883)
State v. Bailey
43 Ark. 150 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1884)
Gazola v. State
45 Ark. 458 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1885)
Paragould v. Lawson
115 S.W. 379 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1908)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 S.W. 1060, 91 Ark. 595, 1909 Ark. LEXIS 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-burke-ark-1909.