Williamson v. Killough

46 S.W.2d 24, 185 Ark. 134, 1932 Ark. LEXIS 52
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 15, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 46 S.W.2d 24 (Williamson v. Killough) 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
Williamson v. Killough, 46 S.W.2d 24, 185 Ark. 134, 1932 Ark. LEXIS 52 (Ark. 1932).

Opinion

Smith, J.

A petition for certiorari has been filed in this court, from which, with the responses thereto, the following facts are made to appear. On December 21, 1931, the county court of Crittenden County made five separate orders changing the lines between certain townships in that county, and one of the effects of each of said orders was to move a Democratic county central committeeman from his township into another. The changes made by these orders were as follows. By one of them the residence of Joe Summerville was changed from Mississippi Township to Proctor Township. The residence of E. D. Grooden was changed from Mound City to Jasper Township; the residence of P. J. Hixon was changed from Fogleman to Wappanocca Township; the residence of Les A. Barton was changed from Black Oak to Fogleman Township; and the residence of J. R. Hood was transferred from Tyronza to Black Oak Township.

On the same day on which these orders were made by the county court, the Democratic county central committee convened in special session, at which meeting the chairman of the committee refused to recognize the five committeemen hereinabove named, for the -reason that they, having been transferred out of the townships for which they had been elected, by the orders of the county court, were no longer members of the committee.

An appeal from this ruling of the chair was made, and nine committeemen, including the five sought to be disqualified, voted to sustain the appeal, and four committeemen voted to sustain the ruling of the chair. The chairman refused to- recognize the right of the five committeemen above-named to vote, and declared their offices vacant, whereupon these five, with fqur others; declared the office of chairman vacant, and by the same vote elected a new chairman, and the nine committeemen who voted to overrule the chair, including the old secretary of the committee, adjourned subject to the call of the new chairman. The old chairman and the four committeemen who voted to sustain his ruling remained in session and proceeded to elect successors to the five committeemen, whom they claimed had been ousted from office, together with a new secretary of the committee after which they sent a certified copy of their minutes showing such elections to the Democratic State Central Committee.

Thereafter these five committeemen whose residences had 'been changed from one to another township by the orders of the county court filed a petition in the circuit court for a writ of certiorari, praying that the orders of the county court he quashed. It was alleged by these petitioners that the purported orders of the county court were void for numerous reasons, among ■ others that they were made by the county judge, and not by the county court.

On February 1, 1932, an application was made to one of the judges of the circuit of which Crittenden County is a part for a temporary order preserving the status quo, and an order was made by the circuit judge which recited that a prima facie showing had been-made that the orders of the county court were void, and upon this finding it was ordered “that any and all persons are hereby restrained from recognizing any purported order of the Crittenden County Court purported to have been made on December 21, 1931, in the matter of changing township lines until the final hearing of this cause.”

Another proceeding of similar nature was filed, which included additional parties, in which the circuit judge made an order restraining the county clerk from entering’ the orders changing" the -boundary lines of the townships until the further order of the circuit court.

Thereupon this proceeding was begun in this court in the name of the chairman and secretary of the State Democratic Central Committee and the chairman and secretary of the Crittenden County Central Committee as reorganized, in which they prayed that a writ of certiorari issue directed to the clérk of the circuit court of Crittenden County commanding him to certify up to this court a certified transcript of all records in the Crittenden Circuit Court in the matter of changing township lines, and the two causes hereinabove referred to there pending, and “that, upon the coming in and inspection of said records, the orders therein made, to the extent they are beyond the jurisdiction of the circuit court as herein set out, be quashed, and that, pending the hearing upon such writ, a temporary restraining order issue prohibiting both the circuit judges of Crittenden County from proceeding further in either of said causes until the final order of this court, and for all other appropriate relief. ’ ’

The records referred to have been brought up on certiorari and are now before us, and it is insisted that the orders of the circuit court staying all proceedings in the matter of the changed lines of the townships were void as being in excess of his jurisdiction.

In support of this contention, it is argued that the effect of the orders of the circuit court is to assume jurisdiction of a contest for places on the Democratic County Central Committee, a subject over which the committees of the party, State and county have exclusive jurisdiction, and over which the courts have no jurisdiction.

It is our opinion, however, that the circuit court has not acted without jurisdiction or in excess of its jurisdiction, as petitioners contend.

It must be remembered that the circuit court has appellate jurisdiction to review all orders of the county court, and, in the exercise of this jurisdiction, the power inheres to make such orders as appear to be appropriate. The circuit court has the jurisdiction, for instance, to decide whether the orders in regard to the township lines were void as not having in fact been made by the county court, just as it has the jurisdiction to determine that these orders, even if made by the county court, were erroneous as being an abuse of the discretion vested in the county court in this behalf. The circuit court unquestionably has the jurisdiction, upon hearing the appeals which have been prosecuted from the orders of the county court, to vacate those orders and set them aside as being an abuse of the discretion of the county court, and pending the hearing* of the appeal the circuit court has the jurisdiction to 'preserve the status quo.

These are, of course, elementary principles, which petitioners concede to be true, but which they say do not apply here for the reason that they are concerned only in the membership of the county central committee, which question they say is purely political, and one over which the courts have no jurisdiction whatever, and the case of Tuck v. Cotton, 175 Ark. 409, 299 S. W. 613, is cited to sustain this contention.

The cáse just cited was brought to contest the election of a township committeeman, and the suit was dismissed by this court on the ground that “the courts will not assume jurisdiction of contests for the offices of committeemen or delegates of a political party” to a convention of the party, for the reason that the law governing the primary election out of which the contest arose had not conferred jurisdiction on the courts to hear contests over an election for 'places on county committees.

The history of our primary election law is a matter of common knowledge. The case of Walls v. Brundidge, 109 Ark. 250, 160 S. W. 230, Ann. Cas.

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Bluebook (online)
46 S.W.2d 24, 185 Ark. 134, 1932 Ark. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williamson-v-killough-ark-1932.