Supreme Court

Decision Information

Decision Content

ARK.] TAYLOR V. J . A. RIGGS TRACTOR Co. 383 TAYLOR V. J. A. RIGGS TRACTOR 'COMPANY. 4-5411 122 S. W. 2d 608 Opinion delivered December 19, 1938. 1. STATUTESWHEN VIOLATIVE OF ART. 5, § 23, OF THE CONSTITUTION. The Legislature may declare a right and refer to existing laws for the remedy, without transgressing the constitutional prohibition against reviving, amending, or extending, by reference only to the title of another law. . . . 2. STATUTESDETERMINATION OF LEGISLATIVE INTENT.—The legislative intent must be ascertained from language used, but "every intendment is to be indulged in favor of [its] prerogative. A doubt of its power to legislate inures to its benefit." 3. CONSTITUTIONAL LAWAMENDMENT NO. 10.—It was the purpose of the people, in adopting Amendment No. 10, to have fiscal affairs of counties . . . conducted on a sound financial basis, and to prevent the making of contracts or the expenditure of funds in excess of revenues receivable for each fiscal year. Act 193 of 1937 expresses an intent that the so-ealled "Turnback" shall be classed as a county fund. Held, that the manner of expressing such intent is sufficiently clear to ascertain the legislative purpose. 4. COUNTIESCONTRACTS IN EXCESS OF REVENUES.—Where county judge, in 1938, purchased tractor, payment to be made solely from the turnback in installments extending through 1939 and into 1940, it was error for the circuit court to affirm a: county court order approving the claim, in view of the intent of the Legislature (as expressed by act 193 of 1937) that the turnback should be treated as a county fund, and that it should come within the provisions of Amendment No. 10 to the Constitution. Appeal from Perry Circuit Court ; J. S. Utley, fudge ; reversed. - Dean, Mooi'e & Brazil and Fred A. Denham, for appellant. Barber & Henry, Williwinson & Williamson and F.A . Lasley, for apPellee. GRIFFIN SMITH, C. J. This appeal presents questions requiring a construction of act 193, approved March 3, I 937.1 Appellee; for a consideration of $4,362.64, sold Perry county a tractor, payment to be made in equal quarterly installments of $545.33, beginning January 15, 1939. The last installment matures October 15, 1940. 1 Act 193 is as follows : "An act to make it a misdemeanor for , any county official- in the state of Arkansas to violate the terms and
384 TAYLOR v. J. A. RIGGS TRACTOR CO. [197 conditions set out in Amendment No. 10 to the Constitution of the state of Arkansas for 1874. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the state of Arkansas: Sec. 1. Hereafter it shall be the express duty of each Prosecuting Attorney in each respective judicial district in this state to enforce, without requiring affidavits of information, the terms and conditions of Amendment No. 10 to the Constitution of 1874 wherein it is provided, among other things, that no County Judge, County Clerk or other county officer, shall sign or issue any scrip, warrant or make any allowance for any purpose whatsoever or authorize the issuance of any contract or warrant, scrip or other evidence of indebtedness in excess of the revenue received from all sources and, hereby, especially from the provisions of act 63 of 1931, being the County Turnback Funds, for any current fiscal year, provided the various county judges at their discretion are hereby authorized to set aside out of said Turnback Fund hereafter received not more than 50 per cent, of said fund for the purpose of constructing and maintaining county roads, and when so set aside by proper order of County Court the same shall be used for that purpose only, and provided further this act shall not prevent the carrying out of any pledge made by any county for the payment of bridge improvement district indebtedness, and provided further that this act shall not affect any agreement heretofore entered into for the payment of judgment or judgments heretofore entered against any county or counties of this state. Section 2. The General Assembly realizing the terms and conditions imposed upon county officials in this state by virtue of Amendment No. 10 does hereby make this express intent as the intention of this act; namely, that, henceforth, it shall be the duty of each Prosecuting Attorney in each judicial district in this state to adequately enforce the provisions of said Amendment No. 10 and that said Prosecuting Attorney shall be liable to impeachment of office if he or his office does not see to it that the provisions, terms, and conditions of Amendment No. 10 are adequately complied with; for the purpose it shall hereafter lie necessary for each county official in this state to annually, during the last week of each year he is in office, supply the Prosecuting Attorney or his office in their office in their respective districts with a report showing funds received and funds paid out during each fiscal year. Section 3. All laws and parts laws in conflict herewith are hereby repealed and this act is hereby designated to be severable and should any part thereof be held invalid such holding shall not affect any other part thereof. Section 4. Although the people of this state adopted Amendment No. 10 to the Constitution of the state of Arkansas for 1874, and although its provisions are adequate if properly enforced, the same have not been enforced and has thereby brought about a condition of laxity on the part of our county officials relative to expending more funds than received during each fiscal year; therefore, an emergency is hereby declared to exist and this act shall be in full force and effect from and after its passage. Approved March 3, 1937.
ARK.] TAYLOR V. J. -A. RIGGS TRACTOR CO. - 385 The purchase is evidenced . by an agreement of August 16, 1938, executed by the County Judge, At an adjourned term of County Court August 29, 1938, the contract was confirmed by an order which, if valid, would have the effect of a. judgment.. Appellant Taylor, a citizen and taxpayer, intervened. He was granted an appeal to Ciretht Court, where the cause was heard on stipulation, 2 without jury. 2 Stipulation: (1) On or prior to August 29, 1938, the plaintiff delivered to the defendant one D-6 Caterpillar Tractor 72-inch gauge, serial No. 2 H 5382 W, fully equipped. Said tractor was accepted by said county. (2) The delivery and acceptance of said tractor was made pursuant to a contract of sale and purchase executed on behalf of said county on August 16, 1938, by Oscar Brazell, County Judge thereof, wherein the said county agreed to purchase of the said J. A. Riggs Tractor Company the tractor aforesaid, f. o. b., Little Rock, for the sum of $4,362.64. The purchase price for said machinery and equipment was to be paid by eight warrants of said county, each in the sum of $545.33, payable out of any money in the treasury of said county to the credit of the Highway Improvement Fund. (3) On August 29, 1938, the same being an adjourned day of the regular July, 1938, term of said court, the County Court of said county made and entered an order approving, ratifying and confirming said contract of purchase and sale, and upon the same day, after examining the duly verified and itemized claim of the said J. A. Riggs Tractor Company filed against said county for the purchase of said tractor, approved the same and ordered the County Clerk to issue and deliver the warrants in the amount and payable out of the funds as here-inbefore set out. Said warrants have been issued and delivered. (4) At the time of the purchase of said tractor said county was in need of machinery and equipment with which to maintain and construct county roads. That the equipment hereinabove described is suitable for said purposes, and was purchased at a price that was fair and reasonable. That is was to the best interest of said county to purchase the machinery and equipment aforesaid; that the county is now using the machinery and equipment and has been so doing since the date of its delivery, for the purpose of constructing and maintaining roads of said county, and that said tractor has been found to be satisfactory in all respects. (5) The Highway Improvement Fund hereinabove mentioned and out of which the warrants aforesaid are payable, consists exclusively of money received by Perry county from the state of Arkansas under act 11 of the Second Extraordinary Session of the Forty-ninth General Assembly, approved February 12, 1934, which designates said money in the state treasury as the "County Highway Fund," sometimes also referred to as the "County Turnback Fund." (6) The amount of money called for by either of
386 TAYLOR V. J. A. RIGGS TRACTOR Co. [197 The Circuit Court properly held that Amendment No. 10 to the Constitution 3 does not prohibit counties from making contracts for expenditures in excess of revenues derived or anticipated from the so-called Turnback Fund. In Anderson v. American State Bank, 178 Ark. 652, 11 S. W. 2d 444, we held that the Turnback Was not a county fund, -and was not controlled by Amendment No. 10. Other decisions have been consistent with the Ander-son Case.' The Circuit Court's second declaration of law was that act 193 did not prohibit Perry county from making contracts and incurring expenditures for the 1938 fiscal year in excess of amounts received during such period if payment is pledged from the Turnback. the said contract of purchase, the allowance of the claim for the purchase price of said tractor, or the warrants issued thereon, all as aforesaid, when added to the aggregate of the contracts, allowances and warrants previously made and issued during the year 1938, payable also from the Highway Improvement Fund, exceeds the amount that will be received from the state of Arkansas by said county for credit to its Highway Improvement Fusnd during the fiscal year 1938. 3 Pertinent parts of Amendment No. 10 are: "The fiscal affairs of counties . . . shall be conducted on a sound financial basis, and no county court or levying board or agent county shall make or authorize any contract or make any allowance for any purpose whatsoever in excess of the revenue from all sources for the fiscal year in which said contract or allowance is made; nor shall any county judge, county clerk, or other county officer, sign or issue any scrip, warrant or make any allowance in excess of the revenue from all sources for the current fiscal year. . . . When the annual report of any . . . county in the state of Arkansas shows that scrip, warrants or other certificates of indebtedness had been issued in excess of the total revenue for that year, the officer or officers of the county . . . who authorized, signed or issued such scrip, warrants or other certificates of indebtedness shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction thereof, shall be fined in any sum not less than five hundred dollars nor more than ten thousand dollars, and shall be removed from office." 4 Burke V. Gullege, 184 Ark. 366, 42 S. W. 2d 397; Stanfield v. Kincannon, 185 Ark. 120, 46 S. W. 2d 22; Ogden V. Pulaski County, 186 Ark. 337, 53 S. W. 2d 593; Independence County v. Independence County Bridge District No. 1, 187 Ark. 140, 58 S. W. 2d 938; Ladd V. Stubblefield, 195 Ark. 261, 111 S. W. 2d 555.
ARK.] TAYLOR V. J. A. RIGGS TRACTOR CO. 387 In its third declaration the court held that if the act should be so construed as to prohibit counties from making contracts and incurring expenditures in excess of amounts actually received from the Turnback and other funds during a. designated fiscal year, that part of the act would be void because the command can only , be understood and the legislative intent ascertained by referring to Amendment No. 10, and § 23 of Art. 5 of the Constitution does not permit la-Ws to be revived, amended, or the provisions thereof extended by reference.' In conclusion, the court held that the contract to purchase, the- order of the County Court approving the claim, and the eight warrants payable from the Turnback were in all respects valid. Counsel for appellee . insists it is not reasonably possible to spell out of the language of act 193 any limitations upon expenditures from the Turback. In the first place, they say, title to tbe act is the Legislature's assur- ance that nothing is to be dealt with except Amendment No. 10.1 After stating the duties of Prosecuting Attorneys with respect to enforcement of the Amendment and mentioning by way of emphasis its purpose to prohibit issuance of warrants or the making of contracts in excess of revenues received from all sources, the act says : . . . "and, hereby, especially froM the provisions of act 63 of 1931, being the County TurnbaCk Fund, for any current fiscal year." This proviSion is followed by a. clause authorizing County Judges "to set aside out of said Turnback Fund heretofore received not more than 50 per cent. of said fund for the purpose of constrpcting and maintaining county roads." Other portions of the section relate to pre-existing indebtedness, which will be referred to in order. AppCllee contends that § 1 deals with but two matters: duty of PrOsecuting Attorneys to enforce Amend-5 Article 5, § 23, of the Constitution: "No law shall be revived, amended, or the provisions thereof extended or conferred by reference to its title only; but so much thereof as is revived, amended, extended or conferred shall be re-enacted and published at length."
388 TAYLOR V. J. A. RIGGS TRACCoR Co. [197 ment No. 10, and the right, created in County Judges, to set aside fifty per cent. of the Turnback, and . . . "in accomplishing these objects the act certainly did not, by its language, place any limitation or inhibition on the expenditure of the Turnback. The only mention of the Turnback found in tbe act is that part Of § 1 following the figures '1874' beginning with the words 'wherein it is provided' and ending with the words 'fiscal year.' The part of the section just referred to is certainly only descriptive. It 'merely, gratnitously and fntilely, expresses the opinion of the Legislature as to what Amendment No. 10 provides. This language, being purely descriptive, has no legislative force or effect, and therefore of itself can place no limitation upon the expenditure of the Turnback." We agree witb appellee that tbe language employed cannot, "of itself," place a limitation upon expenditures fromthe Turnback. But the language is not intended to stand alone. Some meaning Must be given to words used by the Legislature in its obvious endeavor to identify the Turuback. We must presume the lawmaking body was appriSed of the interpretation given Amendment No. 10 by this court. There was knowledge that the Turnback had been' classed as a state funda. fund exempt from the provisions of the Amendment. With this information before it, the General Assembly undertook to compel enforcement of what it considered salutary provisions of Amendment No. 10enforcement through express directions to Prosecuting Attorneys. But following the man-. date so expressed, and following enumerated prohibitions of the Amendment which was designed to prevent any county offieer from making expenditures and creating obligations in a manner counter to the A.mendmenes purpose, there was added tbe language in controversy, . . . "and, hereby, especially from the provisions . of act 63 of 1931, being the County Turnback Fund, for any fiscal year." To give the quoted part of the section effect, the -Word "from" must be construed as meaning revenue arising from the Turnback. In White v. Loughborough, 125 Ark. 57, 188 S. W. 10, in disposing of a ease involving annexation of additional
ARK.] TAYLOR v. J. A. RIGGS TRACTOR CO. 389 territory to a pre-existing_ paving improvement district, Chief Justice McCum,oen, speaking for the court, said : 'It is an instance of the Legislature declaring a right and referring to other existing laws for the remedy, which method of legislation does not offend against that provision of the Constitution which declares that 'no law shall be revived, amended, or the provisions thereof extended or conferred by reference to its title only.' "6 The instant statute is not one where a law was "revived, amended, or the provisions thereof extended or conferred by reference to the title only.'' Section 1 sets out, in explicit terms, the essential provisions of Amendment No. 10. There is no reference whatever to a title. But there is a declaration that the Turnback shall be controlled by the provisions of Amendment No. 10, and this may be done by the method adopted. Further evidence of the legislative intent to require counties to conduct their financial affairs with revenues received from all sources for a particular year is reflected by the emergency clause 4 of act 193) where it is declared that failure of officials to enforce the Amendment has "brought about a condition of laxity . . . relative to expending more funds than [are] received during each fiscal year . . ." [Italics supplied]. 6 In Scales V. State, 47 Ark. 476, 1 S. W. 769, 158 Am. Rep. 768; Chief Justice COCICRILL said: "It is well settled that §. 23 of article 5. of the- Constitution does not make it -necessary, when a new statute' is passed, that all prior laws modified, affected, or repealed by implication by it should be re-enacted." In Watkins v. Eureka Springs, 49 Ark. 131, 4 S. W. 384, this court said: "We are not, however, prepared to assert that when a new right is conferred or cause of action given, the provision of the Constitution quoted requires the whole law governing the remedy to be re-enacted in order to enable the courts to effect its enforcement. . . . They (the makers of the Constitution) meant only to lay a restraint upon legislation where the bill was presented in such form that the legislator could not determine what its provisions were from an inspection of it. What is not within the mischief is not within the inhibition. Every intendment is to be indulged in favor of the prerogative of the legislative branch of the government. A doubt of its powers to legislate inures to its benefit. The language of the provision is so broad that a literal construction would hamper legislation almost to the extent of prohibiting it." See Farris V. Wright and cases cited in dissenting opinion by Mr. Justice SMITH, 158 Ark. 519, 250 S. W. 889,
390 TAYLOR V. J. A. RIGGS TRACTOR Co. [197 It must be conceded that the act is ineptly expressed ; yet, if we are able, from the terms employed, to determine what the purpose of the Legislature was, and if the manner of enactment does not violate accepted constitutional construction, it is the duty of this court to give effect to the intent. County Judges, "at their disCretion," are authorized to "set aside out of said Turnback Fund . heretofore received, not more than fifty per cent. of said fund for the purpose of constructing and maintaining county roads." A limitation on this right is that its exercise shall not impair pledges for payment of bridge improvement district indebtedness, nor shall the act affect "any agreements heretofore entered into for the payment of judgment or judgments entered against any county or counties of this state." Prior to approval of act 1.93, it was lawful for Conn-tY Judges to pledge expectant funds from the Turnback. Hence, if an apportionment of . 50 per cent. or any other part of such Turnback, when set aside in a. separate account for construction and maintenance of county highways, should result in impairment of contracts made before the act was approved, to such extent the statute would be void.7 We are of the opinion that the reference in § 1 of act 193 to "agreements heretofore entered into for the payment of judgment or judgments" contemplated valid contracts made by County Judges payable from the Turn-back. Where purchase was so made, an implied agreement arose that such judge, when County Court convened and the claim was duly presented, would make an order. of allowance. Such allowance would have the effect of a judgment. Under this construction no distinction is made between valid contracts, and agreements for judgments. The judgment is reversed. The cause is remanded with directions to the Circuit Court to enter an order adjudging that payment of the warrants in question may be made from any presently available funds of the county. 7 Article 2, § 17, of the state Constitution is: "No bill of at-tainder, ex post facto law, or law impairing the obligation of contracts shall ever be passed."
ARK.] 391 As to that part of the judgment directing paythent from prospective Turnback fundsfunds accruing to succeeding fiscal yearsthere is disregard of what we construe to have been the legislative intent, as expressed by act 193. Therefore, the agreement upon which the judgment was predicated is prohibited.
 You are being directed to the most recent version of the statute which may not be the version considered at the time of the judgment.