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  "id": 1894507,
  "name": "Pettigrew et al v. Washington County",
  "name_abbreviation": "Pettigrew v. Washington County",
  "decision_date": "1884-05",
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    "judges": [],
    "parties": [
      "Pettigrew et al v. Washington County."
    ],
    "opinions": [
      {
        "text": "Smith, J.\nBy a settlement had by the county clerk with the collector of the revenue of Washington County, for the year 1879, it was ascertained that special school taxes belonging to various school districts, aggregating more than $2,300, had gone into the hands of the collector, but bad not been paid into the county treasury. A scire facias was issued against him and his sureties to appear in the County Court and show cause why judgment should not be rendered against them, for the amount of the defalcation. They appeared aud by demurrer questioned the jurisdiction of the Court. This point being determined against them, they answered. A trial was had and judgment rendered in favor of Washington County.\nIt was sought to quash this judgment upon certiorari. This writ cannot be used as a substitute for appeal for the mere correction of errors of an inferior court. Haynes v. Semms, 39 Ark., 399 and cases cited.\nIt was alleged in the petition and found as a fact, that the petitioners had lost their right of appeal from said judgment without laches or fault on their part. The judgment was' rendered at the July term 1882 of the Washington County Court. The law then in force required the appeal to be taken at the same term or the next succeeding term. Gantt\u2019s Dig. Secs. 705, 1193. An appeal was prayed orally at the July term,'andin writing at the next term, and an appeal bond was filed, which the court disapproved because it was executed only by the defendants in the judgment, without sureties. However, no action was had as to the grant or refusal of the appeal. The application was set down for hearing at 9 A. M. of a certain day, at which time counsel attended, but the court had adjourned an hour before to the next regular term.\n-N\"ow bhe right to appeal being absolute, without regard t\u00b0 merits, if the County Court refused to grant the appeal, or to act upon the application, the remedy was by mandamus to compel it to discharge a plain duty, in the performance of which it was invested with no discretion. Nor was this remedy an ineffectual one, by reaspn of the fact that the County Court had finally adjourned for the term, and the next term would be too late to appeal; since at a subsequent term it might have been compelled to make the necessary order by a nunc pro tunc entry. McCrary v. Rogers, 35 Ark., 298.\nThe circumstances detailed might furnish ground to enjoin the execution of the judgment, if the defendants have any meritorious defense to the action. , But nothing is disclosed to invalidate the judgment itself. The court which rendered it had jurisdiction both of the subject matter and of the persons of the defendants. Gantt\u2019s Dig. Sec. 5279; Christian v. Ashley County 24 Ark., 142 and cases cited.\nSec. 41 of the act of December 7, 1875, is a re-enactment of Sec. 5422 Gantt\u2019s Digest, which requires all taxes for school purposes voted by any school district to be L r levied by the County Court and to be collected by the same officer, at the same time and in the same manner, as county taxes, and to be paid into the county treasury. .'The County Court was, therefore, the appropriate forum lor adjusting the liabilities of the collector and his sureties for these taxes, and for coercing payment.\nBut it is insisted that the act of February 27, 1879, deprives counties of their corporate powers, and hence Washington County had not legal capacity to sue. And it is suggested that Sec. 53 of the Act of Dec. 7, 1875, erects each school district into a body corporate.\nThe school districts are the ultimate beneficiaries' of the taxes levied for the support of schools. But the law contemplates that the proceeds of such levies shall into the county treasury, there to be disbursed on the warrant of the school directors. To hold that the funds may be intercepted on their way to the county treasury, would disturb the harmony of the system, and introduce confusion. The judgment should have been in favor the State, the obligee in the collector\u2019s bond, or of the county treasurer, the real party in interest. Hunnicutt v. Kirkpatrick, 39 Ark., 172. It was in fact rendered in the name of the county upon motion of the treasurer. This was matter of form rather than of substance. And since the objection to the plaintiff\u2019s capacity to sue for this demand was not taken either by demurrer or answer, it must be deemed to have been waived. Gantt\u2019s Dig. Sec. 4567.\nAnother objection to the judgment was, that the County Judge was the father of one of the defendants, and so disqualified to try the cause. This also was waived by failure to call the atention of the County Court to the fact of disqualification. The defendants were numerous and it cannot be presumed that the presiding judge was aware that his son was a party to the action. Shropshire v. State, 12 Ark., 190; Sweepster v. Gaines 19 Id., 96.\nThe Circuit Court quashed the judgment against the son of the County Judge and affirmed it as to the other defendants. This is not an error of which the appellants can take advantage. They were severally as well as jointly liable. Ihe plaintiff copld, even after service, have stricken out the name of the judge\u2019s son, and have proceeded against them alone. Freeman on Judgments, See. 136; Kitchens v. Hutchins, 44 Geo., 620. And they may recover of him his due proportion of whatever sum they may be compelled to pay.\nAffirmed.",
        "type": "majority",
        "author": "Smith, J."
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "L. Gregg, for appellants.",
      "B. B. Davidson for appellee."
    ],
    "corrections": "",
    "head_matter": "Pettigrew et al v. Washington County.\n1. Certiorari: No substitute for affeal.\nThe writ of certiorari cannot be used as a substitute for appeal to correct the mere errors of an inferior court.\n2. Appear: Remedy \u25a0when County Court refuses to grant.\nAYlien the County Court refuses to grant an appeal, or to act on the application for it, it may be compelled by mandamus; and if the time for appealing has elapsed it will be compelled to make the necessary order by a mine fro tunc entry.\n3. County Court : Jurisdiction over defaulting collector of school taxes.\nThe County court has jurisdiction to render judgment against a defaulting collector and his sureties, for school taxes collected by him and not paid over.\n4. Practice. Objections to j>laintijj's capacity to sue.\nObjections to plaintiff\u2019s capacity to sue must betaken by demurrer or answer. It is too late to make them to the judgment.\n5. Judge : Disqualification of.\nIt is too late after judgment, to object that the judge was disqualified to try the case on account of consanguinity to one of the defendants.\nAPPEAL from Washington Circuit Court.\nI-Ion. A. B. Greenwood, Special Judge.\nL. Gregg, for appellants.\nThe first objection made is by demurer to the jurisdiction of the County Court, and its power to render judgment.\nIf the County Court had not jurisdiction all subsequent proceedings were invalid and any judgment for costs or otherwise is void.\nWe submit that by act of the legislature of February 27, 1879, Acts 79, Page 13, all corporate powers were taken away from the counties and it was expressly enacted that the counties should neither sue nor be sued.\nAgain, while the general Revenue law provides that district school taxes shall be collected in the same manner and by the same person as other taxes, yet there is no statute authorizing the County Court to make settlement for them or requiring the collector to settle them with the County Court \u2014 See Section 5422 Gantt\u2019s Digest\u2014 and the County Court being a court of limited or prescribed jurisdiction, we submit it could not go beyond the authority by the act conferred upon it, even if previous revenue laws on other subjects had authorized a settle-' ment with the collector when the act creating these peeuliar districts and authorizing these taxes, had given no such authority.\nThe statute not only declares that Counties shall have no corporate powers and that they shall not sue .or be s ued, but distinctly enacts that each school district shall be a body corporate with power to sue and be sued, &e. &c.,. See Sec. 53, page 71, Act 1877. And hence each district was the only proper party to sue for a right withheld or a wrong done it.\nThe County Court certainly had no general jurisdiction authorizing it to bring in alleged sureties on a collector\u2019s bond and litigate with them, if there was not statutory power for so doing.\nThe Constitution, Sec. 20, Art. 7, as well as the statutes, declares a judge shall .not preside in a cause where \u201c either of the parties shall be connected with him,\u201d &c* Does this not deprive him of jurisdiction to try a cause wherein his son was a party ?\nAnd when his son was brought before him in this case did he not know judicially, as well as personally, that Thomas J. Mullins was his son? He was bound under the Constitution to certify this case to the Governor for the appointment of a judge, &c. See Sec. 36, Art. 7, Constitution 1874. In Freeman on Judgments, Sec. 146, it is said the action of any judge in a matter wherein he is interested is coram non judice and void. See 5 Pickering 483, and Coffin v. Cottle, 9 Pick. 287 and Sigoxirney v LibJey 21 Pick. 101, Gray v. Minot 3 Cush 252, State v. Castleberry 23 Ala., 85 and Sec. 144 of Freeman on Judgments, this authority says, parties cannot waive objections to relationship and the judgment is void. See Converse v. McArthur 17 Barb. N. Y. 410 and 41 Barb. 200, ITall v. Thayer 105 Mass. 219 and other cases cited by Mr. Freeman.\nThe next'error complained of is that the County Court refused to grant an appeal jup\u00f3n j application made and bond filed. At the first term afterwards the county judge disapproved of the appeal bond, not because the signers were not amply good, butjjbecause they were litigants in the case.\nBut this was quite immaterial. The appeal should have been allowed as a matter of right \u2014 Sec. 1193 Gantt\u2019s Digest \u2014 and bond or no bond only determined the right to a supercedeas.\nAs found by the Circuit Court, the county court at its next session adjourned the hearing in the case to a certain hour and before the hour arrived without notice adjourned his court, &c, and without fault or laches on the part of appellants, deprivedjthem of the right to appeal.\nMandamus could not then issue {High on Extraordinary Legal Remedies, Sec. 14, P. 15) because there was no court in session to allow an appeal and no \u2018 appeal could be granted at the next term by reason of that being beyond the time allowed by law; hence the only remedy the law afforded was certiorari.\nUpon the return of which under Sec. 1196 the Court was empowered to hear and determine the,, same, and correct any erroneous proceedings and the nextsection authorized the hearing of evidence dehors the r\u00e9cord, &\u00a1c. See also Sec. 1197.\nThese statutes modify the general rule and give latitude to reach the merits of the case. 25 Ark., 518,\u2022 37 Ark., 318.\nThe Circuit Court upon the evidence found the fact that appellants had been deprived of their right of appeal without fault or laches on their part, but rejected the practice of hearing the case upon its merits. \u00bfIt also found specifically that the county had no interest in the money sought to be recovered and the County was the nominal plaintiff and that the county was not a body corporate or other person and had no capacity to sue, and that the judgment was rendered in faver of Washington County for the use of certain school districts, and yet rendered a judgment affirming the proceeding and judgment in the County Court. And the Circuit Court on appellee\u2019s motion quashed the writ as to all of appallants but one, and refused to quash it as to him, and adjudged that the judgment of the County Court be affirmed in part and quashed in part.\nThis, we submit, was a palpable error. Upon appellee\u2019s motion the Court was legally bound to quash the writ or overrule the motion. As a Court of Law, it could not divide a judgment and quash it as to one and affirm it as to the others. See Freeman on Judgments Sec. 136. He says a judgment void as to one is void as to all.\nHow strange to assume that when A, B and C are equally liable and sued together, A and C must pay the claim and B be discharged because he is a son of the judge, his discharge being for a want of jurisdiction in the court and not upon any defense personal to himself \u2014such never was the law. See Shuford v. Cain 1 abb. \u00dc. S.' 302.\nKitchens v. Hutchins 41 Geo. 620, Com\u2019l Bank v. Wilson 14 Grants ch. 473. G. M. Ij. Ins. Co. v. Cloar 36 Mo. 392\nB. B. Davidson for appellee.\nThe relationsphip of the party to the judge was made known for the first time in the circuit court. No objection was made to the judge below and unless made was waived.\nGantt\u2019s Digest Sec 1159; 12 Ark, 191; 19 Ark., 97; White v. Beagan, 25 Id. 622.\nBut this would not affect this cause as the judgment was quashed as to the relative.\nThe second -ground is that the county court had no jurisdiction as to the subject matter. Acts 1874-5 p. 144 Sec 78. Acts 1879, p. 115 Sec. 8 sub\u2019d 8. Acts 1875, p. 67, Sec. 41.\nThirdly, it was claimed by appellants that the county had no interest and was an improper party to the proceeding. The school tax by the acts referred to must be levied by the county court and collected like any other tax. The only forum authorized to make the settlement was the County Court. 14 Ark., 170; 24 Id., 143.\nLastly it is assumed that the county had no legal capacity to sue. It is assumed that this is a suit brought and prosecuted by a county instead of a settlement under statute by the County Court. The act Feb. 27, 1879 had no reference to settlements of this character. This settlement was made with the sheriff by the clerk, and was conclusive after approval by the court, and spread upon the record. 14 Ark, 170 ; 22 Id., 236 ; 24 Id., 551.\nCertiorari could not be resorted to to open up the settlement with the sheriff. If there had been error in the settlement the statute provides that it may be corrected on motion at any time within one year. Gantt\u2019s Dig., Sec. 5280.\nThe defendants had a right to, appeal and if denied them by the county judge, could have obtained it by mandamus or could have obtained an appeal by application to the clerk of the circuit court. Gantt\u2019s Dig., Sec. 1193,1057.\nIt is not enough that a party may have been deprived of an appeal; he must also show that there is error in the record or the court cannot quash upon certiorari. 23 Ark, 107; 21 Ark, 426; 17 Ark, 440; McCoy v. Co. Court Jackson Co., 21 Ark., 475; Jefferson Co. v. Hudson, 22 Ark., 595.\nIf the case is to he made out by collateral facts certiorari will not lie. 29 Ark., 179 ; 21 Ark., 426.\nIt is assumed that the collector\u2019s bond was joint and not several. The record shows nothing of the kind, and such is not the case. If the action may be joint or several the judgment may be quashed as to some and affirmed as to others. Freeman on Judgments, 136; 11 N. Y., 294-301; 10 Ohio St. 451 ; 24 Ohio St., 87-96.\nOur statute has made all joint obligations the same as joint and several, and ail or a part may be sued, audif all are sued judgment may be rendered against all or a part.\nGantt\u2019s Digest 3587,4480, 4479, 4702, and 4704."
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