{
  "id": 1509441,
  "name": "Ex parte Foote",
  "name_abbreviation": "Ex parte Foote",
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    "parties": [
      "Ex parte Foote."
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      {
        "text": "Battle, J.\nW. E. Eoote was accused and convicted in the mayor\u2019s court of the town of Wynne, in this state, of a violation of section 2 of the following ordinance:\n\u201cBe it ordained by the towm council of the incorporated town of Wynne, Arkansas:\n\u201cSec. 1. It shall be unlawful for any person to stand any stallion or jackass, for the purpose of foaling mares, within the limits of the incorporated town of Wynne.\n\u201cSec. 2. The keeping of any jackass within the limits of said town, in the hearing distance of the populace of said town, is hereby declared a nuisance, and is hereby made unlawful.\n\u201cSec. 3. Any person violating the provisions of sections 1 and 2. of this ordinance shail be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof shall be, fined in any sum not less than ten nor more than twenty-five dollars, and each day that the provisions of either sections 1 or 2 are violated shall constitute a separate offense.\n\u201cSee. 4. All ordinances in conflict with this ordinance are hereby repealed, and this ordinance shall be in force and take effect from and after its passage and publication. Approved May 9, 1901.\u201d\nThe court adjudged that he pay a fine of ten dollars and the costs of the prosecution, and, failing to do so, the marshal of the town took him into custody. He thereupon applied to the Honorable E. D. Eobertson, chancellor of the Fifth chancery district of Arkansas, for a writ of habeas corpus, alleging in his petition that his detention and restraint by the marshal wrere unlawful and wrong for the following reasons:\n\u201c(1) That the passage of said sections 2 and 3 of the ordinance aforesaid was ultra vires.\n\u201c(2) That said sections 2 and 3 of the said ordinance are null and void, and same are of no effect.\n\u201c(3) That, said sections 2 and 3 of said ordinance being ultra vires, invalid, null and void, the said mayor has no jurisdiction to render the judgment aforesaid.\u201d\nThe marshal responded by admitting that he held the petitioner in custody as alleged. Upon a hearing, no evidence being adduced, the chancellor denied the prayer of the petition. Was the ordinance void?\nThe statutes of this state invest municipal corporations with the \u201cpower to prevent injury or annoyance within the limits 'of the corporation from anything dangerous, offensive or unhealthy, and to cause any nuisance to be abated within the jurisdiction given to the board of health,\u201d that is to say, within the corporate limits and one mile beyond; and to make and publish such by-laws or ordinances as to them shall seem necessary to carry into effect this power, and as may be \u201cnecessary to provide for the safety, preserve the health, promote the prosperity and improve the morals, order, comfort and convenience of such corporations and the inhabitants thereof.\u201d Sand. & Ii. Dig., \u00a7\u00a7 5132, 5145 and 5147.\nThese statutes endow municipal corporations with power to prevent and abate nuisances, but they do not authorize the declaration of anything to be a nuisance which is not so in fact. Town of Arkadelphia v. Clark, 52 Ark. 23; Yates v. Milwaukee, 10 Wall. 497; 1 Dillon on Municipal Corporations (4th Ed.), \u00a7\u00a7 374, 379.\n\u201cThe authority to prevent and abate nuisances,\u201d saj^s Judge Dillon, \u201cis a sufficient foundation for ordinances to suppress and prohibit whatever is intrinsically and inevitably a nuisance. The authority to declare what is a nuisance is somewhat broader; but neither this nor the general authority mentioned in the last preceding sentence will justify the declaring of acts, avocations, or structures not injurious to health or property to be nuisances. Much must necessarily be left to the discretion of the municipal authorities, and their acts will not be judicially interfered with unless they are manifestly unreasonable and oppressive, or unwarrantably invade private rights, or clearly transcend the powers granted to them; in which ease the contemplated action may be prevented or the injuries caused redressed by appropriate suit or proceedings.\u201d 1 Dillon, Municipal Corporations (4th Ed.), \u00a7 379. Again he says, \u201cThis authority (the power to prevent and abate nuisances) and its summary exercise may be constitutionally conferred on the incorporated place, and it authorizes its council to act against that which comes within the legal notion of a nuisance ; but such power, conferred in general terms, cannot be taken to authorize the extra-judicial condemnation and destruction of that as a nuisance which in its nature, situation, or use, is not such.\u201d Id. \u00a7 374.\nIn \"Wood on Nuisances it is said: \u201cA nuisance, in the' ordinary sense in which the word is used, is anything that produces an annoyance \u2014 anything that disturbs one or is offensive; but in legal phraseology it is applied to that class of wrongs that arise from the unreasonable, unwarrantable or unlawful use by a person of his own property, real or personal, or from his own improper, indecent or unlawful personal conduct working an obstruction of, or injury to, a right of another or of the public, and producing such material annoyance, inconvenience, discomfort- or hurt that the law will presume a consequent damage.\u201d 1 Wood, Nuisances (3d Ed.), \u00a7 1.\nThe same author says: \u201cNuisances are either public or private. Public nuisances, strictly, are such as result from the violation of public rights, and producing no special injury to one more than another of the people, may be said to have a common effect, and to produce a common damage. Of this class are those intangible injuries that result from the immoral, indecent and unlawful acts of parties that become nuisances by reason of their deleterious influences upon the morals or well-being of society.\u201d Id. \u00a7 14.\nThere are two kinds of public nuisances. One is that class of aggravated wrongs or injuries which affect the \u201cmorality of mankind, and are in derogation of public morals and decency,\u201d and, being malum, in se, are nuisances irrespective of their location and results. The other is that class of acts, exercise of occupations or trades, and use of property which become nuisances by reason of their location or surroundings. To constitute a nuisance in the latter class, the act or thing complained of must be in a public place, or so extensive in its consequences as to have a common effect upon many, as distinguished from a few. Where it is in a city or town, where many are congregated and have a right to be, and produces material annoj'unee, inconvenience, discomfort, or injury to the residents in the vicinity, it is a public nuisance of the latter class.\nIt is said in Wood on Nuisances: \u201cMany kinds of business that would be regarded as a nuisance upon a street that is densely populated and much traveled, or that is occupied for business purposes of such a character as naturally make it what is called a thoroughfare, would not be such upon a less populous street, or one that is not so much used by the public. * * * Thus, a blacksmith shop would not for a moment be tolerated upon a principal street of a city in the vicinity of costly buildings and fashionable business places, except it were kept up and maintained in a way so as to produce no possible annoyance or injury; but, from the need-fulness of the business, it is tolerated upon streets in less important parts of the city, and the smoke and cinders arising therefrom, as well as the noisy reverberations from the heavy strokes of the sledgehammers on its numerous anvils in the prosecution of the business, is permitted, even without the aid of special ordinances.\u201d Sec. 21.\nIt is now well settled that \u201cloud, disagreeable noise alone, unaccompanied with smoke, noxious vapors or noisome smells, may create a nuisance, and be the subject of an action at law for damages, in equity for an injunction, or of an indictment as a public offense.\u201d Id. \u00a7 611. \u201cAny indecent exposure of one\u2019s person in a public place, in the presence of several persons, is a public nuisance, * * * because it shocks the moral sensibilities, outrages decency, and is offensive to those feelings of chastity that people of ordinary respectability entertain.\u201d Id. \u00a7 57. So, for the same reason, the exhibition in public of obscene pictures, prints, books or devices are common nuisances. Id. \u00a7\u00a7 65, 68.\nIn Nolin v. Mayor and Aldermen of Franklin, 4 Yerg. 163, the act incorporating the town of Franklin authorized the city council to enact and pass laws to prevent and remove nuisances. A law was passed by the council inflicting a penalty of five dollars on any person who exhibited a stud horse in the town. The court said: \u201cWas this a nuisance within the meaning of the act of incorporation? Keeping hogs in a market town has been so holden (Salk. 460); as are ale houses, gaming houses, brothels, booths and stages for rope dancers, mountebanks and the like. 1 Hawk. P. C. cb. 75, \u00a7 6. The exhibition of these in the streets would be clearly a nuisance; and we think as certainly showing and keeping a stud horse in the town is. The corporation law was warranted by the charter.\u201d\nAs a rule, a jack is kept for one purpose onty, and that is, the propagation of his own species and mules. He has a loud, discordant bra}q and, as counsel say, frequently \u201cmakes himself heard, regardless of hearers, occasions or solemnities.\u201d He is not a desirable neighbor. The purpose for which he is kept, his frequent and discordant brays, and the association connected with him bring the keeping of him in a populous city or town \u201cwithin the legal notion of a nuisance.\u201d So far as the facts appear to us, section 2 of the ordinance in question is valid.\nIn this case we cannot inquire into the regularity of the proceedings of the mayor\u2019s court. The writ of habeas corpus cannot he legally converted into a writ of error. \"The great object of the writ is the liberation of those who may be imprisoned without sufficient cause, and to deliver them from unlawful custody. It is not the function of this writ to inquire into or correct errors. But its object is to require the person who answers it to show upon what authority be detains the prisoner. If the person restrained of his liberty is in custody under process, nothing will be inquired into, by virtue of the writ, beyond the validity of the process upon its face, and the jurisdiction of the court by which it was issued.\u201d State v. Neel, 48 Ark. 289.\nJudgment affirmed.",
        "type": "majority",
        "author": "Battle, J."
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "\u25a0J. L. Patterson, for petitioner.",
      "J. Emmett Smith and George W. Williams, for Town of Wynne, in reply."
    ],
    "corrections": "",
    "head_matter": "Ex parte Foote.\nOpinion delivered November 30, 1901.\n1. Municipal Ordinance \u2014 Nuisance.\u2014Under Sand. & H. Dig., \u00a7\u00a7 5132, 5145, investing municipal corporations with power to prevent annoyances within their limits, to cause any nuisance to be abated', and to make and publish such ordinances as shall seem necessary to carry such power into effect, a town may pass an ordinance making it unlawful to stand a stallion or jackass within its limits and prohibiting the keeping of any jackass within its limits in the hearing of the populace. (Page 14.)\n2. Habeas Corpus \u2014 Function of Writ. \u2014 On application for habeas corpus, if the person restrained of his liberty is in custody under process, nothing will be inquired into, by virtue of the writ, beyond the validity of the process upon its face and the jurisdiction of the court by which it was issued. (Page 17.)\nCertiorari to Cross- Chancery Court.\nEdward D. Robertson, Chancellor.\nAffirmed.\n\u25a0J. L. Patterson, for petitioner.\nThe constitutionality of an act under which a party has been convicted may be inquired into by habeas corpus. 3 Am. St. 901; 23 Am. S.t. 110; 31 Am. St. 94; 100 IJ. S. 371; 58 Am. St. 576; Church, Iiab. Cor. \u00a7 83; 27 Ark. 467. Municipal ordinances must be confined to those objects over which power is expressly conferred by charter. 27 Ark. 467; 41 Ark. 526; 10 Wall. 497; 52 Ark. 23; 7 Am. St. 640. Residents in towns and cities must accept the inconveniences incident thereto, so long as they are not positive nuisances. 5 Am. St. 524; 64 Am. St. 516; 44 S. W. 353. The ordinance is void for uncertainty. 59 Am. St. 457; 61 'id. 45; 45 Ark. 158.\nJ. Emmett Smith and George W. Williams, for Town of Wynne, in reply.\nThe council had the power to pass the ordinances. Sand. & H. Dig. \u00a7\u00a7 5132, 5145, 5147. The only other question which can arise in habeas corpus is the jurisdiction of the court. 6 la. 79. The matter complained of was a legal nuisance. 1 Bish. Cr. Law, \u00a7 1112. Mere error cannot be reviewed on habeas corpus. 1 Dill. 271; 93 U. S. 18; 118 U. S. 162, 166; 159 H. S. 70."
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