148 S.W.2d 324 | Ark. | 1941
Lands belonging to H.E. Cockerham, J.W. Brown, and A.J. Gregory were condemned for highway purposes August 5, 1940, by order of the Ashley county court. The state highway commission was petitioner.1 Other lands not involved in this controversy were included in the judgment of condemnation.
October 24, 1940, Cockerham, Brown, and Gregory presented separate claims for compensation. The county court order in each case is: "Disallowed for reason of insufficient funds from any and all sources with which to pay said claims."
Claimants applied to chancery court. Injunctions were issued November 18. Prayers of the complaints were that Ashley county "or any person" be restrained from entering the property.
The highway commission has asked this court to prohibit the chancery court from issuing any order interfering with the rights it claims to have under the county court judgment.
Three propositions are presented. First, it is insisted the decree is void because the highway commission, being (as it is alleged) a necessary party, was not served with process. Second. It is urged that the county *929 court judgment is not subject to review by the chancery court. Third. It is urged that the decree is in response to a collateral attack on the judgment of the county court, and since error does not appear on the face of the record, the chancellor was without power to enjoin.
First. — We do not think act 147, approved February 17, 1859,2 is applicable. In Sloan v. Lawrence County,
Second. — Petitioner concedes that the chancery court had jurisdiction of the subject-matter, but thinks that in the absence of error on the face of the record in county court remedy of the landowners was by appeal to circuit court, and that in the special circumstances shown the chancery court was without power to issue *930
the order. This was decided adversely to petitioner's contentions in Independence County v. Lester,
Third. — It is finally argued that the injunction is predicated upon a collateral attack on the judgment of the county court. We do not agree that it was. We think, however, that the decree goes beyond what the court intended. Apparently it holds that the county court judgment was void. This case is distinguishable from Independence County v. Lester. There it was said:
"Under the facts of the record it appears that the county court has condemned appellee's land and is proceeding to appropriate same for a state highway without providing any compensation to appellee for damages, and it appears that the county court claims that it has no authority to make such compensation [because revenues were exhausted]. If so, as already stated, it had no power to condemn, and its order to that effect is absolutely void. Therefore it is obvious that the county court and all those who claim to be acting under authority of such order, in appropriating and using appellee's land for a highway, are doing so without any right whatever."
In the statement of facts it is said: "The county court, according to the pleadings and the agreed statement of facts in the record, had condemned, and the county judge was proceeding to use, appellee's land for a highway, and, at the same time,4 refused to allow appellee's claim for compensation on the ground that the court was without authority to allow the claim because the fiscal year had expired and the revenues were exhausted."
It will be observed that the opinion states there was condemnation when the facts showed that "at the same time" there was refusal to pay. Certainly the court had no right to condemn and at the same time disallow compensation for the reason stated.
The petition will be treated as an appeal and the order will be that the court's action in granting the *931 injunctions is affirmed, but the construction (given the finding of the chancery court that the county court judgment was void) will be that under the decree those enjoined can not take the land until appellees have been compensated.