Bridewell v. Ward

72 Ark. 187 | Ark. | 1904

Battue, J.

On the 16th of December, 1902, C. A. Bridewell and others filed in the county court of Hempstead county twenty petitions, containing in all 848 different names, praying for an order prohibiting the sale of liquor within three miles of the Missionary Baptist church, situate on lot 1, in block 55, in the town of Hope, Hempstead county, Arkansas. These petitions were securely fastened together, and filed at the same time. Shortly after the filing, and on the same day, Ward & Key appeared and asked leave to file a remonstrance, which was granted, and they did so. It was then discovered that there were five other petitions of H. J. F. Garrett and others, containing 144 other names, which were not filed, and C. A. Bridewell and others asked leave to withdraw their petitions for the purpose of filing them with the five. The court took this motion under advisement until the next day, and on that day the court denied the motion. Then C. A. Bride-well and others asked leave to file the petitions of Garrett and others, and make the same a part of, and an amendment to, their petition. This motion the court also denied, announcing that any persons might withdraw their names from the .petition, if they desired to do so, which it had no right to do. The court then ordered the petitions of Garrett and others to be filed as a separate petition, and they were filed, and thereupon Bridewell and others asked that all the petitions be consolidated, because they were asking for the same relief, and the matter in controversy in both cases was the same. This motion was also denied. On the 29th of December, 1902, Leon H. Williams and others filed their petition, and Bridewell and others asked that it be made a part of their petition, which the court refused to allow to be done. All these petitions were exactly alike, with no difference except the signatures at the end of the same.

After the filing of the last petition the county court took up and considered the petition of C. A. Bridewell and others, and, refusing to consider the petitions of Garrett and Williams and others as a part thereof, found that they did not contain the names of a majority of the adult inhabitants residing within three miles of the Missionary Baptist church in Hop.e, and denied the same. Petitioners appealed to the circuit court, where they renewed their motions, which the court denied, and followed the course taken by the county court, and rendered the same judgment; and petitioners appealed to this court.

The question in this case is, should all the petitions have been heard as one?

Section 4877 of Sandels & Hill’s Digest, as amended, under which the petitions in this case were filed, is in part as follows: ■“Whenever the adult inhabitants residing within three miles of any school house, academy, college, university or other institution of learning, or of any church house in this state, shall desire to prohibit the sale or giving away of any vinous, spirituous or intoxicating liquors,” etc., “and a majority of such inhabitants shall petition the county court of the county wherein such institution of learning or church house is situated, praying that the sale or giving away of the intoxicating liquors and alcohol enumerated in the premises be prohibited within three miles of any such institution of learning or church house, said county court, upon being satisfied that a majority of such inhabitants have signed such petition, shall make an order in accordance with the prayer thereof,” etc.

The statute, stated in a few words, provides that whenever a majority of the adult inhabitants residing within a proposed district of a certain description shall petition the county court, praying that the sale of intoxicating liquors be prohibited in such district, an order to that effect shall be made. The petitions in this case asked, for such order. They were filed before the county court undertook to consider or act upon any of them, and the-court was urged by the petitioners, all concurring, to act upon them as a whole. If they contained the names of the majority of the adult inhabitants in the district, they complied with the-statute; the majority petitioned the county court; and the order should have been made. The fact that there were many of them, and that they were filed at different times, did not change their prayer or lessen, the number of petitioners. The filing of the-remonstrance made no such change, nor did it cut off the right of petition. They were in effect only one petition, and were evidently intended to be used as one. There was but one question for the court to decide, and that was, did a majority of the adult inhabitants residing in the proposed district sign the petitions on file, or any of them? If so, it was the imperative dut)r of the court to make the order prohibiting the sale of liquor within the district in accordance with the statute.

Reverse, and remand with instructions to the court to-proceed in accordance with this opinion.

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