151 Ark. 392 | Ark. | 1922
Act No. 422 of the Acts of 1911, sec. 5249 of Crawford & Moses’ Digest, provides in part as follows: “The county court shall have the power to open new roads and to make such changes in old roads as they may deem necessary and proper,” etc. Certain parties, acting under the authority of the above statute, petitioned the Randolph County Court for the establishment of a certain road fifty feet in width in said county, which proposed road extended across the lands of the appellant. The appellant was made a party to the proceedings and objected to the jurisdiction of the court and moved to dismiss the petition. His motion was overruled, the petition granted, and an order made establishing the proposed road and directing the overseer of the district in which the road was situated to open and construct the same. Immediately after making the order establishing the road, the court adjourned sine die, and the county judge and road overseer were threatening to carry the order into effect by entering upon the lands of the appellant for the purpose of opening and constructing the road.
On July 21, 1919, appellant instituted this action in the Randolph Chancery Court, setting up in his complaint in substance the above facts and alleging that the county court was without jurisdiction to make the order, for the reason that the statute, supra, under which the petition was filed and the order made, had no force or effect in Bandolph County for reasons set'up in the complaint. The appellant asked that the appellees, the county judge, road-overseer, and others, he enjoined from carrying into effect the order of the county court. The appellees entered a general demurrer to the complaint, which the court overruled; hut, on a trial of the issues raised by the complaint, answer and cross-complaint, the court entered a decree dismissing the complaint for want of equity, from which decree is this appeal.
The decree of the court is correct. The county court had jurisdiction of the subject-matter of opening up the road petitioned for. The appellant, on his own motion, was made a party to the petition. Carter v. Randolph County, 146 Ark. 221. Under the statute above mentioned, landowners may appeal from judgments of the county court within six months. The remedy, therefore, of the appellant against the order of the county court, of which he now complains and seeks to have set aside and declared of no effect, was by appeal; or, if the court was proceeding without jurisdiction, the appellant could have prohibited its action by prohibition. Certainly the appellant’s remedy, if he was entitled to any, was adequate and complete -at law. “Equity will not restrain the attempted enforcement of a void judgment where the remedy at law is complete.” Knight v. Cresswell, 82 Ark. 330 and cases there cited; Ex parte Christian, 23 Ark. 641; Fuller v. T. M. Dry Goods Co., 58 Ark. 314; Church v. Gallic, 75 Ark. 507.
The decree is correct. Affirmed.