4 Ark. 431 | Ark. | 1842
By the Court,
The record and assignment of errors present two questions, upon which the plaintiffs in error mainly rely to reverse the judgment against them, to wit: 1st, Did the original summons, issued to a county other than that in which the Court was held, and there executed upon all the parties sued, impose upon them a legal obligation to respond to the action, or subject them to the consequences of a judgment by default, upon their failure to do so? 2d, Does the contract, as set forth in the pleadings, warrant the judgment for interest, at the rate of ten per cent, per annum, as pronounced in this case.' t
The first question invokes an inquiry into the power of the Legislature to authorize the running of process from the Circuit Court of one county into a different county or circuit, and the execution thereof in the latter, if the Legislature possesses this power, the answer to the first question must be in toe affirmative; otherwise, in the negative. The Legislature, by statute, approved March 3d, 1838, entitled “ an act supplemental to the act incorporating the Sank of the State of Arkansas,” enacted, that “ all suits brought by the Bank, or any of its branches, on any bonds, notes, or bilis, discounted, negotiable, or made payable at or in said Bank, or any of its branches, may be brought and proceeded in to final judgment, in the county in which such Bank or branch may be situated; and the,writ or writs may be directed to, and executed in, any county in which the defendant or defendants may be found; and execution may be issued to any county in the State, on any judgment in favor of said Bank, or any of its branches;” and by a subsequent provision of {¡he same statute, declared that “the provisions of the preceding sections shall be construed to include, and extend to, the ileal Estate Bank of the State of Arkansas.” These enactments, if valid, unquestionably confer upon the Banks an election to sue their debtors in the county in which they or their branches arc situated, and to cause process to be issued to, and executed in, any couniy where the defendants may be found, when the action, as in this case, is founded upon such obligations as those mentioned in the statute. But the plaintiffs in error insist, that these statutory provisions are repugnant to the provisions of the constitution of this State, and therefore void. This objection, as understood by the Court, is based upon the idea that the jurisdiction of the circuits is restricted, by the constitution, to cases where the party sued may be found or served with process, within the territorial limit, or civil division of the State, to which the judicial power of the Court in which the suit is instituted, is limited, and within which it must be exercised. But, in our judgment, no such restriction can be found in the constitution. That instrument, it is true, defines and prescribes the respective jurisdiction of the different judicial tribunals thereby ordained, so far as it depends upon the subject-matter to be adjudicated, and in some respect prescribes the territorial divisions within which each tribunal shall escrciso the jurisdiction with which it is invested. But, in respect to the power of the courts to issue process from one county or circuit, or other civil division of the State, into a different one, as well as the jurisdiction of the different tribunals over the person of any defendant, .or any other person whom, in the administration of justice, it may be necessary to call before them,' the constitution is silent, and therefore the power of prescribing their respective jurisdiction in this respect, is left with the Legislature. And although the legislative department dees not possess the power of divesting the judicial tribunals of any of the respective jurisdiction or powers with which the constitution invests them, (except in cases where such power is especially granted to the Legislature by that instrument), yet that department of the government, as it is not prohibited by the constitution from so doing, must, from the theory and nature of the government, possess the power to make such enactments as the one in question, because'It neither infringes nor divests any right vested by the'constitution in either the Courts or the people, but simply confers upon the corporations therein named, certain specified privileges, which they could not otherwise enjoy. It is a statute, therefore, by which certain privileges are granted, but inasmuch as the privileges so granted do not clivest or infringe any right vested or secured by the constitution, the provisions of the statute in question, are not, in our opinion, in conflict with, or repugnant to, any of the provisions of the constitution; and therefore wo consider the writ, and the execution thereof, authorized by law, and that the parties therein named as defendants, were bound thereby to answer the action; and, upon their failure to do so, within the time prescribed by law, judgment could be legally pronounced against them.
But, before we dismiss this subject, it may be proper'to state, that we do not consider this, or any oí’nér question analogous to it in principle, as involved, or having been decided by, this Cfourt, in either of the cases cited in the argument, and relied upon by the plaintiffs in error. In the case of Dillard vs. Noel, 2 Ark. R. 449, the Legislature was held to be incompetent to divest the county courts of a jurisdiction conferred upon them bj the constitution; and in the case of The Auditor vs. Davies et al., 2 Ark. Rep. 494, this Court decided, that, without statutory authority, the circuit courts could not, for the purpose of acquiring jurisdiction of a cause, run original process beyond the limit of their territorial jurisdiction. In the case of The State vs. Ashley et al., 1 Ark. Rep. 279, it was held, that a proceeding by information, in the nature of a quo warranto, differed essentially from a proceeding by writ of quo warranto, and that this Court could, under the constitution, exercise original jurisdiction over the latter, but not over the former. In two of these cases, the Legislature had attempted to divest a jurisdiction or right conferred by the. constitution. In the other, the Circuit Court, for the purpose of acquiring jurisdiction of a case, caused original process to be run, and executed at a place without the limit of its territorial jurisdiction, without any statutory provision, or other law authorizing it, and expressly in violation of the law conferring jurisdiction of suits against the State, upon the Circuit Court of Pulaski county. From this simple statement of the questions adjudicated by this Court, in the cases cited, so far as they could, by possibility1', be supposed to bear any analogy to the question under consideration, it appears manifestly, that they are essentially different from it, and bear a very slight analogy, if any, to it.
There are other objections to the writ, urged by the plaintiffs in error, but they are not, in our opinion, such as invalidate it, or require from us any further notice.
The interest adjudged to the defendant in error, is expressly given by the 3d section of the statute approved March 3d, 1838, referred to above, which declares, that, “if any bond, bill, or note, discounted or negotiated in or by the Bank of the State of Arkansas, or any of its branches, shall not be paid at maturity, or, on being protested, or on suit being brought, interest at the rate of ten per centum per an-num, shall, thereafter, be collected and recovered, notwithstanding no rate of interest shall be expressed in such bond, note, or bill.” These provisions, by another section of the same statute, are expressly declared to include, and extend to, the Real Estate Bank, and the'y are, in the opinion of this Court, expressed in the case of McFarland et al. vs. The. Bank of the State of Arkansas, at the present term, not repealed by the act in the Revised Statutes of this State, relative to interest, or otherwise; and therefore the judgment for interest is authorized by law.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.