The Honorable Jim Hill State Representative 100 Center Street Nashville, AR 71852-3821
Dear Representative Hill:
This is in response to your request for an opinion on two unrelated questions. The first involves the resurfacing of a private driveway. The question posed is whether the county can resurface a private drive with an "oil and peas" surfacing. Your second question involves A.C.A. §
With regard to your first question, it is generally held that county labor and equipment cannot be used to make improvements to private property. See Pogue v. Cooper,
It thus appears that as a general matter, the use of county employees and equipment to surface a private drive would be unlawful.1
In response to your second question concerning the "uniform allowance" for the sheriff's department, I am unable to state with certainty that the auditors are incorrect in concluding that this does not include hand guns and ammunition. The relevant Code provision states as follows:
(a) Upon request by the county sheriff, the county quorum court may approve and appropriate a uniform allowance for the sheriff and employees of the sheriff's department in lieu of reimbursement for actual uniform expenses.
(b) Claims for this uniform allowance shall be processed and paid in accordance with the laws of the State of Arkansas. However, an itemized listing or numbered invoice is not required for payment of this uniform allowance.
A.C.A. §
Thus, the "uniform allowance" is paid as a lump sum, with no required documentation other than the presentment of a claim. If approved by the county, the allowance is to be paid regardless of actual expenses incurred.
The question to be decided is whether the legislature intended for sheriff's department employees to furnish their own weapons and related equipment with this "uniform allowance." The question is unclear because the term "uniform" is not defined. Webster's Seventh New CollegiateDictionary 969 (1972) defines "uniform" as "dress of a distinctive design or fashion worn by members of a particular group and serving as a means of identification." It is thus difficult to conclude, based upon the general meaning of the term, that "uniform" extends beyond the "distinctive dress" worn by sheriff's deputies. See The Merriam-WebsterDictionary 751 (Pocket Ed. 1974). Nor has my research yielded any other helpful authority in this regard. And it is well-established that words in a statute must be given their ordinary and usually accepted meaning in the absence of any indication of a different legislative intent. SeeThompson v. Younts,
In my opinion, therefore, in the absence of legislative clarification, it may successfully be contended that weapons and ammunition are not reasonably encompassed within the term "uniform allowance" in A.C.A. §
The foregoing opinion, which I hereby approve, was prepared by Assistant Attorney General Elisabeth A. Walker.
Sincerely,
WINSTON BRYANT Attorney General
WB:EAW/cyh
