Lanier v. Norfleet

Decision Date11 December 1922
Docket Number40
Citation245 S.W. 498,156 Ark. 216
PartiesLANIER v. NORFLEET
CourtArkansas Supreme Court

Appeal from Crittenden Circuit Court, First Division; W. W. Bandy Judge; affirmed.

STATEMENT OF FACTS.

On the 28th day of August, 1922, W. J. Lanier instituted an action against M. B. Norfleet, Sr., in the Crittenden Circuit Court to contest his nomination for senator in the Thirty-second Senatorial District of the State at the primary election of the Democratic party held on August 8, 1922.

The specific grounds of the contest were stated in the complaint and need not be repeated here, because they are not necessary to a decision of the issue raised by the appeal.

With the complaint was filed an instrument in writing, signed by ten reputable citizens of Crittenden County, Ark., who are members of the Democratic party, to the effect that the statements in the complaint were true to the best of the knowledge, information and belief of each of the subscribers thereto. Then follow the signatures of the ten persons, and it purports to have been subscribed and sworn to before O. F Templeton, notary public.

Among other grounds, the defendant, Norfleet, moved to dismiss the complaint because O. F. Templeton was not at the time a duly commissioned and acting notary public. On this point the case was tried upon an agreed statement of facts as follows:

"That O. F. Templeton was formerly a citizen of Clay County, and was granted a commission as notary

public by the Governor of the State of Arkansas while residing there. That subsequently the said O. F. Templeton moved to Crittenden County, Arkansas. That in the year 1921 he assessed his personal property in Crittenden County for taxation; that he paid his poll- tax due for the year 1921 in Crittenden County, Arkansas, and that he voted in Jasper Township in Crittenden County, Arkansas, in the primary election held August 8, 1922, and since his removal to Crittenden County he has continuously resided there and has continuously exercised the duties of notary public under the commission as issued to him in Clay County, Arkansas, and that he has received no additional appointment as notary public in any county in the State of Arkansas from the Governor, and that his term of office under his Clay County appointment expires February 24, 1923; by the terms of that appointment, and as such notary public, under the Clay County commission, he took the affidavits of the affiants to the affidavit supporting the complaint filed in this cause. That O. F. Templeton has filed no bond in Crittenden County, where he has exercised the duties of notary public, but immediately after the execution of the Clay County commission the said O F. Templeton filed in the office of the Circuit Clerk of Clay County, Arkansas, a bond conditioned as required by the statute. That said O. F. Templeton is now and has been since his appointment single and unmarried, but the family of his father reside and are citizens of Clay County, Arkansas, and that said Templeton has made trips to Clay County, visiting the said family of his father."

The court held that O. F. Templeton was not a notary public at the time he attempted to take the affidavits in question, and dismissed the complaint for want of jurisdiction.

From the judgment rendered the plaintiff, W. J. Lanier, has duly prosecuted an appeal to this court.

Judgment affirmed.

Berry & Wheeler, W. J. Lanier and Frank Berry, for appellant.

1. Templeton was a notary public de jure, and there was no defect in the affidavit. From territorial days up to 1901 the office of necessity was a county office. See Law of Arkansas Territory, 1835, p. 438; English, Digest 1848, p. 752; Acts 1848, p. 32; Constitution, 1868, art. VI, § 16; Acts 1874, p. 61. But the Legislature of 1901, Acts 1901, p. 148, provided "that the powers and authority of notaries public shall be coextensive with the State for the purpose of swearing witness and taking depositions" and this was further enlarged by the act of 1905, Acts 1905, p. 687. 107 Ark. 272; 84 Ark. 537; Const. 1874, art. 19, § 4.

2. If he ceased to be a notary public de jure when he removed from the county, he was, at any rate, a notary public de facto, and his acts cannot be questioned collaterally, as is attempted here. 38 Ark. 150; Id. 571; 49 Ark. 439; 55 Ark. 81; 38 Conn. 449; 9 Am. Rep. 409; 132 Ark. 58; 65 Ark. 343; 129 Ark. 286; 133 Ark. 277; 147 Ark. 178; 134 Ark. 535; 42 Ark. 46.

Rudolph Isom, J. W. House, Jr., L. C. Going and S. H. Mann, for appellee.

The filing of the affidavit was jurisdictional. C. & M. Digest, § 3772; 136 Ark. 217; 206 S.W. 131. Templeton vacated his office of notary public by removal from Clay County. Art. 19, § 4, Const. 1874. It is a county office. C. & M. Digest, § 7969. That it was the legislative intention that only persons residing in the county were eligible for this office is made clear by §§ 7976 and 7975, Id. And the last named section does away with the contention that he was still a de facto officer, even though not such de jure. Removal for temporary purposes is protected by the Constitution, art. 19, § 7. But here the removal was permanent.

Where a vacancy is created by statute a judicial determination is not necessary. 140 Am. St. Rep. 181; 113 Id. 512 and note 517; 100 Cal. 537; 131 Ky. 384; 22 R. C. L., p. 438, § 93, and p. 256, § 264; 54 P. 805; 61 A. 172; 27 Tex.App. 558; 141 Mich. 31; 104 N.W. 324.

OPINION

HART, J. (after stating the facts).

Sec., 3772 of Crawford & Moses' Digest confers a right of action on any candidate to contest the certification of vote as made by the county central committee, and provides that the action shall be brought in the circuit court within any county in the circuit or district wherein any of the wrongful acts occurred, if the contest is for a circuit or district office. It provides further that the complaint shall be supported by the affidavits of at least ten reputable citizens, within a designated number of days.

This court has held that the filing of the affidavits in the manner prescribed by the statute is a prerequisite to the exercise of jurisdiction by the court in a contested election case brought under the act. Logan v. Russell, 136 Ark. 217, 206 S.W. 131, and Ferguson v. Montgomery, 148 Ark. 83, 229 S.W. 30.

This makes it necessary to decide whether or not O. F. Templeton was a notary public de jure or de facto, at the time the instruments in question purport to have been subscribed and sworn to before him.

This court has held that a notary public is a public officer. Sonfield v. Thompson, 42 Ark. 46, and Gray v. Hodges, 107 Ark. 272, 154 S.W. 506.

After the admission of the State in 1836, by an act of the General Assembly of November 23, 1837, it was provided that the Governor should, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, appoint one notary public in each county. Revised Statutes of Ark., p. 588. Sec. 6 of the same act provides that if any notary die, resign, or remove from the county, or be removed from office, his record book and all his public papers shall be delivered to the clerk of the county court to be delivered to his successor.

The Legislature of 1848 amended the act so that the county court of each county might appoint one notary public. Acts of 1848, p. 32.

The Legislature of 1874 provided that the Governor may appoint a convenient number of notaries public for each county, who shall be citizens of the county for which they are appointed, and who shall file in the office of the recorder of deeds for the county a bond to the State, for the faithful discharge of their duties, in the sum of $ 1,000 with security to be approved by the clerk of the circuit court of the county, and who shall hold office for the term of four years. Crawford & Moses' Digest, § 7969.

The Legislature of 1905 amended the act to give a notary public power coextensive with the State for the purpose of swearing witnesses, taking affidavits, etc. Sec. 7970a.

Section 7975 is the same provision as that quoted above as section 6 of the Revised Statutes.

It is contended that, under these sections of the statute, a notary public is a State officer, and, although from a particular county, he may remove to another county in the State and still continue to be a notary public until his term of office expires. In making this contention, counsel lay special stress on the fact that, under the statutes, a notary public may take affidavits or acknowledgments in any county in the State. We cannot agree with counsel in this contention. Whatever the extent of the territorial jurisdiction conferred upon him, he is an officer of the county. One purpose contemplated by the statute, as expressly shown by its language, is that the Governor may appoint a convenient number of notaries for each county. The same section further provides that they shall be citizens of the county for which they are appointed and file a bond with the recorder of deeds for the county.

Sec. 7975, which, as we have already seen, was a part of the Revised Statutes, provides that, if any notary die, resign, or remove from the county, or be removed from office, his record book and all his public papers shall be delivered to the county clerk. All these provisions clearly indicate that it was the intention of the Legislature for a notary public to be a county officer, and that his permanent removal should work an abandonment or forfeiture of his office. This is in accord with the provisions of art. 19, sec. 4 of our present Constitution, which reads as follows:

"All civil officers for the State at large shall reside within the State, and all district, county and township officers within their respective districts, counties, and townships, and shall keep...

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9 cases
  • Brown v. Anderson
    • United States
    • Arkansas Supreme Court
    • 23 Diciembre 1946
    ...Arkansas. This affidavit is required by Section 4738, Pope's Digest; and we have held that it is jurisdictional. See Lanier v. Norfleet, 156 Ark. 216, 245 S.W. 498; and Kirk v. Hartlieb, 193 Ark. 37, 97 S.W.2d 434. The trial court found that the affiants were qualified electors and members ......
  • Brown v. Anderson
    • United States
    • Arkansas Supreme Court
    • 23 Diciembre 1946
    ...facto officer in the county to which he moves. We do not have any such situation as that in the case at bar. So, as previously stated, Lanier v. Norfleet affords support to the appellee. The case at bar presents a situation similar in many respects to that which existed in Trussell v. Fish,......
  • Thompson v. Self
    • United States
    • Arkansas Supreme Court
    • 21 Noviembre 1938
    ... ... affidavit, nor is there any question that the officer ... attaching her jurat had that authority. It was held in the ... case of Lanier v. Norfleet, 156 Ark. 216, ... 245 S.W. 498, that the supporting affidavit required by the ... primary election law may be made before a duly ... ...
  • Morrow v. Strait
    • United States
    • Arkansas Supreme Court
    • 31 Octubre 1932
    ... ... of the entire State, and not in some political subdivision ...          The ... case of Lanier v. Norfleet, 156 Ark. 216, ... 245 S.W. 498, involved a contest over the nomination for ... State senator, a State officer elected by a particular ... ...
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