Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1901

Ford v. State

Ford v. State
Supreme Court of Arkansas · Decided October 12, 1901 · Wood
69 Ark. 550; 64 S.W. 879; 1901 Ark. LEXIS 115

Ford v. State

Opinion of the Court

Wood, J.

Petitioners, Ford and Beatty, were each adjudged guilty of contempt of court by the chancery court of Mississippi county; said contempt consisting in disobedience to a process of injunction issued by said court. One was fined in the sum of $500, and the other in the sum of $100. This proceeding is by certio-rari to quash the judgment, on the ground that the punishment imposed was in excess of the court’s jurisdiction. Art. 7, § 36, of the constitution is as follows: “The general assembly shall have power to regulate by law the punishment of contempts not committed in the presence or hearing of the courts or in disobedience of process.” This constitutional provision is couched in such strong affirmative terms as to clearly evince a purpose to limit the power of the legislature to regulate the punishment of contempts to eases where the contempt is not committed in the presence or hearing of the courts, or in disobedience of process. Therefore the legislature, in attempting to prescribe punishment for a contempt committed by disobedience of the court’s process, passed the bounds set by the fundamental law.

Affirmed.

Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.