Court Opinion

ID: 7361428
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-27 23:04:18.571224+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:20:39.203280
License: Public Domain

TYSON, J.
The judgment from which this appeal is prosecuted was rendered by the circuit court of Elmore county on the 7th day of March, 1904. The record discloses that the court convened on the first Monday in March, it being the 7th day of said month. This was the time fixed by the Act creating the fifteenth judicial circuit and the Act known as the “Lusk Bill.” — General Act, pp. 488-566. Both of these acts have been recently declared to be unconstitutional. — Board of Revenue of Jefferson County v. Crow, 37 So. Rep. 469; State ex rel. v. Sayre (in MS.)
The result of these decisions is that the county of Elmore was .never legally detached from the counties composing the fifth judicial circuit and that it has all along remained in that circuit. So then, the time fixed for the convening of the spring term of the circuit court in that county was and is on the 8th Monday after the fourth Monday in February, which, in the year 1904, was Monday the 18th day of April.
We have here then a judgment rendered at a time not appointed by law for the holding of the court. When this is the case, the judgment is void for want of jurisdiction. Ex parte Branch, 63 Ala. 383; Davis v. State, 46 Ala. 80 and cases there cited; Johnson v. State, 37 So. Rep. 421; Walker v. State, 139 Ala. 56.
It is true, in Lewis v. The Intendant and Town Council of Gainesville, 7 Ala. 85, it was, in effect, said that *627such judgments were not void and, therefore, could not be attacked collaterally, but in Wightman v. Karnser, 20 Ala. 455, it was pointed out that this was dictum, and was there repudiated.
Appeal dismissed.
McClellan, C. J., Haralson, Dowdell, Simpson and Denson, J.J., concuring.