Tracy Johnson, Gina Rambo, James R. "Rick" Bright, Greg Moon, and Karen Pryor v. Carol Wright, Individually and in Her Official Capacity as Past Chairman and Current and Past Member of the Eureka Springs City Advertising and Promotion Commission Jeff Carter, Individually and in His Official Capacity as a Member and Current Chairman of the Eureka Springs City Advertising and Promotion Commission James Devito, Individually and in His Official Capacity as a Member [Of] the Eureka Springs City Advertising and Promotion Commission Melissa Green, Individually and in Her Official Capacity as a Member [Of] the Eureka Springs City Advertising and Promotion Commission Harry Meyer, Individually and in His Official Capacity as a Member [Of] the Eureka Springs City Advertising and Promotion Commission Patrick Burnett, Individually and Ostensibly in His Official Capacity as an Apparent Member [Of] the Eureka Springs City Advertising and Promotion Commission The Eureka Springs City Advertising and Promotion Commission The City of Eureka Springs, Arkansas Robert D. "butch" Berry, Individually and as Mayor of the City of Eureka Springs, Arkansas Kim Stryker, Individually and in Her Official Capacity as Chief Administrative Assistant to Mayor Butch Berry State Auto Mutual Insurance Company And Philadelphia Indemnity Insurance Company , 2022 Ark. 48 ( 2022 )


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  •                      Cite as 
    2022 Ark. 48
    SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS
    No.   CV-21-434
    Opinion Delivered:   March 10, 2022
    TRACY JOHNSON, GINA RAMBO,
    JAMES R. “RICK” BRIGHT, GREG
    MOON, AND KAREN PRYOR          APPEAL FROM THE CARROLL
    APPELLANTS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    [NO. 08WCV-21-19]
    V.
    HONORABLE CHARLES SCOTT
    CAROL WRIGHT, INDIVIDUALLY     JACKSON, JUDGE
    AND IN HER OFFICIAL CAPACITY
    AS PAST CHAIRMAN AND
    CURRENT AND PAST MEMBER OF AFFIRMED.
    THE EUREKA SPRINGS CITY
    ADVERTISING AND PROMOTION
    COMMISSION; JEFF CARTER,
    INDIVIDUALLY AND IN HIS
    OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS A MEMBER
    AND CURRENT CHAIRMAN OF
    THE EUREKA SPRINGS CITY
    ADVERTISING AND PROMOTION
    COMMISSION; JAMES DEVITO,
    INDIVIDUALLY AND IN HIS
    OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS A MEMBER
    [OF] THE EUREKA SPRINGS CITY
    ADVERTISING AND PROMOTION
    COMMISSION; MELISSA GREEN,
    INDIVIDUALLY AND IN HER
    OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS A MEMBER
    [OF] THE EUREKA SPRINGS CITY
    ADVERTISING AND PROMOTION
    COMMISSION; HARRY MEYER,
    INDIVIDUALLY AND IN HIS
    OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS A MEMBER
    [OF] THE EUREKA SPRINGS CITY
    ADVERTISING AND PROMOTION
    COMMISSION; PATRICK BURNETT,
    INDIVIDUALLY AND OSTENSIBLY
    IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS AN
    APPARENT MEMBER [OF] THE
    EUREKA SPRINGS CITY
    ADVERTISING AND PROMOTION
    COMMISSION; THE EUREKA
    SPRINGS CITY ADVERTISING AND
    PROMOTION COMMISSION; THE
    CITY OF EUREKA SPRINGS,
    ARKANSAS; ROBERT D. “BUTCH”
    BERRY, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS
    MAYOR OF THE CITY OF EUREKA
    SPRINGS, ARKANSAS; KIM
    STRYKER, INDIVIDUALLY AND IN
    HER OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS CHIEF
    ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT TO
    MAYOR BUTCH BERRY; STATE
    AUTO MUTUAL INSURANCE
    COMPANY; AND PHILADELPHIA
    INDEMNITY INSURANCE
    COMPANY
    APPELLEES
    COURTNEY RAE HUDSON, Associate Justice
    Appellants Tracy Johnson, Gina Rambo, James R. “Rick” Bright, Greg Moon, and
    Karen Pryor appeal the Carroll County Circuit Court’s order denying their motion for an
    emergency injunction that sought the removal of three members of the Eureka Springs City
    Advertising and Promotion Commission (CAPC). For reversal, appellants argue that (1)
    appellee Carol Wright’s appointment to the CAPC violated article 19, section 3, of the
    Arkansas Constitution, and (2) the appointments of appellees Melissa Green and Harry
    Meyer to the CAPC violated Arkansas Code Annotated section 14-42-107(a)(2) (Supp.
    2021). We affirm.
    2
    The City of Eureka Springs (City) created the CAPC when it approved Ordinance
    936 in 1972. The CAPC was organized under Act 185 of 1965 as amended by Act 30 of
    the First Extraordinary Session of 1965 and further amended by Act 123 of 1969. At its
    inception, the CAPC was composed of seven members, all of whom were required to be
    qualified electors of the City. Four members were to be hotel, motel, or restaurant owners
    or managers. The mayor and two members of the city council filled the remaining three
    positions. Ordinance 936 vested commissioners with the authority to adopt rules and
    regulations for the operation of the CAPC and to alter or amend those rules and regulations.
    Over the years, Ordinance 936 was amended several times, but it always called for the
    CAPC to be composed of, in part, two members of the city council.
    In July 2007, the City approved Ordinance 2060, which adopted Arkansas Code
    Annotated section 26-75-601 et seq. (Repl. 2020), as the enabling legislation under which
    the City collected the Advertising and Promotion Tax (A&P tax). The City collects about
    $1.5 million annually pursuant to the A&P tax. Ordinance 2060 provided that the CAPC
    was to be composed of seven members; four business owners or managers in the tourism
    industry who were to reside in the City, two members of the City’s governing body, and
    one qualified elector who resided in the city to be appointed by the mayor from the public
    at large. The two members of the governing body were to serve at the will of the governing
    body. In January 2015, the City approved Ordinance 2220, which amended its code
    regulating the CAPC. Ordinance 2220 provided that the CAPC was to be composed of
    seven members: four tourism-industry members, an at-large member who was to reside in
    Carroll County, and two members who were required to be “members of the governing
    3
    body of the municipality and selected by the governing body and serving at the will of the
    governing body.” The ordinance authorized the mayor to appoint the at-large member.
    At the January 11, 2021, regular City Council meeting, nominations were made for
    appointments to CAPC positions five and six. All six members of the council were present:
    appellees Green and Meyer, Bill Ott, Autumn Slane, Terry McClung, and LauraJo Smole.
    As to position five, Green and Meyer initially received two votes each. After a second round
    of voting resulted in Green and Meyer receiving three votes each, Mayor Butch Berry cast
    the deciding vote for Green, and Green was appointed to CAPC position five. As to position
    six, there were initially three votes for Meyer, and one each for McClung, Ott, and Slane.
    A second vote yielded the same results, and Mayor Berry cast the fourth vote for Meyer,
    which resulted in Meyer’s appointment to position six. Both Green and Meyer were sitting
    city council members at the time of their appointments. Appellee Carol Wright holds
    position seven, the CAPC at-large position. Wright was appointed to that position in June
    2017. At that time, and all times thereafter, Wright has been a Carroll County resident, but
    she has not lived within the Eureka Springs city limits at any time relevant to this appeal.
    On January 27, 2021, the CAPC voted to remove appellant Moon from his position
    as a CAPC commissioner. Appellants Rambo and Johnson were thereafter terminated from
    their employment with the CAPC. Appellants filed a lawsuit alleging, among other things,
    that Moon’s removal was illegal. On May 26, 2021, the circuit court entered an order
    directing that Moon be reinstated. That did not resolve all the issues, and the case proceeded.
    On June 3, 2021, appellants filed a motion for an emergency injunction in which they
    asserted that Wright, Meyer, and Green, had been illegally appointed to the CAPC and
    4
    requested that the circuit court order their removal. Appellants argued that Wright’s
    appointment to the CAPC pursuant to Arkansas Code Annotated section 26-75-605(a)(2)
    violated article 19, section 3, of the Arkansas Constitution. They further argued that Meyer’s
    and Green’s appointments pursuant to Arkansas Code Annotated section 26-75-605(a)(2)
    violated Arkansas Code Annotated section 14-42-107(a)(2). On June 14, 2021, appellants
    filed an amended complaint making the claims set forth in that motion.
    At a June 25, 2021, hearing, the circuit court issued an oral order denying the motion
    for an emergency injunction. Appellants filed a motion to reconsider the decision as to
    Wright only. On July 19, 2021, the circuit court entered a written order again denying
    appellants’ motion. Specifically, the circuit court held that in light of Arkansas Code
    Annotated section 26-75-605 permitting the at-large CAPC commissioner to be appointed
    from the county, article 19, section 3, of the Arkansas Constitution did not prevent Wright’s
    appointment to the at-large position on the Eureka Springs CAPC even though she was not
    a resident or an elector of the City of Eureka Springs at the time of her appointment or
    service on the CAPC. With respect to Meyer and Green, the circuit court concluded that
    Arkansas Code Annotated section 26-75-605 permitted the appointment of two city-
    council members to the CAPC despite appellants’ arguments that their appointments were
    prohibited by Arkansas Code Annotated section 14-42-107. That order also denied
    appellants’ motion to reconsider. On July 29, 2021, the circuit court entered a second order
    denying appellants’ motion to reconsider. On August 11, 2021, appellants filed a notice of
    appeal as to the denial of their motion for injunctive relief and their motion for
    reconsideration. This interlocutory appeal is proper pursuant to Ark. R. App. P.–Civil
    5
    2(a)(6) (2021), which provides for an interlocutory appeal of an order “by which an
    injunction is granted, continued, modified, refused, or dissolved[.]”
    This is an appeal of an order denying injunctive relief. Decisions to grant or deny an
    injunction are reviewed for an abuse of discretion, but we give the circuit court’s
    interpretation of law no deference. United Food & Commercial Workers Int’l Union v. Wal-
    Mart Stores, Inc., 
    2014 Ark. 517
    , 
    451 S.W.3d 584
    . An injunction may be granted if the
    petitioner shows (1) that it is threatened with irreparable harm; (2) that this harm outweighs
    any injury that granting the injunction will inflict on other parties; (3) a likelihood of success
    on the merits; and (4) that the public interest favors the injunction. United Food & Commercial
    Workers Int’l Union v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 
    353 Ark. 902
    , 
    120 S.W.3d 89
     (2003).
    This appeal requires us to interpret our statutes and constitution. In interpreting the
    constitution on appeal, our task is to read the law as it is written and interpret it in
    accordance with established principles of constitutional construction. Zook v. Martin, 
    2018 Ark. 293
    , 
    557 S.W.3d 880
    . It is this court’s responsibility to decide what a constitutional
    provision means, and we will review a lower court’s construction de novo. First Nat’l Bank
    of DeWitt v. Cruthis, 
    360 Ark. 528
    , 
    203 S.W.3d 88
     (2005). Language of a constitutional
    provision that is plain and unambiguous must be given its obvious and common meaning.
    
    Id.
     As to statutes, acts of the legislature are presumed constitutional, and the party challenging
    the statute has the burden of proving otherwise. Landers v. Stone, 
    2016 Ark. 272
    , 
    496 S.W.3d 370
    . The primary rule of statutory construction is to give effect to the intent of the drafting
    body. White v. Owen, 
    2021 Ark. 31
    , 
    617 S.W.3d 241
    . We first construe the statute just as it
    reads, giving the words their ordinary and usually accepted meaning in common language.
    6
    3 Rivers Logistics, Inc. v. Brown-Wright Post No. 158 of the Am. Legion, Dep’t of Ark., Inc.,
    
    2018 Ark. 91
    , 
    548 S.W.3d 137
    . When the language of a statute is plain and unambiguous,
    we determine the drafter’s intent from the ordinary meaning of the language used. 
    Id.
    Finally, in construing a statute, we will presume that the General Assembly, in enacting it,
    possessed the full knowledge of the constitutional scope of its powers, full knowledge of
    prior legislation on the same subject, and full knowledge of judicial decisions under
    preexisting law. Robert D. Holloway, Inc. v. Pine Ridge Addition Residential Prop. Owners, 
    332 Ark. 450
    , 453, 
    966 S.W.2d 241
    , 243 (1998).
    Appellants first challenge Wright’s appointment to the CAPC. According to
    appellants, the circuit court essentially allowed Arkansas Code Annotated section 26-75-
    605(a)(3) to “trump” article 19, section 3, of the Arkansas Constitution. When Wright was
    appointed, Arkansas Code Annotated section 26-75-605(a)(3) provided that
    (a) Any municipality levying a tax pursuant to this subchapter shall create by
    ordinance a municipal advertising and promotion commission, to be composed of
    seven (7) members, as follows:
    ....
    (3) One (1) member shall be from the public at large who shall reside within the
    levying municipality or in the county of the levying municipality and shall serve for
    a term of four (4) years.
    Although appellants concede that section 26-75-605(a)(3) on its face allows Wright’s
    appointment, they insist that it conflicts with article 19, section 3, of the Arkansas
    Constitution, which provides in its entirety:
    No person shall be elected to or appointed to fill a vacancy in any office who does
    not possess the qualification of an elector.
    7
    The “Qualifications of electors” are found in article 3, section 1, of the Arkansas
    Constitution, which provides in relevant part:
    (a) Except as otherwise provided by this Constitution, any person may vote in an
    election in this state who is:
    (1) A citizen of the United States;
    (2) A resident of the State of Arkansas;
    (3) At least eighteen (18) years of age; and
    (4) Lawfully registered to vote in the election.
    (b)(1) In addition to the qualifications under subsection (a) of this section, the General
    Assembly shall provide by law that a voter shall:
    (A) Present valid photographic identification before receiving a ballot to vote
    in person; and
    (B) Enclose a copy of valid photographic identification with his or her ballot
    when voting by absentee ballot.
    It is undisputed that Wright meets the qualifications of an elector as set forth in article 3,
    section 1. Nevertheless, appellants contend that our court has construed article 19, section
    3, as requiring a person to reside in the political subdivision that he or she seeks to serve.
    They therefore claim that Wright’s appointment was a violation of article 19, section 3, and
    cite three cases in support of their argument. All three are distinguishable. At a minimum,
    each involved elective offices and not appointed positions. Moreover, in each instance, the
    challenged official’s eligibility was inconsistent with certain statutory requirements. First, in
    Thomas v. Sitton, 
    213 Ark. 816
    , 
    212 S.W.2d 710
     (1948), we held that a city marshal was an
    “officer” within the meaning of article 19, section 3, and that the marshal was required to
    live in the city limits. However, in Sitton, we also noted that a statute required the marshal
    8
    to be elected by the “qualified voters of the city.” 
    Id. at 821
    , 
    212 S.W.2d at 712
    . Likewise,
    in Davis v. Holt, 
    304 Ark. 619
    , 622, 
    804 S.W.2d 362
    , 364 (1991), a statute purported to
    authorize a person whose residential property spanned two school districts to serve on the
    school board of either. After reviewing “our prior decisions on the matter of residency in
    the context of elections,” we held that a successful candidate for a school board was not
    qualified to hold office because he did not reside in the district. 
    Id. at 624
    , 
    804 S.W.2d at 365
    . Our decision in Davis was informed by Arkansas Code Annotated section 6-14-108
    (Supp. 1989), which provided that “[a]ll persons who have registered to vote in the manner
    prescribed by . . . Amendment 51 . . . shall be deemed qualified electors of the school district
    in which they reside.” Although we said that we have interpreted article 19 section 3 to
    require residence in the political subdivision to be served by the elected official, Davis also
    involved article 19, section 4, which states that “[a]ll 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[.]” We noted that, at that time, a school district was “for
    election purposes[,]” the same as a township. Davis, 
    304 Ark. at 625
    , 
    804 S.W.2d 364
    . See
    also 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 6-14-107
    (a) (1987). Davis ultimately turned on the meaning of the
    term “residence” in the “context of [a] school election case.” Davis, 
    304 Ark. at 624
    , 804
    Ark. at 365. Finally, in Charisse v. Eldred, 
    252 Ark. 101
    , 
    477 S.W.2d 480
     (1972), the parties
    conceded that a successful candidate for city alderman was required to have been a qualified
    elector “of the city” by being a resident of the state for one year prior to election to be
    qualified to serve. Id. at 102, 
    477 S.W.2d at 480
    . We concluded that substantial evidence
    supported the circuit court’s decision that the residency requirement had not been met
    9
    because of the amount of time the official had spent in California and the fact that he voted
    in California elections. Here, there is no statute requiring Wright to be a resident of the
    City. Moreover, Wright was not seeking election to a Eureka Springs office, nor was she
    appointed to fill a vacancy in an elected office. Instead, she was appointed to a commission
    position that was authorized not only by statute but also by a Eureka Springs municipal
    ordinance. Thus, the circuit court correctly concluded that Wright’s CAPC appointment
    was not constitutionally prohibited.
    For their second point, appellants assert that the circuit court erred when it
    determined that Green and Meyer were qualified to serve as CAPC commissioners despite
    being sitting council members at the time of their appointments. Green and Meyer were
    appointed to the CAPC pursuant to Arkansas Code Annotated section 26-75-605(a)(2),
    which provides that “[t]wo (2) members of the commission shall be members of the
    governing body of the municipality and selected by the governing body and shall serve at
    the will of the governing body[.]” Appellants contend that Green’s and Meyer’s
    appointments violate Arkansas Code Annotated section 14-42-107(a)(2), which provides
    that “[a] council member shall not be appointed to any municipal office, except in cases
    provided for in this subtitle, during the time for which he or she may have been elected.”
    When statutes seemingly conflict, it is blackletter law for statutory construction to
    give effect to the specific statute over the general. Searcy Farm Supply, LLC v. Merchants &
    Planters Bank, 
    369 Ark. 487
    , 
    256 S.W.3d 496
     (2007). Likewise, if two legislative acts relating
    to the same subject matter conflict with each other, the later act controls. Kyle v. State, 
    312 Ark. 274
    , 
    849 S.W.2d 935
     (1993). Application of these two canons of construction compels
    10
    us to conclude that Green’s and Meyer’s appointments were not barred by section 14-42-
    107(a)(2).
    First, although section 14-42-107(a)(2) prohibits city council members from being
    appointed to another municipal office while they are serving on a city council, it is a statute
    of general applicability. Arkansas Code Annotated section 26-75-605(a)(2) is more specific
    to the issue in this appeal, and it not only allows the appointments of council members to
    an advertising and promotion commission, but it also requires them. Next, it is true that
    section 14-42-107(a)(2) was amended by Act 879 in 2017. That is more recent than the last
    amendment to section 26-75-605(a)(2). However, the modifications made by Act 879 were
    not substantive in nature. Act 879 amended section 14-42-107(a)(2) provides as follows:
    No alderman or A council member shall not be appointed to any municipal office,
    except in cases provided for in this subtitle, during the time for which he or she may
    have been elected.
    It is clear that Act 879’s changes to section 14-42-107(a)(2) did little more than
    update the statute’s terminology. If, as appellants argue, the General Assembly had wanted
    to prohibit sitting city council members from serving on an advertising and promotion
    commission, it could have simply repealed Arkansas Code Annotated section 26-75-
    605(a)(2). Yet, it did not do so, and Arkansas Code Annotated section 26-75-605(a)(2) is a
    more recent enactment than any substantive rule found in section 14-42-107(a)(2).
    Therefore, section 14-42-107(a)(2) does not provide a basis to disqualify Green and Meyer.
    In conclusion, the circuit court correctly determined that Wright’s appointment as a
    CAPC commissioner was constitutionally permissible and that section 14-42-107(a)(2) did
    11
    not preclude Green’s and Meyer’s appointments. The circuit court therefore did not err in
    denying appellants’ motion for emergency injunctive relief.
    Affirmed.
    WOOD, J., concurs.
    RHONDA K. WOOD, Justice, concurring. I join the majority decision but write
    separately because I’m frustrated with our court’s inconsistent use of the rules of
    constitutional interpretation. For decades, this court has used mixed phrases to explain how
    we interpret unambiguous words in our constitution. Sometimes we have said words
    “should be given their obvious and natural meaning.” 1 Other times, we have said words
    “must be given [their] plain, obvious, and common meaning.” 2 Still other times, the court
    has dropped the word “plain” and used only the phrase “obvious and common meaning.” 3
    The court has not explained these interpretative shifts, and it must be difficult for
    practitioners to understand the court’s approach to constitutional interpretation.
    The majority opinion perpetuates this confusion by stating, “Language of a constitutional
    provision that is plain and unambiguous must be given its obvious and common meaning.”4
    But here, we do not need to search for the meaning of “electors” because the drafters of
    1
    Brown v. City of Stuttgart, 
    312 Ark. 97
    , 101, 
    847 S.W.2d 710
    , 712 (1993); Brewer v.
    Fergus, 
    348 Ark. 577
    , 583, 
    79 S.W.3d 831
    , 834 (2002).
    2
    Oldner v. Villines, 
    328 Ark. 296
    , 302, 
    943 S.W.2d 574
    , 576 (1997) (citing cases using
    the natural-meaning language).
    3
    Worth v. City of Rogers, 
    341 Ark. 12
    , 26, 
    14 S.W.3d 471
    , 478–79 (2001).
    4
    Citing First Nat’l Bank of DeWitt v. Cruthis, 
    360 Ark. 528
    , 
    203 S.W.3d 88
     (2005)
    (emphasis added).
    12
    the constitution defined the term in another section, telling us precisely what that word
    originally meant.5 Thus, we should not misguide practitioners with the belief that we are
    looking for the “obvious and common meaning.” Rather, we must apply the original
    meaning the drafters gave us.
    Parker Law Firm, by: Tim S. Parker, for appellants.
    Amanda LaFever, for appellees.
    5
    Ark. Const. article 3, § 1.
    13