                    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

                                NO. 2009-CA-00243-SCT


WENDY RYALS AND RONALD PERRY

v.

BOARD OF SUPERVISORS OF PIKE COUNTY,
MISSISSIPPI

DATE OF JUDGMENT:                          08/18/2008
TRIAL JUDGE:                               HON. DAVID H. STRONG, JR.
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                 PIKE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANTS:                   ALFRED L. FELDER
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:                    WAYNE DOWDY
                                           DUNBAR DOWDY WATT
NATURE OF THE CASE:                        CIVIL - OTHER
DISPOSITION:                               AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED AND
                                           RENDERED IN PART - 08/19/2010
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:


       EN BANC.

       KITCHENS, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1.    Appellants Wendy Ryals and Ronald Perry each own inner tube, canoe, and kayak

rental businesses on the Bogue Chitto River and Topisaw Creek in Pike County. After the

Pike County Board of Supervisors enacted an ordinance prohibiting the possession and

consumption of alcoholic beverages on portions of the two waterways, Ryals and Perry filed

a bill of exceptions in the Pike County Circuit Court. Aggrieved by the circuit court’s

dismissal of the bill of exceptions, they have appealed to this Court.
                              FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

¶2.    Topisaw Creek is a tributary of the Bogue Chitto (Choctaw for “big creek”) River.

The river itself begins in Lincoln County, Mississippi, just south of Brookhaven, at the

confluence of the East Bogue Chitto and the West Bogue Chitto Rivers. The main stem of

the Bogue Chitto meanders southeasterly through Pike and Walthall Counties, then flows into

Louisiana, where it merges with the Pearl River. Ryals v. Pigott, 580 So. 2d 1140, 1144-45

(Miss. 1990). Recreationists enjoy floating Topisaw Creek and the Bogue Chitto River on

inner tubes, canoes, and other small watercraft. Historically, some of the boaters and floaters

have possessed and consumed alcoholic beverages as they traversed these pristine waters.

¶3.    Following years of complaints from riparian land owners and law enforcement

officers of problems allegedly related to alcohol consumption on these waterways, including

excessive littering, lewd behavior, disturbances of the peace, use of profane language, and

possession and consumption of alcohol by minors, the Pike County Board of Supervisors

conducted a public hearing at which residents of Pike County were afforded the opportunity

to speak for or against a proposed ban on the consumption and possession of alcoholic

beverages on portions of Topisaw Creek and the Bogue Chitto River. A month after the

hearing, the board unanimously enacted an ordinance prohibiting the possession and the

consumption of alcohol beverages, namely “wine, beer, ale, or other liquid containing

alcoholic (sic), intended for beverage purposes.” The ordinance reads, in relevant part:

       It is unlawful for any person to possess or consume alcoholic beverages of any
       type or description, on the waters of the Bogue Chitto River from the
       Holmesville Bridge downstream to the water park, and on the Topisaw Creek

                                              2
       from the Leatherwood Bridge downstream to its place of merger into the
       waters of the Bogue Chitto.

The ordinance notes that, prior to the enactment of the ordinance, the board had become

aware of numerous drownings and other serious accidents resulting in bodily injury caused

by excessive consumption of alcoholic beverages.

¶4.    Appellants Ryals and Perry (hereinafter “business owners”) own business enterprises

which rent inner tubes, canoes, and kayaks to customers for use on the Bogue Chitto River

and Topisaw Creek. Believing themselves aggrieved by the enactment of the ordinance, the

business owners filed a Notice of Appeal with the Pike County Circuit Court, attaching a

copy of the ordinance and a proposed Bill of Exceptions. After the board’s president and the

board’s attorney modified and signed the Bill of Exceptions, the board filed its Response in

Nature of Answer to Notice of Appeal, and a hearing was held on the Bill of Exceptions in

the Pike County Circuit Court.1

¶5.    At the hearing, Pike County Sheriff Mark B. Shepherd testified that numerous persons

owning land adjacent to the Bogue Chitto River and Topisaw Creek had reported alleged


       1
         Mississippi Code Section 11-51-75 (Rev. 2002) provides that the circuit court sits
as an appellate court in cases presented by bills of exceptions. See, e.g., City of Greenwood
v. Henderson, 84 Miss. 802, 37 So. 745 (1905) (appeal on bill of exceptions “must be heard
and decided on the record so made, and cannot be considered on oral testimony”); but see,
e.g., Electronic Data Sys. v. Miss. Div. Of Medicaid, 853 So. 2d 1192, 1200-02 (Miss. 2003)
(original action commenced in chancery court appropriately treated as administrative appeal,
although chancellor conducted two-day hearing in which sworn testimony and exhibits were
received into evidence). Here, the board presented eight witnesses at the circuit court
hearing, and the business owners called five. Given that neither party contends that the
circuit court erred in conducting an evidentiary hearing, this Court will not address the
propriety of the circuit court’s having conducted such a hearing in the case at hand.

                                             3
alcohol-related offenses over the years, including minors in possession of alcohol and public

drunkenness. Sheriff Shepherd also testified that one alcohol-related drowning had occurred

in 2003, and that other alcohol-related injuries commonly had occurred on the two streams.

¶6.    Master Sergeant Troy Travis of the Mississippi Highway Safety Patrol testified that

he had worked at numerous drivers’ license checkpoints in the area, and that these exercises

had resulted in multiple arrests of intoxicated drivers allegedly leaving the Bogue Chitto

Water Park, a frequently used exit point of the Bogue Chitto River. Master Sergeant Travis

averred that many of the intoxicated drivers had informed him that their intoxication was the

result of their having consumed alcohol while floating down the Bogue Chitto River and/or

Topisaw Creek.

¶7.    Lane Ball, an administrator of the Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and

Parks, testified that in 2001, that department had received complaints about an alleged

drinking and trespassing problem on the Bogue Chitto River. Ball testified that after the

department had begun investigating activities on the river, it became apparent that the great

number of infractions being committed there prevented the department from patrolling the

area adequately. Ball also presented statistical information on the number of citations issued

for public drunkenness and for minors in possession of alcoholic beverages, noting that,

between 2000 and 2005, the number of citations totaled 1,381, with 143 of those citations

having been for minors in possession of alcoholic beverages, and twenty-one of the 1,381

citations having been for public intoxication. Ball also opined that the vast majority of other




                                              4
offenses, including trespassing and possession of controlled substances, had been linked to

alcohol consumption on the two streams.

¶8.      The business owners also testified at the circuit court hearing, and both averred that

the amount of commercial activity on the streams had been reduced drastically by the

enactment of the ordinance. Ryals said that she had suffered a 90% loss of business since

the ban of alcoholic beverages had become enforceable, and Perry testified that, prior to the

ban, he had been renting five or six hundred tubes per day, and that, after the ban had become

enforceable, his tube rentals had been reduced to less than one hundred tubes per day.

¶9.      Following the hearing, the circuit court issued a Memorandum Opinion and Order,

upholding the ordinance and finding that the ordinance “is neither in conflict with a State

statutory scheme, nor arbitrary and capricious in its application or enforcement.” After the

business owners’ post-trial motions were denied by the trial court, they appealed to this

Court.

                                           ISSUES

¶10.     The issues that this Court must address are: (1) whether the Board of Supervisors has

exceeded its statutory authority in passing an ordinance prohibiting the (a) possession and

(b) consumption of alcoholic beverages on portions of the Bogue Chitto River and Topisaw

Creek, and (2) whether the enactment of the ordinance was arbitrary and capricious or

unsupported by substantial evidence.

                                 STANDARD OF REVIEW




                                               5
¶11.   “The standard of review of an order of a Board of Supervisors is the same standard

which applies in appeals from the decisions of administrative agencies.” A & F Properties,

LLC v. Madison County Bd. of Supervisors, 933 So. 2d 296, 299-300 (Miss. 2006) (citing

Ladner v. Harrison County Bd. of Supervisors, 793 So. 2d 637, 638 (Miss. 2001) (citing

Barnes v. Bd. of Supervisors, DeSoto County, 553 So. 2d 508, 511 (Miss. 1989))). “The

decision of the board will not be disturbed unless its order ‘was unsupported by substantial

evidence; was arbitrary or capricious; was beyond the [board’s] scope or powers; or violated

constitutional or statutory rights of the aggrieved party.’” Id. at 300 (citing Bd. of Law

Enforcement Officers Standards and Training v. Butler, 672 So. 2d 1196, 1199 (Miss.

1996)). The board’s decisions related to questions of law or statutory interpretation will be

reviewed de novo. Id.; Nelson v. City of Horn Lake ex. rel. Bd. of Aldermen, 968 So. 2d

938, 942 (Miss. 2007).

                                          ANALYSIS

(I) Whether the Board of Supervisors exceeded its statutory authority in prohibiting the
possession and the consumption of alcoholic beverages on portions of the Bogue Chitto River
and Topisaw Creek.

       The board of supervisors of any county shall have the power to adopt any
       orders, resolutions or ordinances with respect to county affairs, property and
       finances, for which no specific provision has been made by general law and
       which are not inconsistent with the Mississippi Constitution, the Mississippi
       Code of 1972, or any other statute or law of the State of Mississippi.

Miss. Code Ann. § 19-3-40(1) (Rev. 2003).

¶12.   If a county or municipality passes an ordinance which stands in opposition to the law

as pronounced by the legislature, the ordinance, to the extent that it contradicts state law, will

                                                6
be found void by this Court, as the laws of this state supersede any and all local ordinances

which contradict legislative enactments. Id. (citing Watkins v. Navarrette, 227 So. 2d 853,

855 (Miss. 1969)); Collins v. City of Hazlehurst, 709 So. 2d 408, 411 (Miss. 1997) (citing

City of Amory v. Yielding, 34 So. 2d 726, 728 (Miss. 1948)). Accordingly, the question this

Court must answer is whether state statutory enactments contradict the Pike County

ordinance, which criminalizes the possession and consumption of alcoholic beverages on the

specified portions of the Bogue Chitto River and Topisaw Creek.

(a) Possession

¶13.   With regard to the possession of alcoholic beverages containing more than five

percent alcohol by weight, the Mississippi Code provides:

       . . . . the manufacture, sale, distribution, possession and transportation of
       alcoholic beverages shall be lawful, subject to the restrictions hereinafter
       imposed, in those counties and municipalities of this state in which, at a local
       option election called and held for that purpose under the provisions of this
       chapter, a majority of the qualified electors voting in such election shall vote
       in favor thereof.

Miss. Code Ann. §§ 67-1-5, 67-1-7 (Rev. 2005) (emphasis added).

¶14.   As for beer and light wines, the Mississippi Code provides that, unless a majority of

the duly qualified electors votes to prohibit the sale or possession of such beverages, “[i]t

shall be lawful . . . in this state to transport, store, sell, distribute, possess, receive, and/or

manufacture wine and beer of an alcoholic content of not more than five percent (5%) by

weight. Miss. Code Ann. §§ 67-3-5, 67-3-7(1), 67-3-13(1) (Rev. 2005) (emphasis added).




                                                7
¶15.   Thus, Mississippi statutes explicitly provide for the lawful possession of alcoholic

beverages in this state. Unless the voters of a county or municipality elect to prohibit the

possession of beer or light wines within the political subdivision (county or municipality),

possession of those beverages is lawful. Miss. Code Ann. §§ 67-3-5, 67-3-7(1), (2) (Rev.

2005). If a majority of the qualified electors votes in favor of legalizing the possession of

alcoholic beverages containing more than five percent of alcohol by weight, Mississippi

Code Section 67-1-7(1) makes it lawful to possess those beverages in that county or

municipality. Miss. Code Ann. § 67-1-7(1) (Rev. 2005).

¶16.   In this case, the record reveals that the residents of Pike County have not voted to

prohibit the sale and possession of beer and light wines, and that the possession of those

beverages has been legal there since 1934, when the legislature ended the era of prohibition

of those beverages in Mississippi. The record also establishes that, in 1966, following the

effective date of the Local Option Alcoholic Beverage Control Law, a majority of the

electors in Pike County voted to legalize the manufacture, sale, distribution, possession, and

transportation of alcoholic beverages containing more than five percent alcohol by weight.

Thus, Pike County is a “wet” county for beer, light wine, and liquor, and controlling

legislative enactments provide that a person may not be prosecuted merely for possessing an

unopened alcoholic beverage in Pike County, with very few exceptions.2


       2
         A nonexhaustive list of reasons for which a person may suffer legal consequences
for mere possession of an unopened alcoholic beverage in Pike County includes: 1) that he
or she is under the age of twenty-one years, see Miss. Code Ann. §§ 67-3-70(1), 67-1-81
(Rev. 2005); 2) that he or she possesses the beverage on the premises of any correctional

                                              8
¶17.   Because the Pike County ordinance makes it unlawful to possess alcoholic beverages

on portions of the Bogue Chitto River and Topisaw Creek, the ordinance stands in opposition

to Code Sections 67-1-7 and 67-3-5, which make it legal to possess alcoholic beverages in

Pike County, subject only to several statutory exceptions. Accordingly, the possession

provision is void, as “[i]t is well established that in any conflict between an ordinance and

a statute, the latter must prevail.” Collins, 709 So. 2d at 411 (quoting Watkins, 227 So. 2d

at 855).

¶18.   If the Pike County Board of Supervisors has the authority to prohibit the possession

of alcoholic beverages on Topisaw Creek and the Bogue Chitto River, which it does not,

nothing prevents the board’s imposing prohibition anywhere or everywhere in the county.

This would amount to a majority of a five-person board’s having the power to override the

will of a majority of the county’s voters. Such is clearly contrary to this state’s established

law. The Pike County Board of Supervisors, however well intentioned, has exceeded its

authority in this instance.

(b) Consumption

¶19.   The provision of the ordinance prohibiting consumption of alcoholic beverages on

portions of the two specified waterways is a different creature. Mississippi Code Sections

67-1-7 and 67-3-65 expressly make it legal to possess alcoholic beverages within Pike



facility within the state, see Miss. Code Ann. § 97-31-35 (Rev. 2006); or 3) that the
possession of an alcoholic beverage violates a term or condition of his or her probationary
or post-release supervision status, see Miss. Code Ann. § 47-7-35 (Miss. 2004).


                                              9
County; however, these statutes are silent on the issue of consumption. Moreover, no other

Mississippi statute announces the legislature’s will to regulate the matter of consumption of

alcoholic beverages in wet counties.

¶20.   In Maynard v. City of Tupelo, this Court considered a Tupelo municipal ordinance

which prohibited “commercial establishments in Tupelo from allowing consumption of

alcohol between the hours of midnight and 7 a.m.” Maynard v. City of Tupelo, 691 So. 2d

385, 386 (Miss. 1997). The ordinance did not penalize individuals who possessed alcohol,

but limited the penalties to the commercial establishments which allowed their patrons to

consume alcohol or possess open containers on such establishments’ premises. Id. at 388.

In upholding the ordinance, this Court noted:

       The Legislature has not clearly expressed an intent that the consumption of
       alcoholic beverages, as opposed to the mere possession thereof, be permitted
       without limitation in wet areas. Absent such a clear expression of intent . . .
       this Court will allow the ordinance to stand.

Id. (emphasis added).

¶21.   Because the legislature has not spoken directly on the issue of consumption of

alcoholic beverages in wet counties, the Pike County provision relating to consumption of

alcoholic beverages on the specified portions of the two streams does not contradict any state

statute; therefore, the Pike County Board of Supervisors was within the power granted to it

by Section 19-3-40(1) to enact and enforce that provision of the ordinance. Miss. Code Ann.

§ 19-3-40(1) (Rev. 2003).

(II) Whether the Board of Supervisors’ adopting the ordinance was arbitrary and capricious
or unsupported by substantial evidence.

                                             10
¶22.   As noted above, “[t]he decision of the Board will not be disturbed unless its order

‘was unsupported by substantial evidence; was arbitrary or capricious; was beyond the

[Board’s] scope or powers; or violated the constitutional or statutory rights of the aggrieved

party.’” A & F Properties, LLC, 933 So. 2d at 299-300 (citing Ladner v. Harrison County

Bd. of Supervisors, 793 So. 2d 637, 638 (Miss. 2001) (citing Barnes v. Bd. of Supervisors,

DeSoto County, 553 So. 2d 508, 511 (Miss. 1989))). A “decision is arbitrary when it is not

done according to reason and judgment, but depending on the will alone. An action is

capricious if done without reason, in a whimsical manner, implying either a lack of

understanding of or disregard for the surrounding facts and settled controlling principles.”

Limbert v. Miss. Univ. for Women Alumnae Ass’n, Inc., 998 So. 2d 993, 1000 (Miss. 2008)

(quoting Miss. Dep’t of Human Servs. v. McNeel, 869 So. 2d 1013, 1018 (Miss. 2004);

Miss. State Dep’t of Health v. Natchez, 743 So. 2d 973, 977 (Miss. 1999)).

¶23.   Here, the record reveals that, prior to enacting the ordinance, the Pike County Board

of Supervisors had been confronted with a plague of illegal activity and public nuisances on

the Bogue Chitto River and Topisaw Creek, including littering, drug possession, public

profanity, indecent exposure, disorderly conduct, trespassing, minors in possession of

alcohol, and public drunkenness. During a relatively brief number of years, numerous

alcohol-related arrests had been made. Peace officers averred that, because of the number

of infractions being committed on the two streams, officers were unable to patrol the vicinity

in a manner that ensured the safety of those visiting the river and the creek. Other Pike

County residents and land owners testified at the board’s hearing and at the circuit court

                                             11
hearing that intoxicated river and creek goers commonly had trespassed on their land, and

that lewd verbal and sexual conduct frequently had been committed by drunk patrons of the

waterways.

¶24.   Given the evidence with which it was presented, it cannot be said that the board’s

decision to prohibit the consumption of alcoholic beverages on the Bogue Chitto River and

Topisaw Creek was without reason, or that the board lacked an understanding of the

surrounding facts. Id. That being the case, the adoption of the disputed ordinance was not

arbitrary or capricious, and this issue is without merit.

                                      CONCLUSION

¶25.   To the extent that the Pike County ordinance undertakes to prohibit the possession of

alcoholic beverages on the Bogue Chitto and Topisaw waterways, it is hereby declared null

and void, as it stands in opposition to Mississippi Code Sections 67-1-7 and 67-3-5, which

make it legal to possess alcoholic beverages everywhere in Pike County, except in those

places statutorily specified. See supra n.2. The ordinance’s ban of alcohol consumption,

however, is valid and enforceable, and shall remain in full force and effect, unless and until

it is lawfully repealed or modified by the Board of Supervisors, because this portion of the

ordinance does not conflict with state law, and because the board did not act arbitrarily or

capriciously in its enactment.

¶26.   AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED AND RENDERED IN PART.

    GRAVES, P.J., DICKINSON, LAMAR AND CHANDLER, JJ., CONCUR.
CARLSON, P.J., DISSENTS WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION JOINED BY
WALLER, C.J., AND PIERCE, J. RANDOLPH, J., NOT PARTICIPATING.

                                              12
       CARLSON, PRESIDING JUSTICE, DISSENTING:

¶27.   Because I would affirm in toto the Pike County Board of Supervisors’ enactment of

an ordinance prohibiting not only the consumption but also the possession, of alcoholic

beverages on portions of the Bogue Chitto River and Topisaw Creek, and because the

majority declares null and void that portion of the Board’s ordinance concerning the

possession of alcoholic beverages on designated portions of the two waterways, I respectfully

dissent.

¶28.   Although the majority appropriately cites Maynard v. City of Tupelo, 691 So. 2d 385

(Miss. 1997), in support of its affirmance of the Board’s enactment of an ordinance

prohibiting consumption of alcoholic beverages on designated portions of the two waterways,

I likewise cite Maynard in support of my position that the Board also had authority to

include in its ordinance a ban on the possession of alcoholic beverages on portions of the

Bogue Chitto River and Topisaw Creek.

¶29.   Ultimately, the issue is whether the ordinance conflicts with state statutes legalizing

possession of alcohol in counties that have opted to be “wet” counties.

¶30.   The aggrieved business owners, Wendy Ryals and Ronald Perry (business owners),

argue that, since possession of light wines and beer, as well as possession of alcoholic

beverages greater than five-percent alcohol, is legal in Pike County, then the Board’s

prohibition on possession of all forms of alcohol is contrary to Section 67-1-7 of the Local

Option Beverage Control Law, and Section 67-3-5 of the Light Wines and Beer Chapter. See

Miss. Code Ann. §§ 67-1-7, 67-3-5 (Rev. 2005). According to the business owners, because

                                             13
the ordinance conflicts with state statutes, “the latter must prevail.” City of Amory v.

Yielding, 203 Miss. 265, 34 So. 2d 726 (1948).

¶31.   Mississippi Code Section 67-1-7 3 states, in pertinent part:

       The manufacture, sale, distribution, possession and transportation of alcoholic
       beverages shall be lawful, subject to the restrictions hereinafter imposed, in
       those counties and municipalities of this state in which, at a local option
       election called and held for that purpose under the provisions of this chapter,
       a majority of the qualified electors voting in such election shall vote in favor
       thereof.

Miss. Code Ann. § 67-1-7 (Rev. 2005) (emphasis added). Mississippi Code Section 67-3-5

(Rev. 2005) states, in pertinent part:

       It shall be lawful, subject to the provisions set forth in this chapter, in this
       state to transport, store, sell, distribute, possess, receive, and/or manufacture
       wine and beer of an alcoholic content of not more than five percent (5%) by
       weight . . . .

Miss. Code Ann. § 67-3-5 (Rev. 2005) (emphasis added). As correctly noted by the majority,

Pike County has permitted the sale and possession of light wines and beer since the

Legislature legalized their sale and possession in 1934. The County has opted to be a “wet”




       3
        The business owners also cite an excerpt from Section 67-1-11(4), which essentially
reads the same as 67-1-7. Section 67-1-11(4) states, in pertinent part:

       If, in such election, a majority of the qualified electors participating therein
       shall vote in favor of the proposition, this chapter shall become applicable and
       operative in such county and the manufacture, sale, distribution and possession
       of alcoholic beverages therein shall be lawful to the extent and in the manner
       permitted hereby.

Miss. Code Ann. § 67-1-11(4) (Rev. 2005).

                                              14
county since 1966 when the Legislature passed the Local Option Beverage Control Law. See

Miss. Code Ann. §§ 67-1-1 to 67-1-99 (Rev. 2005).

¶32.   In Maynard, this Court addressed the issue of possession. Maynard, 691 So. 2d at

388. The Tupelo Brown Bag Ordinance limited its definition of possession to possession of

an open container. Id. at 387. An open container was defined as “any type of drinking

container or in any bottle, can or other container upon which the seal, cork, or cap has been

opened.” Id. The ordinance’s provision that prohibited on-premises consumption and

possession of open containers during certain hours was found to be a reasonable and

necessary means of restricting the consumption of alcoholic beverages. Id. “It appears to this

Court that an ordinance requiring the city to prove the actual ingestion of alcoholic beverages

could be impossible to enforce, and the [ordinance] does in fact allow a citizen to possess

alcoholic beverages so long as the beverages are not in open containers as such is defined in

the [ordinance].” Id.

¶33.   A reading of Maynard would appear at first to lend credibility to the business owners’

argument that the prohibition of mere possession of alcohol conflicts with Section 67-1-7.

However, I find that, looking to the specifics of today’s case, when compared to the specific

facts of Maynard, the purpose of the ordinance would be impossible to realize if Pike County

were required to “prove the actual ingestion of alcoholic beverages.” Id. at 387. Moreover,

I find that the ordinance is limited in scope to “the waters of the Bogue Chitto River from the

Holmesville Bridge downstream to the water park, and on the Topisaw Creek from the

Leatherwood Bridge downstream to its place of merger into the waters of the Bogue Chitto

                                              15
River.”   These are the very areas where law enforcement officials reported the most

misdemeanor violations and the most difficulty in accessing the waterways to enforce the

law. The passing of this ordinance obviously is not an attempt by the Board to limit

possession on the campgrounds or the water park, or to limit possession of alcohol by those

recreating in cabins or homes on the banks of the river or creek, or to penalize those

transporting closed containers of alcohol in their cars to the privacy of their own homes.

Common sense (sometimes referred to as “just good ole walking-around sense”), tells me that

those persons in possession of alcoholic beverage containers – open or otherwise – on the

designated areas of the river or creek are in possession of alcohol for the sole purpose of

consuming it. Stated differently, it is difficult for me to imagine any occurrence more

nonsensical than a person desiring to tube down the Bogue Chitto River from the

Holmesville Bridge to the Bogue Chitto Water Park with a six-pack of unopened beer.

¶34.   I emphasize here that my position is based on the facts and circumstances peculiar to

this particular case, and I would narrowly limit my position to the specific facts of today’s

case so as to not encourage its use carte blanche by municipalities or counties to limit

possession of alcoholic beverages in areas that are otherwise “wet.”

¶35.   Similarly, in Collins v. City of Hazlehurst, 709 So. 2d 408, 411-12 (Miss. 1997), the

City of Hazlehurst’s ordinance prohibiting minors from entering an establishment that sold

light wine or beer was argued to be in direct contravention to Mississippi Code Section

67-3-53(e), which prohibits permit holders authorized to sell beer and light wine to allow

minors to frequent their establishments unless the minors are “accompanied by parents or

                                             16
guardians, or under proper supervision.” See Miss. Code Ann. § 67-3-53(e) (Rev. 2005). In

Collins, despite the conflict in the language of the ordinance with that of the statute, this

Court accepted the City’s argument that it had an interest in the “welfare and protection of

its youth” and in “promoting the public health, morals and safety of those individuals” under

twenty-one years of age. Collins, 709 So. 2d at 412. This Court held that the ordinance was

not void and that the City was acting within its authority under Section 67-3-65. Id. In doing

so, the Court stated:

         This Court finds the City correctly adopted its ordinance under the authority
         of Miss. Code Ann. § 67-3-65. “The police power confers upon the states and
         local governmental units broad regulatory authority over public health,
         welfare, and morals.” Davidson v. City of Clinton, Mississippi, 826 F.2d 1430,
         1433 (5th Cir. 1987).

Id.

¶36.     Likewise, I find today that the Board was acting within its authority to regulate the

public health, morals, and safety of those persons frequenting the Bogue Chitto River and

Topisaw Creek. Additionally, the Board of Supervisors has a great interest in protecting its

citizens from the threat of intoxicated drivers leaving the Bogue Chitto River and Topisaw

Creek by way of the highways and roads of Pike County. Accordingly, in my opinion, the

ordinance’s prohibition on the possession of alcohol is a valid exercise of the county’s police

power.

¶37.     For the reasons discussed, I would affirm the Pike County Board of Supervisors’

enactment of an ordinance prohibiting the possession and consumption of alcoholic

beverages “on the waters of the Bogue Chitto River from the Holmesville Bridge

                                              17
downstream to the water park, and on the Topisaw Creek from the Leatherwood Bridge

downstream to its place of merger into the waters of the Bogue Chitto.” Because the

majority finds otherwise, I respectfully dissent.

       WALLER, C.J., AND PIERCE, J., JOIN THIS OPINION.




                                             18
