                                  Cite as 2017 Ark. App. 534


                    ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
                                        DIVISION IV
                                        No. CR-16-1152


                                                    Opinion Delivered   October 18, 2017

RAYFORD WRIGHT                                      APPEAL FROM THE OUACHITA
                                APPELLANT           COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
                                                    [NO. 52CV-14-32]

V.                                                  HONORABLE DAVID F. GUTHRIE,
                                                    JUDGE

CITY OF BEARDEN                                     REVERSED AND REMANDED WITH
                                  APPELLEE          INSTRUCTIONS


                                LARRY D. VAUGHT, Judge

       Rayford Wright appeals the judgment entered by the Ouachita County Circuit Court

on September 30, 2016. The judgment found that Wright had violated the City of Bearden’s

Ordinance No. 115 and fined him $970 plus $25 court costs. The court further found that it

could not rule on Wright’s argument that the ordinance was unconstitutional because he did

not plead or raise it before the municipal court. 1 On appeal, Wright argues that Ordinance

No. 115 “does not withstand constitutional law.” We hold that the circuit court clearly erred

in finding that it could not rule on Wright’s constitutional argument because it was not pled

or raised before the municipal court. Accordingly, we reverse and remand.

       At issue in this case is the City of Bearden Ordinance No. 115, which provides:



       1Although    amendment 80 to the Arkansas Constitution designated all municipal courts
as district courts, Ark. Const. amend. 80, § 7, the documents and circuit court transcript in this
case refer to the inferior court as the municipal court.
                                 Cite as 2017 Ark. App. 534

               AN ORDINANCE TO REGULATE THE KEEPING OF HORSES,
       GOATS, COWS, & HOGS WITHIN THE CITY LIMITS OF BEARDEN,
       ARKANSAS; DECLARING AN EMERGENCY; AND FOR OTHER PURPOSES.
               WHEREAS, the maintenance of Horse Lots, Goats, Cows, and Hogs within
       the City Limits of Bearden, Arkansas is a nuisance and a menace to health, unless
       sanitary regulations are practiced, and
               WHEREAS, in some instances such animals are maintained at places within the
       City of Bearden, Arkansas, so as to destroy the peace, comfort and health of some of
       the Citizens, now
               THEREFORE, Be It Ordained by the City Council of Bearden, Arkansas:
               SECTION 1. On and after the effective date of this ordinance, no Horse Lot,
       Horse, Goat, or Goats, Goat Pens, Cows, Cow or Cow Lot, Hog or Hogs, or Hog Pen,
       shall be maintained within the City Limits of Bearden, if located within 300 Feet of any
       residence or Home.
               SECTION 2. Provided, however, that such animals, or enclosures for such
       animals, may be maintained within 300 feet of any residents or residences, only if and
       when, the person, firm or corporation desiring to maintain such animals or lots therefor
       within 300 feet of a residence or residents, shall obtain in writing the consent of the
       occupants and owners of the resident or residences that are situated within 300 feet of
       the place where such animals or lots are to be maintained. . . .

Bearden, Ark., Ordinance 115 (May 7, 1957).

       On June 12, 2013, the Mayor of Bearden, Bill Farmer, wrote a letter to Wright advising

that at a June 10, 2013 city council meeting one of Wright’s neighbors (Sharon Garlington)

complained about his horses. In this letter, Mayor Farmer cited Ordinance No. 115 and

advised Wright that he had thirty days to remove the horses from the property.

       Notes from the July 2013 Bearden City Council meeting reflect that Wright appeared

at the meeting and stated that he had been taking care of his horses. He said that if he moved

the horses 300 feet from Garlington’s property, the problem would not be solved. The notes

also provide that Wright received legal notification of his violation and that his thirty days to

comply expired on July 18, 2013. At the August 12, 2013 Bearden City Council meeting,

Garlington reported that Wright had not removed his horses.



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       An arrest warrant for Wright was issued by the Bearden Municipal Court on October

24, 2013. A citation to appear was also issued to, and signed by, Wright, alleging that he

violated Ordinance No. 115 and ordering him to appear in the Bearden Municipal Court to

answer to the charge.

       On January 27, 2014, Wright was found guilty by the municipal court of violating

Ordinance No. 115. He was ordered to comply with the ordinance and to pay a $970 fine, half

of which would be suspended if he complied with the ordinance and maintained good

behavior for twelve months. Wright appealed the municipal court decision to the Ouachita

County Circuit Court on February 24, 2014.

       On August 19, 2016, a trial was held in the Ouachita County Circuit Court. Gayle

Vaughn, the Bearden city court clerk, testified that Ordinance No. 115 was enacted on May 7,

1957, and remained in effect. She said that the ordinance was enacted to regulate the keeping

of animals inside the Bearden city limits. Vaughn stated that Wright had not removed his

horses as of October 2014.

       Garlington testified that she lives within 300 feet of where Wright was keeping his three

horses. She said that there was an odor from the horses and that they needed to be cared for

and fed. Garlington stated that she did not give Wright written or oral permission to maintain

the horses within 300 feet of her home. She said that Wright had not removed his horses as

of June 2014.

       Mitchell Pate, the Bearden city marshal, testified that Garlington had filed a complaint

about the odor of Wright’s horses in June 2013. Pate said that he measured the distance

between Garlington’s residence and Wright’s horses, and it was less than 300 feet. Pate spoke


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with Wright about Garlington’s complaint and asked Wright to move his horses, but Wright

did not. Pate issued the October 2013 citation and testified at the municipal court hearing.

Pate said that Wright’s horses were in the city limits in violation of the ordinance well into

2014.

        Wright agreed that he had three horses within 300 feet of Garlington’s residence from

June 2013 to October 2014. He said that “three mayors” of Bearden had told him he had some

of the healthiest horses around and that they did not smell. Wright also testified that he

believed the ordinance violated constitutional law because there were other horses in the city

limits within 300 feet of residents and the owners of those horses were not being prosecuted.

        At the conclusion of the trial, the circuit court orally affirmed the municipal court

decision, finding that Wright was in violation of Ordinance No. 115 and that the exception

did not apply because as Garlington testified, she did not give written permission to Wright to

maintain his horses within 300 feet of her residence. The circuit court further found that it

could not reach Wright’s constitutional challenge because he did not raise that argument

before the municipal court. The circuit court entered a judgment, and this appeal followed.

        Wright, who has represented himself throughout these proceedings, argues on appeal

that Ordinance No. 115 is unconstitutional because there are owners of other horses in the

city limits in violation of the ordinance who are not being prosecuted. He raised this argument

before the circuit court:

        I know the Court probably don’t care about how I feel but what I want them to know
        is that I think a matter of constitutional law that the ordinance is a violation of that.
        And also because of the other horses that’s in the city limits and they’re a lot closer and
        they all have odors if they have any at all. Well, you know, they are still in violation and
        the city knew it and the mayor . . . told me he didn’t care what [sic] the other people
        had horses or not, he was going to get me.
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However, the circuit court found that it could not consider the constitutional issue because

the challenge was neither pled nor argued in the municipal court.

       Wright did not raise his constitutional challenge in his municipal court pleadings. This

is a criminal case; other than the citation to appear and the municipal court docket sheet, there

were no pleadings. Wright did not argue his constitutional challenge to the municipal court

either. However, this is of no significance. Appeals to the circuit court are governed by

Arkansas Code Annotated section 16-96-507 (Repl. 2006):

       Upon the appeal, the case shall be tried anew as if no judgment had been rendered, and
       the judgment shall be considered as affirmed if a judgment for any amount is rendered
       against the defendant, and thereupon he shall be adjudged to pay costs of the appeal.

See also Ark. R. Crim. P. 36(g) (2016) (providing that an appeal from a judgment of conviction

in a district court shall be tried de novo in the circuit court as if no judgment had been rendered

in the district court); Ark. Const. amend. 80, § 7(A).

       In Bussey v. State, our supreme court held that appeals from a municipal court to the

circuit court are tried de novo. 315 Ark. 292, 295–96, 867 S.W.2d 433, 435–36, (1993) (citing

Stephens v. State, 295 Ark. 541, 750 S.W.2d 52 (1988)). Trial de novo has been interpreted to

mean “as though there had been no trial in the lower court.” Harrell v. City of Conway, 296 Ark.

247, 248, 753 S.W.2d 542, 543 (1988). Although litigants are free to utilize the same defense

in the circuit court as in the municipal court, they are not required to raise that same defense.

Bussey, 315 Ark. at 295, 867 S.W.2d at 435–36. “Nor is the trial in the circuit court to be

influenced or affected by what occurred in the municipal court.” Id., 867 S.W.2d at 436.

Testimony and statistics from a municipal court are of no consequence to a circuit court.

Duhon v. State, 299 Ark. 503, 507, 774 S.W.2d 830, 832 (1989).
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       On de novo review to the circuit court, Wright was permitted to raise an argument for

the first time, and it is undisputed that he did raise a constitutional argument before the circuit

court. 2 Therefore, we hold that the circuit court clearly erred when it found that it could not

rule on the matter because Wright failed to raise it before the municipal court. 3 Accordingly,

we reverse and remand with instructions that the circuit court rule on the constitutional

argument.

       Reversed and remanded with instructions.

       ABRAMSON and HIXSON, JJ., agree.

       Rayford Wright, pro se appellant.

       Wynne Law Firm, by: Tom Wynne, for appellee.




       2We   offer no opinion as to whether Wright’s constitutional argument made to the
circuit court was fully developed or supported by authority.

       3We   note that in In re Adoption of Baby Boy B., our supreme court held that the appellant
failed to preserve his constitutional argument for appeal, despite raising it to the circuit court,
because the circuit court “declined” to rule on it. 2012 Ark. 92, at 14, 394 S.W.3d 837, 844–
45. The instant case is distinguishable because the circuit court herein found that it could not
address the issue because it was not raised before the municipal court. This is a ruling, albeit
an erroneous one.
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