118 Ga. 35 | Ga. | 1903
In 1902 Barker was arraigned under an accusation framed under the Penal Code, § 450. The case came to this court, and the conviction was set aside, on the ground that the accused
Acts of the General Assembly do not include the State, unless they expressly or by necessary implication so declare. Hence it has been held that the State was not embraced within the terms of the general local option liquor law, and that a special act establishing a dispensary to be operated by the State, or one of its subordinate political divisions, was not a special law in a case for which provision was made by the local option law. See the last three cases cited supra. There is nothing in section 428 which would require a construction that it was intended to include the State. On the contrary, its terms indicate that nothing but prohibitions by private individuals was in the legislative mind. It is doubtless true, as contended, that the General Assembly did not have in contemplation local dispensary laws when the act of 1893 was passed, though there was a dispensary in existence at that time in the City of Athens. See Acts 1890-91, vol. II, p. 436. But a dispensary law which prohibited the sale by private individuals would not for this
Judgment affirmed.