9 Ga. 367 | Ga. | 1851
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
The general rule in regard to corporations is, where an act is required to be done by a definite number of persons, that a majority of that definite number may act. Angel & Ames on Corporations, 397. 2 Kent’s Com. 293. Ex parte Wilcox, 7 Cowen’s Rep. 409.
We understand the general rule of law to be, that when a public trust or duty is to be executed by a definite number of persons, such public trust or duty may be executed by a majority of that definite number. Blacket vs. Blitzard, 17 Com. Law Rep. 509. Here, five commissioners were appointed to make the assess
The second ground of error taken is, that the three commissioners who made the assessment, did so without the knowledge or consent of the other two commissioners. •
This objection is necessarily embraced in the first ground of error; for we have just ruled, that it was competent for three of the commissioners, being a majority of the five appointed, to meet together and make the assessment; and however desirable it may have been for all the commissioners to have had notice, and been present when the assessment was made, yet, in the view .which we have taken of the question, such notice and presence was. not indispensably necessary to the validity of the certificate of assessment executed by the majority of the commissioners.
The 12th section of the Act authorizes an extra tax to be levied, not exceeding seventy-five per cent, to be applied in the payment of damages sustained by the owners of property in Tazewell, when ascertained, as before mentioned, by the commissioners. When the plaintiff obtained his certificate from the commissioners of the amount his property had been depreciated, such certificate, certifying the amount due him in consequence of such depreciation, became, by the express provisions of the Act, a debt against the County Treasury of Marion County, and the County Treasurer was bound to pay it without an order of the Inferior Court — the sovereign authority of the State commands him to pay it.
Let the jirdgment of the Court below be affirmed.