88 Ala. 421 | Ala. | 1889
The act of March 19, 1875, applicable to Jackson county among others, authorizes elections to be held by order of the judge of probate, to determine whether the sale of intoxicating liquors shall be prohibited in localities designated by petitions addressed to the probate judge, praying that the elections be ordered. It also provides that if, in a given instance, the result of the election shall be favorable to prohibition, the probate judge shall
Under this act, an election was held in and for beat No. 10 in Jackson county in 1881, resulted in favor of prohibition, and an order was duly made and entered accordingly. In August, 1889, appellee Grider filed a petition praying that an order be made for an election to be held in and by the voters of a part of said beat, to determine whether the order of 1881 should be revoked as to such part of the territory embraced in the former order. The election was ordered, and thereupon the appellant filed his petition before the judge of probate, insisting that the application for the order did not comply with the statute in several particulars, and among others, in that it did not make a case or pray for an election as to whether the former order covering the whole precinct should be revoked, and praying that the order for an election be set aside, revoked and annulled, &c. Appellant’s petition was denied, the election held, resulting in favor of rescinding the former order so far as iu related to that part of beat No. 10 which was described in Grider’s petition; and appellant’s further objections thereto being also overruled, an order was entered up revoking the former order, as to, and only as to, such part of the original territory. And from the rulings of the judge of probate in this behalf, the present appeal is prosecuted.
We entertain no doubt that the order for an election, in response to Grider’s petition, was absolutely void. The statute does not authorize the election for which he prayed, nor any election within and confined to the territory described
The case of Savage v. Wolfe, 69 Ala. 569, is decisive of appellee’s objection to the right of Caldwell to interpose in the proceedings in the court below, in the manner shown by this record. He is a freeholder, not only of the beat, but of
The view we have taken of a vital point presented by the record renders it unnecessary to consider the assignments of error seriatim.
The order of the probate judge, overruling and dismissing the petition of the appellant, is reversed, and the cause remanded.