12 Ga. App. 430 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1913
The plaintiff in error was convicted in the city court of Elberton of a violation of the act approved August 13, 1910, regulating the operation of automobiles on public highways of this State (Georgia Laws of 1910, p. 90). There were three counts in the accusation: the first charging that he operated an automobile “at a rate of speed greater than was reasonable and proper;” the second, that he operated the automobile “so as to endanger the life and limb of persons and the safety of property;” and the third, that he operated the automobile on a public highway, at a place known as “Herndon’s corner,” “without having said machine under control,” and operated it “at a speed greater than six miles per hour.”
. The defendant demurred to the first count upon the-ground that it failed to charge a crime, and that the act itself failed to define a crime, because it failed to name any special rate of speed which would be unlawful, unreasonable, or improper. To the second count he demurred upon the ground that the accusation failed to
A person who operates an automobile should as much obey the law at all times as those citizens who' (like the members of this court) are unable to support such a luxury, but it is easy to conceive of a case in which, if the owner of the automobile was accustomed to use his machine even a small portion of the time, and it was charged that in the county, on some day within two years prior to the filing of the accusation (for the State is not confined to the day stated therein), and at some place of which the accusation gives no hint, he operated an automobile so as to endanger the life and limb of some person or persons whose name, age, color, sex, or place of residence is not even suggested, or so as to endanger property the nature and location of which is possibly undiseoverable, he might be placed absolutely at the mercy of the prosecution, though the testimony against him be false.
Section 12 of the act of 1910, supra, reads as follows: “Nothing
If the legislature intended that where such ordinances existed they should have the effect of excluding other regulation of the speed and operation of automobiles within those towns and cities in which they had been 'adopted, it certainly did not say so. The statute expressly says: “provided such regulation or ordinance is not in conflict with the provisions of this act.” What provisions? All of the provisions; among which is found the one in section 5 regulating the speed and operation of automobiles and other like vehicles. If the legislature had meant to refer only to conflict with provisions regulating lights, numbers,' signals, etc., and'not the provisions regulating speed and operation, it would have specified
We therefore hold that the plea in abatement was correctly overruled, and th^it the municipal ordinance, in so far as it may be in conflict with the general law in any of its provisions as contained in the act of 1910, supra, is inoperative, null, and void, as usurping the province of the general law of the State as contained in section 12 of the act of 1910.