145 Ga. 149 | Ga. | 1916
From the foregoing statement of facts it will be
seen that the act of 1913 expressly declared, that, if the mayor and council should authorize the closing of Pine Street between Fifth and Sixth Streets, a street should be opened by the railway company from Fifth Street to Sixth Street by way of Plum Street, which should be of the width of Plum Street, viz., sixty-six and two thirds feet wide; and that the title to such street should be vested in the mayor and council “before any of the terms of this act shall become operative.” It was also declared that the mayor and council should “have full power and control over said street, and with full power to require the construction and maintenance of viaducts or underpassage for railroad-tracks, whenever in its dis
It seems to us plain that under the act of 1913, and the contract made between the mayor and council and the railway company, there was no authority for closing up a portion of Pine Street without first opening a street sixty-six and two thirds feet in width, and that this requirement constituted a condition precedent. Was this changed by the act of July 30, 1915 (Acts 1915, pp. 692, 696) ? In section 8 of that act it was declared that the contract which had been entered into between the mayor and council and the railway company, was “ratified and approved,” but it did not purport in terms to amend the act of 1913. In section 9 it declared that the City of Macon was authorized and empowered to grant,-upon such terms and conditions as might be prescribed by the mayor and council, to the railway company, its successors and assigns, certain parts of streets, one of them being the “full width of Plum Street between Fifth and Sixth Streets, except the forty (40)-foot street provided for in article six of the contract of October 27, 1914.” Nothing was said as to the closing of a part of Pine Street which was in a southerly direction from Plum Street and apparently parallel with it. Authority was given, in section 10, to modify and amend the condition on which the title to certain portions of the property included in the con
From what has been said it follows that the presiding judge did not err in holding, in effect, that the closing up of Pine Street, as intended, would not be lawful.
There was evidence tending to show, that, under a lease from the city, the plaintiff occupies certain land southeasterly from the point at which it was intended to close a part of Pine Street; that it manufactures brick; that the lease under which the plaintiff holds authorizes the operation of a manufacturing enterprise there; that while the land occupied by the plaintiff does not abut directly upon Pine Street, it is very near thereto, and that street is the only one by which the people of Macon who are customers of the plaintiff can have convenient access to its plant, and by which the plaintiff can deliver its manufactured products to its customers in the city; that the closing of Pine Street between Fifth and Sixth Streets to travel and traffic would work substantial injury to the plaintiff’s business and property; that'certain other streets by which it was contended that the plaintiff could reach the center of the city were merely streets on paper; and that though there were other means of access to and egress from the plaintiff’s plant into the business and residence portions of the city, such means were
The present case is not controlled by the decision in Ward v. Georgia Terminal Co., 143 Ga. 80 (84 S. E. 374). There an alteration and change of grade of a portion of a street in a city was permitted and sanctioned by lawful authority; the land the value of which was lessened was upon another part of the street, beyond a cross-street; and the landowner had the same communication to other parts of the city through intersecting streets, though with less convenience, over the street which was altered. Here the conditions upon which a part of Pine Street could be dosed have not been complied with; and there is evidence from which the presiding judge might find that the plaintiff did not have the same communication to other parts the city through intersecting streets, merely with greater inconvenience.
The view which was taken by the presiding judge and the ruling above made render it unnecessary to consider the attacks made upon the validity of the act of 1913, on the ground that it violates certain provisions of the constitution.
The admission of the evidence complained of in the seventh and eighth assignments of error was not error for the reasons assigned. If any part of it or that set out in the ninth assignment of error was erroneously admitted, this ruling was not such as to require a reversal of the judgment.
Judgment affirmed.