150 Ga. 529 | Ga. | 1920
Prior to April 6, 1896, the Augusta Railway Company was insolvent and in the hands of a receiver. Certain persons undertook to reorganize the company, introduce new capital, and operate the company’s street railroad. As a matter of inducement, the City Council of Augusta, on the date above stated, passed an ordinance relieving “the Augusta Railway Company or its reorganized or successor company from constructing and keeping in repair any of the streets or parts of streets on which said company’s tracks are or may be located.” On April 25, 1896, the board of commissioners of the Tillage of Summerville passed an ordinance declaring, in part: “That, from and after the passage of this ordinance, the said Augusta Railway Company, its reorganized'or successor company, in consideration that it has promised and covenanted with said Board of Commissioners to operate at least a twenty-minute schedule on the line of its cars between said Tillage and the City of Augusta, shall be exempt from paving, constructing, or • maintaining any portion of the streets in said Tillage; this exemption to continue for and during but not exceeding the term of the present charter of said Company, and in no event is it to be construed as a license or grant in perpetuity: Provided, that whenever the said Tillage authorities shall change the grade of any of the streets upon which the tracks of said Company are laid, then the said Company shall at once change. its tracks to conform to said altered grade. ” The company was reorganized as contemplated, and large investments were made in operating and extending the railroad system. In 1901 certain members of the City Council of Augusta initiated a movement to repeal the ordinance of April 6, 1896. The railway company opposed the repeal, and a compromise was eventually agreed upon, which was expressed in an ordinance unanimously passed by the City Council of Augusta on February 5, 1901, whereby it was provided:-that the street-railway company, in addition ta the obligation imposed by the city council upon) the Augusta Railway Company in the ordinance of April 6, 1896, should pay $1,666.66
The ordinances of the- City Council of Augusta adopted in 1896 and 1901, and the ordinance of the Village of Summerville adopted in 1896, and acted upon by the company, became binding as contracts under legislative authority and sanction. While the act of the city in laying street-paving assessments is the exercise of taxing power in a general sense, such assessments are not taxation within the meaning of the constitutional provision requiring taxation to be ad valorem and uniform. ' Assessment for pavement of streets, unlike ad valorem taxation for general purposes, is a matter within the discretion of the city, subject to the limitations contained in
Judgment affirmed.