139 Ga. 249 | Ga. | 1913
(After stating the foregoing facts.)
As the act of 1874 was passed by the legislature, it was not one territorially general. By excepting the City of Savannah, it did not have uniform operation throughout the State; and the clause of the constitution of 1877 which declares that no special law shall
The effect of codification and the adoption of the code upon laws already existing, in'amending or repealing them, has been considered a number of times by this court. What has been said in discussing cases does not appear entirely harmonious. In some instances it has been held that an omission from a section of the code of words or clauses contained in a preceding act of the legislature indicated an intention to change the prior law, or an actual change inconsistent therewith, and that the adoption of the code containing such a change worked an alteration in the law. By the act of 1859 (Acts 1859, p. 48) it was declared: “No suit against a railroad company in this State shall hereafter be dismissed for want of jurisdiction in the court in the county in which said suit may be pending, or hereafter brought; provided the road of such company is located in, or shall run through, the county in which such suit is or may be pending; provided further, the cause of action arose, or the contract was made, or to be performed in the county where the suit was instituted,” Section 3313 of the Code of 1863 (which was also adopted by the legislature) declared the general rule as to venue to be that “all civil cases in law (except as hereinafter provided) shall' be tried in the county wherein the defendant resides.” Section 3317 of that code, which dealt with the jurisdiction of suits against railroad companies, stated that they
In the fourth section of the act of 1856 it. was declared that for the negligent killing of a person by a railroad company, when there was no widow, child or children, the right of action was vested in the legal- representative of the decedent. As codified in the original code (§ 2913) it was declared that “A widow, or if no widow a child or children, may recover for the homicide of the husband or parent.” The words, “if no child or children, it shall vest in his legal representatives,” were omitted. In Miller v. Southwestern Railroad Co., 55 Ga. 143, it was held by two Judges that this operated to limit the right to recover for the homicide of another to the widow or child of the deceased.
By the act of 1854 it was declared what officials might attest a deed for the purpose of record. One of these was a clerk of the inferior court. The code, as adopted, omitted that official from among those whose attestation would suffice to authorize record. It was held that the difference between the code and the act was not attributable to oversight or mistake, but to' an obvious purpose to change a prior law, the whole subject being deliberately considered and dealt with by the codifiers; and that the code would control. Kennedy v. McCardel, 88 Ga. 454 (14 S. E. 710).
In Barnes v. Carter, 120 Ga. 895 (48 S. E. 387), the court had before it this somewhat singular situation: By an act passed in 1881, it was made the duty of the receive^ of tax returns to issue executions against unreturned wild lands. This appears in the Code of 1882 as section 874 (b). In 1882 an act was passed amending the former act by striking therefrom “receiver of tax returns,” and inserting in lieu thereof the words “tax-collector.” Notwithstanding the amendment, the section of the Code of 1882 was reproduced without change in the Political Code of 1895, § 821, which was adopted by the legislature. Thus it became necessary to hold either that the tax-collector should be declared the proper officer to issue executions, as declared by the act of 1882, or the tax-receiver as declared by the code which had been adopted, or that either could do so. In the opinion of Mr. Justice Evans there is a suggestion that perhaps the amending act of 1882 was unconstitutional, and the original act remained of force. But however this might be, it was held that, under the code, the tax-receiver was the proper officer to act.
On the other hand, section 2126 of the Code of 1863 declared that “The obligation of the surety is accessary to that of his principal, and if the latter from any cause [italics ours]» becomes ex
In Daniel v. Jackson, 53 Ga. 87, it was held: '“That part of the act of 1831 which authorizes a resale at the risk of the purchaser who fails to comply with his bid, made at an executor’s, administrator’s, or guardian’s sale, though not embraced in the code, is still of force in this State.” It was said that there was nothing in the act 1831 which was inconsistent with the provision of the code. But it is not easy to see how there was any less inconsistency than that involved in the case of Georgia Railroad & Banking Co. v. Kirpatrick, supra, or in Miller v. Southwestern Railroad Co., supra.
In City of Atlanta v. Gate City Gas Light Co., 71 Ga. 106, one question was whether the general statement in the code that “No charter shall have any force or effect for a longer period than two years, unless the corporation within that time shall in good faith commence to exercise the powers granted by the act of incorporation,” applied to a charter granted by the General Assembly. It was held that it did not. In the opinion Mr. Justice Iiall said: “The constitution of 1868, in declaring of force all acts passed by any legislative bodjr, sitting in Georgia as such, since the 19th of January, 1861 (the date of her secession from, the United States), including that body of laws known as the ‘Code of Georgia’ (evidently designating the original code), and the acts amendatory thereof, or passed since that time, which said code and acts are embodied in the printed book known as ‘Irwin’s Code,’ with certain named exceptions, did not surely intend to adopt as law every
In McDaniel v. Campbell, 78 Ga. 188, it was held that the constitution of 1868, in adopting the code of that year, known as Irwin’s Code, and also the acts passed since 1861, did not ratify any unauthorized change in codifying such acts; and that where the act of 1866 made it a part of the offense of abandoning children that they should be left in a “dependent and destitute” condition, a change of the word “and” to “or” in codifying such act was not ratified by the constitution. In Hardeman v. McManus, 82 Ga. 20 (8 S. E. 733), it was held that the retention in the code of a clause of a section which had been repealed was an error of the compilers, and this error was not cured by the adoption of Irwin’s Revised Code by the constitutional convention of 1868; and that in adopting that code the convention did not intend thereby to adopt the errors contained in it.
The language employed in the acts adopting the Codes of 1863, 1895, and 1910 is not identical with that employed in the constitution of 1868, in reference to the Code of 1868, known as Irwin’s Code. The acts adopt the codes and put them in force. The constitution of 1868, in declaring what laws were in force in the State, employed the following words: “All acts passed by any legislative body, sitting in this State as such, since the 19th day of January, 1861, including that body of laws known as the Code of- Georgia [apparently the original code], and the acts amendatory thereof, or passed since that time, which said code and acts are embodied in a printed book known as ‘Irwin’s Code,’” etc. But cases arising under the Code of 1868 throw light upon the general proposition that the adoption of a code, or the declaration that it embodies the laws in force, does not necessarily involve the adoption of every error in it.
In Georgia Railroad & Banking Co. v. Wright, 124 Ga. 596 (53 S. E. 251), it was held that the failure of the compilers of the Code of 1895 to embrace therein the provisions of the act of 1885, giving stock in foreign railroad companies a status for the purpose of taxation in Georgia, did not, in the absence of conflicting statutes in that code, amount to a repeal by implication of the portion of the act referred to; and that it was still the law. In
Section 5269, par. 1, of the Code of 1895, on the subject of the competency of witnesses, was amended by the act of 1900 (Acts 1900, p. 57) by adding the words, “Whether such transactions or communications were had by such insane or deceased person with the party testifying, or with any other person.” In Wilder v. Wilder, 138 Ga. 573 (6), 574 (75 S. E. 655), this amendment was treated as being in force, though it was omitted from the Code of 1910. See also Mechanics Bank v. Heard, 37 Ga. 401, 412-414; Gardner, Dexter & Co. v. Moore, Trimble & Co., 51 Ga. 268, 269; Westmoreland v. Powell, 59 Ga. 256; Gillis v. Gillis, 96 Ga. 1, 11 (23 S. E. 107, 30 L. R. A. 143, 51 Am. St. R. 121); Comer v. State, 103 Ga. 69 (29 S. E. 501); Mitchell v. Georgia and Alabama Ry. Co., 111 Ga. 760, 768-769 (36 S. E. 971, 51 L. R. A. 622); McCowan v. Brooks, 113 Ga. 384, 388 (39 S. E. 112); Seaboard Air-Line Ry. v. Leader, 115 Ga. 702, 704 (42 S. E. 38); Smith & Company v. Evans, 125 Ga. 109 (53 S. E. 589). It is argued that some of the cases cited involved the construction of sections of the code rather than the effect of omissions therefrom; but a number of. them involved the question of whether certain language employed by the codifiers, or the omission of certain words, operated to change the law as it previously stood.
From the foregoing discussion it will be seen that the legislature have power to adopt a code as a whole, but that no arbitrary and inflexible rule has been applied to the determination of whether or not an act or a part of an act omitted from the code was repealed by the adoption of that book. Probably no Procrustean rule can be announced on the subject. The general presumption is that the codifiers codified the laws existing, rather than made new ones. Some changes were undoubtedly made, and were adopted by the
In a case like the one before us we think it is legitimate to look to the legislative intent as evidenced by the practice of that department of the government since this act found its way into the Code of 1895 in a mutilated condition. Solomon v. Commissioners of Cartersville, 41 Ga. 157; Macon and Augusta R. Co. v. Little, 45 Ga. 370, 380; County of Pulaski v. Thompson & Co., 83 Ga. 270, 272 (9 S. E. 1065); Fullington v. Williams, 98 Ga. 807, 813 (27 S. E. 183); Park v. Candler, 114 Ga. 466, 500 (40 S. E. 523); Epping v. Columbus, 117 Ga. 263 (7), 273 (43 S. E. 803).
When we refer' to the legislative practice, we find that at the session when the Code of 1895 was adopted, and that when the Code of 1910 was adopted, and at almost every session between those dates and since 1910, the legislature has granted to one or more municipal corporations authority to levy a tax at a different rato from that fixed by the act of 1874 as codified. At some sessions several acts of this character were passed. So that it is evident that the legislature did not think that it had made the act of 1874 a territorially general law by adopting the code, and had thus precluded itself, under the constitution, from making special provisions on the subject in the charters of municipal corporations. If such was the effect, then all these charter provisions enacted since 1895, which do not accord with the section of the code under consideration, are void, and no others can be passed. Upon careful consideration, we have arrived at the conclusion that the omission, from the .code of the section exempting Savannah from the operation of the act, and the adoption of the code, did not have any such effect. These sections of the code may have an ample field of operation where the legislature does not declare otherwise.
Judgment affirmed, with direction.