19 Ga. App. 559 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1917
(After stating the foregoing facts.) 1. Prom the above it will appear that the minutes of the commission did not conform to the statutory requirements laid down by the General Assembly. The legislature has seen fit to declare, in express terms, how any municipal action by this commission shall be taken, and to provide that the minutes must show a compliance with the requirements thus laid down. If such legislation be mandatory, any action on their part, not in substantial accordance therewith, is null and void. 28 Cyc. 333. To abolish an office or remove an incumbent, statutory requirements should be strictly followed. 3 Dill. Mun. Corp. § 468. The abolition of a municipal office should be accomplished by ordinance or resolution. 28 Cyc. 349 (9). The distinction between an ordinance and a resolution is usually considered t.o be that, while a resolution deals with matters of special or^ temporary character, an ordinance prescribes
The decisions of the various judicatories are not in entire accord as to whether a statutory provision requiring the record by aye and no vote of municipal action is mandatory or merely directory; but we find the strong weight of authority, especially in the later and what we deem the.better considered cases, to uphold the doctrine that such a requirement is mandatory and constitutes an essential element to support the validity of an ordinance or resolution. In Shinall v. Cartersville, 144 Ga. 219 (87 S. E. 290), Presiding Justice Evans uses the following language: “The City of Cartersville is acting under what is popularly known as a commission form of government. _Its legislative functions are performed by three commissioners, and the manner in which they shall act in this respect is prescribed with great definiteness in the 16th section of the charter of 1911. . . The commissioners are without power to take any municipal action which requires municipal sanction, except as provided expressly or impliedly in the charter.” We have no doubt that the General Assembly, after conferring large and far-reaching powers upon the commissioners of the City of Eome, had an essential and important purpose in prescribing that all of their actions should be taken by aye and no vote, which should in all cases be recorded in that way upon the minutes. This purpose was doubtless, in part at least, to impress each member of the commission with his individual responsibility and to compel each to bear his share thereof by means of a permanent record of his action, incapable of dispute. We can not hold such a requirement to be non-essential and merely directory in its nature, for if the purpose indicated was in part the legislature’s intent, such purpose is not one of form, but of substance, which might theoretically affect 'the actual result of its action. Were such provision intended merely to render more certain what particular procedure had in fact been taken, then the rule might be otherwise, and it might properly come within the reasoning of Judge Broyles in the case of Moore v. Thomasville, 17 Ga. App. 285 (86 S. E. 641), relating to provisions requiring that ordinances shall be signed by the mayor.
In Steckert v. City of East Saginaw, 22 Mich. 104, the rule an
It is contended, however, on the part of the city, that the court-erred in excluding parol evidence offered for the purpose of showing that the commissioners, in the attempted abolition of this office, substantially complied with the requirements of the act. Testimony of the secretary of the commission was offered to the effect that the abolition of the office was in fact upon the recommendation of the first commissioner, and that a yea and nay vote was had thereon, but that he, the secretary, failed to so state on the minutes. This court is of the opinion that the ruling of the trial judge in rejecting this testimony was in accordance with law. As will be seen from what we have already said, it is our opinion that the requirement of the legislature, that the minutes shall show the recommendation of the first commissioner and the aye and no vote taken thereon, is as much mandatory as the requirements that such, recommendation must be first made and that the vote thereon be taken in the mode prescribed. In the ease of Owens v. Dalton, 144 Ga. 656 (87 S. E. 913), our Supreme Court held that when a motion or resolution is adopted by a municipal council, but imperfectly recorded by the clerk, the same council has authority, by resolution made thereafter, to require the clerk to correct the minutes so as to make them speak the truth; but it is recognized in that case that such action reforming the resolution does not relate back so as to affect any intervening right which has arisen to a third person. While it may be true that the duty
2. It is insisted that the plaintiff acquiesced in the abolition of the office, and therefore is not entitled to recover in this suit. There is no merit in this contention. The plaintiff testified as follows: “I was tax-receiver of the City of Rome. -I was not present when the city commissioners undertook to abolish my office, on April 6, 1915. I was at my desk. My fiscal year began
3. If the abolition of the municipal office was invalid and the incumbent in good faith was willing to perform the duties of the office, it follows that he is entitled to its emoluments. The verdict, is not contrary to law, and, being supported by the evidence, the trial judge did not err in refusing to grant a new trial.
Judgment affirmed-