101 Ga. 246 | Ga. | 1897
The official report states the facts.
The application for leave to file information in the nature of ■a writ of quo warranto, which was made in this case, was denied generally, by the judge of the Brunswick circuit. We reverse that judgment, and in doing so have considered all the grounds which were urged here, both by the briefs and in the argument in support of the judgment rendered below, as well as the objections urged thereto by the plaintiff in error; and will now give the conclusions to which such consideration led,.
To this contention, it is replied by the defendant, that, by the provisions of an act-to consolidate and amend the several acts incorporating the city of Brunswick (Acts of 1872, page 151), it is provided that all male persons, citizens of the United States, who have resided six months in the State and thirty days immediately preceding the election in the corporate limits of Brunswick, have registered, attained the age of twenty-one years, and paid all taxes legally demanded, etc., shall be qualified to vote for mayor and aldermen, and that any person legally entitled to vote for those officers, and who shall have actually resided twelve months previous to the election in said city, was and is eligible to the office of mayor or alderman; that the respondent was qualified under this act to hold the office of mayor; and that the act of 1895, as well as the act of 1889 of which it is amendatory, and which are relied on by the plaintiff as establishing the ineligibility of the defendant, are unconstitutional and void, because they except from their operation towns of less than two thousand inhabitants, and are not, therefore, general laws.
The provisions of the act of 1889 (Acts 1889, p. 181) as amended are incorporated in Acts of 1895, page 79, which reads' as follows: “Section 1. That from and after'the passage of this act, the councilmen and aldermen of the towns and cities of this State shall be incompetent to hold, except in towns-of less than two thousand inhabitants, any other municipal office in said towns and cities during the time for which they are chosen; provided, that nothing herein contained shall apply to
The plain meaning of the act of 1895 is, that councilmen and aldermen of all cities and towns in this State, having two thousand or more inhabitants, shall be incompetent to hold any other municipal office in such town or city during the time for which they were chosen such councilmen or aldermen. The class of subjects with which this act intends to deal is aldermen and councilmen of all cities and towns in the State which have two thousand or more inhabitants. Aldermen in a town or city of less than two thousand inhabitants are not within the scope of the act. They are not of the class brought under its provisions. The act is generalfin its terms as applying to all cities and towns in the State having two thousand inhabitants or more. None are excepted; and while the statute is in force, ex vi termini, all towns'and cities which come into the enumerated class will be affected by the act. It is a classification by population for the purpose of general legislation. As the act operates uniformly upon all cities and towns throughout the State which are included and come into the class concerning which the legislation is had, we hold the act to be a general law. Nor do we think that the contention of the respondent that the special act declaring what persons are eligible to the offices of mayor and aldermen of the city of Brunswick is not modified by the general act of 1895, is sound. True, under the act of 1872, consolidating the laws
We are clear therefore that the act of 1889 and amending act of 1895 did modify the act consolidating the acts incorporating Brunswick, and that the terms of these acts applied to the election for mayor and aldermen of Brunswick, held in December, 1896.
The act of 1895, in declaring councilmen and aldermen incompetent to hold any other municipal .office, uses the words, “during the time for which they are chosen.” “Two years or until his successor shall be elected and qualified,” means that the time for which an officer is chosen under that regulation is two years. If an officer after his election resigned, such resignation could not affect the time for which he was chosen; so we hold that, under the act of 1892, the regular term of office of the aldermen of Brunswick is two years, and at a regular election held under that act for the election of such officers for the city, they are chosen for a term of two years.
Granting or refusing the application rests in the sound discretion of the court. Mechera’s Pub. Off. § 480; Throop on Pub. Officers, §781. . And he, if a private person, must show affirmatively upon his application that he has at least prima facie the better title. Collins v. Huff, 63 Ga. 207.
If the relator under the facts is entitled to the office, leave to file the information on this ground should have been granted. Our first code, taking effect January 1, 1862, § 126, made the following provision: “ If at any popular election to fill any office the person elected is ineligible under the foregoing rules, the person having the next highest number of votes, who is eligible, whenever a plurality elects, shall be declared elected,
But the relator also alleges in his application, that “he is a citizen of the State of Georgia and of the county of Glynn and of the city of Brunswick therein, and that as such citizen he has an interest in and is entitled to all the privileges of a citizen in the election of officers for said city and in the office of mayor of said city.” The interest which one who is a citizen and taxpayer has in the due administration of public affairs will entitle him to maintain the proceeding. Churchill v. Walker, 68 Ga. 681; 44 Penn. St. 341; 46 Conn. 479; 53 Mo. 97; 42 N. J. L. 435. Both of these remedies, that is, to install into office the person legally elected, and to oust the incumbent illegally discharging the duties, may be sought by the same information. Mechem’s Pub. Off. §478; 12 N. E. R. 700.
It follows from what has been said as to the general law of ■ the State rendering councilmen and aldermen of cities and towns of this State, of the class in which the city of Brunswick is placed, incompetent to hold any other municipal office in such city during the time for which they were chosen as such councilmen or aldermen, that the facts stated in the record would entitle the relator to leave to file the information for which application was made, not on his claim to the office under the facts shown, but by reason of his citizenship and consequent interest in the office of mayor; and the judgment of the court below refusing the application is
Reversed.