172 Ga. 879 | Ga. | 1931
Three persons named, including the petitioner, Cureton, were duly elected, qualified in January, 1931, and have since constituted the board of commissioners of roads and revenues of Dade County. On April 28, 1930, the defendant Wheeler “as ordinary” sold “road bonds issued” by the county for $73,232. Of this amount the board of commissioners of roads and revenues “has received from” the ordinary $35,900. The sum of $8,776.41 “taxes levied and paid for road purposes . . for the year 1929 has been taken charge of by” the ordinary, “and he holds the same and fails and refuses to deliver the same to the” board of commissioners. The petition of Cureton “as a member of” the board of commissioners and “as a citizen and taxpayer,” alleges, in addition to the foregoing, that the act of 1914 vests in the commissioners exclusive jurisdiction and control over all roads and bridges, and of all bond issues for road purposes, and the proceeds of such bond issues; that it is unlawful for the ordinary “to withhold from said board any part of the road funds of said county, whether the same are proceeds of the sale of bonds issued for road purposes or whether the same arc taxes levied and collected for road purposes;” that the ordinary “has no jurisdiction or control over the roads or bridges . . or the bond issues . . or the funds collected as taxes for road purposes in and for said county, or of any road funds of said county, and the said . . ordinary holds the road funds . . as herein alleged illegally and without authority of law;” that in accordance with provision of the act of 1914 petitioner has made bond for the faithful performance of his official duty, and “is personally responsible for the lawful handling of the funds heretofore
The General Assembly (Ga. Laws 1914, p. 246) created a board of commissioners of roads .and revenues for the County of Dade. It was provided in section 7 “that said board shall have the right to dispose of sufficient bonds of said county, now on hand, for the specific purpose of building said macadamized road and to receive the money for the same, and to contract the building and construction of said road and receive the same when it is completed, either in part or as a whole as they may see proper to direct,” and in section 8 it was provided “that said board shall have the right to do any and all other acts necessary to the building and construction of said road, not herein mentioned, and that the supervision of and powers of said board shall be over- the said road, and over all the other public roads in Dade County, and as are now vested in the
The petition does not allege a failure of the ordinary to appoint a depository, nor does it deny that there is such depository duly appointed and qualified to act for the county. If there is no such depository, it is obviously the duty of the ordinary to appoint one if there is a bank, banker, or trust company located or doing business in said county. All county funds should be deposited with such duly appointed depository. Neither the ordinary nor the board of commissioners of roads and revenues has any legal right to act as depository or to hold the funds of the county in lieu of a regularly appointed depository. The fact that the ordinary has no legal right to hold the funds affords no reason whatever for a court to direct such funds to be paid over to the board of commissioners of roads and revenues, who are equally without lawful authority to hold them. “Mandamus will not lie to compel a public officer to do an act not clearly commanded by law.” Patterson v. Taylor, 98 Ga. 646 (25 S. E. 771); Jackson v. Cochran, 134 Ga. 396 (67 S. E. 825, 20 Ann. Cas. 219). If this mandamus sought to require the ordinary to appoint a depository, as provided for in the act of 1916, the duty of the court would be clearly outlined. It may possibly be the case that there is no bank, banker, or trust company “located” in Dade County; but under the strict letter of the statute a depository may be appointed from among banks or trust companies “doing business” in the county. It can not be known definitely whether the legislature foresaw the possible necessity of appointing a bank not located in the county, but the legislation actually enacted has so provided. The General Assembly will soon be in session, and attention of the authorities of Dade County is respectfully called to this situation, so that they may seek legislative remedy for this situation if the same is desired. Clearly the court did not err in refusing the mandamus absolute to require the ordinary to turn over the funds in his possession to the board of commissioners of roads and revenues. We do not think it necessary to deal with the minor points made in the
Judgment affirmed.