106 Ga. 106 | Ga. | 1898
It follows from the decision in the case of Plumb v. Christie, 103 Ga. 686,-that the dispensary commissioners of Terrell county, under the dispensary act for that county, approved December 10, 1897 (Acts of 1897, p. 562), are mere governmental agents or officials, not only empowered but required by the legislature of the State to establish, under certain rules and conditions, dispensaries for the sale of liquors in that county; that this body is not a private corporation, and that these dispensaries are in no sense private institutions, but • they are public institutions of-the government, created by the State legislature in pursuance of its police power in the interest of public morality. It is true the commissioners in the act •are designated a body corporate, but as. such they have no financial interest in the business of these dispensaries, are not •even paid a salary by virtue of their office, and represent no individual stockholders who are entitled to any income from ihe profits derived from the business. The power of establishing these dispensaries is conferred upon the commissioners of roads and revenues of Terrell county, and their successors, and in effect they are .simply made under the act, by virtue of their office, dispensary commissioners of Terrell county. Even the managers employed by this body, who are actively engaged in the sale of these liquors, do not depend for their pay upon the income derived from such sale, but the act provides that their compensation shall be fixed without any regard whatever to
Judgment reversed.