Lead Opinion
The Civil Code (1910), § 1202, provides that “the county shall pay the receiver one half of what the collector gets for collecting the county tax.” By an act of the General Assembly, approved August 17, 1918 (Acts 1918, p. 110), section 1202 of the Civil Code of 1910 was so amended as to be read as follows: “ The county shall pay the receiver the same compensation the collector
With respect to the time when statutes are to take effect, the old English rule was that if the act was not directed to operate from any particular time, it took effect from the first day of the session at which it was passed. This legal fiction and this extraordinary application of the doctrine of relation was acted upon by the English courts until the statute of 33 Geo. Ill, e. 13, which statute declared that laws shall operate from the time of receiving the royal assent. Sedgwick on Construction of Statutes (2d ed.), 65. “Under constitutions which, by providing in effect that no bill shall become a law until it shall have received the approval of the chief executive or shall have been passed over his refusal to approve, make the executive a necessary constituent of the lawmaking power, an act be-' comes a law, not when it is passed by the two houses of the legislature, but when it is approved by the executive, unless it becomes a law by the lapse of time specified for the return of a bill to the legislature or by being passed by the legislature notwithstanding the disapproval of the executive.” 25 R. C. L. 797; cf. art. 5, § 1, par. 16, of the constitution of this State (Civil Code, § 6485) ; Green v. Hall, 36 Ga. 538; Epslein v. Levenson, 79 Ga. 718 (2),
Judgment affirmed, with direction.
Dissenting Opinion
who dissents from the ruling that the compensation of the tax-receiver for the year 1918, should be apportioned, as ruled by the majority.