14 Ga. 354 | Ga. | 1853
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
That provision was not to be considered as a sort of measure or maximum of terms, on which they were to regulate the grant of license, but as it wore, a minimum of regulation. That is to say: on no less terms should the license be granted ; and as many other terms or regulations might be prescribed by them, as they should deem expedient and proper.
When therefore, these officers in the discharge of their duty, prescribed as a regulation, that the clerk of the applicant also should take a similar oath, they did what they had full power and authority to do by Legislative grant; and they did that, which we think was expedient and judicious.
We are making no departure from a strict construction of this act in so holding. No other construction, we think, can reasonably bo put upon the plain signification of the words used in the statute.
The “ criminal cases,” to which reference is here made, are violations of the public Laws of the State, and not the local by-laws, or police regulations of a town or city, which are not embraced in the elemental definitions of crimes, as recognized by our penal Laws. So this Court has decided, in the case of Williams vs. the City Council of Augusta, (4. Geo. R. 509.)
The offences for which the defendant was fined by the Commissioners, were not violations of our penal codo ; for it is unfortunately true, and so wo have held in another case, at one of •our recent sessions, that the language of the code on this subject, is such as to exempt from punishment under its provisions,
The 27th sec. of the 10th division of the penal code provides, that any person retailing spirituous liquors &c. without a license from the Inferior Court &e, except in corporate towns or cities, whore by law the corporate authorities are .authorized and empowered to grant such license, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, &c.
It will be perceived, that this exception oporates to exempt from tho penalties prescribed, all persons retailing without a license in a corporate town, whose authorities are empowered to grant such license.
It may not have been the intention of the law-maker to give such effect to this section; or, it may really have been intended to leave the matter of punishment, in such cases, in the hands of the corporate authorities, having power to grant the license. However this may have been, as the matter now stands (there being no other provision of our penal code on the subject) there is no law of the State, making penal the retailing of spirituous liquors without a license in a corporate town, having authority to license retailers; and we think that Legislative action is needed in order that such retailers without a license, in corporate towns, as everywhere else in our State, shall in plain and distinct terms, be subjected to punishment under our code, or by ordinance of such town or city; • and we will take the necessary steps to have this matter brought to the early attention of the Legislature.
It is plain from what we have said, that the act of 1852, as our law is now written, is not unconstitutional; because that the offences in question, were not violations of a public law; and therefore not “ criminal cases” in the sense of the term, as used in our constitution.
Our reason for so holding is the same which will be found to
Though this right was guaranteed to Englishmen by Magna Charta, and ever regarded in England as one of the-great pillars of their constitution; yet in that country, municipal corporations, for centuries, have enforced their by-laws, and inflicted fines without the intervention of a jury. So too in this ¡State, similar corporations, before the adoption of our constitution, will be found to have tried and determined such cases, in the same summary way.
Prom these things, we conclude that the light of trial by jury, as it was claimed, accorded and exercised in the State, previous to the 30th of May 1798, was not violated in these causes, by the proceedings of the Town Commissioners of Eaton-ton.
. Let the judgment be affirmed.