84 Ga. 213 | Ga. | 1890
Ford et al., citizens, freeholders and tax-payers of the city of Cartersville, in their own behalf and in behalf of the other tax-payers of said city, filed their petition, in which they alleged that the mayor and aldermen of said city had entered into a contract with the Cartersville Water-Works Company, wherein, among other things, it was stipulated that the mayor and aldermen granted to said company the exclusive franchise of supplying water to said city for 30 years, and agreed to pay said company for a certain supply of water for the benefit of the city $2,500 per annum, in semi-annual payments for said period of 30 years, thus attempting to create a debt, payable by the city, of $75,000; that it was further stipulated that said company should be relieved from all city taxes for the first ten years of said term, in consideration of its furnishing two drinking fountains to the city; that this contract was entered into and this debt attempted to be incurred without the assent of two-thirds of the qualified voters of the city, which assent the constitution of the State makes a condition precedent, and without which the contract and debt could not be made so as to bind the corporation ; that the franchise attempted to be granted and the debt thus attempted to be fastened upon the city, and the contract in all its parts, are wholly void, and place no legal obligation upon the city or its tax-payers. The petition further alleged that on the same day on which
Without going into the details of the answer of the municipal corporation and the Oartersville WaterWorks Company, it is sufficient to say that they admitted the making of the contract, and that the WaterWorks Company had furnished the water for a year, and that the first instalment had become due. The same allegations in the petition and the same answer were made in regard to the contract for furnishing gas. The temporary injunction was refused, and these two cases were argued together, as they, contained the same points; and this decision will govern both.
The charter of the city of Oartersville authorized it