144 Ga. 722 | Ga. | 1916
1. Where tlie property of a corporation is proceeded against as the property, of another corporation, for the enforcement of a street-improvement assessment against it, the real owners’ remedy is by injunction, for the reason that only the party named as defendant can file an affidavit of illegality. City of Atlanta v. Seaboard Air-Line Ry., 137 Ga. 805 (2), 806 (74 S. E. 268).
2. A description in a levy, to wit: “A certain city lot in the City of Atlanta, ward 9, land lot 13, in the 14th district of Pulton countv,
3. A street-railway company which owns a right of way on the side of a street in a municipality, which right of way is 30 feet wide and is occupied by a double track, is not exempt from assessment for a sanitary sewer in the street on which it abuts, on the ground that the railway company can not receive any benefit from the improvement so long as its property is subjected to the present particular use. “Benefit to the owner of the real estate assessed, so far as necessary to be passed upon, as well as the necessity or reasonableness of the improvement, being for the determination of tlie legislature, is concluded by the act authorizing the assessment, and will not be inquired into by tbe courts unless in extraordinary cases presenting a manifest abuse of authority.” Speer v. Mayor &c. of Athens, 85 Ga. 49 (11 S. E. 802, 9 L. R. A. 402); Ga. R. Co. v. Decatur, 137 Ga. 537 (73 S. E. 830, 40 L. R. A. (N. S.) 935); L. & N. R. Co. v. Barber &c. Co., 197 U. S. 430 (25 Sup. Ct. 466, 49 L. ed. 819). The present suit dqes not show such an extraordinary case.
4. A segment of a street-railway located on its own property abutting on a street upon which public improvements have been made, and against which it is sought to enforce an assessment, is, in the absence of statutory authority, not liable to levy and sale, so as to carve a segment out of the railroad-track upon which the levy is made. Georgia R. Co. v. Decatur, supra.
5. The amendment to the charter of the City of Atlanta (Acts 1912, p. 574, § 15), allowing the sale of a segment of a street-railway company’s property for street improvements, is not unconstitutional (1) for the reason that it is lacking in due process of law. If the law is valid the sale is then under process of law, and therefore it can not be said to be void for want of due process of law. (2) Nor for the reason that it is taking private property for public use without just and adequate compensation being first paid therefor. The purpose of the proceeding is not to take the property for public use, but to subject private property to the payment of the expense of a public improvement.
6. “An allegation that a given statute is unconstitutional, in that it violates the constitutional provision which prohibits the passage of a
Judgment reversed.