185 Ga. 844 | Ga. | 1938
Lead Opinion
G. "W. Gibbs, resident of Columbia County, and L. O. Johnson, a resident of Richmond County, brought their petition against the Milk-Control Board of Georgia, alleging substantially as follows: Pursuant to the “milk-control act” approved March 30, 1937 (Ga. L. 1937, pp. 247 et seq.), the board designated Richmond County as a “milk-shed,” and thereafter held an election provided for under the act, for the purpose of determining whether the act should be made applicable in such milk-shed. At the election so held on April 22, 1937 the vote was 24 for adoption and 48 against adoption of the act, and the board so declared the result. Plaintiffs are advised that the board, without any petition therefor, has advertised notice of another election to be held on September 13, 1937. The board is without any authority under the act to call another election after the first; under the act the first election was final and no other election can be had. The board threatens to put the act in force notwithstanding the rejection in the first election, and to control the milk business, including that of plaintiffs and others similarly situated. Plaintiffs are respectively a wholesale milk producer and a producer-distributor as defined in the act, and are both duly licensed milk producers in the milk-shed. Such action by the board will bring great confusion in the milk business and operate greatly to the disadvantage of plaintiffs and others similarly situated, increase the cost of milk
Section 5 of the milk-control act declares: “Upon its organization, the board shall designate natural marketing areas within the State, each of which shall constitute a milk-shed, and the board may, from time to time thereafter, designate additional milk-sheds or combine two or more milk-sheds in which this act is effective. After the designation of any milk-shed and upon petition to the board therefor, the board shall hold an election within such milk-shed to determine whether or not the provisions of this act shall be made applicable within such milk-shed. Each producer, producer-distributor, and distributor having a municipal or county permit to sell milk within the milk-shed shall be entitled to one vote - only. If in any such election a majority of the votes cast shall be favorable thereto, the provisions of this act shall thereupon apply within such milk-shed, and shall remain in force throughout the remaining life of this act. The board shall advertise each such election and make reasonable rules governing the conducting thereof. The decision of the board as to the results of any such election shall be final, but the provisions of this act shall not apply
In construing a similar statute of Indiana, providing for authorization of a levy of taxes for financial aid to railroads, which statute prohibited the levy of such tax more than once in two years, and where the machinery was by a petition of and a vote of the people, the Supreme Court of that State, in Bish v. Stout, 77 Ind. 255, said: "The limitation is upon the amount the township might appropriate to, or raise by taxation for, railroad purposes within any one period of years, and not upon the number of elections which the board . . may order in the township upon the question of such appropriation within such period of time; and certainly not where it appears, as in this case, that at the only prior
As we construe the attack on the constitutionality of the statute, the sole complaint is that it is invalid because of the classification made as to those to which it applies; that is because it excepts from the provisions thereof those producers not having more than six cows from which such producer is actually selling milk. Section 1 of the act declares: “As a matter of legislative determination, it is hereby declared that milk is a necessary article pf food.for human consumption; that the production and mainte
It is apparent on its face that the act is not one levying a tax,
Judgment affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. In the foregoing opinion the writer has merely expressed the views of the majority. His own view is that the first election was final and ended the matter. See Newton v. Ferrill, 98 Ga. 216 (supra). Being of this opinion, he deems it unnecessary to deal with the constitutional questions raised, and he refrains from any expression thereon.
Rehearing
on rehearing.
1. The fact that only four Justices participated in the decision, two being disqualified, and that the disqualifications were unknown until after the decision, does not necessarily and as a matter of law require that the judgment be vacated in order that the places of the disqualified Justices may be filled and the case reheard, the judgment not being void; although such facts might afford discretionary grounds for such action by the court. Since three Justices are satisfied that the decision is correct, and since in these circumstances there is no likelihood that the judgment of affirmance would be changed if the vacancies were filled, the judgment is adhered to so far as this ground is concerned. Greene County v. Wright, 127 Ga. 150 (56 S. E. 288); Edwards v. State, 123 Ga. 542, 544 (51 S. E. 636); Code, § 24-4010; Act approved March 30, 1937, Ga. L. 1937, p. 33.
2. It does not otherwise appear that the judgment should be vacated.
Judgment adhered to.