143 Ga. 428 | Ga. | 1915
Plaintiffs, alleging themselves to be residents and taxpayers of the Bock Hill school district in Early County, brought their petition in behalf of themselves and all others similarly affected, against J. C. Loyless, tax-collector of Early County, to enjoin the collection of the school tax which had been levied by the board of commissioners of said county. The presiding judge refused to sanction the petition, upon which ruling error is assigned to this court.
Tinder the allegations in this petition, the County of Early had not been laid off in 'accordance with the positive requirements of. the act under consideration. In the case of James v. City of Blakely, 143 Ga. 117 (84 S. E. 431), it was held that “the act of December 18, 1900 (Acts 1900, p. 219), which sought to create a district lying outside of the actual corporate limits of the City of. Blakely, and extending to what was termed the 'school limits/ and to prescribe for such territory regulations as to schools and taxation therefor, different from those established by the general school laws, was to that extent unconstitutional, as being a special act different from an existing general law on the subject.” The act just referred to is attacked in the petition in the present ease, to show that as a matter of fact the County-of Early had not been laid off and divided into school districts as contemplated and provided by the McMiehael act. And under the ruling made in the case just cited, we know that the County of Early has not been divided into school ■ districts; for a territory lying within this county of 32 square miles is not divided into school districts, nor is it included in any of the school districts as laid out. That being true, no legal division of the county into school districts has been made; and a division according to law is necessary before there can be legal taxation for the purposes contemplated in the act. It follows, therefore, that the tax, the collection of which it is sought to enjoin in the present case was illegal, and the tax-collector was without authority to collect that tax from the petitioners and other taxpayers and residents of the county.
Judgment reversed.