149 Ga. 114 | Ga. | 1919
The City of Atlanta, desiring to repave a portion of a street within the city limits on the basis of assessments against abutting-property owners for part of the cost of the improvement and against the property of the street-car company which occupied the street for a part of the cost of the improvement, and without any provision for payment of the balance of the cost of the improvement, except that the board of commissioners of roads and revenues of the County of Fulton “had appropriated” a specified amount for that purpose, advertised for bids to make the improvement, and in the advertisement provided that each bidder should deposit $1,000, conditioned to enter into a contract to make the improvement in the event the bid should be accepted, and that upon failure to enter into the contract the deposit should be forfeited to the city as liquidated damages. The Gulf Paving Company filed a bid and in connection therewith made a deposit of $1,000 with the city, conditioned as above mentioned. The bid was accepted, and after notice of the acceptance a demand was made upon the bidder to execute the contract to do the paving. The Gulf Paving Company declined upon the ground that the city had not provided means with which to pay'for the work, a fact unknown to it when the bid was made, and consequently had no authority, “under the constitution and laws of the State,” to enter into the contract. Thereafter, the city having notified the Gulf Paving Company that it would claim the amount deposited as a forfeiture and for liquidated damages, .retained for its own use the '$1,000 so deposited. The Gulf Paving Company then brought an action for money had and received, to recover that amount. The
“1. Since the adoption of the amendment to section 2 of article 6 of the constitution of this State, ratified November 7, 1916, and proclaimed by the Governor on December 15, 1916, as a part of the constitution, the Court of Appeals has no jurisdiction of any case that involves a construction of the constitution of the State of Georgia.
“2. Under repeated rulings of the Supreme Court, that court will not pass upon a constitutional question not properly raised in the court below. A constitutional question is not properly raised where no provision of the constitution is specified. Johnston v. Brenau College, 146 Ga. 182(5), 186 (91 S. E. 85).
“3. Under the foregoing rulings the question as to whether the City of Atlanta, under the constitution of this State, could legally enter into the proposed contract set forth in the petition can not be considered by this court; nor can the question be certified to the Supreme Court; nor can the case be transferred to the Supreme Court.
“4. The question last referred to being eliminated, the petition did not set forth a cause of action, and the court did not err in sustaining the general demurrer and dismissing the petition.” 22 Ga. App. 374 (96 S. E. 392).
The plaintiff, being dissatisfied with the judgment of the Court -of Appeals, filed a petition for certiorari to the Supreme Court, Which was granted. It was alleged that the Court of Appeals erred in holding: “(1) that this case ‘involved a construction of the constitution of the State of Georgia’; (2) that ‘whether the City of Atlanta, under the constitution of this State, could legally enter into the proposed contract set forth in the petition can not be considered by this court’; and (3) that ‘the court did not err in sustaining the general demurrer and dismissing the petition.’ ”
The decision of the case involved application of the constitution and laws of the State in a general sense, but did not, within the meaning of the above provision of the constitution, involve any construction of the State or Federal constitution or any treaty; and it was erroneous for the Court of Appeals in rendering its decision, to decline to rule on the city’s liability to the plaintiff on the ground that it involved a construction of the constitution of this State.
Applying the principles announced in the preceding division, the petition alleged a'cause of action, and it was erroneous for the trial court to dismiss the petition upon general demurrer. The judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed, and the case is remanded for disposition by that court in accordance with the rulings made.