149 Ga. 669 | Ga. | 1920
(After stating the foregoing facts.) Under an act approved November 19, 1890 (Acts 1890 p. 199), entitled “An act to cede jurisdiction to the United States of certain lands therein described for the Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Park,” the jurisdiction of this State was ceded to the United States over all the lands and roads described in the preamble to the act, which lie within the territorial limits of this State, for the purposes of a National Park. Petitioners claim that the road in question was one of the roads the control over which was ceded to the United States Government; and there is some evidence to support this contention. In an act passed by Congress, approved August 19, 1890, entitled “An act to establish a National Military Park at the battlefield of Chickamauga,” jurisdiction over the land and roads thus ceded was accepted and declared upon the passage of the act of cession by the General Assembly of Georgia; and in the act of Congress it is declared that “the following described highways are hereby declared to be approaches to and parts of the Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park as established by the second section of this act.” Then follows an enumeration of the roads and highways referred to, among them being “the Dry Valley road from Eossville, Georgia, to the southern limits of McFarland’s Gap,” etc., which, for convenience, we shall designate as the McFarland’s Gap road. There is evidence to show
- There was no general or special demurrer filed, attacking the prayer for relief on the ground that it was too broad, in that it prayed injunction against any civil or criminal proceedings against
Judgment reversed.