1. The demurrer to the amendment, to the effect that there has been a final adjudication in this case and that the question thereby presented is res judicata, is without merit. In
City Council of Augusta
v.
Newsome,
211
Ga.
899 (
*607
2. “A constitutional attack upon an act or statute, which does not allege specifically how or wherein the act or statute violates the designated provision of the Constitution, is insufficient to present any question for review.”
Persons
v.
Lea,
207
Ga.
384 (2) (
3. The third ground of demurrer complains that this court, in City Council of Augusta v. Newsome, 211 Ga. 899, supra, held that only where the public had abandoned property held for public use would the city have power to sell or dispose of it, and the petition as amended fails to allege an abandonment of the property here involved. As stated in division 1 of this opinion, the question decided in the previous decision in this case was that, under the facts then existing, the trial court did not err in temporarily enjoining the city from disposing of a part of the park where there had been no abandonment of its use by the public. There was no showing then made that the city had legislative authority to dispose of the park. The General Assembly has now authorized the disposal of the park property (Ga. L. 1956, p. 22; Ga. L. 1956, p. 2406), and the city, in compliance with said statutes, has offered the property for sale — leaving for decision only the question whether such a sale is authorized where specific legislative authority therefor exists.
“As a general rule, property held by a municipality for governmental or public uses can not be sold without express legislative authority, but must be devoted to the use and purpose for which it was intended.”
Kirkland
v.
Johnson,
209
Ga.,
824 (1) (
Applying the foregoing principles, where the City Council of Augusta owned the fee-simple title to a tract of land which had been dedicated to and used by the public as a park, and where the General Assembly has expressly conferred upon the city authority to sell and dispose of said property upon conditions with which the city has complied, the trial court did not err in dissolving the previous temporary restraining order and in holding that the city was authorized to make the said sale.
Judgment affirmed.
