70 Ga. 817 | Ga. | 1884
The question in this case is as to the constitutionality of an act to amend the charter of the city of Atlanta approved September 3, 1881.
The first section of the act authorizes the mayor and general council of the city of Atlanta “ to grade, pave, macadamize and otherwise improve, for travel and drainage, the streets and public lanes and alleys of said city, and to construct sidewalks and pave the same, put down curbing, cross-drains, crossings, and otherwise improve the same.”
Section 2d provides “ That in order to fully carry into effect the authority above delegated, the mayor and general council shall have full power and authority to assess the cost of paving and otherwise improving the sidewalks, including all necessary curbing for the same, on the real estate abutting on the street, and on the side of the street on which the sidewalk is so improved.”
Section third authorizes the mayor and general council “ to assess one-third of the cost of. grading, paving, macad
Section fourth, among other things, provides that assessments for the costs of such improvements shall be pro rated on the real estate according to its frontage on the street so improved.
Section fifth provides that the assessment on each piece of real estate shall be a lien on the same from the date of the ordinance providing for the work and making the assessment.
Section sixth provides for the collection of the assessment by execution and sale of the property assessed, the defendant having the right to contest the same by illegality, which is to be returned to and tried by the superior court of Fulton county.
The plaintiffs in error insist that the foregoing act violates paragraph 1, section 2, article 7 of the constitution of this state, in which it is provided that “ All taxation shall be uniform upon the same class of subjects, and ad valorem on all property subject to be taxed within the territorial limits of the authority levying the tax * * * ” (Code, §5181), and is therefore null and void.
Again plaintiffs insist that, if the assessments provided for in the act of September 3, 1881, are not by virtue of the taxing power, it is the taking of private property for public use without just compensation, and the act is void on this account.
Taxes are different from assessments for local improvements, taxes being burdens upon all persons and property alike, and compensated for by equal protection to all,
Hence it follows that the power conferred by the legislature on the city of Atlanta by the act of 1881, to assess the property abutting on streets to be improved, for such improvements, is not the exercise of the taxing power by that city so as to require the same to be uniform and ad valorem, as required by the constitution of this state.
The assessments authorized by the act in question is not the talcing of private property for public use without just compensation. Every person in this state owes a duty to the public to work the public roads and highways, and it is in the power of the legislature, representing the public, to compel a performance of this duty, and it may confer upon municipal corporations this power; it is also competent to authorize these corporations to have the work done on the public streets and thoroughfares of the various municipalities of this state in such manner, by pavements, crossings, drains, and curbings, as may be
The taxing power is limited or circumscribed in this, that taxes must be uniform and ad valorem as prescribed in the constitution.
The exercise of the right of eminent domain is also limited, in that private property can only be taken for public use upon just compensation being made.
The act of 1881 is constitutional and valid, and the chancellor did right to refuse the injunction prayed for by each and all of the plaintiffs in error.
Judgment affirmed.