184 Ga. 273 | Ga. | 1937
Mrs. James A. Hollis filed her petition for mandamus against 0. R. Jones and others, as members of the “Board of Trustees of the Pension Eund of the Police Department of the City of Atlanta,” and alleged: Plaintiff is the widow, of James A. Hollis, who died on June 8, 1930. Por more than thirty years before his death he was a member of the police department of the City of Atlanta. As his widow plaintiff drew a pension of $99 a month until the month of February, 1933, which was paid to her under the act of the General Assembly approved August 18, 1925, providing for payment of pensions to retired members of the police department of said city and to the widows of deceased members thereof. Plaintiff’s husband during his lifetime, and while he was an active member of the police department of said city, after the passage of the act of 1925 and in accordance with its terms, paid a tax of one per cent, of his salary, which went into the Police Pension Fund of the City of Atlanta. In February, 1933, defendants in their capacity as trustees of the pension fund reduced the amount of the monthly payments to plaintiff to $40, which, as she was informed, was done because of the passage by the General Assembly of the act of February 15, 1933, authorizing such reduction. So much of said act of 1933 as seeks to reduce the monthly pension from $99 to $40 is void and unconstitutional, as applied to plaintiff, for the reason that it is in violation of that part of art. 1, see. 10, par. 1, of the constitution of the United States, which declares that no State shall pass any ex post facto law, or law impairing the obligation
The principles announced by this court in Trotzier v. McElroy, 182 Ga. 719 (186 S. E. 817), are controlling of the questions presented by the allegations of this application for mandamus; and therefore the petition was good as against a general demurrer.
Matters of defense not appearing from the allegations of the petition can not be raised by a general demurrer. Anderson v. Hilton & Dodge Lumber Co., 121 Ga. 688 (49 S. E. 725); Gibson v. State, 118 Ga. 29 (44 S. E. 811). Therefore, without 'deciding whether the fact that the petitioner, by receiving for three and a half years the monthly pension installments of $40 as provided in the act of 1933 (Ga. L. 1933, p. 213), upon refusal of the respondents to continue paying to petitioner the monthly pension installments of $99 under the pension act of 1925 (Ga. L. 1925, pp. 228-234), which latter statute was in force when peti