The appellee city filed consecutively two nuisance-abatement proceedings pursuant to Code Ann. § 72-401 (now OCGA § 41-2-5) against appellant Horne in the Criminal Court of the City of Cordele (a recorder’s court), the alleged nuisances consisting of two separate lots with buildings thereon. After trials, orders were entered, in the first case on March 30, 1982, and in the second case on September 7, 1982, finding the properties to be nuisances and ordering Horne to abate them. No certiorari or other appeal was taken from the order in the first case. On October 6, 1982, Horne applied for certiorari in the Superior Court of Crisp County in the second case. On October 28, 1982, the city filed an application for contempt in the first case. Horne filed in Crisp Superior Court a complaint seeking to enjoin further proceedings in the contempt action and to consolidate the equitable petition with the certiorari proceeding. In March, 1983, the cases were ordered consolidated, and the city was restrained from any further action on the contempt application until a hearing could be held.
One of the defenses raised by Horne in the second case was the unconstitutionality of Code Ann. § 72-401. In an order on the city’s motion to dismiss in the consolidated cases, the superior court ruled that no constitutional infirmity existed in the nuisance-abatement procedures under which the city was proceeding; that the Criminal Court of the City of Cordele did not have power to punish for contempt of its order to abate; and that the only recourse was to bind Horne over for prosecution in a court with misdemeanor jurisdiction (superior court), as the offense became one against the state after notice to abate and refusal to comply (OCGA § 41-1-6).
Subsequently, the trial court entered an order reversing its earlier order, and holding that the Criminal Court of Cordele, notwithstanding the state misdemeanor statute, did have power to punish for contempt. Accordingly, both of Horne’s cases were dismissed, and all interlocutory injunctive relief previously granted him was dissolved, from which rulings he appeals.
2. The second enumerated error is the holding that the Criminal Court of the City of Cordele can punish for failure to comply with its nuisance-abatement orders by contempt proceedings. The appellant cites us to OCGA § 41-1-6: “Any person who shall erect or continue after notice to abate a nuisance which tends to annoy the community, injure the health of the citizens in general, or corrupt the public morals shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.” He then quotes from
Healey v. City of Atlanta,
The Criminal Court of the City of Cordele (a recorder’s court) has the clear, manifest, unmistakable power to punish by contempt, failure to abide its judgments. Section 7.01 of the Cordele Charter (Ga. L. 1969, p. 3849) provides that “Such court shall have the power to enforce its judgments by the imposition of such penalties as may be provided by the laws of Georgia . . .” “The laws of Georgia,” enacted as Section 7.03 of the Cordele Charter (Ga. L. 1969, pp. 3850-3851), limit the city court’s power to punish by contempt not to exceed a $250 fine or imprisonment of not more than 30 days, or both.
Healey v. City of Atlanta,
The fact that the General Assembly made the continuation of a nuisance after notice to abate, a misdemeanor (OCGA § 41-1-6), does not preclude the Criminal Court of Cordele’s power to abate nuisances pursuant to the legislative authorization in OCGA § 41-2-5, and its power to enforce its judgments by contempt pursuant to the legislative authorization in the city charter. “ ‘It is well settled that a municipal corporation can not by ordinance provide for the punishment of an act which constitutes a criminal offense under the general law of the State, in the absence of express, legislative authority conferring this power upon the municipality.
Moran v. Atlanta,
Judgment affirmed.
