82 Ga. 252 | Ga. | 1889
The grand jury of Houston county recommended in their general presentments that the presentments be published in certain newspapers, provided the cost of publication (meaning in each paper) did not exceed ten dollars. The judge of the superior court ordered the publication, and a certain newspaper, one of tho^e named, made the publication, and the publishers after-wards presented to the judge of the superior court an account against the county for ten dollars, as compensation. It was approved by him, and was afterwards presented to the county commissioners with a view of obtaining their order for its payment. They refused to grant the order, and a suit was brought in favor of the publishers against the county of Houston, in a justice’s court. Upon the trial, there being a plea that the coiinty was not liable, etc., objections to evidence were overruled, and the magistrate instructed the jury that the law of the case was in a certain section of the code, but that custom, while it did not mate law, might reg
As to custom regulating the law, the constitution, in respect to public taxation and finance, undertook to regulate custom, and to put an end to a great deal that had been customary before the constitution was adopted. Authority for paying out the public money should be found in some law. One claiming to draw money out of the treasury of the county or the State should be able to point to a law that clearly authorizes the expenditure. Kennedy vs. Seamans, 60 Ga. 612; Maxwell vs. Cumming, 58 Ga. 384.
The petition for certiorari had merit, and should have been sanctioned.
Judgment reversed.