104 Ga. 1 | Ga. | 1898
In September, 1897, the mayor and general council of Atlanta, without first obtaining the consent of two thirds of the qualified voters of the city agreeably to law, entered into a contract with the commissioners of roads and revenues of Fulton county for the purchase of certain real estate on which is situated the court-house of that county. In pursuance of this contract, the mayor executed, in the name of the city, five promissory notes, payable to the county commission
The mayor and general council of the city adopted the resolutions below copied. The preamble to the same recited the terms of the original contract between the city and the county, and declared that “it is the desire of the mayor and general ■council of the City of Atlanta to conform in all respects to the law, constitutional and statutory, regulating their conduct in office;” that “it is believed to be best for the government and people of the city and of the county of Fulton that the proposed purchase shall be made; ” and that the action then about to be taken was ‘ ‘ to the end . . that this may be done in such manner as to obviate all legal objections.” These resolutions were in the following words: “Resolved, by the mayor and general council of the City of Atlanta, that the mayor of said eity he, and he is hereby, authorized to contract with the commissioners of roads and revenues of Fulton county with reference to the purchase of said court-house property, according to the metes and bounds defined in the bond for titles now held by the City of Atlanta, on the following terms: The City of Atlanta to pay the commissioners of roads and revenues of
The board of county commissioners (with the exception of one of its members, H. E. W. Palmer) expressed to the mayor and council a willingness to enter into a contract in accordance with the terms of the resolutions above set forth. Thereafter the plaintiffs amended their petition, alleging what had been done with a view to the making of this “second trade,” and praying that the defendants be enjoined from consummating' the same. At the hearing, the trial judge enjoined the county and city authorities from carrying into effect the first contract, but denied the injunction prayed for in the plaintiffs’ amendment. In other amendments to the plaintiffs’ petition, and in the original and amended answers of the defendants, various facts were stated and numerous questions raised with which it
Judgment reversed.