95 Ga. 419 | Ga. | 1895
Kahn was tried before the recorder of Macon for disorderly conduct and gambling. lie was fined $25, and was bound over on the charge of gambling. He took the case by certiorari to the superior court, where the certiorari was dismissed, and to this ruling he excepted.
The testimony before the recorder was: About 2:30 a.m., Sunday, March 5,1892, the chief of police of Macon, having been informed that there was gambling going on over a certain bar-room in that city, took with him some officers for the purpose of “raiding” the place. The door was opened by one of the officers with a false key. The defendant was present. There was a card-table in the room on which were chips and cards, and some other men in the room were jumping up and leaving the table when the chief of police entered. During the night card-playing for money had been going on, and the defendant had participated in the game. The defendant introduced no testimony, but took the position that if there was proof of any offense, it was that of gambling, which is a State offense, and therefore the recorder had no jurisdiction in the matter except to bind the defendant over, and no right to impose a punishment for the offense as proven. Whereupon the recorder cited section 372 of the code of the city, as follows: “Any per
Under the facts stated, the plaintiff in error was properly arrested and bound over to the State court, authority to make arrests and bind over in such cases being granted in the city charter (Acts 1893, p. 240, §§59, 74); but the recorder had no authority to impose a fine as for a violation of the municipal ordinance above quoted. "Where an act is punishable under a general law of the State, a municipal corporation cannot punish for it as an offense against the municipality, unless there is an express legislative grant of authority so to do. “The legislative intention that this may be done ought to be manifest and unmistakable, or the power in the corporation should be held not to exist.” 1 Dillon, Munic. Corp. 4 ed. §368; Mayor etc. of Savannah v. Hussey, 21 Ga. 80; Jenkins v. Mayor etc. of Thomasville, 35 Ga. 147; Vason v. City of Augusta, 38 Ga. 542; Reich v. The State, 53 Ga. 73; Rothschild v. City of Darien, 69 Ga. 503; and see opinion in Hood v. VonGlahn, 88 Ga. 409. Such authority will not be implied from the “ general wel
There is no provision of the charter of Macon which expressly authorizes the recorder to impose a punishment for gambling; nor was it contended that it could be punished as an offense against the municipality, under that name; but it was claimed that the act in question was “disorderly conduct,” and under the ordinance-referred to, could be punished as such. The claim that it was “disorderly conduct,” however, rested wholly upon the fact that it was gambling, a violation of the penal law of the State; and this fact, as we -have shown, so far from being a reason why the corporation could punish for it as disorderly conduct, was a reason why the act could not be dealt with at all as an offense against the municipality. The case differs from those of McRea v. Mayor etc. of Americus, 59 Ga. 168, and Karwisch v. Mayor etc. of Atlanta, 44 Ga. 404, relied on by'counsel for the defendant in error. In the present case, so far as appears from the record, there was no disturbance of the public; the playing was carried on quietly, and not in any sense publicly. Although the room in which it was conducted was situated over a bar-room, it does not appear that there was any communication between the two places. There was nothing independently of the fact that it was gambling which would render the conduct in question an offense of any kind.
It follows from what we have said, that the court below erred in dismissing the certiorari.
Judgment reversed.