91 Ga. 522 | Ga. | 1893
By the injunction in this case, the mayor and council are prohibited from excavating or removing any soil, ■earth or dirt within the corporate limits, for any purpose, during the period stated, unless by permission of the municipal board of health. The ground upon which the injunction is placed is, not that such excavating, etc., would constitute a nuisance per se, but that all power and authority of the city council in the matter of upturning the earth in the city during that period was relinquished, and the consent' of the board of health rendered necessary, by an ordinance adopted by the mayor and council, at the request of the board of health, on the 2d of July, 1890, which declared it should be “unlawful for any persons to excavate or remove, either or both, any soil, earth or dirt within .the incorporate limits of said city, at any time from the first day of June until the fifteenth day of October in each and every year, including the year 1890, unless by permis
We think the court below erred in holding this ordinance applicable to the mayor and council, so as to preclude them from exercising their corporate functions in improving and repairing the streets of the city, as they were undertaking to do when restrained by the injunction. It is a maxim of the common law that “ the king is not bound by any statute if he be not expressly named to be so bound.” No intent to relinquish or abridge any prerogative, right, title or interest of the crown will be presumed, unless such an intent is manifest from the language of the statute. Broom, Leg. Maxims, *72. With us, this rule applies to the State, and in the case of a municipal ordinance, to the governing body of the municipality. In the case of Lingo v. Harris, 73 Ga. 30, it was said: “It is a general rule that the State is not bound by the passage of a law, unless named therein, or the words of the act should be so plain, clear and unmistakable as to leave no doubt as to the intention of the legislature. Where there is doubt, it will be resolved in favor of the public. 20 Wallace, 251; 92 U. S. 618. This rule of construction comes down to us from our English ancestors,- and we recognize it as sound, and the policy which originally dictated it lives and is in force to-day.” See also Brooks v. The State, 54 Ga. 36, and Bishop on the Written Laws, §103. By the charter of the city of Brunswick, the streets of the city were vested in fee simple in the mayor and council, with power to widen, extend and straighten the same, and to open, lay out and establish new streets (Acts 1872, p. 151; §§14, 43) ; and incident to this power was that of grading and otherwise improving the
Beversed.