7 Ga. 221 | Ga. | 1849
By the Court. —
delivering the opinion.
The first question made by the record, is as to the right of the Macon & Western Rail Road Company, under their charter, to engage in the transportation of corn and cotton through the City of Macon, and across the Ocmulgee River on the bridge, by drays or other conveyance.
The complainant alleges, that the defendants are collecting toll from him under the ordinance of 1849, illegally, for the corn and cotton which he causes to be transported across the bridge for the benefit of his customers, '.faking into view the ordinance, and that the complaint is that tolls are exacted from the complainant under it, for causing com and cotton to be transported across the bridge, the conclusion is irresistible to our minds, that the complainant causes the corn and cotton to be carried across the bridge on licensed drays, a business which is not authorized by the charter, either expressly or as necessarily incidental thereto.
The ordinance of 12th February, 1849, is, in our judgment, a valid ordinance, and the corporate authorities of the City of Macon had the power and authority to enact it.
By the 35th section of said Act, it enacted, “ That the Acts heretofore incorporating the City of Macon, together with all laws and parts of laws militating against this Act, be, and the same are hereby repealed.” See Pamphlet Laws, 1847, p. 43.
Before the enactment of the Act of 1847, the State had controlled the regulation of the tolls of the bridge, but when the corporation had paid the purchase money for it to the State, the sovereign authority thought proper to relinquish this power to the. corporation.
When we take into view the legislative history of the City of Macon, the conclusion is irresistible, that the reservation made in favor of carriages loaded with corn and cotton crossing the bridge, by the Act of 1828, was intended to benefit those who came to the City with such produce for sale in that market, and not those who carried their produce across the bridge to be sold in other distant markets. The present state of things, as connected with the transportation of produce by the rail roads, we do not suppose was ever contemplated by the Legislature, and this marked change in the affairs and business of the City, affords a very cogent reason why the Legislature should have relinquished all control over the tolls of the bridge to the corporation. The Act of 1828, as we have seen, prohibited the corporation from charging toll on any wagon or carriage loaded with cotton or corn. The Act of 1847, expressly gives the power and authority to the City authorities to regulate the tolls of the bridge, and as expressly repeals all laws or parts of laws which militate against the power and authority of the corporation to regulate such tolls. The City authorities have regulated the tolls across the bridge by the enactment of the ordinance complained of, and if the law of 1828, or
Let the judgment of the Court below be reversed.