116 Ga. 245 | Ga. | 1902
This was an application by citizens and taxpayers of DeKalb county? for an injunction to restrain the ordinary from •causing the roads of that county to be worked under what is known as the alternative road law, embraced in the Political Code, §§ 573— 583, and from assessing or levying any commutation or ad valorem tax under the provisions of that law, or executing any of the provisions of the same. The judge refused to grant the injunction prayed for, and the plaintiffs excepted. At a special term of the superior court of DeKalb county, held in December, 1900, the
At a special term called by the judge for the purpose of disposing of any civil or criminal business before the court the judge is certainly authorized to dispose of any business that may be on the dockets of the court at the time the special term is convened; and as the judge is authorized expressly to compel the attendance of the grand jury, the court can also dispose of any criminal business which may be brought before it upon presentments or indictments made at the special term. We do not think it will be questioned that the grand jury at a special term may return an indictment or presentment and that the judge may at that term try the persons-thus presented or indicted. A special term of the court is undoubtedly a term of court within the meaning of the law; and as the judge in his discretion is authorized to require the grand jury to be in attendance at such a term,it would seem that when the grand jury is in attendance at that term it is vested with all the authority which it has under the law at any term of court. The court may dispose of any business at a special term, unless there is a law which in express terms or by necessary implication deprives it of this power; pnd when there is a grand jury in attendance at such special term, such grand jury may dispose of any matter which it has authority to pass upon at a regular term. There is nothing in the Political Code, § 583, which either in express terms or by necessary implication requires that the recommendation in reference to the alternative road law shall be made at a regular term of the court. The grand jury at a special term can do anything which it could have lawfully done at the regular term preceding the special term, but of course can not do anything which is by law required to be done at the succeeding term. The grand jury at the September term, 1900, of DeKalb superior court could have made this recommendation, and when this same grand jury was in session at the special term there was no reason why it should not act upon the matter. For many, if not for all, purposes the special term is
2. It was further urged, as a reason why the judge erred in refusing to grant an injunction, that the alternative road law embraced in the sections of the Political Code above referred to was no longer of force, having been repealed by later legislation. The law as contained in the code provided a scheme for working the roads, which was to go into effect in a county only when recommended by the grand jury. In 1896 (Acts 1896, p. 78) an act was passed which amended the act of 1891 embodied in the code, by providing an additional scheme for working the roads, which scheme was not to go into effect in any county until it had been adopted by a popular vote of the county at an election called for that purpose. While the act of 1896 was an amendment of the act of 1891, it was distinctly provided in the act of 1896 “that it shall be optionary with the counties of this State to adopt the road working plan provided by the act of which it is amendatory, or
3, 4. It is alleged in the petition that the alternative road law contained in the code “ is unconstitutional and void, for the reason that it contravenes that provision of the constitution of the State which provides that ‘laws of a general nature shall have uniform operation throughout the State’”; it being insisted that, as that’law excepts from its operation the citizens of towns and cities, it does not and can not have uniform operation through the State. There is a provision in the alternative road law contained in the code, to the effect that “ citizens of cities and towns shall not be
The judge did nob err in refusing to grant the injunction.
Judgment affirmed.