114 Ga. 462 | Ga. | 1901
On October 22,1901, C. E. Melton, Horkan, Powell & Co., and H. J. Finch brought their petition against the Mayor and Aldermen of the City of Moultrie, iu Colquitt county, for injunction. The petition, in substance, alleged that petitioners were engaged in the retail liquor business in the City of Moultrie; that each of them had paid to the proper authorities of the municipality the sum of $500 for a license to do such business, and that a license for such purpose had been regularly issued to each of them, which licenses would respectively expire at. given dates during the year 1902; that they had expended large sums of money in purchasing stocks of liquors, in buildings and necessary fixtures, and implements for carrying on such business; that recently an election had been held for Mayor and Aldermen in the City of Moultrie, and the newly elected mayor and aldermen were about to enact ordinances to revoke the licenses for the sale of liquor which had been granted by the municipal authorities to the petitioners, without refunding or offering to refund to the petitioners the money which they had paid for • such licenses, to prohibit and make penal the having or keeping for sale of malt, spirituous, or intoxicating liquors within the corporate limits of the city, and also tó absolutely prohibit, under a severe penalty, the sale of such liquors within the limits of such city; and that, if such ordinances should he adopted, petitioners would suffer great and irreparable damages. The prayer was, that the mayor and aldermen be restrained from enacting such ordinances, 'and, if enacted, that they be enjoined from enforcing the same. The material allegations of the petition were not denied in the answer. Upon the hearing it appeared that the newly elected mayor and aldermen of Moultrie had adopted the following ordinances: An ordinance specially revoking the licenses which had been theretofore granted to
The doctrine is well established that it is within the power of the duly constituted authorities of any municipality, having by law the power to grant licenses to retail spirituous liquors, to revoke such licenses at any time, without refunding the money paid therefor or any part of the same. Pol..Code, §15; Ison v. Griffin, 98 Ga. 623; Plumb v. Christie, 103 Ga. 686. The fact that the holders of such revoked licenses have invested money in liquors, or in fixtures needed in retailing the same, does not vary the application of the rule. Menken v. Atlanta, 78 Ga. 678; Ison v. Griffin, supra. Section 12 of the charter of the City of Moultrie (Acts 1895, p. 260) gives the mayor and aldermen thereof “full power and control and authority to regulate the sale of spirituous liquors, vinous, malt, and. intoxicating liquors in said city; to grant license for the sale of the same, or to refuse to grant such license; and to establish dispensaries, and to establish such other and further regulations and restrictions as they may deem just and proper, with reference to the sale of all such liquors; and to impose penalties upon all persons selling such liquors without a license, or for violating
Judgment affirmed.