102 Ga. 840 | Ga. | 1898
Under an ordinance of the mayor and general ■council of the City of Atlanta, the plaintiff in error was tried, convicted and sentenced by the recorder of that city, upon the charge of “retailing spirituous and malt liquors without a license.” His petition for certiorari having been overruled and dismissed by the judge of the superior court, he excepted and brought the case, under a writ of error, to this court. The evidence in the case showed that the accused was a physician and druggist, and sold whisky in his drug-store on a certain day, which was Sunday. His contention was, and is, that if he was guilty of any offense at all, it was a State offense and the municipal court had no jurisdiction in the matter.
The case of Hill v. Mayor of Dalton, 72 Ga. 314, relied on by counsel for defendant in error, differs materially from the-present case. Hill was tried by the mayor of Dalton for selling “spirituous, intoxicating, malt, and fermented liquors-within the limits of that city,” which was made an offense by a municipal ordinance which absolutely prohibited the sale of such liquors. It was contended, in behalf of the accused, that the offense committed was that of retailing spirituous-liquors without a license, and, as this Avas a misdemeanor under the laws of the State, the superior court only had jurisdiction thereof, upon an indictment by the grand jury. This court decided that the case was covered by the principle ruled in Rothschild v. City of Darien, 69 Ga. 503, where it was held that “A municipal corporation can not legislate on subjects-already made offenses and punishable by the laws of the State;;
Section 431 of the Penal Code, which makes it a misdemeanor to sell spirituous liquors without a license, contains the following provision: “ No person shall be liable to indictment in the superior courts for a violation of this section, when he has been tried by the corporate authorities for the same offense.” This clause does not confer upon every municipal corporation in the State the power to prescribe and inflict punishment for an offense which is fully covered by this section of the code; nor does it recognize such a power as already existing in every such corporation. It is applicable only in cases where the legislature has clearly granted to the corporate authorities jurisdiction over the offense. Its purpose is neither to confer, nor to recognize, a general jurisdiction, applicable to all municipal corporations, but to protect a person who has been tried in a municipal court, having jurisdiction, from afterwards being put in jeopardy, by the State, under an indictment for the same offense. There are doubtless good reasons why the legislature might have deemed it unwise to confer, indiscriminátely, upon every municipality, regardless of its size or the
Judgment reversed.