102 Ga. 792 | Ga. | 1898
In 1890 the General Assembly conferred upon the mayor and alderfrien of the City of Columbus authority to “declare by resolution that vaccination shall be compulsory upon all persons living in the county of Muscogee, or any part thereof,” the resolution to provide “the time within which all persons living in said county, or any part thereof, shall be vaccinated”; the act further providing that “any person failing to be vaccinated within the time required in said resolution shall, upon conviction,” be punished as therein prescribed. Acts 1890-91, p. 508. On August 7, 1897, the city council passed a resolution for compulsory vaccination of each and every person resident of that city, over the age of two years, and of all persons non-resident who were employed in the city, excepting .such as would produce physicians’ certificates that they had been successfully vaccinated since January 1, 1897, or that such person was an immune, or was in such state of health that vaccination would be dangerous; provided that any person should have the right to be vaccinated by the physician of his choice. Two days later the city council passed a further resolution, that all persons residing within a radius of three miles from the city should be vaccinated within ten days from its passage, except such persons as might produce a certificate of a reputable physician that vaccination was not necessary or would be dangerous in a given case. ' Each of these resolutions provided a penalty for its violation. On September 13, 1897, a further resolution was passed, providing for a house-to-house vaccination, with penalty for failing or refusing to be vaccinated. Morris, Newsom and Yarbrough were arraigned before the recorder’s court for a violation of these resolutions. Upon conviction they each applied to the superior court for a writ of certiorari, and the refusal of that court to sustain the certiorari is the error assigned here. From the record it appears that plaintiff in error Morris resided outside of the city
All of the plaintiffs in error attack the constitutionality of the-act of the General Assembly conferring authority upon the city council of Columbus to require vaccination in certain cases. Before discussing this question, we will dispose of the other questions raised by the petitions for certiorari. Plaintiff in error Morris contends that the court had no jurisdiction of him,, because he was a non-resident of the city, although he lived but three hundred feet from the city limits and in Muscogee county. The General Assembly by an act approved November 15, 1895, amendatory of the act of 1890, creating a new charter for the City of Columbus (Acts 1895, p. 158), gave jurisdiction to the mayor and aldermen of Columbus over all persons living within a radius one mile and a half from the city limits, so far as requiring vaccination was concerned; and if the legislature had power to pass this act (and it is not contended that it did not), then it follows that the recorder’s coxirt had jurisdiction to try and punish any person within the pre
The next point raised by the petitions for certiorari is, that there was no necessity for the enforcement of the ordinance. The right to enforce vaccination (assuming for the present that its enforcement is constitutional) is derived from necessity; and although the authority conferred upon the municipal corporation of Columbus is very broad, still-we can not assume that the legislature intended that they should exercise this authority save in cases of necessity. Did the necessity for the enforcement of the ordinance against the plaintiffs in error exist? We think there can be no question, under the facts appearing in
The General Assembly conferred this authority upon the City of Columbus in the exercise of its police power, by which, says Tiedeman, “State, persons, and property are subjected to all kinds of restraints and burdens, in order to secure the general comfort, health, and prosperity of the State.” The Supreme Court of Illinois has said of this power that it is “ coextensive with self-protection, and is not inaptly termed ‘ the law of overruling necessity.’ It is that inherent power in the State, which enables it to prohibit all things hurtful to the comfort and welfare of society.” Lakeview v. Rose Hill Cemetery, 70 Ill. 192. The Court of Appeals of New York says: “The police power extends to the protection of persons and property within the State.. In order to secure that protection they may be subjected to restraints and burdens by legislative acts. If the act is a valid and reasonable exercise of the police power of the State, then it must be submitted to, as a measure designed for the protection of the public and to secure it against some danger, real or anticipated, from a state of things which modifications in our social or commercial life have brought about. The natural right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness
Judgment affirmed.