106 Ga. 378 | Ga. | 1899
Papworth was arraigned before the recorder of the City of Fitzgerald for a violation of the following ordinance, passed by the city council of Fitzgerald: “Be it ordained by •the city council of City of Fitzgerald, that any person, persons, .firm, or corporation, who shall within the limits of the City of Fitzgerald keep for the purpose of illegal sale any malt, spirituous, fermented, or other intoxicating liquors, shall upon conviction in the municipal court be punished by a fine of one hundred dollars and imprisonment in city jail ninety days.” The accused was found guilty, and the penalty provided for by -the ordinance above quoted was imposed upon him by the recorder. The accused thereupon brought his petition for certiorari to the superior court, and after hearing the same the .judge ordered that the petition for certiorari be overruled. Upon this judgment error is assigned in the bill of exceptions. It is .alleged in the petition for certiorari that the petitioner was tried under “ a complaint or accusation for keeping for the purpose
We fail to find in the charter of the City of Fitzgerald, as embodied in the Acts of 1896, pp. 157-183, any specific provision authorizing the city council to impose, as a penalty for violating any of its ordinances, both a fine' and a term of imprisonment. On the contrary it is provided, in section 68 of the act of incorporation, that it shall'be a part of the judgment against one found guilty of the violation of any of the ordinances of the city, that he “stand committed .until such judgment be complied with, in no case to exceed one day for every one dollar of fine and cost assessed against the defendant, and no fine shall exceed one hundred dollars together with costs.” The words “stand committed,” used in this section, evidently refer to incarceration or imprisonment, and the section quoted provides that such imprisonment shall in no case exceed one day for every dollar of fine and costs; and we think it necessarily implies that no imprisonment at all can be inflicted without there having first been given the defendant the opportunity of paying such fines and costs as may be imposed. Section 76 of .the same act provides that “any person upon whom any fine or penalty shall be imposed may, upon the order of the court before whom the conviction is had,'be committed to the county jail, city prison, workhouse, house of correction, or other place provided by the city for the incarceration of offenders, until such fine, penalty, and costs shall be fully paid. The same section further provides that' the city council may, by ordinance, require any male person over eighteen years of age, when committed in default of payment of fine, to work for the corporation at such labor as his strength will permit, not exceeding ten hours each working-day. Section 33 of the charter grants the council power to “establish and erect a city jail, house of correction, and workhouse, for the confinement and reformation of disorderly persons, vagrants, tramps, idle persons, and
There were several other grounds in the demurrer filed by counsel for the accused to the accusation in the recorder’s court, and also a special plea filed by himbut the above views are-controlling of the issues involved and cover all the points insisted upon in the brief filed in behalf of the-plaintiff in error.
Judgment affirmed, with direction.