168 Ga. 868 | Ga. | 1929
Lead Opinion
W. L. Ash brought quo warranto proceedings to test the right of EL F. Parks to hold office as a member of the board of commissioners of roads and revenues of Lumpkin County, and, as the ground of such proceedings, contended that Parks was ineligible to a place on the board, because he had1 served as a member of the board of county tax-assessprs up to March 12, 1928, and was therefore ineligible to hold any other county office for one year thereafter. Parks filed a response in which, among other grounds of resistance to the proceedings, he insisted that the law declaring one ineligible to hold another county office while acting as tax-assessor and for one year thereafter was unconstitutional; and further claimed that he had abandoned the office of tax-assessor in June, 1927, which was more than a year before he was elected to the position on the board of commissioners of roads and revenues. The judge of the superior court, having determined that an issue of fact was involved, submitted the case to a jury, who returned a verdict finding Parks ineligible to hold the office claimed. Parks filed a direct bill of exceptions to this court.
The rulings made in the first two headnotes require no elaboration.
In the course of the instructions to the jury the court charged as follows: “When a person abandons an office, he must do so wilfully and voluntarily. It must be done in that manner, and he can give it up wilfully and voluntarily or cease to perform its duties in that manner; and it is for you to say whether or not Mr. Parks did that in June, 1927, as he contends, or whether he continued to be tax-assessor until February or March, 1928, and so considered himself at that time. In this connection you are instructed that if Mr. Parks, in February, 1928, signed a written resignation in which he characterized himself as a member of the board of tax-assessors for the County of Lumpkin, and if he at that time time considered himself as a member of that board, then he would be estopped in law to deny that he was such tax-assessor, and your finding should be in favor of the relator, W. L. Ash, if
If Parks had actually abandoned the office, so as to totally sever his connection therewith, the fact that he subsequently, that is, in February, 1928, signed a written resignation in which he characterized himself as a member of the board of tax-assessors for the County of Lumpkin would not be conclusive that he had not actually, prior to that date, abandoned the office. lie might possibly have signed a written resignation for the purpose of clearing up doubts in the minds of others as to whether he had, prior to the date of the resignation, actually terminated his connection with the office. Consequently, it was error for the court to instruct the jury, as appears from the extract from the charge quoted above, that “if Mr. Parks, in February, 1928, signed a written resignation in which he characterized himself as a member of the board of tax-assessors for the County of Lumpkin, and if he at that time considered himself as a member of that board, then he would be estopped in law to deny that he was such tax-assessor.” While the issuance of the written resignation in February, 1928, might be strong evidence that Parks had not abandoned the office in the preceding month of June, nevertheless he was not con-
The court charged the jury in part as follows: “I give you this rule with reference to tax-assessors: The members of said board, during the time they hold their office and for one year thereafter, shall be ineligible to hold any State, county, or municipal office. Now-you are instructed that if you find from the evidence that has been introduced upon the trial of the case that II. F. Parks was appointed tax-assessor in May, 1926, as contended by the relator, Mr. Ash, and took an oath and acted as a tax-assessor and continued to do so, to perform any duties that are incumbent upon him as such tax-assessor, if you find that to be true, that he did those things, then you are instructed that he was a tax-assessor of this county up until the time of his resignation. And you are further instructed, gentlemen, in this connection, if you find that to be true, and if he was elected a county commissioner of this county before the expiration of one year from the time that he ceased to be a tax-assessor of this county, that he was ineligible to be elected as such county commissioner and is in
Neither of these constitutional objections to the statute is valid. In the caption of the act it is recited that it is an act “to regulate the return and assessment of property for taxation in this State; . . to create and provide county boards of tax-assessors in each county; to fix their qualifications and compensation; to provide for their appointment and removal and term of office,” etc. We are of the opinion that that portion of the caption which indicates that the act is to fix the “qualifications” of the tax-assessors was in itself sufficient to authorize the incorporation in the act of the provision for their disqualification. That which would render the members of the board disqualified is necessarily related to the subject of qualification. As to the other ground, to wit, that the provision that a tax-assessor during the time he holds his office and for one year thereafter shall be ineligible to hold any State, county, or municipal office is unconstitutional because it imposes a disqualification to hold office not prescribed by the constitution, and that it was not competent for the legislature to do this by statute,
The rulings made in the 6th and 7th headnotes require no elaboration. ’
Judgment affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. I can not concur in the ruling in regard to the charge of the court with reference to abandonment of the office. There can be an abandonment of an office, just as a change of residence, without any notorious declaration whatsoever.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the judgment of affirmance and all that is said in the majority opinion, except in one particular. I do not concur in the view that the charge quoted in the third headnote is erroneous.