144 Ga. 242 | Ga. | 1915
Certain taxpayers sought to enjoin tax executions issued against them by the Town of Adel, on the ground that the assessment of the tax was made by an illegally appointed board of assessors. The court refused an injunction. -
The charter of the Town of Adel (Acts 1900, p. 202) provides, “That the town council of said town shall have full power and authority [to prescribe] the manner of giving [in] the taxes of said town, to appoint three citizens of said town, who are freeholders
It is contrary to public polic3r to permit an official board having the power to appoint to an office to exercise that power by appoint ing one or more of their own body. When a statute confers the appointing power and does not expressly authorize self-appointment, the appointment of some other than self is always contemplated. The appointment of the board of assessors by the town council from their oato number was an illegal appointment, and the assessors were not de jure officers. Hawkins v. Intendant &c. of Jonesboro, 63 Ga. 527; Mechem on Public Officers, § 113; People v. Thomas, 33 Barb. 287. But it is said that the act of the board of assessors is valid as the act of officers de facto. It is unquestionably true, as a general rule, that a person who enters into an office and undertakes to perform the duties thereof by virtue of an election or appoint
Judgment reversed.