103 Ga. 686 | Ga. | 1898
On January 15, 1898, Plumb, one of the petitioners in the injunction case, presented to the judge of the superior court his petition against Whitehead, as clerk of the city council of Dawson, for mandamus to require the defendant to grant to petitioner a license to sell at retail spirituous liquors within the corporate limits of the city of Dawson, the petition containing a prayer for mandamus nisi requiring the clerk to show cause in vacation why the mandamus should not be made absolute. The petition alleged, in substance, that under the charter of the city of Dawson, exclusive right to grant license to sell liquors within the limits of the city, and fixing the rates and amounts of the license, and the terms and conditions upon which it should issue, is conferred upon the mayor and aider-men of the city; that by an ordinance of the city it was made the duty of the council, at its regular meetings in January of each year, or as soon thereafter as possible, to examine and make such changes as in their judgment may be necessary in the annual license ordinances of the city; that an ordinance of the city makes it the duty of the clerk of the city council to issue and keep a record of all licenses; that petitioner had conformed to all the ordinances touching the grant of licenses for the sale of liquors; that he had been in the business as a retailer of liquors in the city during the year 1897, selling from $6,000 to $8,000 worth of liquors, at least one half of which were pur
In par. 22, sec. 7, art. 3 of that instrument (Civil Code, §5784). it is declared: “The General Assembly shall have power to make all laws and ordinances consistent with this con
In the case of Townsend v. State of Indiana, 37 L. R. A. 294-5, a statute restricting the use of natural gas which one had lawfully obtained possession of from his own premises was upheld. In that case the court said: “A statute can not be declared unconstitutional simply because it may be wrong and unjust, or because it violates the spirit of our institutions or impairs those rights which it is the object of free government to protect.” In the case of LeClaire v. City of Davenport, 13
This question is ably and fully discussed by Justice Gary, in an opinion indicating considerable research, in the case of State ex rel. George v. City Council of Aiken, 20 S. E. Rep. 221, in which the validity of the recent dispensary act of the State of South Carolina was held to be within the police power of the State, and not to be unconstitutional. The opinion of Chief Justice Mclver, who dissented from a majority of the court in that case, is based largely upon the idea that the whole scope and intent of the dispensary act of South Carolina was to enable the State to monopolize the liquor traffic with a view to the profit of such business. As before indicated, the Georgia act
Judgment affirmed.