133 Ga. 642 | Ga. | 1909
J. W. Eoberts filed an equitable petition against the City of Cairo and its mayor and board of aldermen, seeking to have an ordinance alleged to have been enacted by the municipal authorities declared unconstitutional and void; and to obtain an injunction against the mayor and aldermen, restraining them from enforcing the ordinance and from closing the plaintiff’s place of business. He alleged, that he was a disabled Confederate soldier, and received from the ordinary a certificate of his right as such to peddle or conduct business in any county or municipality in this State without'procuring a license or being subject to any tax therefor, provided that he should not peddle or deal in ardent or intoxicating drinks; that he had paid to the ordinary $200 as a license tax, and had procured a license to sell near-beer in Cairo; that the municipal authorities had enacted an ordinance requiring a license to be issued to .persons selling near-beer, and had imposed very onerous conditions and restrictions, which he claimed were unconstitutional, and rendered the ordinance void; that he has been unable to comply with the conditions of the ordinance, and that the City of Cairo “proceeded under said ordinance by threats of criminal prosecution, and otherwise compelled your petitioner to close his place of business, and same has remained closed ever since, to his damage and injury in the sum of $500;” that the ordinance was not a bona fide attempt to adopt reasonable police regulations, but was intended to be a means of prohibiting the business in the city, by prescribing unreasonable and arbitrary conditions; that the city refused to permit him to open up and conduct his business; and that it will become a total loss to him. On the hearing the injunction was denied, and plaintiff excepted.
'The bill of exceptions recited that the plaintiff introduced in evidence a certificate or order issued by'the ordinary of Grady county to the plaintiff, which was copied; that the special license for sale of near-beer, issued by the ordinary to the plaintiff, was introduced, which was also copied; that the affidavits of several persons named, “copies of which are hereto attached, and made part of this bill of exceptions,” as exhibits A, B, etc., were introduced;’ that the defendant introduced “the following affidavits as evidence,
In Colquitt v. Solomon, 61 Ga. 492, 494, Bleckley, J., said:
“Whatever precedes the judge’s certificate, though called an exhibit, is a part of the bill of exceptions, and may be verified by the certificate alone. 48 Ga. 566; 58 Ga. 346. What follows the certificate as an exhibit is an exhibit proper, and must be identified, as indicated by the tenth rule of this court (38 Ga. 689), by the judge’s signature upon the same. Such identification, strictly speaking, was requisite, even before the rule called for it in express terms. 13 Ga. 495.” In Morgan v. Twitty, 64 Ga. 426, it was held, that affidavits used on the hearing of an application for injunction constitute no part of the record, and that to bring them to
The affidavits in the present ease which were attached to the bill of exceptions were not identified by the signature of the judge, and also did not correspond entirely to the description of them in the bill of exceptions. Plainly the evidence was not properly brought up. As to the evidence of the defendant in error, this may have been corrected by the supplemental certificate of the judge. As to that introduced by the plaintiff in'error, the bill of exceptions states
If a consideration of the evidence is necessary to a decision of all the questions raised, and it is not brought up property, there can be no reversal. If there are questions as to the propriety of the judgment, which can be determined without the evidence, they may be considered. Thus a petition may be so wholly devoid of merit that on its face it would not authorize an injunction, regardless of the evidence; and this may work a reversal where an injunction has been granted. Or a respondent may rely on a demurrer alone as cause shown against the grant of an injunction; or an answer may admit facts requiring the grant; or there may be other instances where there can be a decision without the evidence. But is this such a case ? The plaintiff sought an injunction, which was denied. 'To establish the contention that this was error, he carried the bur
Judgment affirmed.