169 Ga. 702 | Ga. | 1930
On May 15, 1929, O. E. DeVane and B. W. Tygart as citizens and taxpayers presented their application for leave to file an information in the nature of quo warranto, to oust M. M. Shaw from tlie office of alderman of the City of Nashville in Berrien County, to which he had been elected on May 30, 1929, on the ground that he was a delinquent in the matter of payment of his state and county taxes and his municipal taxes for the years
It has been ruled by this court: “A petition for leave to file an information in the nature of quo warranto must be verified. Such averments therein as show the relator’s right to’ file an information must be positively verified, but averments concerning the occupant’s usurpation of the office may be verified on information and belief.” McWilliams v. Jacobs, 138 Ga. 375 (3) (57 S. E. 509) ; Harris v. Pounds, 66 Ga. 133 (3); Milton v. Mitchell, 139 Ga. 614, 619 (77 S. E. 831). It has also been ruled: “Although the act of 1887 requires a petition for injunction and receiver to be verified, yet, where the verification is imperfect, the deficiency may be supplied by affidavits at the hearing, in case the presiding judge shall think proper, in the exercise of his discretion, to proceed on the defective verification. It is best, however, to require proper verification before any action is taken on the petition.” Martin v. Burgwyn, 88 Ga. 78 (13 S. E. 958). The rule thus stated in reference to petitions for injunction by analogy is applicable to proceedings in quo warranto. This being so, the judge did not err in allowing the relators to amend.
The act of 1900 (Acts 1900, p. 374) to establish a new charter for the Town of Nashville, as amended by sections 4 and 6 of the act of 1937 (Acts 1937, p. 1436), provides in part as follows : “All persons who shall have been bona fide residents of said
A plea in abatement charged that the relators, though having returned property for taxation to the city and the county for the years 1927 and 1928, had failed to pay such taxes, and that for such reason the quo warranto proceedings instituted by them should be dismissed. The trial judge did not err in striking this plea on general demurrer.
An amendment to the answer alleged that while the several tax fi. fas. against respondent, which were referred to in the petition, were illegal, he nevertheless paid them under protest on •June 5, 1929. The date stated occurred while action was pending, but before decision of the case. Mere payment of the taxes after registration would not validate the registration, and would not
The bill of exceptions recites, that, there being an issue of fact raised by the answer, the case was assigned for trial before a jury on June 7, and that after both sides had introduced evidence as set forth in the bill of exceptions the court directed a special verdict answering certain questions propounded to the jury, and thereafter entered a judgment declaring the respondent ineligible, and ousting him from office. The judge did not err in rejecting evidence offered by the respondent, to the effect that his name appeared on the registration lists of the county, during the years 1921', 1928, and 1929, as a qualified voter, on the ground that it was irrelevant. The uncontradicted evidence demanded the verdict directed, and the judge did not err in rendering the judgment ousting the respondent from the office.
Judgment affirmed.