107 Ga. 275 | Ga. | 1899
The plaintiff in error brought suit in the superior court of Hancock county against the Mayor and Aldermen of the Town of Sparta, making substantially the following allegations: The defendant is indebted to her in the sum of $12,-•500 damages, for that in December, 1896, one Mandel, who had been theretofore conducting the business of retailing spirituous liquors in the Town of Sparta, proposed to petitioner that the latter purchase a certain quantity of spirituous liquors which would remain in his store after the expiration of his license, said Mandel expressing his intention to leave Sparta and go into business elsewhere. Prior to that time petitioner’s husband had been engaged in the same business in said town, and, believing the statement of Mandel, as agent of petitioner accepted .said proposition. About the last of December petitioner was informed by an officer of the corporation that the corporation would not issue a license to one of the Mandéis to sell liquor during the year 1897, that Mandel did not have the sum of $4,000, which was the amount the mayor and aldermen had fixed for said license, and that they would not accept an offer, previously made by Mandel, to convey to the mayor and aider-men a tract of land and pay such sum in addition thereto as would aggregate $4,000 for said license, if petitioner would pur
The defendant demurred to the petition on a number of grounds. The court sustained the demurrer and dismissed the petition, and the plaintiff in error excepted.
1. This is a very remarkable case; and if the facts averred in the petition be true, a singular and entire misconception of the legal nature of a license to retail spirituous liquors, as well as of the powers and duties of a municipal corporation, exists in the minds of both parties to the cause. In any view of the •case, the demurrer to the petition was properly sustained. The 18th section of an act of the General Assembly, entitled “ An act to alter and amend, revise and consolidate the several acts-granting authority to the town of Sparta, and to confer additional powers upon the mayor and aldermen of said town, and for other purposes,” provides “that said mayor and aldermen shall have exclusive right to grant, or, in their discretion, refuse to grant license to sell malt, spirituous, or intoxicating liquors within the corporate limits of said town; shall prescribe the terms on which license may be issued, and regulate and
But it is said that the license was issued to Mandel through the mayor of the town, in consequence of a desire on the part of the latter to injure the petitioner. It may be replied, that under the statute the mayor has no power to issue licenses, but such power is conferred alone upon the mayor and aldermen as an official body. The exercise of this power is á quasi-judicial act, and, as it involves judgment and discretion, it must be exercised by the authority to which it is confided. It can not lawfully be delegated to any other person, or body. Black on Intoxicating Liquors, §§155, 171. Being such, the official body with whom the power is lodged is not subject to respond in damages to one who feels himself aggrieved by their action. Ison v. Mayor, 98 Ga. 623. It is averred in the petition that the mayor and aldermen, while requiring from the petitioner cash in payment of the license fee, accepted from Mandel a tract of land of estimated value of $4,500, and paid to Mandel $500, the difference between the license fee and the value of the land. Assuming this to be true, and conceding, as we do, that such action was clearly illegal, beyond the powers of the corporation, and of which any citizen of the town would have a right to complain, it does not give to the licensee any right to recover damages for such illegal action, nor does it give her any right in an action, such as is set out in the petition, to have the deed cancelled; for however much injury such action might have done to the citizens at large, it in no way affected the right of the petitioner to engage in the business for which she was licensed. It is true she alleges that by this means and
From what has been said, it must follow that the demurrer to the petition was properly sustained, and the judgment is
Affirmed.