The appearance-supersedeas bond in certiorari must be executed according to the provisions of Code
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§ 19-214 as a condition, precedent to the sanctioning of the application. Among other things, the bond shall be made payable “if the conviction be in a municipal court, to the municipality.” This condition, however, is satisfied if the obligee in the bond is such an officer of the municipality as has power to bind it in the subject matter of the instrument. “If it is a valid contract between the obligors and the city, adequate to the accomplishment of the purposes mentioned in the statute and conditioned according to the obligation therein stated, it is good.”
Williams
v.
City of Tifton,
3
Ga. App.
445 (
In this case the bond was made payable to “Nat. 0. Carter, City Recorder of Yidalia, or his successors in office,” he being the City Recorder who tried the case in which the defendant was convicted. If such bond was given to the obligee in his personal capacity only, it would not, of course, be a valid contract with the city. Code § 4-401, and citations. It appears, however, from the charter of the City of Vidalia (Ga. L. 1922, pp. 1004, 1023-1025), that under section 24 the recorder has power and authority, where that office has been created, to try all offenses against the ordinances of the city; and under section 26 he has authority “to forfeit all appearance bonds when the principal shall fail or refuse to appear at said court at the times and places specified therein, under such rules and regulations as the Mayor and Council of said city shall by ordinance prescribe, and the; said police court shall have the power and authority to do so, generally, all other acts and things necessary for the proper enforcement of its authority.” Accordingly, the recorder is the person charged with the responsibility of forfeiting appearance bonds such as this when their conditions have not been complied with, and he necessarily does so for and on behalf of the city as such officer. This being so the petition affirmatively shows a valid contract between the obligors and the city for this purpose, and it was not subject to dismissal upon this ground. Nothing to the contrary was held in
Williams
v.
City of Dublin,
24
Ga. App.
358 (
The charter of the City of Vidalia, which is not under attack, provides in section 68 that the mayor and council “shall have the right and authority, by ordinance, to- prohibit idling, loitering and loafing on the streets, alleys, lanes, squares and sidewalks of said city, or upon any of them, and to prohibit the idling, loitering and loafing in any of the public buildings in said city, and to prescribe penalties for the violation thereof.” Pursuant to such charter provision a city ordinance, for the violation of which defendant was convicted, was enacted providing in part that “it shall be unlawful for any person to idle, loiter or loaf upon any of the streets, sidewalks, alleys, lanes, parks or squares of said City of Vidalia, or in any public building in said city.”
The evidence showed the defendant to be a man unable to do any manual labor, afflicted with a deformity, suffering from rheumatism of the spine, and stomach ulcers, who lived in a hotel in downtown Vidalia and who had no' known occupation but paid all his bills regularly, who owned an automobile and spent most of his time between 8:00 or 8:30 a. m. and 10:00 or 10:30 p. m. in his automobile, legally parked at a certain location, although sometimes he would be out of the car. Occasionally he would drive the car away for short periods of time and then bring it back, and occasionally he would be seen talking to other people. There was no evidence that he was ever disorderly, made any disturbance, or obstructed traffic.
A motion to dismiss the charges at the conclusion of the evidence was overruled, defendant contending that the ordinance, being unreasonable, is void; that it is unreasonable and void as to this defendant who is shown to be unable to work; that it is unreasonable in that it applies to public buildings, parks and like places; that it is an invasion of the rights of citizens, and in violation of the due process clause of the State Constitution. The constitutionality of the charter provision not being under attack, the ordinance, insofar as it follows charter provisions, will be taken as constitutional.
Young
v.
City of
Waycross, 11
Ga. App.
846 (
The defendant here was committing no unlawful act detrimental to morals or which constituted a nuisance or obstruction in any public place. Most of the time he sat in his lawfully-parked automobile, which he had a right to do. He was accordingly guilty of no offense, and an ordinance attempting to penalize him
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for this conduct is so arbitrary and unreasonable as to be void. See
The judge of the superior court erred in overruling and dismissing the application for certiorari.
Judgment reversed.
