1. Its charter (Ga. L. 1937, p. 1877) provides in section one that the “Town of Flowery Branch” may sue and be sued. A municipal corporation can sue and be sued only in the manner provided by its charter, and in its appropriate corporate name.
Boon
v.
Mayor &c. of Jackson,
98
Ga.
490 (
2. In so far as the petitioners seek equitable relief “as individuals, citizens, and taxpayers,” the allegations of the petition are insufficient to show special damage to them, or any damage that is not shared equally by all other “individuals, citizens, and taxpayers.” The petition, therefore was insufficient for the grant of any relief to the petitioners as individuals, citizens, and taxpayers. Code §§ 72-103, 72-202;
Coast Line R. Co.
v.
Cohen,
50
Ga.
451;
East Tenn., Va. & Ga. Ry. Co.
v.
Boardman,
96
Ga.
356 (
3. “The right to extraordinary aid of mandamus exists only where the applicant has a clear legal right to the relief sought and there is no
*198
oilier adequate remedy.”
Lindsey
v.
Board of Commissioners of Roads & Revenues of Colquitt County,
169
Ga.
368 (
4. The trial court erred in overruling the demurrers to the petition, and all subsequent proceedings are nugatory.
Judgment reversed in both cases.
