T. M. Stephens filed a petition to enjoin the City of Ellijay and the mayor thereof from destroying the barn
“Petitioner shows that said mayor is acting and threatening to act without the scope of his authority, in that he is ordering Sam Hood, as chief of police in and for said city, to enter upon the premises of this defendant and destroy said property, and that it be done at the expense of this plaintiff; and that any such acts or doings on the part of B. C. Logan as mayor, or on the part of Sam Hood as police chief, is without authority of law and is in violation of the constitution of the State of Georgia, article 1, section 1, and paragraph 3, of the same, which declares, ‘No person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property, except by due process of law.’” The prayer of the petition is for injunction restraining the defendants from doing the acts complained of. The City of Ellijay demurred upon the grounds, (1) that the petition sets forth no cause'of action against the city; (3) that it appears from the petition that a court of equity is without jurisdictioh, for the reason that the matter has been adjudicated by the mayor’s court of the city, which' is a court of competent jurisdiction, and the matter is governed and controlled by the city and the charter and ordinances of the city are to said city as the constitution of the State of Georgia is to the General Assembly; (3) that in a proceeding to abate a nuisance the mayor of said city, who is the presiding officer of the police court, has jurisdiction to suppress and abate a nuisance after a hearing, if in his sound discretion he deems such to be a nuisance; that nuisances are abated under the city charter, and the superior court has no jurisdiction to abate nuisances. The demurrer was sustained and the petition dismissed.
An answer was filed, and was specified as a part of the record to be transmitted to this court, and was so transmitted; but in the decision of the court’s ruling upon demurrer the answer is entirely immaterial and can not be considered. Under section 19 of the act incorporating the City of Ellijay, approved August 14, 1909, Georgia Laws, 1909, p. 844 et seq., there was created a city police court for the municipal corporation, empowered to sit at any time,
From the above extracts from the charter of the City of Ellijay it will be observed that not only has the court jurisdiction of the subject of nuisances within-the corporate limits, but any nuisance may “be abated in a summary manner,” and that no such accusation in writing, or copy thereof, is required as in the case of a violation of purely municipal ordinances hereinabove quoted. Under the allegations of the petition, the plaintiff was given notice and accorded a hearing before the police court of Ellijay as created by the act of 1909; and he alleges that in pursuance of an order he removed the cause of the obnoxious odors, etc., and complied with
Judgment affirmed.