We consider first the main bill of exceptions.
It is a well-established rule of j'udicial procedure that the constitutionality of a statute will not be decided, if the case can be properly determined without deciding such question.
Georgia Power Co. v. Decatur,
173
Ga.
219 (3) (
It is conceded in the briefs that the population of Sumter County is less than the minimum stated in the act, according to the census of 1940. Independently of this, however, and irrespective of any question as to judicial notice (cf.
Fidelity & Deposit Co.
v.
Smith,
35
Ga. App.
744, 746,
The intent of this act was to classify counties on basis of population, for the purpose of changing the system of compensation to-clerks of the superior courts, as it then existed in such counties under general laws. As indicated in section 1, the class was to be- *175 composed of counties having a population of 26,750 to 27,750, inclusive, according to the United States census of 1930 or according to any subsequent United States census.
The constitution provides that “Laws of a general nature shall have uniform operation throughout the State, and no special law shall be enacted in any case for which provision has been made by an existing general law.” Code, § 2-401; In
Stewart
v.
Anderson,
140
Ga.
31, 33 (
*176
In the instant case, any conclusion to the effect that Sumter County is now subject to the act of 1933, merely because its population was within the prescribed limits under the census of 1930, would ignore the provision as to “any subsequent United States census,” and determine its status just as though no such provision was contained in the statute. If classification should be thus fixed unchangeably by the particular census, the county or counties might as well have been specified by name, since they could be readily identified by such description, and would be hedged thereby. Any such construction would render the act special, and repugnant to the constitutional provision contained in the Code, § 2-401, as quoted above.
Futrell
v.
George,
supra;
Reynolds
v.
Hall,
154
Ga.
623 (2) (
If, in order to be valid, a classification by population must open to let in counties subsequently falling within the class, so also it must open to let out a county which either by increase or decrease according to the last census ceases to have the required population. Otherwise no constitutional classification could be maintained. See, in this connection,
Whether this conclusion would follow from a strict, grammatical construction of the statute, it accords with the principle that the intention of the legislative body, as it manifestly appears in a statute, must be carried into effect, although the precise and literal sense of the terms might be different.
Erwin
v.
Moore,
15
Ga.
361;
Demere
v.
Germania Bank,
116
Ga.
317, 318 (
The court properly sustained grounds 1 and 2 of the general demurrer and dismissed the action. In this view, it is unnecessary to pass upon other questions raised by the main bill of exceptions, or to rule upon the assignments of error contained in the cross-bill.
Judgment affirmed on the main bill of exceptions; cross-bill dismissed.
