C. S. Swiney and Mario Moscardelli filed their petition for injunction against the City of Forest Park and its mayor and councilmen, alleging that the plaintiffs were residents of and property owners in a territory which was not included within the corporate limits of the city before the passage and approval of an act of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia passed at the 1953 Nov.-Dee. session thereof (Ga. L. 1953, Nov.-Dee. Sess., p. 3029 et seq.); and that this act enlarged the city limits so as to include the lands and homes of petitioners and make them liable for taxes and licenses for businesses conducted by *155 them in. the territory added to the city by this act. It is alleged that this act, being a local or special act, is unconstitutional because the notice of intention to apply therefor, duly published and attached to the act, as follows: “Notice of Legislation. An Act to amend an Act to create the City of Forest Park to provide for dividing the city into wards. To provide for a mayor and aldermen for said city to define their term and manner of election and compensation. To define said limits of said city, and for other purposes. Ed Kemp, E. A. Foster, Representatives,” was insufficient to constitute the notice required by article III, section VII, paragraph XV of the Constitution of 1945 (Code, Ann., § 2-1915), because it did not say in what General Assembly of what State the bill was to be introduced, or that any bill was to be introduced in any legislative forum, and that the words in said notice, “To define said limits of said city, and for other purposes,” were too vague and indefinite to put any person on notice that any territory was to be added to said city. To this petition the defendants interposed their demurrer, which was sustained by the trial judge, and to this judgment the plaintiffs except. Held:
1. While article III, section VII, paragraph XV of the Constitution of 1945 (Code, Ann., § 2-1915) provides that no local or special bill shall be passed by the General Assembly unless notice of intention to apply therefor shall be published and copy of such notice attached to and made a part of the bill, as therein required, and a failure to. comply with these requirements of the Constitution renders such a local bill null and void
(Smith
v.
McMichael,
203
Ga.
74,
2. The words “To define said limits of said city” as used in the notice here involved are sufficiently broad to include the extension or enlargement of the corporate limits. In State
v.
Hooker,
3. Under the foregoing authorities, the notice of intention to apply for local legislation was sufficiently definite and comprehensive to meet the requirements of article III, section VII, paragraph XV of the Constitution of 1945 (Code, Ann., § 2-1915), and the trial judge did not err in sustaining the general demurrer and dismissing the plaintiffs’ petition.
Judgment affirmed.
