172 Ga. 895 | Ga. | 1931
Upon the petition of Duffell, in which he alleged that Templeman was a person of unsound mind and that a guardian should be appointed for his person and property, the ordinary appointed a commission consisting of two physicians and an acting solicitor-general of the Atlanta Circuit, to examine Templeman by inspection and to hear and examine witnesses under oath, if necessary, as to his condition, and to make return of such examination and inquiry to the ordinary, specifying in the return under which class they found Templeman to be. The commission thus appointed made their return in which they found that a guardian should be appointed for the 'person and property of Templeman.
Thereupon Templeman filed in Fulton superior court his peti
The first question for decision is whether there was a county /attorney for the County of Fulton at the time the commission was ¡appointed to examine Templeman, who should have been appointed ■ on the commission. The proceeding in this case was under the act >of August 20, 1918. This act provides that “Upon the petition of /any person on oath, setting forth that another is liable to have a /guardian appointed,” the ordinary “shall issue a commission directed to three reputable persons, two of whom shall be practicing medical physicians in good standing, said physicians to be residents of the county, if that number reside therein, and the county attorney or solicitor of any city court located in said county, and if no county attorney or solicitor of said city court, the solicitor-general of the circuit or some attorney of the county appointed by
By the constitution of this State the General Assembly is authorized to delegate to any county the power to levy a tax “for litigation.” Civil Code (1910), § 6562. The litigation referred to in this provision of the constitution is such litigation as involves the rights of the county as a corporation only. Koger v. Hunter, 102 Ga. 76 (29 S. E. 141); DeVaughn v. Booten, 146 Ga. 836 (92 S. E. 629). Each county of this State is a body corporate with power to sue or be sued in any court. Civil Code (1910), § 383. In suits against a county the fiscal affairs of which are committed to a board of commissioners, service on the county may be perfected upon a majority of the commissioners. Civil Code (1910), § 385. Such suits have to be defended by the county commissioners in the name of the county. They can not be defended without an attorney. From the general powers conferred upon the commissioners of Fulton County, as set out above, and by general laws to which no specific reference has been made, the commissioners are by clear implication authorized to employ counsel to defend suits brought against the county in civil matters. This power has been recognized by the decisions of other courts. A county generally has, in the absence of express authority, implied statutory authority, through its proper officers or agents, usually the county board, to employ counsel to represent the county in civil suits in which the county is interested, or to which the county is a party. 15 C. J. 547 (§ 239) (2). The power to control the fiscal affairs of a county carries with it the power to employ counsel. Jefferson County v. Jefferson County Fiscal Court, 161 Ky. 538 (170 S. W. 1171). In Eagle River v. Oneida County, 86 Wis. 266 (56 N. W. 644), the Supreme Court of Wisconsin held that a county “has the legal capacity to sue and be sued, and to appeal to the Supreme Court, and it is its duty, by implication, when it has a case pending in the Supreme Court, to attend to it and see that it is properly presented to that court j and, connected with' such a duty,
Furthermore, we are of the opinion that the board of county commissioners of Fulton County has the implied authority to employ counsel to advise it in the discharge of its duties, in the preparation of the innumerable orders which it must pass, in the making of various contracts which it must execute in behalf of the county, and in other transactions in which the county engages. Without the aid of competent legal advice it would be difficult, if not impossible, for the county commissioners to discharge their various duties in a proper and satisfactory manner. Having reached the conclusion that the county commissioners are authorized by clear implication to employ counsel or the county, we see no good reason why such authority should be confined in its exercise to cases or occasions requiring the employment of counsel. This would necessitate various contracts of employment, or various appointments of counsel, to meet the oft-recurring necessities of the county.
But it is insisted that the employment of Mr. Shelton was invalid and void, because there was no formal contract of his employment by the county in writing signed by both him and the county, and spread upon the minutes of the county commissioners. This contention is based upon the provisions of section 386 of the Civil Code, which declares that “all contracts entered into by the ordinary with other persons in behalf of the county must be in writing and entered on their minutes.” We do not think that the appointment of Mr. Shelton was invalid for the reason assigned. We have seen that under the law creating the board of commissioners of Fulton County that body had implied legislative power to appoint a county attorney. Where a statute by implication authorizes the county commissioners to appoint an officer in and for a county, the action of the commissioners in so doing is done by them as an agency of the State. The relation between the county and the county attorney does not rest upon contract, but arises from appointment authorized by a legislative enactment. The power and authority to appoint a county attorney comes from the legislature and the people. Commissioners of Roads v. Shorter, 50 Ga. 489, 508. An individual who has a designation or title given him by law, and who exercises functions concerning the public, assigned to him by law, is a public officer. Bradford v. Justices, 33 Ga. 332. An office is a public station or employment conferred by the appointment of the government. Any one is a public officer who is appointed by the government and has any duty to perform concerning the public. Nor does it matter that his authority or duty is confined to very narrow limits. Polk v. James, 68 Ga. 128;
Having held that the county commissioners were authorized to appoint a county attorney, and that there was a county attorney in office at the time the .ordinary appointed the commission to examine Templeman, who should have been appointed on the commission, what was the effect of the failure to appoint this officer on the commission? This act of 1918 is to be strictly construed. Morton v. Sims, 64 Ga. 298; Singer v. Middleton, 135 Ga. 825 (70 S. E. 662). By this act no guardian shall he appointed for the estate of a person nor shall such person be committed to the sanitarium except upon the return of the commission appointed in the manner prescribed by this act, finding that a guardian should
Petitioner further sought the writ of prohibition to enjoin the ordinary from appointing a guardian for his person and property, upon the ground that the return of the commission was illegal and void for the reason that it did not specify whether petitioner was found to be “an idiot, a lunatic, an insane person, a deaf and dumb person incapable of managing his estate, an habitual drunkard, or a person imbecile from old age or other cause and incapable of managing his estate.” The return of the commission in this case was not illegal and void for this reason. By the act of 1918 the ordinary appoints the commission therein provided for, requiring them to examine by inspection the person for whom guardianship or commitment to the sanitarium is sought, and to hear and examine witnesses on oath, if necessary, as to his condition and capacity to manage his estate, and to make return of such examination and inquiry to the said ordinary, specifying in such return under which class they find said person to come. This provision of the statute does not require the commission to specify in what class of mental defectives falls the person for whom guardianship or commitment to the sanitarium is sought. This provision requires the commission to specify whether such person should have a guardian ap
Having found that there was a county attorney in Fulton County and that he should have been appointed on the commission, it becomes unnecessary to'consider the question whether there is a solicitor of any city court in Atlanta who should have been appointed to serve on such commission, if there had been no county attorney.
Applying the principles ruled in the first, second, and third divisions of the opinion, the trial judge erred in denying the writ of prohibition.
Judgment reversed.