146 Ga. 644 | Ga. | 1917
Certain taxpayers and residents of the Villa Eica school district of Carroll county brought their petition to enjoin the assessment and levy of a local school tax upon the property in that district, on the grounds, among others, that the entire county of Carroll had never been laid off into school districts as provided by law, nor was a map of the county as thus laid off, outlining the boundaries of the school districts with full description thereof, filed with the ordinary as required by the statute. On the trial it appeared that the board of education of Carroll county, on September 18, 1905, passed a resolution directing the county school commissioner, in connection with the president of the board of education, to prepare a map of the school districts and submit the same for ratification at its next meeting. At the next meeting of the board the committee presented what purported to be a map of the county, with the school districts defined thereon, and with some slight amendments the map was adopted as delineating the school districts of Carroll county. Afterwards, on-August 15, 1914, an election was held in what is known as the Villa Eica school district on the subject of local taxation for the support of the public schools. A majority voted in that election in favor of local taxation for public schools, and the ordinary declared the result accordingly. By virtue of this election the trustees and the county school commissioner were preparing to assess and levy a local tax for school purposes, when the petition was filed. The evidence disclosed that the division of the county into school districts, was. made by marking out the different school districts upon a map purporting to be a map of Carroll county. In point of fact this map did not embrace the entire territory of the county, and omitted ten full land lots and eleven fractional land lots off the eastern side of the county. The omitted area comprises about five square miles.' This map was filed in the county commissioner’s office. The testimony as to its filing in the ordinary’s office was very meager, but it appeared that elections had been called by the ordinary in other school districts on the faith that the county had been divided into school districts as provided by the statute. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiffs, and the' court refused, on motion, to grant new trial.
In 1905 the General Assembly enacted a law to carry into effect the recently adopted constitutional amendment for the support of