The act approved February 14, 1950 (Ga. L. 1950, p. 2389 et seq.) as amended (Ga. L. 1953, Nov.-Dee. Sess., p. 2547), purporting to change from the fee to the salary system, in certain counties in Georgia, the clerk of the superior court, the sheriff, the ordinary, the tax collector, and the tax receiver (or tax commissioner), declares “that the provisions of this act shall apply to all counties in the State of Georgia having, by the United States census of 1940, a population of not less than 53,000 inhabitants, nor more than 75,000 inhabitants, and to all counties in this State having, by any future census of the United States, a population of not less than 53,000 nor more than 75,000 inhabitants, and on the publication of said census any county not now having said population of 53,000 but by said new census having said population of 53,000, such county shall immediately automatically pass under the terms of this act.”
In
Tift
v.
Bush,
209
Ga.
769 (
The conjunctive word “and” having likewise been used in the act of 1950 as amended, under the interpretation given its meaning in Tift v. Bush, supra, Floyd County is “frozen” within the terms of the act, and the act is therefore not a general law.
The next question is whether the act of 1950 is a valid special or local law. Taking the allegations of the petition to be true, as must be done on general demurrer, the present act, if construed to be a special or local law, would be violative of article 3, section 7, paragraph 15, of the Georgia Constitution of 1945 (Code, Ann., § 2-1915), for the reason that it was not advertised in Floyd County, the locality to be affected.
Smith
v.
City Council of Augusta,
203
Ga.
511 (
Accordingly, the trial court did not err in overruling the defendants’ general demurrer to the petition, which sought by declaratory judgment to decree the act of 1950 as amended to be violative of designated provisions of the Georgia Constitution of 1945.
*886
Other constitutional questions set forth in the petition, a determination of which is not necessary to a disposition of the case, will not be passed upon.
Lively
v.
Grinstead,
210
Ga.
361, 363 (
Judgment affirmed.
