109 Ga. 835 | Ga. | 1900
By an act approved December 20, 1899, the General Assembly of this State undertook “to incorporate the town of Kirkwood, in DeKalb county, to confer certain powers on the municipal authorities of said town,” and to .prescribe the territorial limits thereof. See Acts of 1899, p. 233. The present proceeding was instituted by certain citizens and taxpayers of that town, with a view to testing the validity of this enactment, they contending, among other things, “that the description contained in the act relative to the property to be granted for municipal purposes” was so indefinite and uncertain that the territorial limits and boundaries of the proposed corporation were incapable of ascertainment.
From the “Beginning Point,” the location of which is made definite by the act of incorporation, the contemplated boundary
It was earnestly insisted by counsel for the defendants in error, in a brief filed in behalf of their clients, that: “It can not be said that this act leaves a hiatus or gap, because the very language of the áct in the concluding sentences fills it up by demanding a line to the beginning; ” and “the mere difficulty in selecting the line will not prevent the court from finding it.” In reply, we may say that the mere fact that the language of the act manifests an intention on the part of the legislature that the prescribed boundary should effectually encompass the territory designed to be set apart for municipal purposes, and that
The case in hand is totally unlike that which would be presented if a landowner, after stating generally in a deed of conveyance his intention to convey all of a certain tract of land upon which he resided or which was locally known by a designated name, should, in attempting to describe the premises by
In the case now before us, the extent and boundaries of the territory to be included within the corporate limits of the town of Kirkwood were, by the act of 1899, for the first time sought to be determined and established. A resort to extrinsic evidence as an aid in endeavoring to arrive at the legislative intent with regard to the contemplated location of the southeast-ern boundaries of that town would therefore be futile, as was evidently recognized by the parties to this litigation; for no attempt to show that Kirkwood was enclosed by definitely established lines previously run or recognized by its inhabitants was made on the hearing below. Nor would it benefit the defendants in error were we, in compliance with the suggestion of their counsel, to apply the maxim above alluded to, and thus expunge from the description contained in the act of incorporation so much thereof as refers to the course to be run “in a westerly direction, along the southern line of said Sisson,” upon the idea that this was an erroneous specification, inasmuch as a line so run could not possibly connect with the beginning point, as was the result manifestly contemplated. To eliminate this part of the description would have no effect other than to leave the last
Judgment reversed.