Asbell v. Mayor of Brunswick
This text of 80 Ga. 503 (Asbell v. Mayor of Brunswick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This was an application by George W. Asbell to- the judge of the superior court for a writ of certiorari', which the court refused to grant, upon the petition without more. The application shows that Asbell was a policeman of the city of Brunswick; and that the mayor exhibited certain charges against him, for inefficiency in the discharge [504]*504of his duties and for failure and neglect of duty; it being charged that he, being then a policeman of said city, whose duty it was to discover and disclose information pertaining to the commission of crimes or offences within the limits of the city, claimed that he had information tending to convict the perpetrator of a homicide committed in that city, which information he failed to disclose, but which, in a certain anonymous letter to the mayor and council, he proposed to furnish if they would pay him $1,000. Asbell appeared and answered these charges, the trial being had before six aldermen sitting as a court, one of whom, Mr. Penniman, acted as presiding officer of the court, he being mayor pro tern! and the mayor being absent and refusing to preside. Asbell was found guilty; which finding, he says in the petition, was contrary to the evidence.
We think the judge of the superior court should have granted this writ of certiorari. We see no reason why Mr. Penniman should not have' been allowed to vote as well as any other member of the court. The law authorized him to vote. There is nothing in the act of the legislature, incorporating the city of Brunswick, which deprived him of the privilege, and if there is anything in the ordinances of the city to that effect, it does not appear [505]*505in this record; we have none of the ordinances before us. So we think that the court organized to try the defendant ruled wrongly in holding that Mr. Penniman was not entitled to vote.
In view, therefore, of this act and the allegations in the petition for certiorari, we think that the judge of the superior court should have granted the writ and let it be answered, and then have determined the case properly. The judgment of the court below is reversed because of the refusal of the court to grant the writ of ce't tiorari prayed for.
Judgment reversed.
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