Beavers v. Inman

133 S.E. 275, 35 Ga. App. 404, 1926 Ga. App. LEXIS 403
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 14, 1926
Docket16682
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 133 S.E. 275 (Beavers v. Inman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beavers v. Inman, 133 S.E. 275, 35 Ga. App. 404, 1926 Ga. App. LEXIS 403 (Ga. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Bell, J.

James L. Beavers, chief of police of the City of Atlanta, was tried by the police committee of the general council of that municipality upon charges preferred by Edward H. Inman, a member of the committee. The accusation was in four counts, styled and set forth as “specifications” 1, 3, 3, and 4. Count 1 charged in general terms the violation of rule 33 of the police department, which provided that the chief of police “will, as often as possible, pay frequent visits at unusual hours to various portions of the city, that he may be able to know, of his own knowledge, that the officers and men are performing their duties.” Count 3 charged the violation of an ordinance which was in language identical with the above. Count 3 alleged the infraction of rule 39 of the police department, which provided that “no member of the detective or police department will be permitted to work divorce cases, nor will any member of the police department knowingly be allowed to work on cases that will lead up to divorce proceedings.” Count 4 averred that the said Beavers as chief of police had falsely made an affidavit that on account of his poverty he was unable to [406]*406pay the court costs in a named judicial proceeding to which he was a party, and thus had violated a certain rule of the police department, which provided that “members of the police department are required to speak the truth at all times and under all circumstances, whether under oath or otherwise,” and that anyone “who wilfully departs from the truth [is] considered unfit for service.”

The respondent made a motion to disqualify certain members of the committee, demurred generally and specially, and pleaded in abatement, and answered. The motion to disqualify and the demurrers were overruled. The committee tried the issue formed by the plea in abatement and found against the plea. The trial on the merits resulted in the respondent’s conviction of the charges specified as 1, 2, and 4, and in his acquittal of charge number 3. Whereupon the committee ordered his discharge from the police department. By petition for certiorari he excepted to all of the rulings and findings against him. The judge of the superior court set aside the conviction of charge number 4 as being contrary to evidence and without evidence to support it, but affirmed the other rulings and findings of the committee, with the direction that the case be remanded to the committee “to pass such judgment upon their findings as to them should seem meet and proper,” the purpose of which direction was “to allow the committee to reconsider, if it so desires, its judgment, in view of the fact that specification No. 4 is stricken, and, if they see fit, to resentence” the respondent upon specifications 1 and 2, both of the others being then eliminated. The respondent thereupon brought the case to this court for review.

The grounds of the motion to disqualify and the facts touching the plea in abatement are sufficiently indicated in the headnotes. The committee did not err in overruling the motion, nor in finding against the plea, and the superior court committed no error in overruling the certiorari so far as it related to these matters. The special demurrers were to specifications 3 and 4 only, and, in view of the history of the case as to these charges, counsel have not sought any decision by this court in reference to these demurrers. And we will not pass upon the general demurrer. This demurrer having challenged the sufficiency of the accusation as a whole, without reference to any particular count, was properly overruled if any one of the counts alleged cause for the respondent’s dis[407]*407cipline or removal. Hence, a determination of the question raised by the general demurrer would involve a decision as to the sufficiency of each separate count of the accusation. Lowe v. Burke, 79 Ga. 164 (2) (3 S. E. 449); Napier v. Union Colton Mills, 93 Ga. 587 (20 S. E. 80); Hudson v. Hudson, 119 Ga. 637 (46 S. E. 874). One of these counts (number 3) was 'eliminated by an acquittal at the hands of the committee, and the conviction on another count (number 4) has been set aside by the judgment of the superior court, and no exceptions to that judgment have been taken by the municipality. Counsel for both sides have treated the case as if these counts were of no concern in the present inquiry. Thus, if we undertook a consideration of the demurrer to the accusation as a whole, we would at once be confronted with questions to which counsel have not even remotely addressed themselves, if not with questions actually moot under the instant writ of error, concerning, as they do, the sufficiency in law of counts 3 and 4. In these circumstances, and especially in view of the opinion which we entertain, and will later express, as to the exceptions to the committee’s ultimate finding and judgment, we make no ruling in reference to the demurrer. This conclusion will be without prejudice, however, and the case will stand without any adjudication on demurrer as to the legal sufficiency of any count or specification of the.accusation.

This brings us to a consideration of the exceptions to the committee’s findings under specifications 1 and 2. Since these counts are in substance the same, one alleging a violation of a rule of the police department and the other a violation of an ordinance which in language was identical with the rule, and since the convictions on -these two charges will, therefore, stand or fall together, we will not hereafter distinguish between the two regulations, but will deal with the case as though it involved a conviction of violating the rule only, what is said both in this opinion and in the head-notes having reference to' the ordinance as well as to the rule.

The petition for certiorari assigned, among other things, (1) that the committee erred in charging respondent as set forth in specifications 1 and 2, and in convicting him oE the offenses therein alleged, “because same did not constitute any offense, for that -said rule was impossible to be complied with in form or letter;” (2) that the committee erred in so convicting him, because “a com[408]*408pliance with said rule, as shown by said rule, was entirely discretionary with the chief,” and it “was not alleged or proved, nor was proof offered, that the chief of police had not exercised the discretion requiring [him] to comply with said rule, and he could not be convicted of a violation thereof without such proof;” and (3) that the conviction under those two specifications was illegal “because there was no evidence to show, or tending to show, that he was guilty of a violation of said rule.”

In our view of the case, it is unnecessary to decide whether all of these exceptions were well taken. To repeat the rule which the respondent was accused of violating, it provides: “He [the chief of police] will, as often as possible, pay frequent visits at unusual hours to various portions of the city, that he may be able to know, of his own knowledge, that the officers and men are performing their duties.” The “officers and men,” of course, are other members of the police department. What is meant by “as often as possible”? What are “frequent visits”? And when is an hour “unusual”? By what standards shall these questions be determined, and who is to determine them? Honest and intelligent men would, no doubt, differ very materially in undertaking to answer them.

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Bluebook (online)
133 S.E. 275, 35 Ga. App. 404, 1926 Ga. App. LEXIS 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beavers-v-inman-gactapp-1926.