City Council of Waycross v. Youmans

11 S.E. 865, 85 Ga. 708, 1890 Ga. LEXIS 138
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 12, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 11 S.E. 865 (City Council of Waycross v. Youmans) 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.

Bluebook
City Council of Waycross v. Youmans, 11 S.E. 865, 85 Ga. 708, 1890 Ga. LEXIS 138 (Ga. 1890).

Opinion

Bleckley, Chief Justice.

1. The bill of exceptions was certified on the 21st of April, 1890. Besides assigning error on the final decision, which was rendered on the 12th of April, it excepts to and assigns error upon two previous orders granted in the cause, one of them passed on the 1st, and the other on the 5th of March, 1890. It was certainly too late to except to these orders for the first time on the 21st of April, no motion to vacate or modify them, so far as appears, having been made or ruled upon at the final hearing of the case, or at any time within ten (Code, §8206), twenty (Code, §3213), or even thirty [709]*709(Code, §4252) days previously to tendering the bill of exceptions. To make effectual any attempt to review these interlocutory orders, a motion to set them aside should have been made at the hearing, or they should have been attacked beforehand by exceptions entered pendente lite in due time and manner. This disposes of them.

2. So much of the charter of Waycross as is necessary to quote on the main question involved in this case is a single sentence, found in the 4th section (Acts of 1889, p. 899), which is as follows: “And in the event that the office of said mayor, or of either of said aldermen, shall become vacant by death, resignation, removal or otherwise, a majority of the council shall order a new election, by giving at least ten days’ notice in any one or more of the city papers, or at two or more of the most public places in the said city.” Here the office of mayor did become vacant; a majority of the council did order a new election by giving at least ten days’ notice in one of the city papers, and an election was actually held accordingly. The opinion of Judge Atkinson, which we find in the record, is so full and satisfactory upon the effect of this election, that we adopt it as our own.. It reads as follows:

“The mayor of Waycross, elected for the year 1890, having died, in order to fill the vacancy caused by his death, the town council, under the charter of the city, ordered an election to he held at a certain time after publication of the notice for such election in the newspapers published in said city. The day named for the election to be held was the'20th day of February, 1890. In one of the city papers that notice was properly published for the requisite number of days. In the other it was published for eight days only, and then was made to read, by reason of a typographical error, “the 20th day of February, 1809.” Observing this error in the [710]*710publication, the town council, upon the day before the election, revoked the order for the election; but notwithstanding the revocation of the order, an election ivas held, which resulted in the election of the petitioner in this case. Between the time of calling the election and the order revoking the call for the election, two of the members of council filed with the clerk of the council their resignation as members of the town council, but up to the time of the revocation of the order, such resignations had not been accepted, nor had the successors of such members of council been elected and qualified. Without the vote of these two aldermen, the order revoking the call for the election could not have been carried. The petitioner insists, first, that those members of council' having filed their resignations, they were no longer members of the town council, had no right to exercise any of the functions of the office of aldermen, and that the order passed by council while they were acting as councilmen was void and did not operate to postpone the election that had been previously ordered; second, that even if they were legally acting as aldermen, the council had no right, after having once fixed a day for the election, to rescind its order and postpone to another date the holding of the election. The court is of the opinion, with regard to the first point, that those members of council having been elected to fill their respective offices for a period of time fixed by law, and the law

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Bluebook (online)
11 S.E. 865, 85 Ga. 708, 1890 Ga. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-council-of-waycross-v-youmans-ga-1890.