Cole v. Holland

132 S.E.2d 657, 219 Ga. 227, 1963 Ga. LEXIS 411
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 5, 1963
Docket22090
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 132 S.E.2d 657 (Cole v. Holland) 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
Cole v. Holland, 132 S.E.2d 657, 219 Ga. 227, 1963 Ga. LEXIS 411 (Ga. 1963).

Opinions

Candler, Justice.

Jack Holland, as Solicitor General of the Gwinnett Judicial Circuit, instituted a proceeding in the Superior Court of Gwinnett County to remove Daniel C. Cole from his office as sheriff of that oounty. His petition, as later amended, in substance, alleges: Cole, as sheriff, raided an illegal' distillery in his county on or about January 26, 1962. At the distillery, he found and seized 1,380 pounds of sugar, an upright boiler, a large steel tank, a pre-heater and an oil blower — apparatus and appliances which were being used for the purpose of making whiskey. At the distillery, he also found and seized 301 cases of glass jars which the operator [228]*228intended to use as containers for whiskey made at the distillery. He stored the sugar and jars in the barn of Horace J. Cofer, one of his deputies, and the other equipment in a garage at Lawrenceville, Georgia. Approximately 258 gallons of whiskey was also seized at the distillery and Cole carried it to the county’s jail. On or about May 17, 1962, Cofer, by direction from Cole, turned over the sugar to Marion C. Perry, a “notorious bootlegger” and Cole knew that it would be used for the purpose of making illicit whiskey. Cofer, on direction from Cole, also turned over the glass jars to parties unknown to him, but well known to Cole, and was paid $570 for them— a price fixed by Cole. They were delivered to such unknown parties about midnight and the money Cofer received for them was delivered to Cole who did not account for it to the governing authority of Gwinnett County. The parties who picked up the jars came to Cofer’s home in a truck with the lights turned off and they were not turned on until the jars were loaded on it at Cofer’s barn and the truck had reached a point about a fourth of a mile from Cofer’s barn. During April 1962, Alex S. Evans, one of Cole’s deputies and Thomas Led-ford removed the upright boiler and oil blower from the place where Cole had stored them in Lawrenceville to an illegal distillery in Gwinnett County where they were again seized by other officers while being used for the purpose of making whiskey and Cole knew of such intended use of them and “condoned and consented” to such act by Evans and Ledford. The amended petition further alleges that Cole, as sheriff, or his deputies, on various occasions and particularly on or about May 19, 1962, June 20, 1962, and January 29, 1963, seized large quantities of nontax-paid whiskey at illegal distilleries in Gwinnett County; that such whiskey was moved to and stored in the basement of the county’s jail; that Cole did not dispose of it as required by law; and that he and Alex S. Evans, one of his deputies, together with Marion C. Perry and Harry Gravitt, transferred and removed 240 gallons of it with a truck belonging to deputy Evans to a drive-in theater operated by Gravitt in Gwinnett County where it and the truck were seized by other officers. Cole demurred to the petition as amended on general and special grounds and also answered it. His general demurrers question the sufficiency of the amended petition to state a cause of action for the relief [229]*229sought and attack on several grounds the constitutionality of Code § 24-2724 which is made applicable to sheriffs by Code §§ 24-2814 and 77-111. His special demurrers attack and move to strike several allegations of the petition as amended on the grounds that they are conclusions of the pleader, argumentative in character and not based on otherwise well pleaded facts and for those reasons do not enable the respondent Cole to prepare his defense. His demurrers were overruled and he excepted to that judgment. The case resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff and on that finding a judgment was rendered removing Cole from office. A motion for new trial based on the usual grounds was timely filed by Cole and later amended by adding several special grounds. His amended motion was denied and he also excepted to that judgment. Held:

1. We do not think the court erred in overruling the general demurrers Cole interposed to the amended petition. This is true because, (1) its allegations are amply sufficient to show malpractice by him which this court said in Cargile v. State, 194 Ga. 20, 23 (20 SE2d 416), is evil, bad or wrong practice in office and, (2) Art. XI, Sec. II, Par. I of the Constitution of 1945 (Code Ann. § 2-7901) declares that a county officer “shall be removed upon conviction for malpractice in office.” But it is here urged that a conviction in a criminal prosecution against Cole for malpractice in office was a condition precedent to his removal from office. This position is untenable. A sheriff is a county officer and no statute of this State makes an act which amounts to malpractice in office when committed by him a penal offense, but an action to remove him from office is a quasi-criminal proceeding. Wallace v. State, 160 Ga. 570 (128 SE 759). The jury’s finding that Cole was guilty of the illegal and wrongful acts alleged against him in the amended petition was a “conviction” of him for malpractice in office and a conviction of him for malpractice in the removal proceeding which Holland instituted would authorize a judgment removing him from office. McClellan v. Pearson, 163 Ga. 492 (136 SE 429). A ruling different from the one just made would, as to a sheriff, render the removal provision of the Constitution meaningless since, as stated, malpractice in office by him is not a penal offense. Since the referred to provision of the Constitution of 1945 is in no wise dependent for its force and effectuation on Code § 24-2724, there is no occasion [230]*230and it is not necessary for this court to rule on' the constitutional attacks which Cole made on that Code section. On conviction for malpractice in office, the Constitution itself provides for his removal from office and a conviction for malpractice in the proceeding which the solicitor general filed against Cole in the superior court of the county in which Cole resided was a conviction for malpractice in office within the meaning of the constitutional provision which declares that a county officer shall be removed upon conviction for malpractice in office. While no statute has been enacted implementing this provision of the Constitution, Code § 3-105, nevertheless provides: “For every right there shall be a remedy, and every court having jurisdiction of the one may, if necessary, frame the other.” The fact that Holland in his removal petition states that it was brought under Code § 24-2724 is not controlling. To any given facts, this court will apply the law applicable thereto. See Fontaine v. Baxley, 90 Ga. 416, 427 (17 SE 1015); Girtman v. Girtman, 191 Ga. 173, 180 (4) (11 SE2d 782); and Trowbridge v. Dominy, 92 Ga. App. 177, 180 (88 SE2d 161).

2. The judgment overruling Cole’s special demurrers is not erroneous. They were interposed to the original petition and renewed to it after it was materially amended. The attack they make on several different allegations of the petition as amended shows no sufficient reason for striking them.

3. Over an objection by Cole that it was irrelevant and immaterial because it did not establish that Marion C. Perry was a “notorious bootlegger” as alleged in the petition and because it is not connected in any way with the respondent Cole since it is not shown by evidence that he had any knowledge of the indictment or that it would make him (Perry) a “notorious . bootlegger,” a certified copy of an indictment which was returned during 1959 against Marion C.

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Cole v. Holland
132 S.E.2d 657 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1963)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 S.E.2d 657, 219 Ga. 227, 1963 Ga. LEXIS 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-holland-ga-1963.