Dispensary Commissioners v. Hooper
This text of 56 S.E. 997 (Dispensary Commissioners v. Hooper) 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
By an act approved December 15, 1902 (Acts of 1902, p. 222) > the-county commissioners of Lee county were constituted a board for the establishment, management, and control of dispensaries in the county. The act provided that such board might establish a dispensary for the sale of liquors in any of the incorporated towns of the county whenever the municipal authorities should, by proper ordinance, determine that it was desirable to have a dispensary in the town. One half of the profits of each dispensary was to be paid into the county treasury, and the other half into the treasury of the town in which the dispensary was located. A dispensary was established in the city of Smithville, one of the incorporated municipalities of the county. On August 1, 1906, an act was approved providing for local option elections in counties in which the sale of whisky is not lawful except through [100]*100dispensaries. Acts of 1906, p. 114. This act provides that upon, petition, signed by one third of the voters qualified to vote for members of the General Assembly, the ordinary shall order an election at a stated time “to determine whether or not the sale of intoxicating liquors shall be absolutely prohibited in such county or not.” The provisions of the general local-option law, as to the mode and manner of the elections, were declared to be applicable to such elections, unless such provisions were clearly inapplicable. The act provided, if the result of the election should be against the dispensary, that after the expiration of four years, upon a petition of the character above referred to, a new election should be called, and, if the result of such an election was for the dispensary, “then the laws regulating the sale of intoxicating liquors in dispensary in .said counties, which were in existence at the date when their operation was suspended by virtue of the voters of said county having voted 'Against the dispensary’ shall be restored to force and effect.” It was also provided that no local-option eléctions under the general local-option liquor law “shall be called in any county after the same has voted 'Against the dispensaries,’ and so long as the provisions of this act are of force in such county.” .On August 18, 1906, the act approved December 15, 1902, providing» for the establishment of dispensaries in Lee county, was repealed so far as it related to the city of Smithville; the act to take effect on January 1, 1907. The repealing act provided that after the date mentioned the city of Smithville shall have no part or claim in any profits arising out of any dispensary in the county. Acts of 1906, p. 438. On January 1, 1907, the county commissioners, claiming to act in their capacity as dispensary commissioners, continued to maintain the dispensary in the city of Smithville, and the solicitor-general,, on the relation of certain citizens of that city, filed a petition against the commissioners in their individual capacity, to enjoin the continuance of the dispensary, on the ground that it was a public nuisance. The judge granted the injunction, and the defendants excepted.
Judgment affirmed.
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56 S.E. 997, 128 Ga. 99, 1907 Ga. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dispensary-commissioners-v-hooper-ga-1907.