Fowler v. Mayor of Milledgeville

170 S.E. 819, 47 Ga. App. 584, 1933 Ga. App. LEXIS 569
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 5, 1933
Docket22751, 22761
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 170 S.E. 819 (Fowler v. Mayor of Milledgeville) 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
Fowler v. Mayor of Milledgeville, 170 S.E. 819, 47 Ga. App. 584, 1933 Ga. App. LEXIS 569 (Ga. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

Sutton, J.

The charter of the City of Milledgeville as amended authorizes the city to pave its streets in the manner pointed out therein. Ga. L. 1900, p. 345, et seq., as amended (Ga. L. 1925, p. 1199). Sections 3 and 5 thereof authorize the mayor and aldermen of said city to grade and pave its streets by passing an ordinance for that purpose, in which they shall prescribe the location, character, and manner of the improvement desired. The original charter of said city requires that an ordinance shall be read three times' in council before its passage. Sections 4 and 6 of said amended charter provide that said .paving ordinance shall be passed “under the rules providing for the passage of ordinances in said city, and when a copy of said resolution or ordinance shall have been posted at some conspicuous place frequented by the public in the city hall for seven days, the resolution or ordinance shall become final and binding, unless, prior to the expiration of the seven days notice by posting in the city hall a majority of the owners of land abutting on the street . . to be improved” shall file with the clerk and treasurer of the city their written protest against said “improvement, stating their objections thereto.” By section 8 of the charter amendment it is provided that at the next regular meeting of council after their filing, such objections shall be inquired into by the mayor and aldermen, and should they overrule them they shall proceed to make the improvement. By section 9 thereof’it is provided that when the ordinance shall become final and binding the mayor and aldermen shall proceed with the improvement in accordance therewith, but that no contract for the work shall be let “until [585]*585after notice has been published in a newspaper having general circulation in the City of' Milledgeville, once a week for two weeks, in which notice a general description of the improvements to be made shall be given, the time and place that bids shall be received, the form of bids, and a statement of where the plans and specifications may be inspected shall be contained in said notice. After publication of the above-mentioned notice all the property owners to be assessed for the cost of the improvement and all other persons interested who do not within fifteen days thereafter commence proceedings to prevent said improvement and assessment being made and enforced shall be conclusively presumed to have accepted the terms of the resolution or ordinance under which said improvements are to be made.” Section 10 thereof deals with the making of the contract for the work. By section 11 thereof it is provided that “as soon as practical after the contract provided for in section 10 has been entered into, the mayor and aldermen of said city shall cause to be made an accurate measurement and plan of the work to be done, showing the number of feet and fractions thereof of frontage thereon of each and every abutting property and the location of all railroad tracts in street or alleys to be paved, and shall file the plat, with the measurements plainly marked thereon, showing the location and measurement of each abutting property and of each and every street crossing, which plat shall be filed in the office of the clerk and treasurer of the city and be subject to inspection of all persons interested. The owner of any abutting land . . lying within the improvement may, within five days from the filing of the plat, make written objection thereto,” and the mayor and aldermen of the city shall set a date for the hearing and pass upon the same. The charter then provides that “After the plat and measurements . . shall have been approved, or after five days from the filing thereof, if no objections are made, the mayor and aldermen shall pass a resolution assessing the cost of the paving.”

The defendant in fi. fa. in this case owned property abutting on a street improved in the City of Milledgeville, and his property was assessed for his portion of the cost of the improvement. The defendant in fi. fa. did not pay his proportionate share of the cost of such improvement, and execution was issued against him. To this execution he interposed his affidavit of illegality, in which he set up that the fi. fa. was proceeding against him illegally. He offered, an, [586]*586amendment to this affidavit, setting up that the ordinance providing for the paving of such street was void 'and unenforceable because it was not adopted in accordance with the charter requirements, in that it was not read three times, and in that the city did not post a copy of the resolution or ordinance in the city-hall, and that therefore he had no opportunity to protest and did not know that the paving being done in front of his property was under the amendment of 1925. He further set up that the city did not pass a resolution assessing the cost of the paving against the abutting property owners before the work was completed, but thereafter passed the following resolution: “Motion by Alderman Hutchinson, seconded by Alderman Stembridge, that the assessments rolls 2, 3, and 4 be passed as drawn by the city engineer,” which was placed upon the minutes; that this was insufficient and came too late, in that it was not acted upon until many months after the filing of the plat and after the work was completed, because it was not read three times before being put to passage, and because the exact frontage of his property was not described therein, and because the assessment roll referred to therein was not a part of the minutes at the time such motion was put upon the minutes or at the time the same was acted on. The court refused to allow all of this amendment, with the exception of the allegations that the ordinance providing for the improvement had not been read three times, as required by the city charter, and held that the only issue in the case was whether such ordinance had been so read. The defendant in fi. fa. excepted pendente lite to this judgment. The case proceeded to trial on the single issue, and, after the introduction of the evidence, the court directed a verdict for the plaintiff in fi. fa. The defendant in fi. fa. moved for a new trial, the motion was overruled, and to this judgment he excepts.

The issues and questions raised in this case as to the time of the filing of the traverse to the affidavit of illegality, as to the reading three times of the ordinance providing for the paving, as to the exclusion of certain evidence, and as to the disqualification of one of the jurors in the case, are controlled by the decision in the case of Jeanes v. Milledgeville, 45 Ga. App. 755 (165 S. E. 900), where substantially the same questions and issues were raised as in the instant case and were decided adversely to the plaintiff in fi. fa. This leaves us to determine whether or not the court erred in re[587]*587fusing to allow the other matters set up in the affidavit of illegality and amendment, which we will now pass upon.

In order for the ordinance providing for said paving to become final and binding, it was necessary for a copy thereof to have been “posted at some conspicuous place frequented by the public in the city-hall for seven days.” This posting was necessary, as required by the charter, in order that, if a majority of the owners of land abutting on the street to be paved desired to file objections with the mayor and aldermen, they could do so. The defendant in fi. fa. sets up that the ordinance in question was not so posted, and was therefore invalid. This would have been a good attack upon the validity of this ordinance had it been made at the proper time. However, the defendant in fi. fa.

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Bluebook (online)
170 S.E. 819, 47 Ga. App. 584, 1933 Ga. App. LEXIS 569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fowler-v-mayor-of-milledgeville-gactapp-1933.