Haywood v. Mayor of Savannah

12 Ga. 404
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1853
DocketNo. 64
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 12 Ga. 404 (Haywood v. Mayor of Savannah) 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
Haywood v. Mayor of Savannah, 12 Ga. 404 (Ga. 1853).

Opinion

By the Court

Lumpkin, J.

delivering the opinion.

|[1.] The facts in this case, are briefly these : The plaintiff in ■error, Alfred Haywood, was brought up before the Mayor and Aldermen of Savannah, and fined $30, for buying in the market house, fish in quantity greater than was requisite for the use and consumption of his family, contrary to the Ordinance of the 'City, passed 30th of January, 1851. On ceitiorari to the Superior Court, the Judge affirmed the judgment, and this writ of error is brought to reverse this decision. And the only question is, had the municipal authorities the power to pass the ordinance, for the violation of which this fine was imposed ?

The Legislature in 1809, passed an Act to limit the jurisdiction of the City of Savannah, so far as relates to the regulation of the market. The preamble recites, that “ Whereas, the citizens of this State, who take their produce to market, consider [406]*406themselves imposed upon, by being detained in market under an ordinance passed by the incorporated body aforesaid; for remedy whereof,

“ Be it enacted, &c. That from and immediately after the passing of this Act, no person or persons attending said market with any commodity for sale, shall be detained in said market, or debarred from selling by the wholesale or retail after the rising of the sun; any law, ordinance or usage, to the contrary, notwithstanding.” Clayton's Dig. 540.

The old market having been entirely consumed by the great fire of 1820, the General Assembly in 1821, authorized the erection of a new market, on the same spot of ground which had been occupied by the old one, to wit, Ellis’s Square, which had been set apart for that purpose as far back as the 7th of April, 1763. The new market was to be built at the expense of the City, and vested absolutely in the corporation. Dawson's Compilation, 427.

In 1825, an Act was passed by the Legislature, to amend .and consolidate the several Acts which had been previously passed in relation to the powers and privileges of the corporation of the City of Savannah and the hamlets thereof, and for other purposes therein mentioned. By the 11th section of this Act, the Mayor and Aldermen, or a majority of them, are clothed with power and authority, “ to make such by-laws and regulations, and impose such pains, penalties, and forfeitures for the violation of the same, as shall be conducive, to the good order and government of the City.” Dawson's Compilation, 464, 465.

It having been held by the Courts, that notwithstanding this broad grant of power to legislate generally, for the good order, &c. of the City, that the corporation had no authority to tax income, although in addition to this general grant, by the 7th section of the same Act, the Mayor and Aldermen were empowrered “ to raise any sum or sums of money by a poll tax, or by tax and assessment upon all real and, personal estate, within the corporate limits of the City,” the Legislature in December, 1849, passed another Act amendatory of and in addition to the various Acts heretofore passed, in reference to the City of Savan[407]*407nah. And by the 3rd section of this Act, it is provided, “ That the Mayor and Aldermen of the City of Savannah, and the hamlets thereof, be and they are hereby vested with full power and authority, from time to time, to make, ordain, and establish such by-laws, rules, regulations and ordinances, as shall appear to them necessary, for the security, welfare, and convenience, of the said City, or for preserving health, peace, and good government within the present or future bounds of the same.” Pamphlet Acts, 1819, pp. 83, 84, 85.

The remainder of the third section, is to confer additional authority relative to taxation.

The 4th is in reference to the same subject.

The 5th gives to the corporation the power to lay out new' streets and lanes, and to widen the old ones.

The 6th provides the mode of assessing damages, under the exercise of power in the 5th section.

The 7th relates to side-walks and pavements.

The 8th exempts the Mayor and Aldermen from the performance of Jury duty during their continuance in office.

The 9th enacts that where doubts shall arise, as to the construction of the Act, or any previous Act passed, touching the City of Savannah, the same shall in Courts of Law' and Equity and elsewhere, be taken most favorably for the corporation.

And the 10th declares that all laws and parts of laws, militating against this Act, be, and the same are hereby repealed. lb.

' Do any or all of these Acts, repeal directly or by necessary implication, the Act of 1809 ? That Act, it will be recollected, confers upon the citizens of the State, the right to sell at wholesale, in the City market; and his Honor, Judge Jackson, held, and W'e think very properly, that if the vendor may sell at wholesale, that the purchaser cannot be restricted in the quantity he shall buy. But in the judgment of the Circuit Court, the Act of 1809 has been repealed by the subsequent legislation, which has been cited, or by the ordinance of 1851, passed in pursuance'thereof.

We do not apprehend that the Act of 182Ó, granting to the citizens of Savannah, the right of erecting at their own expense [408]*408and cost, a public market, to be absolutely vested in the corporation, has much to do with thiá controversy. And although referred to, both in the argument and the decision, little or no reliance seems to have been placed upon it in either.

But why so little stress is laid upon the Act of 1825, in the discussion, and why it should be wholly pretermitted in the opinion under review, we cannot readily comprehend. It wall be seen, by referring to it, that the grant of power under the 11th section of that Act, is- almost .as broad and sweeping as that conveyed by the 3rd section of the Act of 1849. And the former as well as the latter, contained at the conclusion, the usual repealing clause of all Acts or parts of Acts, militating against its provisions. It is true, that the Act of 1825, inhibits the corporation from passing any ordinance contravening the laws of the State or the Constitution thereof; and that this interdiction is omitted in the Act of 1849. But in the absence of such prohibition, it is not pretended that a municipal corporation could, by its by-laws, contravene the Constitution, Common Law7, or Statutes of the State.

But the Act of 1849, is supposed to settle this question, and to justify the ordinance of 1851, under which this fine was inflicted. In other words, that it repeals the restriction in the Act of 1809. And the reason assigned for this conclusion, is this : The Act of 1849, it is said, is entitled an Act amendatory of and in addition to the various Acts heretofore passed, in reference to the City of Savannah. Now, it is asked, was the Act of.1809, an Act passed in reference to the City of Savannah?' If so, says the Circuit Judge, it is embraced in the caption of the Act of 1849, and repealed by it. Again, it is asked, does it militate against the Act of 1849 ? The answer is, that it does, inasmuch as it restricts the Mayor and Aldermen s'o far as it relates to the passage of ordinances regulating the market; whereas, the Act of 1849, gives to the Mayor and Aldermen unlimited jurisdiction over this subject.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Ga. 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haywood-v-mayor-of-savannah-ga-1853.