Ramsey v. Hamilton

182 S.E. 392, 181 Ga. 365, 1935 Ga. LEXIS 94
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 19, 1935
DocketNo. 11030
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 182 S.E. 392 (Ramsey v. Hamilton) 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
Ramsey v. Hamilton, 182 S.E. 392, 181 Ga. 365, 1935 Ga. LEXIS 94 (Ga. 1935).

Opinion

Gilbert, Justice.

Balph L. Bamsey and others hereinafter mentioned filed in the superior court of Fulton County an equitable petition against George B. Hamilton, treasurer of the State of Georgia, William B. Harrison, comptroller-general of the State of Georgia, and the Begents of the University System of Georgia, seeking to restrain and enjoin the said treasurer and comptroller-general from paying to the said regents a sum of money appropriated by the act of 1935 (Ga. Laws 1935, p. 9) for use in erecting necessary structures at the various units of the University System, and to restrain and enjoin the regents from receiving and expending the same. The .petition alleged that the various parties .are citizens and taxpayers of the State of Georgia; that Bamsey is a teacher in the public schools of Fulton County, and. has children in the public schools of Atlanta; that he owns certain real estate on which he pays an ad valorem tax at an assessed value of $1900; that among other taxes paid by him there is a four-mills State tax assessed against said property, which he paid in 1934 and will pay for the year 1935, which ad valorem tax is collected and paid into the State treasury, and out of which funds the common schools of the State, of which the Fulton County schools are a part, receive part of the funds appropriated to the common schools; that a part of his salary is paid out of the common-school fund from the State treasury; that the Fulton County public-school system has been allotted for the year the sum of $107,621.06 [367]*367out of the common-school fund of the State; that the State superintendent of schools has notified the county, superintendent of schools of Fulton County to discount the allotment 20 per cent., and they are now being operated accordingly; that if the Fulton County school system fails to get its full allotment in 1935, his salary will be reduced; that petitioners Nance, Petry, Jeffries, Morgan, Spires, and Livsey are named as parties in their individual capacity, as well as constituting the Executive Committee of the Georgia Federation of Labor, an unincorporated association, among the members of whom are several hundred men and women engaged in teaching in the common schools of-the State; that Nance is a resident and taxpayer of Fulton County, with children in the public schools of Atlanta; that he owns and pays taxes on real estate in said county and is interested in seeing that the tax money he contributes to the support of the State government, and particularly the common schools and eleemosynary institutions, is lawfully paid as provided by law; that Petry is a resident and taxpayer of Fulton County, with children in the public schools of Atlanta; that his wife is confined in the State Hospital at Milledgeville, which is supported out of funds appropriated from the general treasury; that part of the tax he pays to the State of Georgia is used for the support of said hospital and the common schools, and if the annual appropriation to the said hospital is cut SO per cent, below the amount appropriated for 1935 it will cause a reduction in the attention and treatment accorded to his wife; and that no funds from the general treasury shall be paid to the regents of the University System, under the special appropriation of 1935, until the annual appropriation to said hospital has been paid in full for the year 1935; that petitioners Jeffries, Morgan, Spires, and Rivers are respectively residents -and taxpayers of the counties of Muscogee, Bibb, Chatham, and Richmond, and that petitioners Mitchell, Reynolds, and Livsey, are residents of Fulton County and employed in the Atlanta public school system, which is supported in part by funds allotted and paid out of the common-school fund in the State treasury, and the compensation paid them comes in part from such allocated funds.

The petition further alleged that the act of 1935 is unconstitutional, illegal and void, for several reasons which, in the view we take of the case, need not be stated. The prayer was that “the [368]*368defendant William B. Harrison, as comptroller-general of the State of Georgia,” be restrained and enjoined from countersigning any warrant drawn by the Governor of Georgia, directed to “George B. Hamilton, as treasurer of the State of Georgia,” authorizing the payment of $333,333.33 or any part of said sum to the said “Regents of the University System of Georgia;” that the defendant “George B. Hamilton, as treasurer of the State of Georgia,” be restrained and enjoined from paying out on any -warrant or order to the Governor of the State of Georgia, or any one else, the sum of $333,333.33, or any part of said sum, to the “Regents of the University System of Georgia,” that the act of 1935 be declared unconstitutional and void; and “that the Regents of the University System of Georgia, its officers and agents,” be restrained and enjoined from receiving the said sum or any part thereof “from the defendant Hamilton, as treasurer, or the State of Georgia, or any one on his behalf,” and be further restrained and enjoined from spending any funds by way of travel or otherwise for the purpose of obtaining a grant or gift of funds from the United States Government, or by way of preparation and plans in the nature of fees for compensation to architects or contractors; and for such other equitable relief as might be meet and proper. The defendants filed an answer, and also demurred on the grounds that the petition did not set forth a cause of action; that the petitioners had no such interest in the subject-matter of the litigation as would authorize them to maintain the suit; that the petition was in effect and purpose a suit against the State of Georgia without its consent; that the State was a necessary and indispensable party to the action; and that the petition failed to show that the appropriations made to the regents could not be legally paid from the State treasury. After hearing evidence the court sustained the demurrer, and by separate decree denied an injunction. The petitioners excepted.

We have not set out in the foregoing statement the evidence which was heard by the court, because we are of the opinion that the general demurrer was properly sustained, and only a discus-, sion of the case in that respect is necessary. The petition was not filed against the State officers in their individual, but in their official, capacity; and the law to be applied must be considered accordingly. It is ordinarily the rule that when it is sought to [369]*369restrain and enjoin State officers in their official capacity from doing an alleged illegal act, the suit must be brought by the attorney-general of the State. Peeples v. Byrd, 98 Ga. 688 (4) (25 S. E. 677). In that case it was said: “No citizen or taxpayer, as such, has the right to institute in his own name an equitable petition against the reporter and the person with whom he, under the Governor’s approval, has made a contract to publish the Supreme Court Eeports, for the purpose of testing the legality of that contract or of interfering with the carrying out of the same; because the State, being a party to the contract, would be a necessary party to the .case, and as it can not be 'subjected to an action of any kind without its own express consent, such a petition can not be maintained.” In Sanders v. Ballard, 160 Ga. 366 (127 S. E. 851), the suit was against the defendant in his official capacity as State superintendent of schools, but the question of the unconstitutionality of the statute under which he acted was not raised, though it was contended that he had no authority to do what ho was seeking to do under the act.

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Bluebook (online)
182 S.E. 392, 181 Ga. 365, 1935 Ga. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ramsey-v-hamilton-ga-1935.