Van Valkenburg v. Stone

158 S.E. 419, 172 Ga. 642, 1931 Ga. LEXIS 166
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedApril 20, 1931
DocketNo. 7994
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 158 S.E. 419 (Van Valkenburg v. Stone) 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
Van Valkenburg v. Stone, 158 S.E. 419, 172 Ga. 642, 1931 Ga. LEXIS 166 (Ga. 1931).

Opinion

Russell, C. J.

(After stating the foregoing facts.) As said in Dyer v. Martin, 132 Ga. 445, 447 (64 S. E. 475) : “The constitutional scheme of county government is that the powers in relation to roads, public buildings, taxes, and other county matters are to be exercised by the ordinary, except where the General Assembly confers such powers upon county commissioners of a particular county.” As appears from the record, J. .M. Stone as commissioner supersedes the ordinary in Cobb County. When the administration of county affairs in Cobb County devolved upon this commissioner, the power over the roads usually exercised by an ordinary under the provisions of the code was lodged in him, and he could discharge all functions with reference to county matters generally, and the roads in particular, which had been conferred upon him by the act creating the office of commissioner and which had. theretofore been performed by the ordinary. Town of Decatur v. DeKalb County, 130 Ga. 483 (61 S. E. 23). Since the passage of the act of 1850, which in the creation of the office of ordinary transferred to its jurisdiction powers of the justices of the inferior court, it may be said that the administration of all four different systems of road-working has been lodged in our ordinaries until the enactment of the law allowing any comity which may so desire to substitute commissioners of roads and revenues. We do not overlook the fact that in a few counties the county matters are in charge of county judges, but this fact is immaterial at the present time. There can be no question of the fact that the defendant as commissioner [646]*646of Cobb County has the right and duty to enforce the working and repair of all the public roads in his county, in accordance with the law applicable within his jurisdiction. The General Assembly, recognizing that there were or might be instances in which the county authorities might not perform the duties imposed upon them by law, enacted section 5441 of the Code of 1910, which gives to any citizen of a county the right of applying to the superior court for the writ of mandamus to compel the ordinary or county commissioners, as the case may be, to repair and keep in condition any of the county roads. That section as it is incorporated in the Code of 1910, adopted by the General Assembly, did not in its original form refer at all to the subject of roads. Section 4868 of the Code of 1895, which had been brought forward from our previous codes, consisted of only five lines: “Mandamus does not lie as a private remedy between individuals to enforce private rights, nor to a public officer who has an absolute discretion to act or not, unless there is gross abuse of such discretion; but it is not confined to the enforcement of mere ministerial duties.”

However, in 1903 the General Assembly amended this section so as to make it particularly applicable to roads (Ga. L. 1903, pp. 41-43), by adding all of the section in its present form which comes after the word “duties” in the original section as quoted. The proviso added is: “provided, however, that on the application of one or more citizens of any county of this State against the county commissioners of roads and revenues of such counties where by law supervision and jurisdiction is vested in such board of commissioners of roads and revenues over the public roads of such counties, and the overseers of the public roads complained of, or the ordinaries of such counties where by law supervision, control, and jurisdiction over such public roads is vested in the ordinaries and the overseers of the public roads that may be complained of, either, both, or all of said named parties, as the facts and methods of working the public roads in the respective counties may justify, which application or petition for mandamus shall show that one or more of the public roads of such county of such petitioner’s residence are out of repair, and do not measure up to the standards and do not conform to the legal requirements as prescribed by sections 512, 513, and 533 of volume 1 of the Code of 1895 [sections 632, 633 and 654 Code of 1910] of Georgia, and are in such condition [647]*647that ordinary loads, with ordinary ease, can not be hauled over such public roads, the judges of the superior courts of this State are hereby authorized and given jurisdiction, and it is hereby made their duty, upon such showing being made, to issue the writ of mandamus against such parties having charge of and supervision over the public roads of such county, and to compel by such proceedings the building, repairing, and working of such public roads as are complained of, up to that standard now required by existing laws of this State as embodied in sections 512, 513, and 533 of volume 1 of the Code of 1895 [sections 632, 633, and 654 Code of 1910], and so that ordinary loads, with ordinary ease and facility, can be continuously hauled over such public roads; and the judges of the superior courts shall, by proper order, in the same proceedings compel the work done necessary to build, repair, and maintain such public roads up to the standard so prescribed.” However, the adoption of the amendment of 1903 did not in any way affect the general law of mandamus or the rules of practice and procedure as to this remedy previously existing. Nor did it affect the general rules upon the subject which had been announced by this court. One of the best known of these rules is that the grant of a mandamus lies largely in the discretion of the presiding judge.

In Savannah &c. Canal Co. v. Shuman, 91 Ga. 400, 402 (17 S. E. 937, 44 Am. St. R. 43), Mr. Justice Lumpkin said: “The granting or refusing of injunctions has always been regarded as discretionary, and it seems quite clear that in cases of mandamus it lies very largely within the discretion of the presiding judge as to whether or not the writ will, in a given case, be made absolute; and in order to reverse a judgment in a case of this kind, it would be necessary to show that the discretion of the court was abused.” In the very early case of Moody v. Fleming, 4 Ga. 115 (48 Am. D. 210), this court ruled that except in a case of clear legal right the writ of mandamus was a discretionary remedy. That the issuance of an interlocutory injunction upon conflicting evidence is discretionary, and that the judgment of the lower court will not be reversed unless the discretion of the lower court has been manifestly abused, is a rule so frequently applied as to become practically axiomatic. And yet it seems that this rule as to injunctions was first applied as to mandamus, since in one of the earliest cases, Harwell v. Armstrong, 11 Ga. 328, the decision in Moody v. [648]*648Fleming, supra, which was a case of mandamus, was used as the basis of the decision delivered by Judge Warner, who delivered the •opinion of the court. In the Harwell case he said that "the court boloAV alloAved the defendant, Armstrong, to file his answer under the circumstances stated in the record; refusing to permit the complainants to take their bill pro confesso; and the question is, whether this court will control the discretion of that court, under this statement of facts?” He then cited the ruling in Moody v. Fleming, supra, that this court would control the discretion of the court below "only in cases where there is a refusal to exercise it or a flagrant abuse of it.” As said by Mr. Justice Lumpkin in the Savannah Canal case, supra (a mandamus proceeding against the Savannah Canal Company), this court, by citing the case of Moody v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
158 S.E. 419, 172 Ga. 642, 1931 Ga. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-valkenburg-v-stone-ga-1931.