Court Opinion

ID: 5577193
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-11 01:27:55.458989+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:35:58.435801
License: Public Domain

Evans, P. J.
Applicant for habeas corpus was convicted, in the recorder’s court of the City of Atlanta, of a violation of an ordinance prohibiting “any person to carry intoxicating liquor or beer on his person for the purpose of unlawful sale, or to carry same around the streets for the purpose of unlawful sale.” He was sentenced to pay a fine of $500.00 and costs, or work on the streets or public works of the citv for thirty days under the direction of the superintendent of public works. He alleged that he was illegally detained under this sentence, by being confined in the city stockade where he was under guard and forced to work and labor. Upon considering the return of the writ by the chief of police, and the evidence offered at the hearing, the court refused to discharge the applicant and remanded him to the custody of the respondent: The exception is to this judgment.
1. Applicant insists that the ordinance under which he was prosecuted is void, for the reason that the municipal offense therein defined can only be .committed by an act made penal by the general statute of the State. In other words, his point is, that the act of 1907 (Ga. L. 1907, p. 81) makes penal the sale of intoxicating liquor, and that the municipal offense contains no ingredient or concomitant which is not covered by the statute law, and, in the absence of ’express legislation, the municipality of Atlanta can not deal with an act which is- declared to be a violation of the criminal laws of the State. This court on several occasions has declared *339that a municipal corporation, in the absence of express legislative enactment can not punish for an offense against the criminal laws of the State. Thrower v. Atlanta, 124 Ga. 1 (52 S. E. 76, 1 L. R. A. (N. S.) 382, 110 Am. St. R. 147), and eases cited. But it has also announced the law to be that if the offense recognized by the ordinance contains an ingredient or concomitant essential to the preservation of the city’s peace, health, and good order, which is not included in the act or acts made criminal by the State law, the ordinance is valid. Menken v. Atlanta, 78 Ga. 668 (2 S. E. 559). This ease is concrete authority for the ruling we now make. The local option law forbade the sale of spirituous or intoxicating liquor, and the ordinance in that case punished the keeping of liquors for unlawful sale in any store, house, room, office, or other place. In the course of the opinion upholding the ordinance Bleckley, C. J., said: “But the statute, though it makes the unlawful sale of liquors an offense, does not make the keeping of them for unlawful sale an offense. The ordinance does the latter and not the former. It hovers on the margin of the statute, and nowhere overlaps the text. If there is keeping for unlawful sale, the ordinance is violated, whether any sale is made or not. In case a sale ensues, the statute is also violated; but this does not cancel the violation of the ordinance. An offense committed against one jurisdiction can not be wiped out by committing another against another jurisdiction. The onty object of the ordinance is to prevent preparation for violation of the statute.” See Callaway v. Mims, 5 Ga. App. 9 (62 S. E. 654), and Athens v. Atlanta, 6 Ga. App. 244 (64 S. E. 711), where Powell, J., ably discusses the various decisions of this court.
2. All of the other assignments of error relate to questions which were recently decided in Loeb v. Jennings, 133 Ga. 796 (67 S. E. 101), and do not require further notice.

Judgment affirmed.

All the Justices concur.