On January 11, 1916, the council of the City of Macon adopted an ordinance condemning New street from Cotton avenue to Mulberry street for paving. Pursuant to this ordinance, New street within the limits named was paved with concrete. After the paving was completed, the council of the City of Macon, on March 21, 1916, adopted an assessing ordinance by which the cost of this paving was apportioned and assessed against the owners of abutting property. After notice, the treasurer of the city issued executions against these owners, including the plaintiffs. The executions were placed in the hands of the marshal of the city for collection, and by him were levied upon the property of the plaintiffs,- who thereupon filed their petition to enjoin the city and the marshal from enforcing the executions. An interlocutory injunction was denied. The grounds upon which the plaintiffs predicated their right to the relief prayed for were: (1) Neither the paving ordinance nor the assessing ordinance was certified and presented to the mayor of the City of Macon, as required by section 24 of
1. The paving ordinance of January 11, 1916, was a legislative act. Charter of the City of Macon, Acts 1914, pp. 996, 1028, secs. 20, 94. The legislative power under the charter of the city is vested in a mayor and aldermen (see. 20). The mayor has no power to vote upon any matter of legislation (see. 30). The mayor of Macon, in so far as he is a constituent part of the legislative department of the city, is given a qualified veto power, under section 24 of the charter, which is as follows: “Every ordinance of the council, and every resolution passed by that body, -shall, before it takes effect, be presented, certified by the clerk, to the mayor within two days after the passage thereof. If the mayor approve it, he shall sign it; if not, he shall return it with his objections, and file the same with the clerk within five days, Sundays excepted, after he receives it, and the council shall, at the first regular meeting thereafter when a quorum is present, order the objections to be entered at large on the minutes, and shall at said meeting take a vote on the question, ‘Shall the ordinance or resolution pass notwithstanding the objections of the-mayor?' If as
The charter of a city is the organic law of the corporation, and “bears the same general relation to the ordinances thereof that the constitution of the State bears to its statutes.” 2 Dill. Mun. Cor. (5th ed.) 904, § 575; McQuil. Mun. Ord. 21, § 15. “Constitutions do not usually undertake to prescribe mere rules of proceeding, except when such rules are looked upon as essential to the thing to be done, and they must then be regarded in the light of limitations upon the power to be exercised. It is the province of an instrument of this solemn and permanent character to establish those fundamental maxims, and fix those unvarying rules, by which all departments of government must at all times shape their conduct; and if it descends to prescribing mere rules of order in unessential matters, it is lowering the proper dignity of such an instrument and usurping the proper province of ordinary legislation.” Cooley’s Const. Lim. (7th ed.) 114. We think that the plain and unambiguous provision contained in section 24 of the charter of the City of Macon, that “Every ordinance of the council, and every resolution passed by that body, shall, before it takes effect, be presented, certified by the clerk, to the mayor,” for his approval or disapproval, is mandatory, and can not be construed as directory only. The fact that the mayor presided over the meetings of the council at which the paving and assessing ordinances were introduced and passed, and at which the minutes in which these ordinances were set out at length were read and approved, or the fact that the mayor was familiar with the ordinances in question, tacitly approved the same, waived the formal presentation and certification by the clerk, is not a compliance with the mandatory provision of the charter. 2 Dill. Mun. Cor. (5th ed.) 578. An ordinance of a city which may deprive its citizens of
2. It is earnestly insisted that the plaintiffs are estopped from questioning the validity of the paving and assessing ordinances, inasmuch as they stood by and permitted the street to be paved without interposing any objection. In this connection it is said that the City of Macon, under its charter, has full power and authority, in the discretion of the mayor and council, to pave the public streets of the city, and to apportion and assess the cost of such paving against owners of abutting property. Acts 1914, p. 981, sec. 94 (a)-(j). The charter of the city confers broad powers on the mayor and council in respect to the improvement of the streets of the city, but by its very terms it is declared that no ministerial power is given the mayor and council in this respect. A valid municipal .ordinance is the foundation of its jurisdiction. The charter confers the power to acquire jurisdiction to pave its” streets; but jurisdiction, in the proper sense of the term, is not vested in the mayor and council by the provisions of the charter itself. The charter is not and was not intended to be self-operating. Where necessary jurisdiction exists, or is acquired, an owner of abutting property benefited by the improvement of the street, who has knowledge of the improvement and of the charter provisions under which it was made, will not, after the completion of the improvement, be heard to object for the first time to the levy of an assessment upon his property. 4 Dill. Mun. Cor. (5th ed.) §§ 1455 et seq.; 2 Paige & Jones on Taxation, §§ 1015 et seq. The principle has been recognized in this State in Draper v. Atlanta, 126 Ga. 649, 653 (55 S. E. 929), where it was said: “In eases where there is jurisdiction, the property owner will be es-topped from questioning the validity of the proceedings of the mayor and council, if he stands by and permits the work to be done without interposing any objection;” citing Elliott on Eoads and Streets, § 589. If jurisdiction had been acquired, the doctrine of estoppel would apply with full force to the admitted failure of the mayor and council to comply with the requirements of certain general ordinances. The ordinance of January 11,1916, was illegal and void. “All that was done under it was without authority of law, and no assessment upon adjacent property on account of the” paving of the street is collectible. City of Atlanta v. Gabbett, 93
Judgment reversed.