
Your Trusted Partner in Personal Injury & Workers' Compensation
Call Now: 904-383-7448When, in his opinion, the facts warrant, the Governor shall, by proclamation, declare that, because of unlawful assemblage, violence, overt threats of violence, or otherwise, a danger exists to the person or property of any citizen or citizens of the state and that the peace and tranquility of the state or of any area or political subdivision thereof is threatened, and because thereof an emergency, with reference to said threats and danger, exists. In all such cases, when the Governor shall issue his proclamation he shall be and is further authorized, in coping with said threats and danger, to order and direct any person, corporation, association, or group of persons to do any act which would, in his opinion, prevent danger to life, limb, or property or prevent a breach of the peace; or he may order such person, corporation, association, or group of persons to refrain from doing any act or thing which would, in his opinion, endanger life, limb, or property or cause, or tend to cause, a breach of the peace, or endanger the peace and good order of society; and he shall have full power to enforce such order or proclamation by appropriate means.
(Ga. L. 1957, p. 44, § 2.)
- 38 Am. Jur. 2d, Governor, §§ 4, 9. 53 Am. Jur. 2d, Military, and Civil Defense, § 3.
- 77 C.J.S., Riot; Insurrection, §§ 31-33. 81A C.J.S., States, §§ 80, 81.
- Governmental powers in peacetime emergency, 88 A.L.R. 1519; 96 A.L.R. 312; 96 A.L.R. 826.
Conclusiveness of official determination of existence of emergency within the contemplation of constitutional or statutory provisions permitting excess of maximum limit of tax or indebtedness in an "emergency", 90 A.L.R. 328.
Database error: SQLSTATE[HY000]: General error: 8 attempt to write a readonly database
This Georgia Code resource is curated by a Florida and Georgia attorney, a personal injury and workers' compensation attorney admitted in Georgia (State Bar of Georgia No. 881027, since 2006) and Florida. For legal consultation, call 904-383-7448.