Newton County v. East Georgia Land and Development Co., L.L.C. ( 2014 )


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  • In the Supreme Court of Georgia
    Decided: October 20, 2014
    S14A1049. NEWTON COUNTY et al. v. EAST GEORGIA LAND
    AND DEVELOPMENT COMPANY, LLC.
    BLACKWELL, Justice.
    East Georgia Land and Development Company, LLC sued Newton
    County and several of its officers for a writ of mandamus,1 contending that a
    zoning ordinance adopted by the County on May 21, 1985 is invalid. The trial
    court agreed that the zoning ordinance is invalid, it awarded summary judgment
    to East Georgia, and the County appeals. We find no error and affirm.
    The zoning ordinance at issue refers to — and purports to incorporate by
    reference — a set of maps identified in the ordinance as the “Official Zoning
    District Maps for Newton County.” These maps are an integral part of the
    1
    More specifically, East Georgia sued Newton County, its zoning administrator, its
    commissioners, and its Board of Zoning Appeals. For the purposes of this appeal, we have
    no need to distinguish between the various defendants, and so, for the sake of simplicity, we
    refer to the defendants collectively as the “County.” By the way, this appeal marks the third
    appearance of this dispute in our Court. For more information about the circumstances that
    led to the dispute and earlier and related proceedings, see our decisions in East Georgia Land
    & Dev. Co. v. Baker, 
    286 Ga. 551
    (690 SE2d 145) (2010), and East Georgia Land & Dev.
    Co. v. Newton County, 
    290 Ga. 732
    (723 SE2d 909) (2012).
    zoning ordinance. The ordinance identifies the lands to which its various zoning
    classifications apply only by reference to the maps, and without the maps, the
    zoning ordinance would be too indefinite and vague to satisfy the requirements
    of due process. See Hulsey v. Smith, 
    224 Ga. 783
    , 783 (164 SE2d 782) (1968);
    City of Waycross v. Boatright, 
    104 Ga. App. 685
    , 687-688 (2) (122 SE2d 475)
    (1961). See also City of Flovilla v. McElheney, 
    246 Ga. 552
    , 552 (1) (272 SE2d
    287) (1980); City Council of Augusta v. Irvin, 
    109 Ga. App. 598
    , 600 (1) (137
    SE2d 82) (1964). The County does not dispute that the maps are an essential
    part of the ordinance.
    The only such maps that appear in the record, however, were adopted by
    the County on July 2, 1985, and nothing in the record shows that those maps
    even were in existence on May 21, 1985, when the County enacted the zoning
    ordinance.2 As we explained when this case last appeared in our Court, for an
    2
    The County argues that it had adopted some maps in 1971 in connection with an
    earlier zoning ordinance, and the 1971 maps were in existence on May 21, 1985, when the
    County enacted the zoning ordinance at issue. The problem is, nothing in the record shows
    that the 1971 maps were designated as “Official Zoning District Maps for Newton County,”
    the designation by which the 1985 ordinance identifies the maps incorporated therein.
    Accordingly, the record fails to show that the 1971 maps are the same maps that the 1985
    ordinance purports to incorporate by reference. See East Georgia Land & Dev. Co. v.
    Newton County, 
    290 Ga. 732
    , 737-738 (2) (723 SE2d 909) (2012). And in any event, no
    original or certified copy of the 1971 maps appears in the record, and an ordinance only can
    2
    ordinance to properly incorporate a map or other document by record, four
    criteria must be satisfied:
    (1) The document must be sufficiently identified so that there is no
    uncertainty as to what was adopted. (2) The document must be
    made a public record. (3) It must be accessible to members of the
    public who are, or may be, affected by it. (4) The adopting
    resolution must give notice of this accessibility.
    East Georgia Land & Dev. Co. v. Newton County, 
    290 Ga. 732
    , 737 (2) (723
    SE2d 909) (2012) (citation and punctuation omitted). A map not yet in existence
    cannot have been “made a public record” and certainly is not “accessible to
    members of the public who are, or may be, affected by it.” Indeed, this Court
    previously has rejected “the proposition that the principle of incorporation by
    reference can apply prospectively to a document which has yet to be filed or
    made a public record because it is non-existent.” McKee v. City of Geneva, 280
    be proved only by “production of the original or of a properly certified copy.” Thorsen v.
    Saber, 
    288 Ga. 18
    , 19 (1) (701 SE2d 133) (2010) (citations omitted). Finally, even if the 1971
    maps were shown to bear the relevant designation, and even if the 1971 maps were properly
    authenticated, the 1971 maps are inconsistent in several respects with the 1985 ordinance —
    the 1971 maps, for instance, designate a different number of districts than are indicated by
    the 1985 ordinance — and for that reason as well, the 1971 maps clearly are not the maps
    that the County meant to incorporate by reference when it enacted the 1985 ordinance. The
    1971 maps “may have reflected the zoning that existed before [May 21, 1985], but they are
    not part of the [1985 zoning ordinance], and are not probative of the zoning established in
    the . . . map [identified in the 1985 zoning ordinance].” Bd. of County Commrs. v. Rohrbach,
    226 P3d 1184, 1188 (Colo. App. 2009).
    
    3 Ga. 411
    , 412-413 (627 SE2d 555) (2006). Cf. Mid-Ga. Environmental Mgmt.
    Group v. Meriwether County, 
    277 Ga. 670
    , 674 (5) (594 SE2d 344) (2004)
    (requirements for incorporation of zoning map by reference were met when,
    among other things, “[t]he minutes show that the Board had before it the official
    zoning map at the time it considered the ordinance”); Reynolds v. Bd. of
    Commrs. of Paulding County, 
    180 Ga. App. 516
    (349 SE2d 536) (1986)
    (upholding validity of zoning ordinance — which purported to incorporate the
    official zoning map by reference — based on, among other things, the trial
    court’s finding that “[a]t the time of said adoption, there was an official zoning
    map in existence”). In this respect, our law is consistent with the general rule in
    American law. See 1 Salkin, American Law of Zoning § 9:3 (5th ed.). From the
    record, it appears that an essential part of the zoning ordinance was missing
    when the County enacted the ordinance on May 21, 1985. The trial court so
    found, and as a result, the trial court concluded that the ordinance was void at
    the moment of its enactment. We see no error in the findings of the trial court
    on this point, nor in its conclusion that the ordinance was void from its
    inception. See 
    Boatright, 104 Ga. App. at 688
    (2). See also 
    Irvin, 109 Ga. App. at 600
    (1).
    4
    The County argues that, even if the ordinance was invalid at the moment
    of its enactment, it was made valid on July 2, 1985, when the County adopted
    the set of maps bearing the designation “Official Zoning District Maps of
    Newton County.” But there is no evidence that the County reenacted the
    ordinance on July 2, 1985, when it adopted the maps, see State ex rel. Weiks v.
    Town of Tumwater, 400 P2d 789, 792 (Wash. 1965), and there also is no
    evidence that the County purported on July 2, 1985 to incorporate the adopted
    maps into any zoning ordinance. See Bd. of County Commrs. v. Rohrbach, 226
    P3d 1184, 1188 (Colo. App. 2009). And we previously have rejected the idea
    that an ordinance void at the moment of its enactment can somehow be revived
    without the formality required to fully enact it again. See 
    McElheney, 246 Ga. at 552-553
    (1), (2) (zoning ordinance was void and could not be revived where
    it required certification of maps by a nonexistent official). See also Mancil v.
    City of Pearson, 
    158 Ga. 279
    , 282 (
    123 S.E. 207
    ) (1924) (where ordinance
    creating a board of tax-equalizers for the year 1922 was void, a 1923 ordinance
    could not cure the prior ordinance and create a new board for the year 1922). On
    this point too, Georgia law is consistent with the general rule in American law.
    See 3 Rathkopf’s The Law of Zoning & Planning § 39:8 (4th ed.) (“Where the
    5
    original ordinance is itself void or invalid for failure to have followed
    procedural requirements in its enactment, the usual rule is that any amendment
    thereto — even if made under proper procedures — is also invalid.” (Citations
    omitted.)); 6 McQuillin, The Law of Municipal Corporations § 21:5 (3d ed.)
    (“The general rule is that void ordinances cannot be amended and that an
    ordinance passed as an amendment to a previous ordinance, which never took
    effect, is invalid; a void ordinance cannot be vitalized by amendment, and
    reenactment is necessary to validate that intended to be enacted by it.” (Citations
    omitted.)). The adoption of “Official Zoning District Maps of Newton County”
    on July 2, 1985 did nothing to revive the invalid ordinance of May 21, 1985.
    The trial court did not err when it concluded that the May 21, 1985 zoning
    ordinance is invalid, and it was right to award summary judgment to East
    Georgia. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.3
    3
    Two other points warrant a mention. First, in its brief, the County worries that, if the
    judgment of the trial court were affirmed, it would “render every zoning ordinance in
    Georgia invalid.” After all, the County says, most local zoning ordinances and maps are
    amended from time to time, and if the adoption of maps in this case after the enactment of
    the zoning ordinance leaves the ordinance invalid, then no zoning ordinance or map could
    be later amended. But the County misunderstands the ruling of the trial court. It was not the
    July 2, 1985 adoption of maps that rendered the zoning ordinance here invalid; the zoning
    ordinance is invalid because, when it was enacted on May 21, 1985, it was incomplete. An
    ordinance properly enacted and complete at its enactment can be amended, so long as the
    6
    Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
    proper procedures for amendment are followed. See Meriwether 
    County, 277 Ga. at 673
    (3);
    Atlanta Bio-Med v. DeKalb County, 
    261 Ga. 594
    , 595 (2) (408 SE2d 100) (1991). The worry
    expressed by the County is overblown.
    Second, perhaps the reader might think our decision formalistic, and in a sense, it is.
    But the law requires such formalism, and as we have explained before, there are good
    reasons to insist upon such formalism in lawmaking, especially when it comes to the
    enactment of laws restraining the property rights of citizens. Such formalism is necessary,
    we have said, “to provide certainty to the public as to what was actually adopted by the
    County and also to protect the public from any arbitrary changes of the ordinance or the maps
    that do not go through the . . . notice process.” Newton 
    County, 290 Ga. at 738
    (2).
    7
    

Document Info

Docket Number: S14A1049

Judges: Blackwell

Filed Date: 10/20/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/7/2024