BellSouth Mobility Inc. v. Gwinnett County, GA

944 F. Supp. 923, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14175, 1996 WL 673317
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedAugust 13, 1996
Docket1:96-cv-01268
StatusPublished
Cited by65 cases

This text of 944 F. Supp. 923 (BellSouth Mobility Inc. v. Gwinnett County, GA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
BellSouth Mobility Inc. v. Gwinnett County, GA, 944 F. Supp. 923, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14175, 1996 WL 673317 (N.D. Ga. 1996).

Opinion

ORDER

G. ERNEST TIDWELL, Chief Judge.

The above-styled matter is before the court on plaintiffs’ appeal from the Gwinnett County Board of Commissioner’s April 23, 1996 decision denying plaintiff BellSouth Mobility, Inc.’s (“BellSouth”) application for a Tall Structure Permit. The matter is also before the court on: defendants’ motion to exceed page limits [docket no. 5]; plaintiffs’ motion to exceed page limits [docket no. 13]; and plaintiffs’ motions to dismiss certain claims without prejudice [docket nos. 11 & 18].

Factual Background

Sometime during the early part of 1995, plaintiff BellSouth determined that in order to meet the obligations imposed on it by its FCC license, it needed to improve its signal strength within the Five Forks-Trickum/Oak Road area of Gwinnett County, Georgia. BellSouth’s engineers then determined that to achieve this objective, BellSouth needed to install a cellular telephone communications monopole somewhere within that area. The ideal height of the monopole, according to BellSouth’s engineers, would be 197 feet above ground level.

On June 28,1995, BellSouth entered into a lease agreement with plaintiffs Dean. That agreement gave BellSouth an option to use the Dean property (“Dean property”), which is located at 3109 Five-Forks Triekum Road, to construct, maintain, and operate a cellular communications monopole. The Dean property is zoned commercial and is currently occupied by an automotive repair shop, an auto parts store, and a tire supply company.

Under section 14-116 of the Gwinnett County Code (“Code”), a property owner who wants to erect on his or her property a wireless communication tower that is greater than fifty feet must first apply to the county for a “Tall Structure Permit.” This application must be submitted to the county’s department of planning and development. Gwinnett County, Ga., Code of ORDINANCES § 14-117 (1994). Further, each application shall contain detailed plans and specifications showing: (1) the nature of the structure, (2) the structure’s proposed use, (3) the height of the structure, and (4) the structure’s proposed location (with all property lines clearly defined and all distances from the proposed structure to the property lines clearly marked). Id. The property owner must also pay a fee. Id.

Once the property owner has submitted the tall structure permit application, the planning and development department of the county will review it and make a written recommendation to the county board of commissioners. Although the planning and development department may recommend that the application be granted or denied, all applications must be considered by the board of commissioners, who are charged with the responsibility of making the final decision. Gwinnett County, Ga, Code of ORDINANCES § 14-120. Indeed, according to the Code, the board of county commissioners, “in the exercise of its discretion under the police power vested in [it],” may deny any application:

where the proposed structure could interfere with or endanger the public using the existing or proposed air facilities located within the county, or where the structure to be erected could endanger the person or property of citizens of the county, or where the structure to be erected would not be compatible from an aesthetic viewpoint with existing or proposed development in *925 the area of the proposed facility, or where the structure to be erected would not be acceptable or after evaluation would be found to be unacceptable from an architectural standpoint with existing or proposed structures in the area.

Id.

On February 12, 1996, plaintiffs, through BellSouth and its counsel, filed their application for a permit to place a cellular communications monopole on the Dean property. Their application was assigned number TSP-96-002. In the application, plaintiffs described the structure that BellSouth wanted to place on the Dean property as a “197-foot monopole together with a 326 square foot unmanned single-story prefabricated concrete switch gear building.” Both of these structures were to be “enclosed by an 8-foot chain link fence with 3 strands of bobwire along the top.” In addition to filling out the form provided by the county, plaintiffs also attached several documents supporting their application. These documents included:

1) a report by Airspace Safety Analysis Corporation showing that the monopole presented no hazard to navigable air space in the area;
2) the option and lease agreement between BellSouth and plaintiffs Dean;
3) plaintiffs’ constitutional objections concerning the standard of review for approving or denying a tall structure permit; and
4) two complete sets of boundary survey and site plans.

The boundary survey and site plans which plaintiffs submitted clearly indicate the nature of the proposed monopole structure, its proposed use, the height of the structure, and its proposed location on the Dean property. The documents also demarcate the property lines and show the distances between the monopole and the property lines.

After conducting its investigation, the planning and development department recommended that plaintiffs’ permit application be approved on condition that: (1) the site remained a leased area; (2) plaintiffs install a 10-foot landscape strip, planted with evergreens, outside the fenced area along its north and west side; and (3) plaintiffs obtain all the required building and development permits. As part of the planning and development department’s investigation, it solicited comment on plaintiffs’ application from the Gwinnett County Department of Transportation, the Gwinnett County Department of Public Safety, and the Gwinnett County Airport Authority. Each of these agencies had no objection to plaintiffs’ plans. The permit application was scheduled to be considered by the board of commissioners at a March 26,1996 hearing.

Shortly before the board’s scheduled hearing, homeowners in a residential subdivision located behind the Dean property voiced opposition to the application. The board decided to postpone the hearing from March 26, 1996 to April 23,1996.

During this time, plaintiffs, apparently after attempting to have some discussion with local property owners, supplemented their permit application. Plaintiffs agreed to three additional conditions. They agreed to prohibit microwave equipment from being operated on the Dean property. They agreed to paint the monopole in a color selected by the adjacent residential property owners. And they agreed not to light the monopole. Plaintiffs also supplemented their application by providing the board with the structure’s radio frequency (Rf) emissions specifications. Further, before the April 23, 1996 hearing, plaintiffs submitted a document to the board informing it of the additional requirements that, in their opinion, the Telecommunications Act imposed upon them.

At the April 23rd hearing, the board of commissioners permitted plaintiffs five minutes to present their case.

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Bluebook (online)
944 F. Supp. 923, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14175, 1996 WL 673317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bellsouth-mobility-inc-v-gwinnett-county-ga-gand-1996.