Binford v. Western Electric Co.

133 S.E.2d 361, 219 Ga. 404, 1963 Ga. LEXIS 466
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 10, 1963
Docket22193
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 133 S.E.2d 361 (Binford v. Western Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Binford v. Western Electric Co., 133 S.E.2d 361, 219 Ga. 404, 1963 Ga. LEXIS 466 (Ga. 1963).

Opinion

Grice, Justice.

This controversy is over an application to rezone residential property so as to authorize construction of an office building and parking facilities. Assigned as error is a ruling sustaining general demurrers to the petition opposing such rezoning and also a ruling dissolving a temporary restraining *405 order which had enjoined the issuance of a building permit and the construction.

The petition was by Harry A. Binford, Jr., Carl W. Franzman and Walter P. Walker, owners of properties adjoining that sought to be rezoned, against Western Electric Company, Inc., Guy Eaves, Chief Inspector, Fulton County Department of Public Buildings, Archie Lindsey, James Aldredge and Harold McCart, Commissioners of Roads and Revenues of Fulton County, and Fulton County itself, in the Superior Court of that county. In substance the petition made the material allegations hereinafter set forth.

The defendant Western Electric Company, Inc., filed an application wdth the Atlanta-Fulton County Joint Planning Board, seeking rezoning from “residential” to “apartment-office” of a described tract of land having a frontage of 1,851.8 feet on Roswell Road and a depth of 1,285' feet along Abernathy Road in Fulton County. All property abutting that sought to be rezoned was, when the application was filed, and is, zoned residential. After a hearing before that planning board, it recommended approval of the application to the defendants commissioners. Later, pursuant to a hearing before the commissioners, at which plaintiffs and numerous others opposed such application, the application was granted by a two-to-one vote. It is the declared intention of Western Electric to construct on this property an office building and parking lot of an unknown size and structure but sufficient to provide office space and parking for at least one thousand employees. Title to the property was not vested in Western Electric when it filed its. application for rezoning, or when either of the two hearings was held.

The grant of the application for rezoning by the commissioners is null, void and of no effect, the petition avers, for the following reasons: (1) Under the commissioners’ resolution, Western Electric, not being the owner of the property it sought to have rezoned, had no standing before the planning board or the commissioners; (2) Section 9 of Georgia Laws 1952, p. 2689, under authority of which the commissioners purported to act, violates the due process clauses of the Federal and State Constitutions in that it fails to provide for judicial review; (3) the commis *406 sioners, prior to the hearing before the planning board, publicly declared that they favored Western Electric’s application and, having prejudged the issues, were disqualified from hearing them; and (4) such 1952 statute does not confer power to “spot” zone and remove a small tract from residential to business or commercial purposes, and such rezoning was unreasonable and arbitrary.

Unless enjoined, the defendant Chief Inspector will issue to Western Electric a permit authorizing construction of an office building and parking lot, and Western Electric will construct them. Plaintiffs’ homes will depreciate in value if that happens.

Plaintiffs’ prayers for relief included temporary restraint and permanent injunction against the Chief Inspector’s issuance of a building permit to Western Electric and against the latter’s beginning any construction on such property; declaration that any action taken by the commissioners purporting to rezone as hereinbefore described is null, void and of no effect; declaration that Section 9 of Georgia Laws 1952, p. 2689, is unconstitutional ; and for general relief.

The trial court sustained two grounds of Western Electric’s general demurrer to the foregoing petition, sustained its motion to dissolve the restraining order above referred to, and also sustained two similar grounds of general demurrer of the other defendants.

We now deal with the four attacks on the action complained of, and thus test the sufficiency of the petition in the face of the general demurrers.

(a) The plaintiffs’ contention that Western Electric had no standing to seek rezoning because it did not own the property in question at the time it filed the rezoning application or at the time of either of the two hearings is not meritorious.

The basis for that contention is a resolution adopted by the commissioners. It provided in part that “A proposed change of district or of text may be initiated by the Atlanta-Fulton County Joint Planning Board, the Commissioners of Roads and Revenues, or by an application filed with the Atlanta-Fulton County Joint Planning Board, by one or more owners of property within the area proposed to be changed . . (Emphasis *407 ours.) Plaintiffs contend that this language authorizes initiation of zoning changes only by those parties named and that Western Electric, not coming within them, had no standing to make such application.

That position is not maintainable in view of Georgia Laws 1952, p. 2689, supra, which establishes the procedure for what occurred here. Section 9 of that Act provides that “All proposals to amend or modify any portion of the comprehensive plan or zoning resolution, whether proposed by the authorities in charge of county affairs, by the planning commission, by a property owner, or otherwise, shall be filed with the planning commission, which shall proceed to hold a public hearing thereon, after notice to interested parties. . (Emphasis ours.)

Thus, the General Assembly in providing for the procedure for zoning changes, did not restrict initiation of such changes to the commissioners, the planning board or owners of the particular property. The General Assembly added “or otherwise” and then required notice to “interested parties,” thereby evidencing an intention that such proposals to amend or modify might also be made by others having a legitimate interest. If any conflict exists between the statute and the resolution, the statute must control.

Here, the petition only alleges that Western Electric was not the “owner” of the property. It does not allege that it did not have any interest in the property or in the outcome of the rezoning proposal. In fact, the petition negatives lack of interest by Western Electric; it alleges that “It is the declared intention of the defendant Western Electric” to construct an office building and parking lot on the property.

(b) The plaintiff’s contention that Section 9 of Georgia Laws 1952, p. 2689, supra, is unconstitutional as a denial of due process because of lack of provision for judicial review of the commissioners’ decisions in rezoning matters is likewise not meritorious.

This- contention was rejected in Kirkpatrick v. Candler, 205 Ga. 449, 456 (53 SE2d 889) (one Justice dissenting and another disqualified). The 1943 Act dealt with there contained material provisions identical with those in this 1952 Act and was held *408 to provide judicial review. The later case of Toomey v. Norwood Realty Co., Inc., 211 Ga. 814 (89 SE2d 265), relied upon by the plaintiffs, did not decide this question.

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Bluebook (online)
133 S.E.2d 361, 219 Ga. 404, 1963 Ga. LEXIS 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/binford-v-western-electric-co-ga-1963.