City of Duluth v. Riverbrooke Properties, Inc.

502 S.E.2d 806, 233 Ga. App. 46, 98 Fulton County D. Rep. 2546, 1998 Ga. App. LEXIS 882
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 22, 1998
DocketA98A1291
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 502 S.E.2d 806 (City of Duluth v. Riverbrooke Properties, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Duluth v. Riverbrooke Properties, Inc., 502 S.E.2d 806, 233 Ga. App. 46, 98 Fulton County D. Rep. 2546, 1998 Ga. App. LEXIS 882 (Ga. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

Eldridge, Judge.

This case involves an action in equity seeking a mandatory injunction brought by the City of Duluth (“the City”) against defendants Riverbrooke Properties, Inc. (“Riverbrooke”), owner and seller, and Everett Major (“Major”), the officer, stockholder, and developer, in order to enjoin the defendants from continued violation of the city’s developmental regulations and require them to file the “as-built” survey and certification for the Riverbrooke Subdivision’s 15-acre lake. The complex facts at issue are as follows:

In early 1991, Major and Riverbrooke, appellees-defendants, began development of a subdivision which was annexed into the corporate limits of the City of Duluth, appellant-plaintiff. The subdivision had five hundred ninety-nine lots; the subdivision was to be developed in five phases with thirteen separate segments, because there were three different price range segments built simultaneously at each phase.

On February 22, 1991, the original development plans for the entire subdivision with all five phases and the three segments in each phase as one development plan, were filed with the City of Duluth, and were approved under the 1971 Development Regulations. Footnote number 29 of the initial construction plans filed for Riverbrooke stated: “Provide detention pond record drawings (as-built) with the submittal of the final plat or before certificate of occupancy is issued. Record drawings shall include topo of pond verifying volume, outlet structure detail, and hydrology study on as-built data.” Footnote 29 referred to the three detention ponds constructed in The Villas, Summit phase V, and The Plantation phase V; Foot *47 note 29 did not refer to the lake to be built as a detention facility. The purpose of a detention facility, under the regulations and nuisance law, is to regulate the volume and rate that the discharge of surface water run-off is allowed to occur so that it will not be at a rate, point of concentration, or volume greater than that prior to development.

On January 13, 1992, the City adopted new and stricter development regulations (“1992 Regulations”). Section 8.2.8 of the 1992 Regulations mandated for the first time: “Detention Facility Engineer’s Certification and Record Drawings. A certified record survey of each detention facility shall be prepared by a Georgia Registered Land Surveyor. A certified record drawing of the facility shall be prepared based upon this survey; and, based upon the parameters established on the record drawing, an addendum to the Storm Water Management Report shall be prepared which demonstrates that the facility, as constructed, complies with the requirements of these Regulations. The amended Storm Water Management Report shall be certified by a Georgia Registered Professional Engineer.” Neither the 1992 Regulations nor the 1971 Regulations defined the term “detention facility” or required that a lake or pond automatically be treated as a detention facility, because the lake received surface water run-off, which incidentally was detained. Article 14 of the development regulations stated that the regulations became effective immediately and applied to any land disturbance permit after the effective date. It also provided a “grandfathered” exclusion to “[a]ny subdivision or other project for which a valid and complete application for a Development Permit shall have been received prior to the effective date of these Regulations.” See Section 14.1.2. These new regulations excluded Riverbrooke Subdivision because, under the 1971 Regulations, the City had not issued Riverbrooke “a valid and complete application for a Development Permit.” Under the 1971 Regulations, such permit was not issued until the completion of the subdivision and the occupancy permit was issued.

The approved preliminary development plans contained a 15-acre lake in a swampy area of flood plain, where pine beetles had killed the trees, leaving it unsightly. The City did not want a lake and did not want any responsibility or liability for the lake. The lake was to serve as an amenity for recreational use and to improve the appearance and as an incidental detention pond for surface water run-off and sedimentation of construction mud to protect the Chattahoochee River for water quality control. The water discharged from the lake drained through a state-of-the-art siphon system. The siphon system drained water from the bottom of the lake instead of the top through a stand pipe in order to allow sedimentation to occur prior to the discharge of the water, which would prevent flooding up to the 100-year flood plain line. The design and construction of the *48 lake cost $300,000. The defendants did not build the lake as a detention facility within the meaning of the regulations. If the lake had not been constructed, then the flood plain where the lake was built would have been sufficient to receive any surface water run-off without detention. The 1971 Regulations did not require the construction of the lake as a detention facility. The lake was completed in July 1991. The defendants provided the City “as-built” drawings of the dam. The director for the City had been closely involved in the planning and design of the lake.

In May 1992, Major deeded the lake, the clubhouse, and the surrounding recreational lands to the homeowner’s association of Riverbrooke Subdivision.

During the period from 1992 into 1995, the City approved the final subdivision plats for the five phases done in thirteen planned segments of the Riverbrooke Subdivision. Several of the final subdivision plats approved by the City showed the lake as a boundary. During the construction of Riverbrooke, the City had five different Directors of Planning and Development, who each had responsibility for approval of subdivision construction in the City and who had been familiar with all phases of the development. Between January 1 and September 31, 1992, the City issued to the defendants 151 building permits without raising any issue about the lake being used as a detention facility. By letter of December 30, 1992, the City certified that road improvements and drainage structures in Phases I, II, and III of The Summit at Riverbrooke had been constructed to City standards for the purpose of the performance bond.

On March 13, 1995, the City of Duluth approved the final plat of the completed Riverbrooke Subdivision submitted by the defendants and issued certificates of occupancy for the completed residential units. No “as-built” survey and certification of the lake was filed by the defendants pursuant to Footnote 29; however, the City approved the plans and occupancy permits nonetheless.

The City began receiving complaints in 1994 from residents of the Riverbrooke Subdivision who lived near the lake that water was backing up into the culvert behind Clearbrooke Way in which a drainage ditch carried surface water run-off into the lake. The City engineers investigated the situation and decided that the culvert under the road, through which water drained to the lake, was undersized and would not permit the free flow of drainage surface water run-off without backing up. The City’s then Director of Planning and Development issued a proposed executive order mandating that Major correct the problem at his expense by installing a second culvert under the City’s street. The City could not get Major to voluntarily fix what they saw as the problem in the way they wanted the problem corrected.

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Bluebook (online)
502 S.E.2d 806, 233 Ga. App. 46, 98 Fulton County D. Rep. 2546, 1998 Ga. App. LEXIS 882, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-duluth-v-riverbrooke-properties-inc-gactapp-1998.