Dev. Auth. of Cobb Cnty. v. State

829 S.E.2d 160
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 3, 2019
DocketS19A0378
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 829 S.E.2d 160 (Dev. Auth. of Cobb Cnty. v. State) 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
Dev. Auth. of Cobb Cnty. v. State, 829 S.E.2d 160 (Ga. 2019).

Opinion

Blackwell, Justice.

The Development Authority of Cobb County resolved in May 2018 to issue $ 35 million in revenue bonds under OCGA § 36-62-2 (6) (N) to finance a retail development in east Cobb County. In particular, the Development Authority proposed to use the bonds to acquire land near the intersection of Powers Ferry Road and Terrell Mill Road and to construct a facility on that land that is suitable for the operation of a grocery store. The Development Authority then would lease the facility to the Kroger Company, which would relocate a nearby grocery store to the newly constructed facility.1 Cobb County resident Larry Savage objected to the bonds,2 and the *161Superior Court of Cobb County denied validation of the bonds, concluding that OCGA § 36-62-2 (6) (N) does not authorize the bonds and that paragraph (6) (N) is unconstitutional in any event. The Development Authority and Kroger appeal, and for the reasons that follow, we reverse.

1. The superior court concluded that OCGA § 36-62-2 (6) (N) does not authorize the revenue bonds that the Development Authority has proposed to issue. Subsection (6) identifies fifteen kinds of "projects" that development authorities can finance. Known as the "catchall provision" of subsection (6), paragraph (6) (N) authorizes development authorities to finance:

The acquisition, construction, installation, modification, renovation, or rehabilitation of land, interests in land, buildings, structures, facilities, or other improvements and the acquisition, installation, modification, renovation, rehabilitation, or furnishing of fixtures, machinery, equipment, furniture, or other property of any nature whatsoever used on, in, or in connection with any such land, interest in land, building, structure, facility, or other improvement, all for the essential public purpose of the development of trade, commerce, industry, and employment opportunities. A project may be for any industrial, commercial, business, office, parking, public, or other use, provided that a majority of the members of the authority determines, by a duly adopted resolution, that the project and such use thereof would further the public purpose of this chapter.

OCGA § 36-62-2 (6) (N).

The superior court gave two reasons for its conclusion that paragraph (6) (N) does not authorize the bonds in question. First, the superior court said that paragraph (6) (N) authorizes a development authority to finance a project only to the extent that the project is "essential" to "the development of trade, commerce, industry, and employment opportunities." Although the superior court noted that Kroger expects to employ more persons at the new grocery store than at the existing grocery store nearby, the superior court reasoned that these additional employment opportunities were not enough to show that the new grocery store is "essential" to "the development of trade, commerce, industry, and employment opportunities." Second, the superior court said that the additional employment opportunities at the new grocery store in any event are not the sort of "employment opportunities" with which paragraph (6) (N) is concerned, citing our decision in Haney v. Development Auth. of Bremen, 271 Ga. 403, 519 S.E.2d 665 (1999). The superior court misunderstood both paragraph (6) (N) and Haney.

Under paragraph (6) (N), a project is eligible for public financing only to the extent that it promotes "the development of trade, commerce, industry, and employment opportunities." But nothing in paragraph (6) (N) requires that an eligible project be "essential" to such development. To be sure, the word "essential" appears in paragraph (6) (N), but it is used to describe the purposes for which a development authority may finance projects, not the projects themselves.3 To say that "the development of trade, commerce, industry, and employment opportunities" is an "essential" purpose of development authorities is not to say that anything financed by a development authority must be "essential" to such development.4 See Deal v. Coleman, 294 Ga. 170, 172 (1) (a), 751 S.E.2d 337 (2013) ("When we consider the meaning of a statute, we must presume that the General Assembly meant what it said and said what it meant." (Citation and punctuation omitted)). That a project may not be "essential"

*162to "the development of trade, commerce, industry, and employment opportunities" does not render the project categorically ineligible for financing under paragraph (6) (N), and the superior court erred when it concluded otherwise.

The superior court also erred when it relied on Haney to conclude that the additional employment opportunities at the new grocery store are not the sort of "employment opportunities" with which paragraph (6) (N) is concerned. To begin, it is not entirely clear what principle the superior court gleaned from Haney; about Haney, the superior court simply said: "There is no evidence as described in [ Haney ] that this new Kroger furthers the essential public purpose of employment opportunities. In the Haney case[,] the fact that the proposed project would hire 25 new employees was not sufficient for it to be eligible for a [d]evelopment [a]uthority bond." But whatever the superior court understood Haney to mean, Haney is quite distinguishable from this case.

In Haney, we reversed the validation of bonds to finance the construction of a "public golf course ... designed to fulfill the governmental function of providing recreational facilities and services to area residents." 271 Ga. at 408 (3), 519 S.E.2d 665. We said that the golf course at issue "[was] not a traditional business enterprise conducted for profit and thus d[id] not meet the definition of a trade, industry, or commerce." Id. Citing our earlier decision in Odom v. Union City Downtown Development Auth., 251 Ga. 248

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Bluebook (online)
829 S.E.2d 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dev-auth-of-cobb-cnty-v-state-ga-2019.