Gifford-Hill & Co. v. Harrison

191 S.E.2d 85, 229 Ga. 260, 1972 Ga. LEXIS 577
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 16, 1972
Docket27063, 27064
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 191 S.E.2d 85 (Gifford-Hill & Co. v. Harrison) 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
Gifford-Hill & Co. v. Harrison, 191 S.E.2d 85, 229 Ga. 260, 1972 Ga. LEXIS 577 (Ga. 1972).

Opinion

Nichols, Justice.

These appeals are from a judgment of the Superior Court of DeKalb County dismissing a petition for mandamus. The issue made by the pleadings was whether a conditional use permit should have been granted as a matter of right. The appeal was dismissed upon the defendants’ motion that the petitioner had no legal standing to the relief sought. Gifford-Hill & Company, Inc., the original petitioner, held a lease option to the property. By a motion to intervene, W. A. Kelly and L. Henderson Hawkins became parties prior to the appeal to this court. An appeal was prematurely taken to the judgment permitting such intervention and dismissed prior to the present appeal reaching this court (Harrison v. Hawkins, 228 Ga. 522 (186 SE2d 779)), and no cross appeal has been filed to the present appeals.

In March, 1971, applications were made for development and building permits on the subject property to the proper DeKalb County officials. These permits were denied. Appellant Gifford-Hill then instituted an action in the trial court *261 for mandamus, requiring the Board of Commissioners of DeKalb County and its employees to issue the necessary permits.

The trial court dismissed the action of the appellant Gifford-Hill on the ground that it had no legal interest in the subject property so as to entitle it to a writ of mandamus. Thereafter the property owners, the other appellants here, who had optioned the property to Gifford-Hill, were allowed by the court to intervene in the case and prosecute their appeal along with that of Gifford-Hill; this accounts for two cases being docketed in this court.

The facts giving rise to this litigation are, briefly stated as follows: Gifford-Hill acquired the subject property, by option and otherwise, to be used for a stone-crushing operation. On June 12, 1970, when Gifford-Hill sought authorization from the proper officials to use the subject property, it was zoned "Industrial District M.” The zoning ordinance provided that in "Industrial District M” certain "conditional uses” were permitted "upon application to the planning commission and favorable decision thereof.” Among the "conditional uses” permitted was the following: "16. Development of natural resources, including the removal of minerals and natural materials, together with necessary building, machinery and appurtenances thereto, subject to the conditions of operation described in the R-150 Residential District; however, the requirement pertaining to fences may be waived by the Planning Commission in this district.” The authorization requested by Gifford-Hill to use the subject property for a crushed-stone plant was denied by the planning commission on July 8, 1970. Gifford-Hill duly appealed this decision to the board of commissioners. DeKalb County enacted a new zoning ordinance on July 28, 1970, and that ordinance rezoned the subject property so as to prohibit a crushed-stone operation on it. On December 8, 1970, Gifford-Hill’s appeal was heard by the board of commissioners, and the appeal was denied by a two to two vote, one commissioner abstaining from voting.

It was then that Gifford-Hill filed the mandamus action *262 referred to above; that action was dismissed by the trial court; the intervention of the appellant property owners was allowed; and both appeals are here for review.

Appellants contend that Gifford-Hill is entitled to use the subject property pursuant to the zoning ordinance in existence on June 12, 1970, when it properly applied for the required authorization to use the property for the purpose of a crushed-stone operation. They further contend that the rezoning of the subject property by the July 28, 1970, ordinance, which prohibited a crushed-stone operation on the subject property, cannot defeat or cut off their right to use the property for that purpose, and that the appellees should be required by the court to issue the necessary authorization to use the property for a crushed-stone operation pursuant to the zoning ordinance in effect on the date that the authorization was requested.

The appellees take the position that Gifford-Hill was not entitled to authorization to use the property for a crushed-stone operation under the old zoning ordinance (prior to July 28, 1970), that it had not complied with the conditions and requirements called for under that ordinance, that its application was properly denied by the planning commission on July 8, 1970, that its appeal was properly denied by the board of commissioners on December 8, 1970 (the zoning having been changed by that time), and that the trial court properly dismissed the mandamus action filed in March of 1971.

The trial court’s dismissal of Gifford-Hill’s complaint was erroneous. This dismissal must have been predicated on the case of Lemmons v. City of Decatur, 215 Ga. 647 (112 SE2d 597), which was decided on the issue pleadings rule then in effect. That case held that the allegations in the petition were conclusions which were entirely unsupported by allegations of fact, and that a general demurrer filed in opposition to the petition for mandamus was properly sustained. That case is distinguishable on that basis, and it is therefore unnecessary to overrule that decision. In any event, Lemmons is conflict with Clairmont Development Co. v. *263 Morgan, 222 Ga. 255 (149 SE2d 489), wherein this court held that an "optionee and holder and obligee of a contract to purchase a described tract of land in Gwinnett County” was entitled to bring an action for mandamus to compel zoning officials to issue it a certificate of zoning compliance which was prerequisite to issuance of a building permit.

It should be made clear that a party holding an option from the owner of land, an agent of the owner of land, or a party standing in any other contractual relationship with the owner of land can bring an action to require municipal and county governing bodies and their employees to issue permits which zoning regulations say must be issued before construction or occupancy can begin.

The last sentence of Art. XV of the "1970 Zoning Ordinance of DeKalb County, Georgia,” enacted July 28, 1970, provides as follows: "Prior ordinances shall remain in effect insofar as required for the initiation of any proceedings against such violations and for the prosecution of any violations heretofore commenced.”

Appellants contend that the governing authority and its employees violated the prior ordinance by denying them authority to use the property for the use requested and by denying the appeal on December 8, 1970. The record shows that the appeal by Gifford-Hill was commenced on July 17, 1970, prior to the enactment of the rezoning ordinance on July 28, 1970. Therefore, it is clear that by the very terms of the July 28th ordinance, "prior ordinances shall remain in effect ... for the prosecution of Any violations heretofore commenced.”

Thus, the appellants, if entitled to the permit requested on June 12, 1970, are not barred by the enactment of a new ordinance in July 1970 from seeking the writ of mandamus under the decisions of this court in Gay v. Mayor of Lyons, 212 Ga. 438 (4) (93 SE2d 352), and Forbes v. Lovett, 227 Ga. 772, 775 (183 SE2d 371).

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Bluebook (online)
191 S.E.2d 85, 229 Ga. 260, 1972 Ga. LEXIS 577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gifford-hill-co-v-harrison-ga-1972.