Mary Harris v. City of South Fulton

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 16, 2021
DocketA20A1990
StatusPublished

This text of Mary Harris v. City of South Fulton (Mary Harris v. City of South Fulton) 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
Mary Harris v. City of South Fulton, (Ga. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

FOURTH DIVISION DILLARD, P. J., RICKMAN, P. J. and BROWN, J.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. https://www.gaappeals.us/rules

DEADLINES ARE NO LONGER TOLLED IN THIS COURT. ALL FILINGS MUST BE SUBMITTED WITHIN THE TIMES SET BY OUR COURT RULES.

March 8, 2021

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A20A1990. HARRIS et al. v. CITY OF SOUTH FULTON et al.

RICKMAN, Presidng Judge.

The main issue in this appeal is whether the City of South Fulton, approved by

voters in a 2016 referendum, includes the neighborhood of Loch Lomond, which was

previously in unincorporated Fulton County. Loch Lomond residents – including

petitioners Mary Harris, Leander Robinson, and William Shepherd – did not vote in

the referendum election because the Fulton County Superior Court had ruled eight

days earlier that the City of Atlanta had successfully annexed their neighborhood out

of unincorporated Fulton County. But after we reversed that order on appeal in

Johnson v. City of Atlanta, 348 Ga. App. 216 (820 SE2d 257) (2018), Petitioners filed

this action for declaratory and injunctive relief, alleging that their inability to participate

in the referendum violated their rights to vote and to equal protection. As a remedy for those alleged violations, Petitioners sought a judicial determination that Loch Lomond

is not part of South Fulton. The trial court denied the petition, and Petitioners appeal.

We conclude that Loch Lomond is part of South Fulton under the Supreme Court’s

reasoning in City of Atlanta v. Mays, 301 Ga. 367 (801 SE2d 1) (2017), and that

Petitioners are not entitled to the relief they seek. We therefore affirm.

The relevant facts are undisputed and center on three related events – the

incorporation of the City of South Fulton, the annexations of Loch Lomond and five

similar neighborhoods into the City of Atlanta, and two separate lawsuits challenging

those annexations.

The incorporation of the City of South Fulton. House Bill 514 (“HB 514”),

authorizing a referendum to create the new City of South Fulton in Fulton County, was

first presented to the Georgia House of Representatives in March 2015. Section 1.10

of the bill declared that “[t]he City of South Fulton is incorporated by the enactment

of this charter and is constituted and declared a body politic and corporate[.]” Section

1.11 of the bill provided that the boundaries of South Fulton “shall include all

unincorporated areas of Fulton County . . . as such exist on July 1, 2016” and “are

more particularly described in Appendix A[.]” Appendix A, in turn, provided that the

city’s corporate limits “shall not include any territory that was annexed into another

2 municipality before July 1, 2016[.]” The bill called for a special referendum election

to be held on November 8, 2016 for the approval or rejection of the creation of the city

by “qualified electors of Fulton County residing within the corporate limits of the City

of South Fulton as described by Section 1.11 of [HB 514].”

On April 26, 2016, the governor signed HB 514 into law. On November 8, 2016,

the special election was held, and the referendum passed by a margin of 7,983 votes.

Soon thereafter, South Fulton held its first city council election, followed by a run-off

election. As explained more fully below, Loch Lomond residents did not vote on the

referendum or in the subsequent municipal elections. The parties have stipulated that

Loch Lomond had approximately 404 registered voters in November 2016.

The annexation of Loch Lomond and five similar neighborhoods into the City

of Atlanta. Meanwhile, in April 2015 (after HB 514 was first presented to the

legislature), certain residents of Loch Lomond petitioned for their neighborhood to be

annexed into the adjacent City of Atlanta under OCGA § 36-36-32.1 On June 6, 2016

(after HB 514 was signed into law), Atlanta approved the annexation by municipal

1 That statute provides a method of annexation “by which a municipality may annex adjoining land upon application by a minimum of 60% of adjoining landowners[.]” City of Brookhaven v. City of Chamblee, 329 Ga. App. 346, 348 (1) (765 SE2d 33) (2014).

3 ordinance. Around the same time, Atlanta also approved the annexation of five other

unincorporated areas of Fulton County contiguous to Atlanta.

The lawsuits challenging the annexations. In June and July of 2016, before the

cityhood referendum vote, certain residents of the annexed neighborhoods filed two

separate lawsuits against the City of Atlanta in Fulton County Superior Court. The first

was brought by eight Loch Lomond residents opposed to Atlanta’s annexation of Loch

Lomond (“the Johnson case”) ; the second was brought by representatives of the five

similar neighborhoods who disputed Atlanta’s annexations of their neighborhoods

(“the Mays case”). In both cases, the plaintiffs alleged, among other claims, that the

annexations were untimely because they did not take legal effect until after the date that

HB 514 froze the boundaries of the City of South Fulton. The cases were heard by two

different trial court judges.

A final order was issued in the Mays case first, on September 8, 2016. The Mays

judge ruled that HB 514 rendered the five challenged annexations untimely and

therefore null and void. Specifically, the judge concluded that HB 514 provided that

the City of South Fulton would include all territory of unincorporated Fulton County

that had not been annexed into other municipalities before July 1, 2016, but the

annexations did not become legally effective until that date. The day after the Mays

4 decision was issued, the City of Atlanta filed a notice of appeal to the Supreme Court

of Georgia. The Mays plaintiffs/appellees filed an emergency motion to lift the

automatic supersedeas of the trial court’s order so that the residents of the five

neighborhoods could vote in the upcoming November referendum, and the Supreme

Court granted that relief. Mays, 301 Ga. at 370 (1).

A final order was issued in the Johnson case on October 31, 2016 – just eight

days before the November referendum. The Johnson judge reached the opposite

conclusion of the Mays judge, finding that the annexation of Loch Lomond was

effective in June 2016, when the Atlanta mayor signed the municipal ordinance, and

thus was timely as it preceded HB 514’s July 1, 2016 boundary-fixing date. The

Johnson plaintiffs filed a notice of appeal to the Supreme Court, but not until after the

election. Accordingly, Loch Lomond voters – believing they were residents of the City

of Atlanta – did not vote in the November 2016 referendum.2

2 Ralph Jones, the registration chief for the Fulton County Election Division, testified at the hearing in this case that his office was responsible for determining which Fulton County voters got which ballots, depending on whether the voter lived in a municipality or in an unincorporated portion of the county. According to Jones, the ballots of the Loch Lomond residents did not include the referendum question because “the voters of Loch Lomond [were] registered in the City of Atlanta, at that time.”

5 In 2017, after the referendum, the Supreme Court issued its decision in Mays.

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Bluebook (online)
Mary Harris v. City of South Fulton, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mary-harris-v-city-of-south-fulton-gactapp-2021.