Woodham v. City of Atlanta

657 S.E.2d 528, 283 Ga. 95, 2008 Fulton County D. Rep. 416, 2008 Ga. LEXIS 136
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 11, 2008
DocketS07A1309, S07A1566
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 657 S.E.2d 528 (Woodham v. City of Atlanta) 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
Woodham v. City of Atlanta, 657 S.E.2d 528, 283 Ga. 95, 2008 Fulton County D. Rep. 416, 2008 Ga. LEXIS 136 (Ga. 2008).

Opinion

Thompson, Justice.

The State of Georgia instituted a bond validation proceeding under the Georgia Revenue Bond Law, OCGA § 36-82-60 et seq., to confirm and validate the issuance of City of Atlanta Tax Allocation Bonds to finance a project known as the Atlanta BeltLine Redevelopment Plan. The Atlanta Independent School System (“school system”), the city of Atlanta, and Fulton County (appellees herein) were named as defendants in that action.

Appellant John F. Woodham, a resident of Fulton County and the city of Atlanta, intervened under OCGA § 36-82-77 (a) and filed objections. After a series of hearings, the trial court validated the bonds and overruled Woodham’s objections, including a claim that the BeltLine Plan proposal violates Art. VIII, Sec. VI, Par. I of the 1983 Georgia Constitution, known as the Educational Purpose Clause. Woodham appeals in Case No. S07A1309.

On the day prior to the initiation of the bond validation action, Woodham preemptively filed a petition for declaratory judgment challenging the issuance of the bonds. The trial court dismissed the *96 declaratory action based on its determination that the bond validation petition was the exclusive forum for adjudication of Woodham’s claims. Woodham appeals that ruling in Case No. S07A1566.

For the reasons that follow, we hold that certain proposed funding for the BeltLine Plan violates the Educational Purpose Clause; therefore, we reverse in Case No. S07A1309. We further conclude that the trial court correctly dismissed the declaratory judgment action; therefore, we affirm in Case No. S07A1566.

Case No. S07A1309

1. By ordinance, the city of Atlanta adopted the BeltLine Redevelopment Plan (“BeltLine Plan”), a 25-year project which “proposes to combine greenspace, trails, transit, and new development along 22 miles of historic rail segments that encircle the urban core” of Atlanta. Redevelopment Plan, § 1. The ordinance further created the BeltLine Redevelopment Area and Tax Allocation District Number Six — BeltLine (“TAD”), authorizing the pledge of ad valorem tax allocation derived from that TAD for the payment of or as security for the payment of the tax allocation bonds. The school system, by resolution, agreed to participate in the BeltLine Plan by consenting to pledge a portion of tax increments derived from the educational ad valorem property taxes levied and collected within the BeltLine TAD, subject to certain conditions.

Woodham asserts that the proposed use of school taxes to fund the BeltLine Plan violates Art. VIII, Sec. VI, Par. I (a) and (b) of the 1983 Georgia Constitution because it contemplates the expenditure of school taxes for non-educational purposes. Art. VIII, Sec. VI, Par. I (a) requires the board of education of each school system to certify annually to its fiscal authority a school tax not greater than 20 mills per dollar “for the support and maintenance of education.” In accordance with that provision, a tax is levied upon the assessed value of all taxable property within the territory served by that school system. Id. Under Art. VIII, Sec. VI, Par. I (b), the expenditure of school tax funds is limited, as follows:

School tax funds shall be expended only for the support and maintenance of public schools, public vocational-technical schools, public education, and activities necessary or incidental thereto, including school lunch purposes.

It is well settled that “[wjhere a constitutional provision expressly provides that funds derived from taxes levied and collected may be *97 used only for particular purposes, such funds cannot be utilized for or diverted to any other purpose.” Wright v. Absalom, 224 Ga. 6, 8 (159 SE2d 413) (1968). 1

It is without dispute that the use of school tax revenue to fund the BeltLine TAD is not an explicit expenditure for educational purposes under Par. I (b); however, the question remains whether such funding is “necessary or incidental” to public schools or public education under that subsection. “Although we have held that this provision ‘vests broad powers in school districts to do those things properly determined to be necessary or incidental to public education,’ [cit.], this power must and does have its limits.” DeKalb County School Dist. v. DeKalb County, 263 Ga. 879, 880 (1) (440 SE2d 185) (1994).

In DeKalb County School Dist., we determined that the expenditure of school tax funds for improvements to a county public road adjacent to a DeKalb County school “would stray too far from the [school] District’s principal task of educating young people in favor of providing a benefit to all citizens that the County generally has the duty to provide.” Id. at 881 (1). As a result, we held that the expenditure of school taxes for the road improvements was not necessary or incidental to public education and thus violated the Educational Purpose Clause. 2 If the use of school revenue to improve a county road which provided access to a school was held to be an impermissible expenditure, it follows that school taxes cannot be used to fund the BeltLine Plan which provides a benefit to all citizens, and which has little, if any, nexus to the actual operation of public schools in the city of Atlanta. Although appellees assert that the BeltLine TAD will likely produce future revenue for the school system, such potential benefit “will not suffice where the constitutional authorization for such expenditure is lacking.” Wright, supra at 8.

Applying the principles of DeKalb County School Dist., supra, and Wright, supra, we hold that school tax funds levied and collected by the school system cannot constitutionally be applied to benefit the BeltLine project.

2. Because we hold that the proposed use of school tax funds under the BeltLine project violates Art. VIII, Sec. VI, Par. I of the *98 Georgia Constitution, we do not address Woodham’s other enumerations of error directed to the alleged illegal diversion of school tax funds for non-educational purposes. See Fowler Properties v. Dow-land, 282 Ga. 76 (2) (646 SE2d 197) (2007). Any remaining enumerations of error are rendered moot by our ruling herein.

Case No. S07A1566

3. Woodham submits that the trial court erred in granting appellees’ motions to dismiss the preemptive declaratory judgment action on the basis that the bond validation proceeding was the exclusive forum for adjudication of Woodham’s claims. We disagree.

Under the Georgia Revenue Bond Law, all revenue bonds “shall be validated in the superior court in the manner set forth in Code Sections 36-82-74 through 36-82-83.” OCGA § 36-82-73. 3

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Bluebook (online)
657 S.E.2d 528, 283 Ga. 95, 2008 Fulton County D. Rep. 416, 2008 Ga. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodham-v-city-of-atlanta-ga-2008.