Summary
Judgment reversed. Quillian, C. J., and Shulman, P. J., concur.
Summary
Judgment reversed. Quillian, C. J., and Shulman, P. J., concur.
Text
Appellee-condemnor instituted special master in rem condemnation proceedings against 2.29 acres of land owned by appellant-condemnee. Condemnor's school district encompasses all of Upson County with the exception of the land within the corporate limits of the City of Thomaston (City). The City operates an entirely separate and independent school system within a district comprised of all the land inside its corporate limits. Condemnee's property 15 located totally within the corporate limits of the City and, therefore, is within the City's school district. Despite the fact that the condemnor owns approxImately 40 acres in the vicinity, condemnation of condemnee's property was sought because her 2.29 acres is adjacent to a high school which the condemnor is building. The condemnor's high school is also within the territorial limits of the City's school district. The proposed use of the condemnee's property is to construct an athletic track for the school.
Prior to the hearing before the special master, condemnee moved to dismiss the condemnation proceeding on several grounds. The return of the special master denied condemnee's motion to dismiss and made a monetary award. Condemnee then filed exceptions to the return of the special master. A hearing was held and the superior court overruled condemnee's exceptions and denied the motion to dismiss.
The order of the superior court denying condemnee's motion to dismiss was certified for immediate review. Condemnee's application to this court for an interlocutory appeal from that order was granted in order that we might address several important issues which are raised in this condemnation action.
1. The condemnor's motion to dismiss the instant appeal because condemnee's brief does not comply with Rule 15(c) (3) of this court is denied. See generally McDaniel v. Pass,
2. The threshold issue is whether the condemnor, a county board of education, is authorized to exercise the power of eminent domain pursuant to the Special Master Act, Ga. Code Ann. 36-601a et seq. Although county boards of education in the past have successfully used what Code Ann. 36-602a denominates as the "supplementary" and "cumulative" special master procedure, it does not appear that their authority to do so has been heretofore directly challenged and judicially established. See Norton Realty &c. Co. v. Bd. of Ed. of Hall County,
Code Ann. 32-951 (Ga. L. 1956, p. 100) authorizes and empowers county boards of education "to take and damage, by condemnation, private property for public school purposes, either for public school building sites, playgrounds, athletic fields, or other purposes, in connection with the common schools, high schools or any public educational program which is now or may be hereafter authorized by law." Code Ann. 32-952 (Ga. L. 1956, p. 100) provides in part: "Condemnation proceedings by such boards . . . shall take the form provided in Chapters 36-1 through 36-6 or the form provided in Chapter 36-11." (Emphasis supplied.) It is essentially condemnee's contention that the use of the mandatory "shall" in Code Ann. 32-952 evidences a legislative intent that the condemnor is authorized to condemn only pursuant to the procedures specifically enumerated therein, of which the special master procedure, Chapter 36-6A, is not one. In furtherance of this limited construction of Code Ann. 32-952 and in refuting any interpretation of the Special Master Act, enacted in 1957, as general authority for the condemnor to use that "supplementary" and "cumulative" procedure, condemnee cites Ga. L. 1961, p. 2864. That statute amended section 2 of the 1956 enactment (Code Ann. 32-952) to add the following proviso: "Provided, that county boards of education in counties having a population (including the population of any independent school district located in such county) of more than 500,000 according to the last or any future United States census may use the [special master] form of condemnation procedure . . ." Thus, according to condemnee, after 1961 only county boards of education in counties having greater than one-half million population "may use" the special master procedure and all others "shall" use only the procedures enumerated in Code Ann. 32-952.
Assuming for the sake of argument that condemnee is correct and that, after the 1961 enactment, under Code Ann. 32-952 only certain county boards were authorized to use the special master procedure and further assuming that such a limitation would not be unconstitutional (but see City of Atlanta v. Sims,
3. The next issue to be resolved is whether the condemnor has the authority to condemn property outside its boundaries in order to build an athletic track.
"(S)tatutes conferring the power of eminent domain must be given a strict construction, 'and when the power is granted, the extent to which it may be exercised is limited to the express terms of clear implication of the statute in which the grant is contained.' [Cits.]" Howard v. City of Atlanta,
The "state of facts" which exists in the instant case is clearly distinguishable from that which was presented in Norton Realty. In the first instance, Norton Realty involved construction of a sewer line, a circumstance clearly recognized therein as being " 'an exception to the general rule' " that powers may not be exercised outside territorial limits. Norton Realty, 129 Ga. App. at 672, supra, citing Langley v. City Council of Augusta,
Norton Realty does not establish an unlimited right of condemnation outside the territory of the condemnor. The extra-territorial exercise of the right of eminent domain as an "implied" power is authorized only if it is "reasonably necessary" to a condemnor's successful completion of an undertaking initiated pursuant to its express grant of authority over a subject matter within its jurisdiction. The condemnor in the instant case is expressly granted only the "control and management" of the Upson County School District, a limited territory. Code Ann. 2-5302; Upson County School Dist.,
Truitt A. Mallory, for appellant.
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This document cites
- Supreme Court of Georgia - UPSON COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT et al. v. CITY OF THOMASTON et al., 248 Ga. 98, 281 S.E.2.d 537
- Supreme Court of Georgia - HARWELL v. GEORGIA POWER COMPANY., 246 Ga. 203, 269 S.E.2.d 464
- Supreme Court of Georgia - CITY OF ATLANTA v. FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF ATLANTA et al., 246 Ga. 424, 271 S.E.2.d 821
- Supreme Court of Georgia - SHADDEN et al. v. COWAN et al., 213 Ga. 29, 96 S.E.2.d 608 (1956)
- Supreme Court of Georgia - CITY OF ATLANTA v. SIMS., 210 Ga. 605, 82 S.E.2.d 130 (1954)
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