This appeal arises from the grant of an application for discretionary review. Appellant Association of Guineans in Atlanta, Inc. applied to the DeKalb County Board of Commissioners (the “BOC”) for a special land use permit (SLUP) for a single-family house located in a residential area of DeKalb County and zoned as a single-family residence. In its permit application, appellant stated an intent to use the property as a “place of worship and family life center.” The BOC denied appellant’s SLUP application, and appellant appealed to the superior court seeking
1. Appellant alleges the trial court erred when it dismissed its constitutional challenges to the zoning ordinance. We find no error. “The rule is that a landowner who makes a constitutional attack on a zoning ordinance must do so before the local governing body — either county commission or city council — in order to afford that body the opportunity to amend the ordinance and bring it within constitutional limits.” Shockley v. Fayette County,
2. As stated in its order of dismissal, the trial court dismissed a portion of appellant’s complaint “on the grounds that [appellant had] failed to make a prima facie case showing a violation [of the RLUIPA].” Appellant alleges this ruling was in error because the trial court applied the wrong analysis for a motion to dismiss. We agree. The May 2011 hearing transcript shows that the trial court was adamant the motion at issue was one for dismissal and that it would not be considering any evidence outside of the pleadings: “[I]t’s not my understanding that you’re entitled to an evidentiary hearing on this motion to dismiss.” Since the trial court was ruling on a motion to dismiss that had not been converted into a motion for summary judgment, the trial court was required to assume the factual allegations in the complaint to be true and then determine: (1) whether the allegations in the complaint disclosed with certainty that appellant would not be entitled to relief under any set of provable facts and (2) appellees have shown that appellant cannot possibly introduce evidence within the framework of the complaint that would warrant the relief sought. Northway v. Allen,
3. Appellant
Judgment affirmed in part, reversed in part, and vacated in part, and case remanded with direction.
