By this action plaintiffs seek a declaratory judgment determining that certain of our General Statutes dealing with acquisition of lands for State parks are unconstitutional. While the validity of a statute, when directly and necessarily involved, may be determined in a properly constituted action under the Declaratory Judgment Act, G.S. 1-253 et seq., “this may be done only when some specific provision(s) thereof is challenged by a person who is directly and adversely affected thereby.” Greensboro v. Wall,
No condemnation proceeding affecting any lands of the plaintiffs has as yet been instituted under any statute the constitutionality of which they seek to have determined in this action. All that has occurred is that employees of the Division of Parks and Recreation in the North Carolina Department of Natural and Economic Resources have made initial alternative planning proposals for a State park which contemplate ultimate acquisition of certain lands of the plaintiffs for park purposes. However, no “Master Plan” for the park in question has as yet been “adopted” by the Division of Parks and Recreation, and even when adopted, such a “Master Plan” will serve merely as a guide to the Division itself in carrying out its statutory functions. The making of such a plan is a sensible, and even a necessary, preliminary step if our State parks are to be developed in an orderly rather than a haphazard fashion. However, the adoption of the plan by the Division of Parks and Recreation in no way assures that it will ultimately be carried out or that any of the lands contemplated by the plan to be included in a State park will ever be acquired for that purpose. The continuing review and revision of the plan by the Division itself to keep it consistent with changing concepts and conditions, the requirement for review and approval by higher governmental authority within the executive branch, and the final necessity for legislative approval in the form of appropriation of funds, all present contingencies in the path leading to ultimate acquisition of any particular tract of land for park purposes. Clearly the inclusion of a particular tract of land within a plan at any stage of its development, including after its “adoption” by the Division of Parks and Recreation, does not constitute a taking of that land. The mere planning, including the making of preliminary surveys, is not a taking or damaging of the
There is no merit in plaintiffs’ contention that, because Judge Lee denied defendants’ motion made under Rule 12(b)(6) to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted on the grounds that there is no genuine controversy in existence, Judge Smith could not thereafter allow defendants’ motion for summary judgment made on the same grounds. While one superior court judge may not overrule another, the two motions do not present the same question. Alltop v. Penney Co.,
The judgment of Judge Smith allowing defendants’ motion for summary judgment and dismissing this action is
Affirmed.
