514 S.E.2d 831 | Ga. | 1999
Reba Bradshaw applied to Towns County for a license for the retail sale of beer and wine. Jack Dayton, the sole county commissioner, rejected her application because she did not meet the requirements for a “qualified location” under the county ordinance. Bradshaw filed a petition for certiorari and mandamus, arguing that the county ordinance was unconstitutional. Because the trial court correctly held that the ordinance does not violate due process or equal protection, we affirm.
In 1985, the Towns County commissioner adopted a resolution regulating the sale of beer and wine. The ordinance states that beer and wine may be sold only at a “qualified location.” To be qualified, the location may not be within 100 yards of any church, funeral home, school, college educational building, or other retail store selling beer and wine as measured from property line to property line. In addition, the ordinance limits the number of qualified locations within each voting district to one location for every 500 registered voters.
1. To satisfy due process, a law must have a reasonable relationship to a proper legislative purpose and must be neither arbitrary nor discriminatory.
Contrary to Bradshaw’s contentions, the county’s reliance on the number of registered voters in each voting district, rather than the county’s population, is not arbitrary in the constitutional sense.
2. The record also does not support Bradshaw’s contention that the county ordinance violates equal protection. Specifically, she failed to present any evidence that the county has treated differently other similarly situated applicants for liquor licenses.
Judgment affirmed.
Quiller v. Bowman, 262 Ga. 769, 771 (425 SE2d 641) (1993).
See Arras v. Herrin, 255 Ga. 11, 11-12 (334 SE2d 677) (1985) (holding that county vio
Cf. Mayor & Council v. Anderson, 246 Ga. 786, 787-788 (272 SE2d 713) (1980) (concluding that county ordinance tying the number of liquor licenses to the number of city inhabitants is not void for vagueness); see also OCGA § 3-3-2 (b) (1) (requiring ascertainable standards in local licensing ordinances).
See Corey Outdoor Advertising v. Board of Zoning Adjustment, 254 Ga. 221, 222-223 (327 SE2d 178) (1985) (rejecting vagueness challenge to provision that prohibited signs from being “erected on or within 300 feet of the boundaries” of historic properties).