Rezoning. Chamblee-Dunwoody Hotel Partnership is the owner of 8.3 acres of land adjacent to the intersection of Chamblee-Dunwoody Road and 1-285. Over the past twelve years, this tract of land has been zoned as residential property. During that period of time, seven different applications have been presented to the DeKalb County Commission seeking to rezone the acreage as 0-1 or commercial. The last such attempt was by the present owners in 1979. The Commission rezoned the property to residential-condominium but not to 0-1. The partnership brought suit complaining that the failure to zone the property for business use was an unconstitutional limitation on the property owner’s! reasonable rights to use its property as it saw fit. Our Supreme Court rejected this contention and held that the zoning as residential-condominium was not an unconstitutional zoning of the property.
DeKalb County v. Chamblee Dun woody Hotel Partnership,
In early 1982, on its own motion and on behalf of the Bentley Group, the DeKalb County Commission petitioned the Planning Commission to rezone the property from residential to O-I. After hearing, the DeKalb County Commission did rezone the property to 0-1. David Burry is a homeowner who owns property immediately across Chamblee-Dunwoody Road from the property under litigation. He and an organization of homeowners who own homes in the general neighborhood of the rezoned tract (Gainesborough 500 Civic Association, Inc.) brought the present suit against the DeKalb County Commission, each commissioner individually, the county and others directly involved in zoning decisions in the county, the Bentley Group, and ultimately upon a motion to intervene, against *247 the Hotel Group. Each of the defendants filed an answer, but because of the large amount of money involved and the uncertainty of execution of that contract caused by the contingency of successfully changing the zoning to O-I, defendants moved for an expedited hearing.
Prior to the expedited hearing, each defendant moved the trial court to dismiss Burry’s and the Gainesborough complaint upon the ground that neither possessed requisite standing to contest the zoning order of DeKalb County. The trial court granted an expedited hearing holding the same less than 30 days from the filing of the answers and motions to dismiss by the defendants. At that hearing the trial court allowed evidence as to standing both by Burry, the Gainesborough group and the Bentley Group. The trial court ruled that neither Burry nor the Gainesborough group had requisite standing to contest the zoning ruling and, at the motion of all the defendants, dismissed the complaint. Burry alone brings this appeal raising as enumerations three alleged errors. Held:
1. In substance, Burry complains that he was deprived of sufficient time to present evidence on the issue of standing. Related to this complaint are arguments: that the trial court erred in granting an expedited hearing in contravention of local rules; violated the time restraints of the Civil Procedure Act; erroneously denied a motion for a continuance; curtailed the time available and thus denied Burry rights of discovery; and generally denied him a constitutional hearing.
The crux of the respective positions adopted by Burry and the county and property owners is that a motion to dismiss for lack of standing is either a motion in bar of judgment (Burry’s position) or is a motion in abatement (the appellees’ position). If it is a plea in bar then the taking of evidence converted the plea from a motion to dismiss to a motion for summary judgment and went to the merits of the case.
Newsrack Supply v. Heinle,
In this determination we conclude the trial court erred. Excluding pleas going to the jurisdiction of the court over the person or matter in controversy (which dispute the power of the court to proceed), a plea in abatement focuses upon an error in pleadings or procedure which, over objection, precludes the erring party from proceeding until the error has been corrected. Such a complaint does
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not go to the merits of the case and leaves the basic issue unresolved.
Chatham v. Royal-Globe Ins. Co.,
In this case, the county and property owners moved to dismiss Burry’s complaint because he lacked standing. There is no challenge to the proposition that if Burry had standing as a matter of law, the trial court possessed the power to proceed and dispose of the question of zoning and impose that solution upon the parties to the litigation; i. e., the court could exercise lawfully jurisdiction over both the subject matter of the complaint and over the parties. Thus the only question presented is whether the party plaintiff (Burry) had standing to invoke the powers of the court; i. e., was a proper party plaintiff. That decision goes to the merits of his claim. A decision that Burry had no standing does not abate his action until a proper party plaintiff can be substituted. A finding of no standing resulted in a final disposition of his action and thus constituted a plea in bar. The motion to dismiss for lack of standing therefore when supported by evidence outside the pleadings became a summary judgment.
Capes v. Morgan,
“Plaintiffs were entitled to notice of conversion of a motion to dismiss into a motion for summary judgment and 30 days to respond to such motion.”
Riverhill Community Assn. v. Cobb County Bd. of Commrs.,
2. The ruling in Division 1 above renders moot the enumerations of error dealing with denial of a motion for continuance or denial of right to pursue discovery. However, as relates to the owner in fee of the rezoned property, we find no error in the grant of intervention to Chamblee-Dunwoody Hotel Partnership. See
State of Ga. v. Bruce,
Judgment reversed.
