Appellant City of Suwanee appeals the judgment rendered against it in an inverse condemnation action brought by Appellee Settles. Bridge Farm, LLC. At the conclusion of a bench trial, the trial court found that the City’s enactment of an amendment to its zoning ordinance had effected an unconstitutional regulatory taking of a large parcel of land owned by Settles Bridge and awarded Settles Bridge more than $1.8 million in damages. The City appeals, contending, inter alia, that the case was unripe for judicial review due to Settles Bridge’s failure to exhaust its administrative remedies. We agree with the City that Settles Bridge should have exhausted its administrative remedies prior to initiating litigation in this matter, and we therefore reverse the judgment entered against the City.
In 2006 and 2007, Settles Bridge assembled approximately 36 acres of property in the Suwanee North-area of the City of Suwanee. The Suwanee North area is located within an R-140 zoning district, comprised primarily of low-density residential development, and Settles Bridge intended to develop a residential subdivision on the property. In December 2006 Settles Bridge submitted a 41-lot subdivision plan to the City and ultimately obtained City approval of numerous variances for its anticipated development.
During the time it was pursuing the subdivision plan, Settles Bridge was contacted by Notre Dame Academy, which expressed an interest in purchhsing the property to develop for use as a school. After confirming with a City planning official that schools were a permitted use within the R-140 zoning classification, Settles Bridge agreed to sell the property to Notre Dame. Accordingly, in February 2008, Settles Bridge and Notre Dame executed a purchase contract for the property, and Settles Bridge abandoned its subdivision plan.
Shortly thereafter, City officials learned of Notre Dame’s interest in the property. Officials determined that the City’s zoning ordinance, as then in effect, permitted the development of a school within the R-140 zoning classification “as of right,” meaning that such a use would be authorized without any public review. At that point, the City was in the process of developing its 2030 Comprehensive Land Use Plan, which, among other things, called for remaining undeveloped property in the Suwanee North area to be developed for future single-family or compatible uses. On February 29,2008, the Suwanee City Council adopted a three-month moratorium on the issuance of building and development permits within residential zoning districts for “large projects” exceeding certain square footage or acreage thresholds. The school envisioned by Notre Dame qualified as a “large project” covered by the moratorium.
Under the City’s zoning ordinance, a special use permit may be issued only if the project in question is deemed “consistent with the needs of the neighborhood or the community,” “compatible with the neighborhood,” and “not... in conflict with the overall objective of the Comprehensive Plan.” The zoning ordinance further requires that, in assessing an application for a special use permit, the City
shall consider the policies and objectives of the Comprehensive Plan, particularly in relationship to the proposed site and surrounding area, and shall consider the potential adverse impact on the surrounding area, especially in regards [sic] but not limited to traffic, storm drainage, land values and compatibility of land use activities.
SUP applications are to be reviewed first by the City Planning Commission. After receiving the Planning Commission’s recommendation and conducting a public hearing, the City Council makes the final decision regarding whether to issue a special use permit.
Neither Settles Bridge nor Notre Dame ever applied for a special use permit for any proposed use on the subject property. Instead, both parties filed suit against the City, challenging the legality of the moratorium and the SUP amendment. Notre Dame agreed to a settlement with the City and terminated its purchase contract with Settles Bridge. Settles Bridge persisted in its litigation against the City, which culminated in a week-long trial before an advisory jury. After receiving the advisory jury’s responses to special interrogatories and conducting a follow-up hearing, the trial court held that the City by its enactment of the SUP amendment had effected a taking of the subject property. See Gradous v. Bd. of Commissioners of Richmond County,
On appeal of a trial court’s finding of an unconstitutional regulatory taking, this Court is bound to affirm the trial court’s findings of fact unless they are clearly erroneous but must review de novo the trial court’s legal conclusions. City of Atlanta v. TAP Assocs.,
As a general rule, before seeking a judicial determination that a local regulation is unconstitutional as applied to its property, a party must first apply to local authorities for relief. Mayor & Aldermen of the City of Savannah v. Savannah Cigarette Amusement Svcs.,
However, this Court has recognized a narrow exception to the exhaustion requirement for situations in which the litigant establishes that submitting to the administrative process would be “futile.” Mayor & Alderman of the City of Savannah,
Even where a litigant would be required to return to the same administrative body that had already denied it relief, however, the futility exception does not apply if the issue presented is not the same as the issue previously decided adversely to the litigant. DeKalb County v. Cooper Homes,
As in Cooper Homes, the issue on which Settles Bridge should have sought administrative review is not the same as the issue previously decided by the City Planning Commission and City Council. The issue previously decided was whether to amend the City’s zoning ordinance to specify that, in certain primarily residential zoning districts where the landowner proposes a permitted use that exceeds certain size/scope thresholds, the landowner must first obtain a special use permit. The issue that would have been decided, had Settles Bridge exhausted its administrative remedies, is whether, and under what conditions, Settles Bridge should be granted a special use permit to build a school on its property, and would have required assessment of site-specific considerations regarding traffic, storm damage, land values, and the like.
The fact that Settles Bridge was pessimistic about its prospects for obtaining a special use permit, even if that pessimism was justified, does not prove that exhaustion of remedies would have been “futile” as this Court has defined that term. As we have recently held, the conduct of an administrative decision-maker “outside of and prior to the normal administrative process do[es] not ordinarily demonstrate futility.” Ga. Dept. of Community Health v. Ga. Society of Ambulatory Surgery Centers,
Contrary to Settles Bridge’s argument, our decision in City of Albany v. Oxford Solid Waste Landfill,
Nor does it matter that Settles Bridge representatives appealed to City officials in opposition to the SUP amendment both informally and at the public hearing. These efforts do not constitute a fulfillment of the administrative process, nor does their lack of success demonstrate futility. See Mayor & Aldermen of the City of Savannah,
In conclusion, Settles Bridge refused to engage in an administrative process that could have obviated the need for the protracted litigation that has unfolded. Accordingly, we conclude that the trial court erred in declining to dismiss this case due to Settles Bridge’s failure to exhaust its administrative remedies, and we reverse.
Judgment reversed.
