S14A1874. COTTRELL et al. v. ATLANTA DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY et al.
(770 SE2d 616)
Supreme Court of Georgia
MELTON, Justice.
March 16, 2015
Reconsiderations denied April 9 and 14, 2015.
This case concerns the Superior Court of Fulton County‘s validation of roughly $200 million in municipal bonds (the “2014 NSP Bonds“) to be issued by the Atlanta Development Authority d/b/a Invest Atlanta (“Invest Atlanta“). Invest Atlanta and the Geo. L. Smith II Georgia World Congress Center Authority (“Congress Center Authority“) (collectively, the “New Stadium Entities“) propose to have the 2014 NSP Bonds issued for the purpose of funding a portion of the cost of developing, constructing, and operating a new stadium facility in downtown Atlanta (the “New Stadium Project” or “NSP“) for the Atlanta Falcons professional football team. Additional funding for the NSP will be provided by the Atlanta Falcons Stadium Company, LLC (“StadCo“), a Georgia limited liability company associated with the Atlanta Falcons Football Club, LLC (the “Club“), as well as through the sale of personal seat licenses. The NSP is a successor facility to the over twenty-year-old Georgia Dome, and it will be owned by the Congress Center Authority, which also owns the Georgia Dome.
Procedurally, on February 4, 2014, the State of Georgia filed a Petition for Bond Validation in the superior court to authorize the issuance of the 2014 NSP Bonds. A notice to the public was filed on that same day, as well as a Rule Nisi Order setting the bond validation hearing for February 17, 2014. Notice of the proceeding was published in the Fulton County Daily Report on February 7, 2014 and February 14, 2014 as required by
By way of background, the Georgia Dome was, and the NSP is to be, funded in part by a Hotel/Motel tax levied under
proceeds is used to fund a multipurpose domed stadium facility. Before 2010, taxes imposed under Paragraph (a) (5) of
Notwithstanding the [December 31, 2020] termination date stated in division (ii) of subparagraph (A) of this paragraph . . . a tax levied under this paragraph may be extended by resolution of the levying county or municipality and continue to be collected through December 31, 2050, if a state authority certifies: (i) that the same portion of the proceeds will be used to fund a successor facility to the multipurpose domed facility as is currently required to fund the multipurpose domed facility under division (ii) of subparagraph (A) of this paragraph; (ii) that such successor facility will be located on property owned by the state authority; and (iii) that the state authority has entered into a contract with a national football league team for use of the successor facility by the national football league team through the end of the new extended period of the tax collection.
In order to structure the deal and issue the 2014 NSP Bonds for the New Stadium Project, the New Stadium Entities created various agreements and took several steps:
- Based on the 2010 subsection (B) amendment to
OCGA § 48-13-51 (a) (5) allowing for an extended period to collect a Hotel/Motel tax as long as a certain percentage of the proceeds collected during the extended period were expended to fund a “successor facility,” in March 2013, the City passed City Resolution 13-R-0615, which authorized the Mayor to execute (1) a Hotel/Motel Tax Funding Agreement with [Invest Atlanta], as consideration for Invest Atlanta agreeing to provide for the development, construction, equipping, and funding of the publicly financed portion of the cost of a multipurpose operable roof stadium through its issuance of revenue bonds necessary to provide such services and facilities and the [City] agreeing to make payments from certain Hotel/Motel Taxes collected under such agreement to be pledged as security for the [2014 NSP Bonds] (2) a Hotel/Motel Tax Operation and Maintenance Agreement [“O&M Agreement“] with [the] Congress Center Authority for the use of funds in excess of the amount necessary for payments due under the Hotel/Motel Tax Funding Agreement to provide for operation and maintenance services for the new stadium, all in accordance withOCGA [§] 48-13-51 (a) (5) [(B)] ; and for other purposes.
The City prepared a Hotel/Motel Tax Funding Agreement with Invest Atlanta and an O&M Agreement with the Congress Center Authority consistent with City Resolution 13-R-0615. The City currently levies a Hotel/Motel Tax, and 39.3 percent of the first seven percent of the tax will be paid to fund the NSP (the “NSP Tax Proceeds“).
- Invest Atlanta is to issue the 2014 NSP Bonds, which Bonds will be secured by Invest Atlanta‘s pledge and assignment of
the NSP Tax Proceeds to a bond Trustee. The City will collect the tax and transfer the proceeds to Invest Atlanta, and Invest Atlanta will use the NSP Tax Proceeds to pay the debt service on the 2014 NSP Bonds. - Pursuant to a “Bond Proceeds Funding and Development Agreement,” Invest Atlanta is to place the proceeds from the sale of the 2014 NSP Bonds into a Project Fund and instruct the Trustee to distribute money from the Project Fund to the Congress Center Authority. The Congress Center Authority will use the money to fund the New Stadium Project, and the Congress Center Authority will own the New Stadium Project. The Congress Center Authority will also raise money to fund a portion of the NSP by selling certain personal seat licenses. StadCo will provide all additional funds necessary for the NSP.
- After paying the necessary NSP Tax Proceeds to Invest Atlanta to provide for the payment of the principal and interest on the 2014 NSP Bonds, the City will allocate the remaining NSP Tax Proceeds to the Congress Center Authority, consistent with the extended levy provision of
OCGA § 48-13-51 (a) (5) (B) . The Congress Center Authority, in turn, will use those proceeds to pay a portion of the NSP‘s future capital upkeep, maintenance and operating expenses. - StadCo and the Club are required to play Atlanta Falcons’ regular-season and post-season home games at the New Stadium Project for at least 30 years.
1. Cottrell contends that the 2010 subsection (B) amendment to
Pursuant to the Uniformity Clause, “[l]aws of a general nature shall have uniform operation throughout this state and no local or special law shall be enacted in any case for which provision has been made by an existing general law. . . .” Id. In this regard, a statute would run afoul of the Constitution if it were “a general law which lack[ed] uniform operation throughout the state or a special law for which provision ha[d] been made by existing general law.” Lasseter v. Ga. Public Svc. Comm., 253 Ga. 227, 229 (2) (319 SE2d 824) (1984). However,
“[o]ur State Constitution only requires a law to have uniform operation; and that means that it shall apply to all persons, matters, or things which it is intended to affect. If it operates alike on all who come within the scope of its provisions, constitutional uniformity is secured. Uniformity does not mean universality. This constitutional provision is complied with when the law operates uniformly upon all persons who are brought within the relations and circumstances provided by it.” [Cits.] A law which operates uniformly upon all persons of a designated class is a general law within the meaning of the Constitution, provided that the classification thus made is not arbitrary or unreasonable. [Cit.]
(Emphasis supplied.) State v. Martin, 266 Ga. 244, 246 (4) (466 SE2d 216) (1996). Indeed, the General Assembly may properly exclude certain persons or things from the application of a general law. McAllister v. American National Red Cross, 240 Ga. 246 (2) (240 SE2d 247) (1977). As explained more fully below,
As an initial matter, this Court has previously determined that
Like subsection (A) before it,
Likewise, the classification of the taxing authorities affected by subsection (B) is reasonable, in that (1) there is nothing arbitrary or unreasonable about allowing the same taxing entities that already have experience paying for a multipurpose domed stadium facility through the collection of a seven percent Hotel/Motel tax under
Accordingly, we find that
2. Cottrell argues that the Hotel/Motel Tax Funding Agreement between the City and Invest Atlanta is illegal, and, by extension, unconstitutional,2 because
During the extended period of [Hotel/Motel Tax] collection [through December 31, 2050], the county or municipality shall further expend (in each fiscal year during which the tax is collected during the extended period of collection) an amount equal to 39.3 percent of the total taxes collected at the rate of 7 percent toward funding the successor facility certified by the state authority. Amounts so expended shall be expended only through a contract with the certifying state authority.
Pursuant to the Hotel/Motel Tax Funding Agreement, after Invest Atlanta issues the 2014 NSP Bonds, the City will pay the NSP Tax Proceeds to a bond trustee to whom the proceeds have been assigned by Invest Atlanta. The funds are used to pay the debt service on the bonds and are distributed from the bond trustee to the Congress Center Authority pursuant to a Bond Proceeds Funding and Development Agreement, which allows the Congress Center Authority, as the certifying state authority here, to expend the money to fund the New Stadium Project. In this manner, the City will meet its obligation to ensure that it “expend[s] [the NSP Tax Proceeds] toward the funding of a successor facility” while also making sure that the “[a]mounts so expended [to fund the New Stadium Project] shall be expended only through a contract with the certifying state authority.” This arrangement complies with the requirements of
3. Cottrell asserts that the proposed bond transaction violates
There is no requirement that Invest Atlanta own the New Stadium Project in order for it to issue revenue bonds to fund the project or for the tax proceeds paid to Invest Atlanta to be considered as part of the “revenue” to pay for the bonds.4 Indeed, pursuant to
4. Cottrell further contends that the bond transaction here violates the Intergovernmental Contracts Clause (see
Just as there is no requirement that Invest Atlanta own the NSP, there is also no requirement that Invest Atlanta actually construct the NSP in order to properly issue revenue bonds for the purpose of financing the project. Pursuant to the Developmental Authorities Law, Invest Atlanta has the power to “issue . . . revenue bonds . . . and to use the proceeds thereof for the purpose of paying all or part of the cost of any project” (
in that the facility would bring about “an increase in tourism“). This enumeration is without merit.
5. Cottrell argues that the trial court erred in failing to hold that City Resolution 13-R-0615, which extends Atlanta‘s existing Hotel/Motel tax to fund a portion of the construction and maintenance costs of the NSP, is illegal. He contends, primarily, that City Resolution 13-R-0615 is void because the City enacted it in March 2013, over a year before the Congress Center Authority provided the City with a tax certification required by
In this regard,
. . . a tax levied under this paragraph may be extended [past the December 31, 2020 termination date stated in
OCGA § 48-13-51 (a) (5) (A) (ii) ] by resolution of the levying county or municipality and continue to be collected through December 31, 2050, if a state authority certifies [among other things]: (i) that the same portion of the proceeds will be used to fund a successor facility to the multipurpose domed facility as is currently required to fund the multipurpose domed facility under division (ii) of subparagraph (A) of this paragraph[.] . . .
By its plain terms,
necessary in order for a city to pass a valid resolution or that the failure to adhere to this chronological order would have the extreme result of rendering prior authorizing actions void. In any event, here, both
6. Cottrell asserts that the trial court erred in adjudicating the validity of the O&M Agreement7 in this case, because the Agreement did not act as “security” for the 2014 NSP Bonds. In this regard, he contends that, by answering any question regarding the validity of the O&M Agreement, the trial court violated its own self imposed limits on its “subject matter” jurisdiction. In its final validation order, the trial court stated that “[t]he purpose of this proceeding is to determine whether as a matter of law the proceedings for the issuance of the [2014 NSP] Bonds were lawfully conducted and the procedures were complied with, and whether as a matter of fact there is adequate security for the payment of the bonds.” Validation Order at 5, n. 6. However, the trial court‘s statement has nothing to do with and no control over a superior court‘s jurisdiction “to hear and determine all questions of law and of fact in the [bond validation] case and . . . render judgment” on those issues. (Emphasis supplied.)
7. Finally, Cottrell urges that the trial court erred in failing to find that the O&M Agreement violates the Intergovernmental Contracts Clause of the State Constitution, in that this Agreement
between the City and the Congress Center Authority requires the City to reimburse StadCo, a private company, for certain expenses incurred from events and other activities at the New Stadium Project. Again, we disagree.
Pursuant to the Intergovernmental Contracts Clause:
The state, or any institution, department, or other agency thereof, and any county, municipality, school district, or other political subdivision of the state may contract for any period not exceeding 50 years with each other or with any other public agency, public corporation, or public authority for joint services, for the provision of services, or for the joint or separate use of facilities or equipment; but such contracts must deal with activities, services, or facilities which the contracting parties are authorized by law to undertake or provide. . . .
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
Decided March 16, 2015 —
Reconsiderations denied April 9 and 14, 2015.
Thelma W. Cummings Moore; John F. Woodham, for appellants.
Paul L. Howard, Jr., District Attorney; Samuel S. Olens, Attorney General, Denise E. Whiting-Pack, Senior Assistant Attorney General; Hunton & Williams, Matthew J. Calvert, Douglass P. Selby, Ashley F. Cummings; Sutherland, Asbill & Brennan, Thomas W. Curvin, Matthew W. Nichols, for appellees.
Notes
(i) . . . a county (within the territorial limits of the special district located within the county) or municipality is authorized to levy a tax under this Code section at a rate of 7 percent. A county or municipality levying a tax pursuant to this paragraph shall expend an amount equal to at least 51.4 percent of the total taxes collected prior to July 1, 1990, at the rate of 7 percent and an amount equal to at least 32.14 percent of the total taxes collected on or after July 1, 1990, at the rate of 7 percent for the purpose of [among other things]: (I) promoting tourism, conventions, and trade shows[.] . . .
(ii) In addition to the amounts required to be expended under division (i) of this subparagraph, a county or municipality levying a tax pursuant to this paragraph shall further expend (in each fiscal year during which the tax is collected under this paragraph) an amount equal to 14.3 percent of the total taxes collected prior to July 1, 1990, at the rate of 7 percent and an amount equal to 39.3 percent of the total taxes collected on or after July 1, 1990, at the rate of 7 percent toward funding a multipurpose domed stadium facility. . . . Any tax levied pursuant to this paragraph shall terminate not later than December 31, 2020[.] . . .
