James Little’s personal residence in the City of Lawrenceville is adjacent to property owned by Mahlon Burson, who is a member of the City Council, and Burson’s two sons (Rezoning Applicants). Rezoning Applicants began utilizing their property to store materials for use in an automobile and tire business. Several years later, Little complained to the City about this outdoor storage and eventually filed an official zoning complaint. Rezoning Applicants then filed an application to rezone their property from a residential to a light manufacturing classification. The City’s Planning Staff recommended denial of the rezoning, but the Planning Commission recommended otherwise, and the City Council approved the rezoning application. Little appealed from this rezoning decision, naming as defendants the City, the City Council, and Rezoning Applicants (Appellees), and also sought injunctive relief against Rezoning Applicants. Although the trial court found that Burson violated the zoning conflict-of-interest law, OCGA § 36-67A-1 et seq., it nevertheless concluded that the rezoning was valid, that the City properly followed the procedures set out in the City Charter and the zoning ordinance, and that Little failed to exhaust his available administrative remedies for determining whether the activities conducted on the property violate the zoning ordinance even after the rezoning. Little appeals pursuant to this Court’s grant of an application for discretionary appeal. Although it now appears that the Court of Appeals has jurisdiction of this case, we have retained it for reasons of judicial economy. See
Redfearn v. Huntcliff Homes Assn.,
1. Little contends that the trial court erred in ruling that the City properly followed the procedures set forth in the City Charter
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for enacting ordinances. The provisions of the City Charter may once have controlled zoning procedure in accordance with the former Georgia Constitution of 1976, which forbade the legislature from regulating municipal zoning authority.
Warshaw v. City of Atlanta,
2. Little urges that the trial court erred by failing to set aside the rezoning action even though it found that Burson had violated OCGA § 36-67A-2. Under that code section, a local government official who knows or reasonably should know of a conflict of interest in a rezoning action is required to make an immediate written disclosure of his interest to the governing authority, disqualify himself from voting, and “not take any other action on behalf of himself or any other person to influence action on the application for rezoning. . . .” Because Burson disclosed his interest and disqualified himself from voting, the question is whether he violated the statute by taking “any other action. . . .”
In construing a statute in which, as here, “certain acts are specified which are followed by a general expression referring to other acts, such other acts must be of like character with those named.”
Board of Chiropractic Examiners v. Ball,
3. Little also contends that the trial court erred in ruling that he failed to exhaust his administrative remedies with regard to the issue of whether the activities conducted on the property violated the zoning ordinance even after the rezoning. According to Little, further administrative proceedings would be futile because the City Council has already decided this issue by virtue of certain language in its rezoning decision. As the trial court stated, however, the zoning ordinance requires that all questions of interpretation be presented first to the Planning Commission, then to the Board of Appeals, and then to the courts. Exhaustion of administrative remedies is futile only where further administrative review “would result in a decision on the same issue by the
same body. . .
.” (Emphasis supplied.)
WMM Properties v. Cobb County,
Judgment affirmed.
