Appellant Mary Kathryn Powell, the owner of a parcel of real property in the City of Snellville, appeals from the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to the defendants in the lawsuits Ms. Powell filed against them over the zoning classifications placed on her property. For the reasons that follow, we dismiss Ms. Powell’s direct appeals, treat her appellate pleadings as an application for discretionary review, and deny further review of the trial court’s actions.
In 1993, Ms. Powell owned an 11-acre parcel of land in Gwinnett County which she planned to sell for development as a parking lot for a shopping center to be built on adjacent property. At Ms. Powell’s request, the City of Snellville annexed Ms. Powell’s property in July 1993 and, over Ms. Powell’s objection, zoned the property as “Office and Institutional” with a condition prohibiting the property from being developed as a parking lot. In December 1993, Powell filed suit in superior court against the city, its mayor, council members, planning director, and planning commission, contesting the zoning classification imposed on her property and the city’s refusal to re-zone the property to what Ms. Powell deemed a constitutional classification. She also sought damages under 42 USC § 1983 for alleged inten
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tional and malicious interference with her contractual and property rights, damages under OCGA § 36-33-4, and a declaratory judgment that the Atlanta Regional Commission’s interpretation of a rule promulgated by the Department of Natural Resources was unconstitutional. While Powell’s lawsuit was pending in superior court, the city re-zoned the property from “Office and Institutional” to “Neighborhood Business,” again with the prohibition against development as a parking lot for the planned adjacent mall. In July 1994, Ms. Powell filed a second lawsuit in superior court in which she contended the “Neighborhood Business” classification was unconstitutional, sought damages pursuant to 42 USC § 1983, and alleged that OCGA § 36-67A-5 had been violated by city council members who voted on the second zoning classification while they were defendants in her first appeal and thereby potentially exposed to personal liability. The superior court granted summary judgment to appellees in both cases and, relying on
Village Centers v. DeKalb County,
1. The city maintains appellant is not entitled to directly appeal the trial court’s judgments because the trial court was engaged in reviewing zoning decisions made by the local zoning tribunal and appeals therefrom must come by way of application. OCGA § 5-6-35 (a) (1);
Trend Dev. Corp. v. Douglas County,
2. As stated earlier, Ms. Powell filed applications for discretionary review of the trial court’s judgments, and we are reviewing the briefs filed in this case as if they were filed in support of and in opposition to the applications. In response to the observation that the property now is zoned to a classification to which Ms. Powell has no objection, Ms. Powell contends she is entitled to a jury trial to determine whether she suffered a temporary taking entitling her to damages from 1993, when the city initially improperly zoned her property, until the city zoned the property for a planned residential community in 2000. A property owner does not suffer a compensable temporary taking under the Fifth Amendment to the U. S. Constitution unless the government has deprived a landowner of all use of the property.
Cobb County v. McColister,
Inasmuch as we conclude from our examination of the records in conjunction with the applications for leave to file an appeal that reversible error does not appear to exist and the establishment of a precedent is not desirable, the applications are denied. Rule 33, Rules of the Supreme Court of Georgia.
Appeals dismissed and applications to appeal denied.
