Wе granted certiorari to consider whether municipal annexations using roadways to achieve contiguity are “аbsolutely void as not authorized by law.” The Court of Appeals held that they may be, and therefore respondent, an entity with no interest in the property annexed, had standing to challenge the annexations.
St. Andrews Public Serv. Dist. v. City Council of the City of Chаrleston,
FACTS
Petitioner (The City) purported to annex certain parcels and “all adjacent public rights-of-way.” Respondent challenges the annexation of six parcels and the concurrent annexation of portions of two roadways. Without the annexation of the roadways, these six parcels would not be contiguous to the City’s borders.
The сircuit court dismissed the complaint, holding respondent lacked standing to contest the annexations. The Court of Apрeals reversed and remanded the matter for further proceedings.
ISSUE
Does a party who does not reside or own property in the annexed area, and whose proprietary interests or statutory rights are not infringed upon by the annexation, have standing to challenge a municipal annexation?
ANALYSIS
Respondent is a special purpose district (SPD) whose territory includes the parcels at issue here. It is well settled that a municipality may annex territory within an SPD.
Tovey v. City of Charleston,
The parcels were annexed using either the 75% method found in S.C.Code Ann. § 5-3-150(1) or the 100% petition method set forth in § 5-3-150(3) (Supp.2001). A municipality’s annеxation of contiguous property under the 75% method can be challenged by a municipality or a resident, or a рerson residing in or owning property in the area to be annexed. In order to challenge a 100% annexation, the challenger must assert an infringement of its own proprietary interests or statutory rights.
State by State Budget & Control Bd. v. City of Columbia,
The Court of Appeals held that respondent lacked statutory standing to challenge the annexation of these parcels. We
Despite the lаck of statutory standing, the Court of Appeals found respondent had standing under our decision in
Quinn v. City of Columbia, supra.
In
Quinn,
we adopted a rule thаt permitted a “stranger” to the annexation to challenge that proceeding if the annexation ordinancе was “ ‘absolutely void’, i.e.
not authorized by
law....”
Id.
at 407,
We now overrule Quinn, and hold that the only non-statutory party which may challenge a municipal annexation is the State, through a quo warranto action. In our view, the better policy is to limit “outsider” annexation challenges to those brought by the State “acting in the public interest.” Therefore, we reverse the Court of Appeals’ holding that respondent has standing to challenge these annexations. 2
In deciding the standing issue, the Court of Appeals called into question the legality of these annexations. We
We find contiguity here. The maps in the appendix indicate that City property and roadways abut the roadways that werе annexed. At the time of this annexation, 3 S.C.Code Ann. § 5-3-110 (Supp.2001) permitted the annexation of such abutting roadways upon priоr consent of the entity maintaining the roadway. There is no contention consent was lacking here. Accordingly, the record establishes that all the challenged properties touch — albeit via annexed roadways in some cases — property already within the limits of the City of Charleston. The fact that the City and the properties share a common boundary is sufficient to establish contiguity. Bryant v. City of Charleston, supra.
We find contiguity existed at the time of these annexations and that respondent lаcks standing to maintain this action. Accordingly, the decision of the Court of Appeals is
REVERSED.
Notes
. That is, a party not authorized by thе annexation statute to sue.
. Respondent also relies on our decision in
Glaze v. Grooms,
. S.C.Code Ann. § 5-3-305 (Supp.2001), which took effect approximately three and a half years after these annexatiоns, defines contiguous property:
For purposes of this [municipal annexation] chapter, "contiguous" means рroperty which is adjacent to a municipality and shares a continuous border. Contiguity is not established by a road, watеrway, right-of-way, easement, railroad track, marshland, or utility line which connects one property to another; however, if the connecting road, waterway, easement, railroad track, marshland, or .utility line intervenes between twо properties, which but for the intervening connector would be adjacent and share a continuous border, the intervening connector does not destroy contiguity.
We express no opinion on the impact of this statute on annexations accomplished after May 1, 2000, the statute’s effective date.
