TUTEN et al. v. CITY OF BRUNSWICK et al.
S92A0696
Supreme Court of Georgia
July 8, 1992
July 30, 1992
418 SE2d 367 | 262 Ga. 399
WELTNER, Chief Justice.
2. Second, the attorney general argues for the first time on motion for reconsideration that the jurors at issue in Division 2 of our opinion were not “clients” of the district attorney. He relies on
Subsection (b) was added to
The attorney general concedes in his motion for reconsideration that the district attorney should have disclosed this information to the defense. That is exactly what the majority opinion holds.
The motion for reconsideration is denied.
DECIDED JULY 8, 1992 — RECONSIDERATION DENIED JULY 30, 1992.
Lee W. Fitzpatrick, L. Clark Landrum, Clive A. Stafford-Smith, for appellant.
David E. Perry, District Attorney, Michael J. Bowers, Attorney General, Susan V. Boleyn, Senior Assistant Attorney Genеral, Peggy R. Katz, Staff Attorney, for appellee.
S92A0696. TUTEN et al. v. CITY OF BRUNSWICK et al.
(418 SE2d 367)
WELTNER, Chief Justice.
This appeal concerns the power of a city to alienate a park that has been dedicated to public use.
Factual background
1. Residents of the City of Brunswick sought to enjoin the city commission from completing a proposed conveyance to a church of city park land. They contended that:
Blythe Place or Blythe Square was named, designated and dеdicated as a public park or square when the original Plan of the City of Brunswick was drawn up and laid out in the year 1771 and has continuously existed as a public park or public square since the existence of the City of Brunswick, Georgia.
The trial court found no material factual issue that would require an evidentiary hearing and disposed of the case on issues of law. The trial court‘s order states in part:
OCGA Section 36-37-6 establishes a comprehensive method for disposal of municipal property. It requires publication of notice of intent to sell, and a bidding process, for property worth more than $500.00. However,OCGA Section 36-37-6 (c) provides an exception to those procedures, when a city engages in “trading or swapping” property when that is “deemed to be in the best interest of the municipal corporation.”The Court has considеred Plaintiffs’ thorough analysis of the historical background surrounding the creation of public parks in the City of Brunswick, and their summary of past legislative efforts to protect them. However, the Court finds that under current law the city parks are not exempt from the provisions of
OCGA Section 36-37-6 (c) .
Statutory considerations
2. (a) The act of 1976 (Ga. L. 1976, p. 351; enacted as Code Ann. § 69-318; now codified as
Except as otherwise provided in this Code section, the governing authority of any municipal corporation disposing of any real or personal property of such municipal corporation shall make all such sales to the highest responsible bidder, either by sealed bids or by auction after due notice has been given.
(b) The act of 1976, above (now codified as
Notwithstanding the foregoing provisions of this section [concerning bidding procedure, notice, advertisement requirements], the governing authority of any municipal сorporation is hereby authorized to sell any lots from a municipal cemetery or personal property belonging to the municipal
corporation with an estimated value of $500 or less without regard to the foregoing provisions of this section. Such sales may be made in the open market without advertisement and without the acceptance of bids. The estimation of the value of any persоnal property to be sold shall be in the sole and absolute discretion of the governing authorities of the municipality or their designated agent. Provided, however, nothing herein shall prevent a municipality from trading or swapping property with another property owner, if said trade or swap is deemed to be in the best interest of the municipality.1
3. (a) With the appearance of the Official Code of Gеorgia Annotated, Code Ann. § 69-318 became
Nothing in this Code section shall prevent a municipal corporation from trading or swapping property with another property owner if such trade or swap is deemed to be in thе best interest of the municipal corporation.
(b) It is on this third subparagraph, now
The issue
4. (a) The problem of statutory construction in this case thus becomes an analysis, not so much of words, but of punctuation and new
(b) The following precepts are instructive:
(i)
Except as otherwise specifically provided by particular provisions of this Code, the enactment of this Code by the General Assembly is not intended to alter the substantive law in
existence on the effective date of this Code. [Emphasis supplied.]4
(ii)
In all interpretations of statutes, the courts shall look diligently for the intention of the General Assembly, keeping in view at all times the old law, the evil, and the remedy. . . .5
5. (a)
(b) What we now have with OCGA is simply a rearrangement of an existing statute into the first three subparagraphs of
(c) In sum, there is no indication that the General Assembly intended by this minor rearrangement to expand the powers of municipalities; or to relieve them of the bidding requirements of the 1976 act (Div. 2 (a), above); or to alter settled principles of the common law
6. Further, to read
7. (a) (i) “The construction [of statutes] must square with common sense and sound reasoning.” Blalock v. State, 166 Ga. 465, 470 (143 SE 426) (1928).
(ii) In the construction of a statute a court may decline to give a legislative act such construction as will attribute to the General Assembly an intention to pass an act which is not reasonable, or as will defеat the purpose of the proposed legislation. [Bd. of Trustees v. Christie, 246 Ga. 553, 554 (272 SE2d 288) (1980).]
(b) (i) The rearrangement into a discrete subparagraph (
(ii) The power to swap and trade cemetery lots and personal property of limited value remains just that — and nothing more.
Holding
Under our interpretation of the effect of
Judgment reversed. All the Justices concur, except Bell, P. J., and Fletcher, J., who dissent.
FLETCHER, Justice, dissenting.
The Commission of the City of Brunswick adopted a resolution in June 1991 to transfer part of a city park to a church in exchange for church property. The trial court denied a motion by two city residents seeking to enjoin the conveyance. Because
1. The code provision governing the disposition of municipal property requires any municipality disposing of real property to sell to the highest responsible bidder by sealed bids or auction, “[e]xcept as otherwise provided in this Code section.”
Nothing in this Code section shall prevent a municipal corporation from trading or swapping property with another property owner if such trade or swap is deemed to be in the best interest of the municipal cоrporation.
Construing the statutory language, subsection (c) enables municipalities to trade or swap property with another property owner without receiving sealed bids or conducting an auction so long as the exchange is in the best interest of the municipal corporation. The term “best interest of the municipal corporation” means an exchange for property of like or higher vаlue to the municipal corporation.10 The city commission‘s minutes approving the exchange indicate that the church property was of equal size and value to the park property. Since the proposed exchange meets the best interest test, the Brunswick City Commission had the power to convey the park property in exchange for the church property.
2. Contrary to the assertions of the majority opinion, the same analysis and result would have been reached under the statute prior to the 1983 recodification of the code. The previous code provision dealing with the sale of municipal property had three paragraphs. Paragraph one provided procedures for the sale of property to the highest bidder after notice of the proposed sale; paragraphs two and three contained exceptions. See Ga. Code Ann. § 69-318 (Harrison 1976). The exceptions for the sale of cemetery lots, personal property valued at less than $500, and trading or swapping of property were contained in the second paragraph. Their position in the same paragraph does not mean that trading or swapping was limited solely to cеmetery lots or personal property under $500, as the majority opinion contends. Instead, like
I am authorized to state that Presiding Justice Bell joins in this opinion.
DECIDED JULY 16, 1992 — RECONSIDERATION DENIED JULY 30, 1992.
Rountree & Souther, George M. Rountree, for appellants.
