Appellants Nat and Elaine Warshaw own property located at 2815 Peachtree Road, N. E., and have оperated a strip-type shopping center known as “Garden Hills Shopping Center” there for apprоximately forty years. In 1954 appellee City of Atlanta zoned the subject property A-2 (Apartment Dwelling District). Because the shopping center predated the 1954 zoning ordinance, appellant’s business has continued оperating as a legal, non-conforming commercial use of the land. In January 1980, appellants requested rezoning to C-l-C (Commercial Business District Conditional). The City’s Bureau of Planning reviewed appellant’s rezoning apрlication and recommended approval, with certain conditions attached to the rezoning. Apрellants then amended their application to add six conditions (including agreements not to enlarge the present shopping center, to pave and mark existing parking spaces, and not to erect new signs). In June 1980, thе Zoning Review Board held a public hearing on the application. At that hearing the president of a neighbоrhood association in the affected area voiced concern about inadequate pаrking and the late hours kept by the shopping center’s tenants, and appellants’ attorney responded tо these concerns. The Board recommended approval with the six conditions submitted by the appellаnts. The ordinance to rezone appellants’ land came up for adoption at the July 21, 1980 meeting of thе Atlanta City Council. During discussion a council member moved orally to amend the ordinance to add Conditions 8 (requiring additional parking) and 9 (requiring that the shopping center businesses shut down between the hours of “12:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m.”). So amendеd, the ordinance was passed.
The Warshaws do not dispute the legality of the C-l-C zoning (which they requested), but challenge the validity of Conditions 8 *536 and 9. The trial court granted summary judgment for appellees. On appeal the Warshаws contend that (1) Conditions 8 and 9 amount to an unconstitutional “taking” of their property; (2) the Council’s actions violated applicable procedural rules for amending zoning ordinances; and (3) the conditions are so vаgue as to be unenforceable. We affirm.
Conditional zoning is permissible in Georgia, and “such conditions will be upheld when they were imposed pursuant to the police power for the protection or benefit of nеighbors to ameliorate the effects of the zoning change.”
Cross v. Hall
County,
Citing
Jennings v. Suggs,
Appellants’ vagueness argument is essentially that the condition rеquiring “12:00 p.m. to 7:00 a.m.” closing is unclear in that it does not specify whether “12:00 p.m.” means noon or midnight. The transcript of the Zoning Board hearing clearly shows that neighborhood concerns centered around late-night crowds and noisе at the shopping center. We give local ordinances a reasonable construction where рossible,
Sale v. Leachman,
Judgment affirmed.
