City of Atlanta v. YUSEN AIR & SEA SERVICE, No. A03A1230.
Decision Date | 05 September 2003 |
Docket Number | No. A03A1230. |
Citation | 263 Ga. App. 82,587 S.E.2d 230 |
Parties | CITY OF ATLANTA v. YUSEN AIR & SEA SERVICE HOLDINGS, INC., et al. |
Court | Georgia Court of Appeals |
OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE
Holland & Knight, James M. Hunter, Jason P. Wright, Cheryl A. Barnes, Laurie W. Daniel, Atlanta, for appellant.
Glaze, Glaze, Harris & Arnold, Kirby A. Glaze, Joe M. Harris, Jr., Jonesboro, for appellees.
Citing OCGA § 32-3-1 et seq., the City of Atlanta ("the City") petitioned to condemn property owned by Yusen Air & Sea Service Holdings, Inc. and occupied by Yusen Air & Sea Service (USA), Inc. (collectively, "Yusen"). The trial court granted the petition and condemned the property. Yusen subsequently moved to set aside the taking under OCGA § 32-3-11. The trial court granted Yusen's motion, and the City appeals.1 For reasons that follow, we affirm.
1. A trial court may set aside, vacate, or annul a declaration of taking under OCGA § 32-3-11 "in the following situations—fraud or bad faith, the improper use of the condemnation powers, the abuse or misuse of the condemnation powers, and `such other questions as may properly be raised.'"2 We will not reverse the trial court's findings on such issues if those findings are supported by any evidence.3
On July 1, 2002, the City petitioned to condemn Yusen's property pursuant to the ordinance and OCGA § 32-3-1 et seq. In connection with its petition, the City filed a declaration of taking and deposited with the trial court $2,400,000, the estimated just and adequate compensation for the property. That same day, the trial court entered a condemnation order directing Yusen to surrender the property to the City within 30 days.
Following the condemnation, Yusen moved to set aside, vacate, and annul the taking. It argued, among other things, that the City's declaration of taking failed to comply with OCGA § 32-3-6 because the authorizing ordinance allowed the City Attorney to choose between two alternative taking methods. The trial court granted Yusen's motion. We find no error.
A condemning authority may acquire property for transportation purposes through the declaration of taking method set forth in OCGA § 32-3-1 et seq. or through the various other methods, such as the Special Master procedure, provided in Title 22 of the Code.4 Under the declaration of taking method, title vests in the condemnor—and the property is condemned—once the condemnor files its declaration of taking and deposits into the court's registry the sum it has estimated as just compensation.5 In contrast, the Special Master method requires an evidentiary hearing on all disputed issues before the condemnation takes place.6 Following the hearing, the Special Master issues an award, which "condemn[s] and vest[s] title to the property or other interest in the condemning body upon the deposit by that body of the amount of the award into the registry of the court."7
Thus, unlike the Special Master method, a declaration of taking contemplates an immediate title transfer without an evidentiary hearing. Noting this immediate result, our Supreme Court has found that, "to ensure due process to the property owner," the condemning body must strictly conform to the requirements of OCGA § 32-3-1 et seq.8 A declaration of taking that fails to comply with the statute does not vest title in the land to the condemnor.9 The record shows that the City's declaration of taking violates OCGA § 32-3-6 and, consequently, cannot vest title in the City. Under OCGA § 32-3-6(b)(6), the declaration must "contain or have annexed thereto ... [a] certified copy of an order by the ... municipality ... finding that the circumstances are such that it is necessary to proceed in the particular case under this article, and specifically authorizing condemnation under this article." The City's declaration references the attached ordinance, which contains a "finding" that the declaration of taking method is "necessary" to acquire land for the project. In the next paragraph, however, the ordinance authorizes the City Attorney to use that taking method or, alternatively, the Special Master method.
Our rules of statutory construction require that we give "[w]ords used in a statute ... their ordinary and common meaning where the statutory language is plain and unambiguous."10 Furthermore, "[a]ll words of a statute should be given effect, and a statute should not be construed so as to render any language meaningless or mere surplusage."11 OCGA § 32-3-6(b)(6) plainly requires a municipal finding that proceeding through the declaration of taking method is necessary. The word "necessary" means essential or indispensable. 12
Although the City claims that the city council met this requirement here, we fail to see how the declaration of taking method can be necessary or essential when the council also contemplated and specifically authorized use of an alternative method. In short, the council nullified its necessity finding by permitting use of the Special Master method to acquire the property. Any other conclusion ignores the statute's language, as well as the legislature's clear intent that the declaration of taking method, and its immediate title transfer, be employed only when necessary.13 Accordingly, the trial court properly set aside the taking of Yusen's property.14
2. The City's motion for expedited review is dismissed as moot.
Judgment affirmed.
1. The City has attached to its...
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