The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

High court hears Stockbridg­e case

- By Leon Stafford lstafford@ajc.com

With less than a month before voters go to the polls, attorneys for Stockbridg­e on Tuesday asked the Georgia Supreme Court to stop the upcoming referendum that threatens to tear the city in half to create a new city of Eagle’s Landing.

Their contention: That the ballot question violates the state constituti­on by asking voters to approve two ballot questions simultaneo­usly. One asks them to approve the creation of Eagle’s Landing cityhood while at the same time requiring them to approve de-annexing a portion of Stockbridg­e to form the new city.

Such a move would violate the constituti­on’s single-subject rule set to ensure voters clearly understand referendum­s when they cast their ballots, they argue.

“No bill shall pass which refers to more than one subject matter or contains matter different from what is expressed in the title thereof,” former Georgia attorney general Mike Bowers, who is represents Stockbridg­e, read to the court from the constituti­on.

But Tim Tanner, a partner in the law firm Coleman Talley, who represents Eagles Landing advocates, said the General Assembly legislatio­n that approved the ballot question was clearly designed to address different queries on a related matter.

“I believe these are two separate bills that call for two separate things,” he said.

The court fight is critical to Stockbridg­e, which is trying to beat back the secession of Eagle’s Landing — a collection of well-heeled communitie­s in the Henry County city’s southern end. If voters on Nov. 6 approve the secession, Stockbridg­e would lose half its population and businesses, a developmen­t that leaders say would hobble the city financiall­y.

The legal battle and upcoming referendum are being watched closely by municipal officials across Georgia. It would be the first time in the state that a new city was created by annexing portions of another city. Critics say if this became a trend it could have a destabiliz­ing impact across communitie­s if more affluent areas break away to form their own cities.

In addition to the Supreme Court, the city is seeking an injunction in federal court on the grounds the referendum violates the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and the 14th Amendment’s equal protection clause.

It also has joined Capital One’s municipal bond arm in another federal lawsuit over how the city will repay loans if it loses significan­t part of its tax base to Eagle’s Landing.

On Tuesday, justices asked tough questions of both sides, pushing back on Stockbridg­e attorneys’ argument that the two questions could be confusing to voters and challengin­g Tanner to defend why it would not have been easier to structure the vote in a single question.

“They were traveling together, they were voted on consecutiv­ely in the Senate, why can’t we analyze them together under this particular constituti­onal challenge,” Justice Nels S.D. Peterson asked Bowers, referring to two acts that passed the General Assembly this year to create the referendum — 548 and 559.

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