In the Supreme Court of Georgia
Decided: March 21, 2016
S15A1442. GEBREKIDAN v. CITY OF CLARKSTON.
NAHMIAS, Justice.
Aster Zeru Gebrekidan filed an application for discretionary appeal to
challenge her conviction and fine for violating a City of Clarkston ordinance
that prohibits certain retailers of packaged alcoholic beverages from allowing
on their premises any form of electronic or mechanical game machine or coin-
operated device that may be used for entertainment or amusement purposes. We
granted Gebrekidan’s application to decide whether the State’s detailed statutory
scheme regulating coin operated amusement machines (COAMs) and COAM
businesses in Georgia, see OCGA §§ 16-12-35 and 50-27-70 to 50-27-104
(COAM Laws), preempts the City’s ordinance under the Uniformity Clause of
the Georgia Constitution, see Ga. Const. of 1983, Art. III, Sec. VI, Par. IV (a).
As explained below, we conclude that the State’s COAM Laws preempt the
City’s ordinance at least insofar as the ordinance applies to COAMs as defined
by the state statutes, and we therefore reverse Gebrekidan’s conviction and fine.
1. Gebrekidan operates a convenience store in Clarkston where she
sells packaged beer, malt beverages, and wine for consumption off-premises and
also offers COAMs for play pursuant to a state license granted pursuant to the
COAM Laws. Chapter 3 of the City of Clarkston Code of Ordinances (City
Code), entitled “Alcoholic Beverages,” includes the following provision:
Sec. 3-57. - Machines operated for amusement purposes on retail
premises.
No retail dealer in packaged beer, malt beverages or wine
shall permit on his premises any slot machines or mechanical music
boxes or pinball machines or any form of electronic or mechanical
game machine or coin-operated device which might be used for
entertainment or amusement purposes.
On June 5, 2014, the City cited Gebrekidan for violating § 3-57 by
“[o]perating coin-operated amusement machines in [a] retail store selling
packaged beer, malt beverages or wine,” and she was ordered to appear in the
Municipal Court of Clarkston to answer the charge. Gebrekidan filed a motion
to dismiss the citation based on the Uniformity Clause, arguing that the COAM
Laws preempt City Code § 3-57. On September 9, 2014, the municipal court
2
held a hearing and announced that it would deny the motion. Gebrekidan
requested an immediate bench trial, waived the appearance of witnesses against
her, and entered a stipulation with the prosecutor that she “offered coin-operated
amusement machines for play and packaged alcohol for sale at the same location
. . . [and] was licensed by the State of Georgia to operate coin-operated
machines.” In a written order entered on September 15, 2014, the municipal
court found Gebrekidan guilty as charged and fined her $250. On the
preemption issue, the court held that City Code § 3-57 “is a fair and reasonable
ordinance under the City’s police powers that serves an important public
interest, it does not conflict with general laws and accordingly, it is not
preempted by State law.”
Gebrekidan obtained review by certiorari in the Superior Court of DeKalb
County, raising only her preemption claim. After a hearing on January 12,
2015, the superior court entered an order affirming Gebrekidan’s conviction on
February 6, 2015. The court held that § 3-57 is “primarily a regulation of
alcohol rather than COAM[s]” due to its placement in the Alcoholic Beverages
chapter of the City Code and because it prohibits all types of games and
entertainment machines at packaged alcohol stores and not just COAMs as
3
defined by the state law. The court recognized that “[t]he State law regulating
COAM[s] is voluminous,” but ruled that § 3-57 is “a reasonable exercise of the
City’s discretionary power to set rules for alcohol sales . . . authorized by
O.C.G.A. § 3-3-2.”1 The court concluded that “City Code § 3-57 is not a local
COAM regulatory system at all and does not duplicate any of the provisions of
[the COAM Laws].” Gebrekidan filed a timely application for discretionary
appeal, which this Court granted on April 2, 2015. The case was orally argued
on September 15, 2015.2
2. State statutes generally control over local ordinances on the same
subject. See City of Buford v. Georgia Power Co., 276 Ga. 590, 590 (581 SE2d
1
OCGA § 3-3-2 (a) says:
Except as otherwise provided for in this title, the manufacturing, distributing, and
selling by wholesale or retail of alcoholic beverages shall not be conducted in any
county or incorporated municipality of this state without a permit or license from the
governing authority of the county or municipality. Each such local governing
authority is given discretionary powers within the guidelines of due process set forth
in this Code section as to the granting or refusal, suspension, or revocation of the
permits or licenses; provided, however, that residency by an applicant within the city
or county issuing the permit or license shall not be a requirement by the respective
local governing authority if the applicant designates a resident of the city or county
who shall be responsible for any matter relating to the license.
2
Amicus curiae briefs have been filed by the Georgia Municipal Association, Inc. and by
the Georgia Amusement and Music Operators Association of Georgia and 42 independently owned
and franchised convenience stores.
4
16) (2003); Franklin County v. Fieldale Farms Corp., 270 Ga. 272, 273 (507
SE2d 460) (1998). This doctrine, known as state preemption, is rooted
primarily in the Georgia Constitution’s Uniformity Clause, which now reads:
Laws of a general nature shall have uniform operation throughout
this state and no local or special law shall be enacted in any case for
which provision has been made by an existing general law, except
that the General Assembly may by general law authorize local
governments by local ordinance or resolution to exercise police
powers which do not conflict with general laws.
Ga. Const. of 1983, Art. III, Sec. VI, Par. IV (a). See generally Fieldale Farms,
270 Ga. at 273-275 (reviewing the historical development of the state
preemption doctrine in Georgia).3
Under the first part of the Uniformity Clause, which carried forward
language similar to that of previous Constitutions, the General Assembly may
preempt local ordinances on the same subject as a general law either expressly
or by implication. See Fieldale Farms, 270 Ga. at 275. In express preemption,
the statutory text speaks to the need for statewide uniformity on the subject in
question or to the lack of local authority to regulate the subject of the general
3
Several other constitutional provisions address preemption in various contexts, but the
parties do not contend that these provisions control in this case. See, e.g., Ga. Const. of 1983, Art.
III, Sec. VI, Par. VII; Art. IX, Sec. II, ¶ I (a), (c); Art. IX, Sec. VII, ¶ V.
5
law.4 In implied preemption, the intent of the General Assembly to preempt
local regulation on the same subject as the general law is inferred from the
comprehensive nature of the statutory scheme.5 In this context, the General
Assembly speaks through its silence as well as its words; the broad scope and
reticulated nature of the statutory scheme indicate that the legislature meant not
only to preclude local regulation of the various particular matters to which the
general law directly speaks, but also to leave unregulated by local law the
matters left unregulated in the interstices of the general law.
4
See, e.g., City of Buford, 276 Ga. at 590 (finding express preemption of a municipal
ordinance placing a one-year moratorium on the construction of electric power substations within
500 feet of residentially zoned property, where a state statute prohibited local ordinances “expanding
the power of regulation over any business activity regulated by the Public Service Commission
beyond that authorized by charter or general law or by the Constitution”); GeorgiaCarry.org, Inc. v.
Coweta County, 288 Ga. App. 748, 748-749 (655 SE2d 346) (2007) (finding express preemption of
a local ordinance prohibiting firearms on or near county recreation facilities and sports fields, where
a state statute said that “[n]o county or municipal corporation, by zoning or by ordinance, resolution,
or other enactment, shall regulate in any manner . . . the possession, ownership, transport, [or]
carrying . . . of firearms or components of firearms”); Hortman v. Guy, 242 Ga. App. 174, 176 (529
SE2d 182) (2000) (finding express preemption of a local animal control ordinance that expanded the
class of persons responsible for ensuring that livestock were fenced in or otherwise prevented from
straying onto public roads and other people’s property, where the General Assembly “found and
declared a necessity for a uniform state-wide livestock law embracing all public roads in the state
and all other property” in the statutes abolishing the open range).
5
See City of Buford, 276 Ga. at 590; Fieldale Farms, 270 Ga. at 276. See also City of
Atlanta v. S.W.A.N. Consulting & Sec. Servs., Inc., 274 Ga. 277, 279 (553 SE2d 594) (2001)
(explaining that the legislative intent to preempt local laws may be inferred “‘from the sweeping
language and broad scope’ of a general act regulating an industry on a statewide basis’” (citation
omitted)).
6
The 1983 Constitution added an exception to the basic preemption rule
with the “except” provision of the Uniformity Clause. See Fieldale Farms, 270
Ga. at 274-275. Converse to express preemption, where the statute says that the
a subject addressed by a general law is not appropriate for local regulation, the
“except” provision permits the General Assembly “by general law [to] authorize
local governments by local ordinance or resolution to exercise police powers”
on a subject provided for by general laws. Sometimes the general law will
clearly give the local government the authority to enact the ordinance at issue.
See, e.g., Old South Duck Tours v. Mayor and Alderman of City of Savannah,
272 Ga. 869, 871 (535 SE2d 751) (2000). Where a comprehensive general law
authorizes local regulation only on particular matters, however, local ordinances
that regulate matters outside the scope of that specific authorization do not come
under the “except” provision and remain impliedly preempted. See S.W.A.N.
Consulting, 274 Ga. at 279 (“By expressly authorizing additional local
regulation of the private detective and security business in [the] limited instance
[of street patrol service], the [comprehensive general law] impliedly preempts
the City’s regulation of [private security] services in its adult entertainment
establishments.”); Fieldale Farms, 270 Ga. at 277 (“By explicitly granting this
7
narrow power to local governments [to assess reasonable monitoring fees and
to seek an injunction if the fees were not paid], the statute by implication
precludes counties from exercising broader powers.”).
There is also a significant limitation on the General Assembly’s power to
authorize local regulation under the “except” provision of the Uniformity
Clause: the local ordinance still cannot “conflict with general laws.” See
Fieldale Farms, 270 Ga. at 275 (“The [Uniformity Clause’s] second provision
provides for an exception to the general rule of preemption when general law
authorizes the local government to act and the local ordinance does not conflict
with general law.” (emphasis added). See also Pawnmart, Inc. v. Gwinnett
County, 279 Ga. 19, 20 (608 SE2d 639) (2005) (“[T]he Ordinance, because it
also regulates Georgia’s pawnbrokers, is preempted unless it is (1) authorized
by general laws, and (2) does not conflict with them.”). Such a conflict
obviously exists where a local ordinance directly contradicts a general law in
relevant part, see, e.g., Hill v. Tschannen, 264 Ga. App. 288, 290-291 (590 SE2d
133) (2003) (physical precedent only), but it also may arise where the local
ordinance impairs or detracts from the general law’s operation, rather than
augmenting and strengthening it. See Fieldale Farms, 270 Ga. at 275. See also
8
Willis v. City of Atlanta, 285 Ga. 775, 777 (684 SE2d 271) (2009); Rabun
County v. Georgia Transmission Corp., 276 Ga. 81, 87 (575 SE2d 474) (2003).
Compare Grovenstein v. Effingham County, 262 Ga. 45, 46-47 (414 SE2d 207)
(1992) (finding no conflict where a state statute prohibiting the furnishing of
alcohol to persons under age 21 was augmented by the local ordinance at issue,
which prohibited the same conduct under more specific circumstances by
banning retail beer and wine licensees from selling to persons under age 21 and
providing for revocation of their licenses for violations).
3. We will now apply these preemption principles to the general laws
and local ordinance at issue in this case.
(a) We first address whether City Code § 3-57 is preempted under
the analysis directed by the first part of the Uniformity Clause. As Gebrekidan
acknowledges, the State’s COAM Laws do not contain express statutory
language preempting local ordinances on the subject of COAMs or COAM
businesses. The superior court recognized, however, that the statutory scheme
regulating the COAM industry is “voluminous,” and we conclude that the court
erred in holding that this comprehensive general law did not preempt the local
ordinance by implication.
9
OCGA § 16-12-35 creates an exception to Georgia’s criminal laws against
gambling for certain coin operated games and other devices designed and
manufactured for bona fide amusement purposes only, which are
comprehensively regulated by the remainder of the COAM Laws in OCGA §§
50-27-70 to 50-27-104. The COAM Laws include findings by the General
Assembly that “the ability to operate a bona fide coin operated amusement
machine business in this state constitutes a privilege and not a right,” that the
State needs “to prevent the unregulated operation of the bona fide coin operated
amusement machine business,” and that
the bona fide coin operated amusement machine business can be
conducted in a manner to safeguard the fiscal soundness of the state,
enhance public welfare, and support the need to educate Georgia’s
children through the HOPE scholarship program and pre-
kindergarten funding authorized by . . . the Constitution.
OCGA § 50-27-70 (a).
The statutory scheme, which is now administered by the Georgia Lottery
Corporation (GLC), is extensive.6 The COAM Laws define “bona fide coin
operated amusement machines” both by way of general requirements and by
6
Various provisions of the COAM Laws were amended effective July 1, 2015. See Ga. L.
2015, p. 39. None of the amendments appears to affect the issues in this case. In particular, OCGA
§ 50-27-86 was not amended.
10
giving numerous examples of machines that fall within the general definition.
See OCGA § 50-27-70 (b) (2) (A).7 The statutes establish two classes of
COAMs; require “master” licenses for COAM manufacturers, distributors, and
owners and “location” licenses for owners and operators of businesses (like
Gebrekidan’s) where COAMs are available for play by the public; and impose
annual licensing and permitting fees. See OCGA §§ 50-27-70 (b) (3) - (4), 50-
27-71, 50-27-78. The COAM Laws limit the percentage of a location owner’s
7
OCGA § 50-27-70 (b) (2) (A) says:
“Bona fide coin operated amusement machine” means every machine of any kind or
character used by the public to provide amusement or entertainment whose operation
requires the payment of or the insertion of a coin, bill, other money, token, ticket,
card, or similar object and the result of whose operation depends in whole or in part
upon the skill of the player, whether or not it affords an award to a successful player
pursuant to subsections (b) through (g) of Code Section 16-12-35, and which can be
legally shipped interstate according to federal law. Examples of bona fide coin
operated amusement machines include, but are expressly not limited to, the
following: (i) Pinball machines; (ii) Console machines; (iii) Video games; (iv) Crane
machines; (v) Claw machines; (vi) Pusher machines; (vii) Bowling machines; (viii)
Novelty arcade games; (ix) Foosball or table soccer machines; (x) Miniature
racetrack, football, or golf machines; (xi) Target or shooting gallery machines; (xii)
Basketball machines; (xiii) Shuffleboard games; (xiv) Kiddie ride games; (xv)
Skeeball machines; (xvi) Air hockey machines; (xvii) Roll down machines; (xviii)
Trivia machines; (xix) Laser games; (xx) Simulator games; (xxi) Virtual reality
machines; (xxii) Maze games; (xxiii) Racing games; (xxiv) Coin operated pool tables
or coin operated billiard tables as defined in paragraph (3) of Code Section 43-8-1;
and (xxv) Any other similar amusement machine which can be legally operated in
Georgia. The term also means a machine of any kind or character used by the public
to provide music whose operation requires the payment of or the insertion of a coin,
bill, other money, token, ticket, card, or similar object such as jukeboxes or other
similar types of music machines.
11
income that may be derived from COAMs and the number of COAMs in a
single location; regulate the terms of contracts between COAM owners and
COAM lessees; and require owners and operators to report revenues and awards,
with COAMs being electronically connected to the GLC, thereby allowing the
State to easily monitor and collect a tax that starts at 5% of revenues and
increases to 10% over time. See OCGA §§ 50-27-84, 50-27-102. It is a crime
to misuse COAMs, such as by paying cash for successful plays, and there are
numerous penalties for violating other provisions of the complex statutory
scheme, such as provisions requiring the filing of reports. See OCGA §§ 16-12-
35, 50-27-85. The GLC is authorized to provide for enforcement, see OCGA
§ 50-27-81, and several provisions of the COAM Laws give the GLC
rulemaking authority, which has been exercised. See Ga. Comp. R. & Regs.
Chapters 560-2-18 (Coin Operated Amusement Machines) and 560-2-19
(COAM Administrative Hearings).
In sum, the COAM Laws, the text of which (aside from annotations) fills
more than 35 pages of the Georgia Code, establish by general laws precisely the
sort of comprehensive statutory scheme regulating a subject – COAMs and
COAM businesses – on a statewide basis that we have previously found gives
12
rise to implied preemption of local ordinances on the same subject. See, e.g.,
S.W.A.N. Consulting, 274 Ga. at 277-279 (discussing implied preemption under
the Georgia Private Detective and Security Agencies Act); Fieldale Farms, 270
Ga. at 275-278 (discussing implied preemption under the Georgia Water Quality
Control Act).
The City contends, however, that City Code § 3-57 is not a local ordinance
on the same subject as the COAM Laws, arguing that § 3-57 regulates alcohol
and not COAMs and is “primarily aimed at preventing loitering and illegal
public consumption of packaged alcoholic beverages.” The superior court
seemed to agree, concluding that “City Code § 3-57 is not a local COAM
regulatory system at all and does not duplicate any of the provisions of [the
COAM Laws].” But in the preemption context, it is not the reason for or
purpose behind the enactment of a local ordinance that controls. The proper
focus is on the subject and operation of the general and local laws. City Code
§ 3-57 regulates packaged alcohol dealers, but it does so by prohibiting them
from engaging in the COAM business – the same subject provided for by the
COAM Laws. The superior court found persuasive the City’s argument that §
3-57 prohibits all electronic and mechanical game machines at packaged alcohol
13
stores, not only COAMs as defined in the COAM Laws. In fact, that argument
is a concession that § 3-57 regulates COAMs, even if it may also regulate other
game machines. The only game machines at issue in this case are the ones that
Gebrekidan operates in her business pursuant to a state license granted under the
COAM Laws, which the City does not dispute are COAMs as defined by state
law.
Nor does it matter, in the analysis under the first part of the Uniformity
Clause, that the local ordinance does not duplicate any specific provision of the
COAM Laws. As explained above, where the state statutory scheme is as
comprehensive as the COAM Laws, we presume that the General Assembly
meant to occupy the entire field of regulation on the subject, and thus that the
gaps the legislature left were intended to be unregulated matters rather than
spaces for local governments to fill by local regulation. Thus, contrary to the
City’s claim, § 3-57 is not an ordinance that only incidentally affects COAMs
and COAM businesses. The direct effect of § 3-57 is to ban COAMs from
businesses in the City of Clarkston where the State of Georgia allows them. For
these reasons, we conclude that the COAM Laws preempt City Code § 3-57 by
implication.
14
(b) We must still determine, however, whether City Code § 3-57
can survive preemption by the COAM Laws under the “except” provision of the
Uniformity Clause. As outlined previously, in this analysis “the [o]rdinance,
because it also regulates [COAMs and COAM businesses], is preempted unless
it is (1) authorized by general laws, and (2) does not conflict with them.”
Pawnmart, 279 Ga. at 20.
We need not reach the conflict question, because the City cannot clear the
first hurdle of this test, as it has not shown that general laws authorize City Code
§ 3-57. The City asserts that the necessary authorization can be found in § 1.03
15
(w) of the City’s charter8 and in OCGA § 3-3-2 (a).9 The charter was enacted
by the General Assembly, and § 1.03 (w) grants broad police powers to the city
council, but the charter is a local law, not a general law. See Borders v. City of
Atlanta, 298 Ga. 188, 192 (779 SE2d 279) (2015). Thus, the charter cannot
provide the authorization of local regulation “by general law” that is required
by the “except” provision of the Uniformity Clause. See Little v. City of
Lawrenceville, 272 Ga. 340, 341 (528 SE2d 515) (2000) (“Powers which the
legislature sets out in city charters ‘are subject to limitations and preemptions
imposed by general law.’” (citation omitted)).
8
The charter of the City of Clarkston says in § 1.03:
Corporate Powers. Be it further enacted, that the corporate powers of the city, to
be exercised by the city council, may include the following: . . . (w) To exercise and
enjoy all other powers, functions, rights, privileges and immunities necessary or
desirable to promote or protect the safety, health, peace, security, good order,
comfort, convenience, morals, and general welfare of the city and its inhabitants; and
to exercise all implied powers necessary to carry into execution all powers granted
in the Act as fully and completely as if such powers were fully enumerated herein;
and to exercise all powers now or in the future authorized to be exercised by other
municipal governments under other laws of the State of Georgia. No enumeration
of particular powers in this Act shall be held to be exclusive of others, nor restrictive
of general words and phrases granting powers; but shall be held to be in addition to
such powers unless expressly prohibited to cities under the constitution or applicable
public acts of the State.
Ga. L. 1967, p. 3391.
9
The text of OCGA § 3-3-2 (a) is set forth in footnote 1 above.
16
Conversely, OCGA § 3-3-2 (a) is a general law, but it does not authorize
City Code § 3-57. That ordinance does not address the “granting or refusal,
suspension, or revocation” of City licenses to manufacture, distribute, or sell
alcoholic beverages, OCGA § 3-3-2 (a); it simply makes it illegal for certain
alcoholic beverage dealers in Clarkston to permit COAMs on their premises that
state law allows. This conclusion is bolstered by the fact that the COAM Laws
authorize local governments to adopt and enforce ordinances regulating COAM
businesses in 11 specific respects, but not in the way that City Code § 3-57
attempts to regulate them. See OCGA § 50-27-86.10 Two provisions authorize
10
OCGA § 50-27-86 says:
In addition to the state regulatory provisions regarding bona fide coin operated
amusement machines contained in Code Section 16-12-35 and this article, the
governing authority of any county or municipal corporation shall be authorized to
enact and enforce an ordinance which includes any or all of the following provisions:
(1) Prohibiting the offering to the public of more than six Class B machines that
reward the player exclusively with noncash merchandise, prizes, toys, gift
certificates, or novelties at the same business location;
(2) Requiring the owner or operator of a business location which offers to the
public any bona fide coin operated amusement machine that rewards the
player exclusively as described in subsection (d) of Code Section 16-12-35
to inform all employees of the prohibitions and penalties set out in
subsections (e), (f), and (g) of Code Section 16-12-35;
(3) Requiring the owner or possessor of any bona fide coin operated amusement
machine that rewards the player exclusively as described in subsection (d) of
Code Section 16-12-35 to inform each location owner or location operator of
the business location where such machine is located of the prohibitions and
penalties set out in subsections (e), (f), and (g) of Code Section 16-12-35;
(4) Providing for the suspension or revocation of a license granted by such local
17
governing authority to manufacture, distribute, or sell alcoholic beverages or
for the suspension or revocation of any other license granted by such local
governing authority as a penalty for conviction of the location owner or
location operator of a violation of subsection (e), (f), or (g) of Code Section
16-12-35, or both. An ordinance providing for the suspension or revocation
of a license shall conform to the due process guidelines for granting, refusal,
suspension, or revocation of a license for the manufacture, distribution, or
sale of alcoholic beverages set out in subsection (b) of Code Section 3-3-2;
(5) Providing for penalties, including fines or suspension or revocation of a
license as provided in paragraph (4) of this subsection, or both, for a violation
of any ordinance enacted pursuant to this subsection; provided, however, that
a municipal corporation shall not be authorized to impose any penalty greater
than the maximum penalty authorized by such municipal corporation’s
charter;
(6) Requiring any location owner or location operator subject to paragraph (1) of
subsection (b) of Code Section 50-27-84 to provide to the local governing
authority a copy of each verified monthly report prepared in accordance with
such Code section, incorporating the provisions of such Code section in the
ordinance, providing for any and all of the penalties authorized by subsection
(d) of Code Section 50-27-84, and allowing an annual audit of the reports
from the location owner or location operator;
(7) Requiring the location owner or location operator of any business location
which offers to the public one or more bona fide coin operated amusement
machines to post prominently a notice including the following or
substantially similar language:
GEORGIA LAW PROHIBITS PAYMENT OR RECEIPT OF
MONEY FOR WINNING A GAME OR GAMES ON THIS
AMUSEMENT MACHINE; PAYMENT OR RECEIPT OF
MONEY FOR FREE REPLAYS WON ON THIS
AMUSEMENT MACHINE; PAYMENT OR RECEIPT OF
MONEY FOR ANY MERCHANDISE, PRIZE, TOY, GIFT
CERTIFICATE, OR NOVELTY WON ON THIS
AMUSEMENT MACHINE; OR AWARDING ANY
MERCHANDISE, PRIZE, TOY, GIFT CERTIFICATE, OR
NOVELTY OF A VALUE EXCEEDING $5.00 FOR A
SINGLE PLAY OF THIS MACHINE.;
(8) Providing for restrictions relating to distance from specified structures or uses
so long as those distance requirements are no more restrictive than such
requirements applicable to the sale of alcoholic beverages;
(9) Requiring as a condition for doing business in the jurisdiction disclosure by
the location owner or location operator of the name and address of the owner
18
local ordinances suspending or revoking alcohol and other licenses granted by
the local government, but only as a penalty for conviction of the COAM location
owner or operator for violating certain parts of the COAM Laws or for violation
of an ordinance enacted pursuant to § 50-27-86. See OCGA § 50-27-86 (4) -
(5). Another provision allows local governments to impose location restrictions
on COAMs that are no more restrictive than the local location restrictions
applicable to the sale of alcoholic beverages. See OCGA § 50-27-86 (8).
Thus, in enacting the comprehensive COAM Laws, the General Assembly
considered their interaction with local alcohol regulations, but the legislature did
not authorize local governments to flatly prohibit alcoholic beverage licensees
from allowing COAMs on their premises or to penalize such businesses for
doing so. For these reasons, insofar as City Code § 3-57 directly regulates
COAMs as defined by the COAM Laws, we conclude that the local ordinance
is not authorized by general law, and thus the ordinance is not saved from
of the bona fide coin operated amusement machine or machines;
(10) Requiring that all bona fide coin operated amusement machines are placed
and kept in plain view and accessible to any person who is at the business
location; and
(11) Requiring a business that offers one or more bona fide coin operated
amusement machines to the public for play to post its business license or
occupation tax certificate.
19
preemption by the COAM Laws under the “except” provision of the Uniformity
Clause. See S.W.A.N. Consulting, 274 Ga. at 279; Fieldale Farms, 270 Ga. at
277. Compare Grovenstein, 262 Ga. at 46-47. We therefore reverse the
contrary judgment of the superior court.
Judgment reversed. All the Justices concur.
20