Georgia judge won't award attorneys fees to governments in lawsuit over Rivian vehicle plant
AP News

Georgia judge won't award attorneys fees to governments in lawsuit over Rivian vehicle plant

A judge has rejected an attempt by Georgia and a local development agency to make residents pay legal fees after they unsuccessfully sued to block the Rivian electric vehicle plant

FILE - A sign warns against trespassing on government property at the site of a planned Rivian electric truck plant March 7, 2024, in Rutledge, Ga. (AP Photo/John Bazemore, File)


ATLANTA (AP) — A judge has rejected an attempt by the state of Georgia and a local development agency to force people who unsuccessfully sued to block an electric vehicle plant to pay the government's legal fees.

State government and the development authority demanded that six Morgan County property owners who challenged the zoning for Rivian Automotive pay more than $337,000 in legal fees incurred by the government.

Morgan County Superior Court Judge Stephen Bradley, in a ruling filed Friday, said that the two lawsuits where the government agencies were seeking fees were far from frivolous, and that awarding legal fees to the government could make it harder for regular citizens to exercise their rights to challenge government actions in court.

“No truly aggrieved citizen should be prohibited from suing to test the legality or constitutionality of the government’s claims, and any precedent that could allow political actions and costs to be offloaded to complaining litigants would be untenable," Bradley wrote.

JoEllen Artz, a leader of opposition group No2Rivian, said the ruling keeps citizens from being “silenced by Goliath.”

The state is seeking to recover another $200,000 in fees in a separate case in Atlanta. A spokesperson for Attorney General Chris Carr didn't immediately return an email seeking comment.

The ruling came days before a Tuesday groundbreaking ceremony for the $5 billion Rivian plant, which is supposed to eventually employ 7,500 people on a 2,000-acre site near Social Circle, about 45 miles (70 kilometers) east of downtown Atlanta.

Some local residents oppose the plant, saying it is an inappropriate neighbor to farms and will ruin residents' drinking-water well in a rural area on the eastern edge of Atlanta's suburban frontier. The property's previous owner, a joint development authority that includes the governments of Jasper, Morgan, Newton and Walton counties, transferred ownership of the land to the state. That extinguished what could have been a contentious rezoning fight because state land is generally exempt from local zoning laws.

But the lawsuits challenged whether that was appropriate, questioning whether leasing land to Rivian for a truck assembly plant was a public purpose, or whether Rivian's private activity still required rezoning by Morgan County.

Bradley ruled against the plaintiffs, but he acknowledged in Friday's ruling that the transfers "seem clearly designed to circumvent resistance from local voices opposing the Rivian project.”

The development authority, in a statement published in The Covington News, argued it should recoup attorney fees because the lawsuits were illegitimate attempts to "delay progress, costing taxpayers and the community.”

But Bradley said the plaintiffs did not sue in bad faith and a had chance of winning because they raised “new and unanswered questions of law” about the state's traditional immunity from being sued.

“As shown in the defendants’ reactions, there was a very real chance that a court could decide in the plaintiffs’ favor," Bradley wrote.

The Morgan County Commission, which was also sued, didn't seek attorneys' fees.

Recommended for You

He’s an NBA and UCLA basketball legend. Reggie Miller’s ‘passion’ at 60? Mountain biking
Los Angeles Times

He’s an NBA and UCLA basketball legend. Reggie Miller’s ‘passion’ at 60? Mountain biking

News
Ben Griffin takes a 2-shot lead in Napa ahead of his Ryder Cup debut
AP News

Ben Griffin takes a 2-shot lead in Napa ahead of his Ryder Cup debut

News
Clifton Powell drops the name of the agent he says fired him for doing another 'little Black movie'
Los Angeles Times

Clifton Powell drops the name of the agent he says fired him for doing another 'little Black movie'

News
Striking St. Louis Boeing Co. machinists reject third contract offer
UPI

Striking St. Louis Boeing Co. machinists reject third contract offer

News
Appeals court rules Trump administration can end legal protections for more than 400,000 migrants
AP News

Appeals court rules Trump administration can end legal protections for more than 400,000 migrants

News
Federal government sues Uber over alleged discrimination against people with disabilities
AP News

Federal government sues Uber over alleged discrimination against people with disabilities

News
Missouri Senate approves congressional redistricting map
UPI

Missouri Senate approves congressional redistricting map

News
Wannasaen breaks out of a swing funk to shoot 63 and take Kroger Queen City lead
AP News

Wannasaen breaks out of a swing funk to shoot 63 and take Kroger Queen City lead

News
An activist flotilla on a mission to Gaza says it was attacked again in Tunisia
AP News

An activist flotilla on a mission to Gaza says it was attacked again in Tunisia

News
House votes to increase penalties for illegal border crossings
UPI

House votes to increase penalties for illegal border crossings

News
Progress 93 supply and trash removal mission headed to space station
UPI

Progress 93 supply and trash removal mission headed to space station

News
Schiff lawyer told Justice Department it should investigate Pulte for probing mortgages of Trump opponents
Los Angeles Times

Schiff lawyer told Justice Department it should investigate Pulte for probing mortgages of Trump opponents

News
Texas drops lawsuit against doctor accused of illegally providing care to transgender youth
AP News

Texas drops lawsuit against doctor accused of illegally providing care to transgender youth

News
Son of billionaire Patriots owner Josh Kraft drops out of Boston mayor’s race against Michelle Wu
AP News

Son of billionaire Patriots owner Josh Kraft drops out of Boston mayor’s race against Michelle Wu

News
‘Person of interest’ in custody in fatal shooting of Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk
Los Angeles Times

‘Person of interest’ in custody in fatal shooting of Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk

News