Appellants Nancy Atwell, Elizabeth Craven, and Matthew Weinstein appeal the denial of their petition for writ of mandate against the City of Rohnert Park (City). In 2010 and 2015, the city council approved and reapproved an expansion for an existing Wal-Mart store, which would include a full grocery component. Appellants contend the city council's second approval was inconsistent with its General Plan and land use policy LU-7. The trial court concluded appellants' petition was barred by res judicata because a prior petition challenging the city council's initial approval also asserted a claim contesting General Plan consistency. The trial court further held appellants' petition was barred by the statute of limitations and
I. BACKGROUND
A. The Initial Project and EIR
The City's General Plan includes land use policy LU-7 (hereafter Policy LU-7) which declares the City's obligation to: "Encourage new neighborhood commercial facilities and supermarkets to be located to maximize accessibility to all residential areas. [¶] The intent is to ensure that convenient shopping facilities such as supermarkets and drugstores are located close to where people live and facilitate access to these on foot or on bicycles. Also, because Rohnert Park's residential population can support only a limited number of supermarkets, this policy will encourage dispersion of supermarkets rather than their clustering in a few locations." (Italics omitted.)
In 2009, Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (Wal-Mart) filed an application with the City, proposing to expand its existing store located in the northwest corner of town. The expansion would add approximately 36,000 square feet to the existing Wal-Mart "big box" discount store for the addition of a 24-hour grocery/supermarket (Project).
In 2010, the City prepared a draft environmental impact report (EIR). That EIR evaluated whether the Project was consistent with the General Plan. With regard to Policy LU-7, the draft EIR concluded the Project was "consistent." It stated: "The proposed project would expand the existing Walmart store to add space for food sales. There are no existing grocery stores within a 1-mile radius of the project site; therefore, the proposed project would be consistent with the commentary language concerning dispersal of grocery uses throughout the City. Furthermore, the proposed project would install bicycle storage facilities and enhance pedestrian facilities to improve accessibility for these modes of transportation. Finally, the 24-hour operation of the expanded store would provide local residents with the opportunity to shop at times when existing stores are not open.... These characteristics are consistent with the objective of maximizing accessibility to supermarkets."
In response, the City received public comments asserting the Project was not consistent with the General Plan or Policy LU-7. These letters argued the Project would close existing neighborhood-serving grocery stores, is located in a large commercial area, and would contribute to an over-concentrated area around the U.S. Highway 101/Rohnert Park Expressway interchange.
The City addressed these comments in its final EIR. It concluded the concerns lacked merit and did not detract from the Project's consistency with
The planning commission subsequently considered the EIR. Following a public hearing, the planning commission declined to approve the original EIR or the Project. The planning commission instead concluded the EIR and Project did not comply with the General Plan and was, in part, inconsistent with Policy LU-7.
Wal-Mart subsequently appealed the planning commission's decision to not certify the EIR, arguing the EIR satisfied the requirements of the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA; Pub. Resources Code, § 21000 et seq. ) and complied with Policy LU-7. Following a public hearing at which Policy LU-7 was discussed, the city council granted the appeal and specifically found "The Project would be consistent with all applicable General Plan goals and policies...." The resolution approving the site plan concluded: "The Project, as proposed and with recommended conditions and mitigation measures, will be consistent with the General Plan and Zoning Ordinance."
B. The Sierra Club Action
Sierra Club and Sonoma County Conservation Action (SCCA) filed a petition for writ of mandate in Sonoma County Superior Court challenging the city council's EIR and Project approvals. (Sierra Club v. City of Rohnert Park (2012, No. SCV248112) (Sierra Club action).) Appellants were not named parties in that action. The petition asserted three causes of action for violating CEQA, the state Planning and Zoning Law ( Gov. Code, § 65000 et seq. ), and the Rohnert Park Municipal Code. The second cause of action for violations of the state Planning and Zoning Law alleged: "The Project is inconsistent and incompatible with applicable goals, policies and objectives of the Rohnert Park General Plan, including but not limited to ... Policy LU-7...." The Sierra Club action requested in part a peremptory writ of mandate commanding the City to set aside its EIR certification and Project approval.
Although raised in its petition, Sierra Club and SCCA did not pursue the claim that the Project conflicted with Policy LU-7. The trial court subsequently granted the petition and ordered the resolutions approving the Project be vacated and the Project be remanded for additional environmental review. Specifically, the court ordered "the EIR must address each and every traffic mitigation measure proposed for the Project and reanalyze the cumulative noise impacts...."
The City vacated the Project approvals and prepared a revised EIR. However, the revised EIR did not alter the original EIR's analysis of the Project's consistency with the General Plan.
In 2014, the planning commission held a public hearing on the revised EIR. Appellants objected to the Project during this hearing, alleging the Project "is in a section of town that has very few residents in it, and ... that's clearly at odds with the LU-7 plan. The original economic plan says that it would draw customers from a wide area." In response, the City asserted the Project "is consistent with City of Rohnert Park's General Plan. [¶] Even now, one and two neighborhoods coming on line in the west side of Rohnert Park are neighborhoods that will need grocery stores and services. There are other businesses operating at an expanded time frame, where those workers do need grocery stores and services." The City also took the position that the issue of urban decay was not part of what the court found inadequate about the EIR and thus is not before the planning commission. The planning commission subsequently certified the revised EIR and reapproved the Project.
Appellants then appealed the planning commission's decision. At the public hearing on the appeal, appellants again objected to the Project and challenged its consistency with the General Plan. Wal-Mart opposed the appeal and argued the Project complied with Policy LU-7 for three principal reasons: (1) the Project is located where there are no competing supermarkets within a mile, thereby meeting the goal of dispersing supermarkets; (2) the supercenter will be open 24 hours a day, helping augment options for local customers; and (3) the City, in the intervening years, has approved residential construction in the vicinity of Project. The City staff report also opined the Project was consistent with Policy LU-7, noting: "If anything, the Project is more consistent with the objectives of Policy LU-7 today than it was when it was considered in 2010 because of increased residential development in the vicinity of the Project." The city council denied the appeal and concluded the Project would comply with the City's General Plan and zoning ordinance.
D. Trial Court Proceedings
In 2015, appellants filed a petition in the superior court challenging the Project's consistency with Policy LU-7 and seeking a writ of mandate ordering the City to vacate the Project approvals. After merits briefing was completed, the City filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings asserting appellants' claims were barred by the doctrine of res judicata.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings
" 'A judgment on the pleadings in favor of the defendant is appropriate when the complaint fails to allege facts sufficient to state a cause of action. [Citation.] A motion for judgment on the pleadings is equivalent to a demurrer and is governed by the same de novo standard of review.'
[Citation.] 'All properly pleaded, material facts are deemed true, but not contentions, deductions, or conclusions of fact or law....' " ( People ex rel. Harris v. Pac Anchor Transportation, Inc . (2014)
In granting the City's motion for judgment on the pleadings, the trial court concluded appellants' petition was barred by res judicata and the statute of limitations. For the reasons we explain below, we conclude res judicata bars appellants' petition. Accordingly, we need not address whether it also is barred by the statute of limitations.
1. Res Judicata
"The doctrine of res judicata bars a party and persons in privity with that party from relitigating a claim following a final judgment on the merits of the claim. ' " 'The prerequisite elements for applying the doctrine to either an entire cause of action or one or more issues are the same: (1) A claim or issue raised in the present action is identical to a claim or issue litigated in a prior proceeding; (2) the prior proceeding resulted in a final judgment on the merits; and (3) the party against whom the doctrine is being asserted was a party or in privity with a party to the prior proceedings.' " ' " ( Roberson v. City of Rialto (2014)
a. Identical Cause of Action
The second claim in the Sierra Club action alleged violations of the state Planning and Zoning Law. It asserted the Project "is inconsistent and incompatible with applicable goals, policies and objectives of the Rohnert Park General Plan," including Policy LU-7. Similarly, appellants' petition contends the Project violates the state Planning and Zoning Law because it conflicts with the Rohnert Park General Plan. The petition alleges "the Project directly contravenes Policy LU-7" and, due to such inconsistency, "the City acted in an arbitrary and capricious manner and committed a prejudicial abuse of discretion in approving the Project...." The petition also seeks a declaration of rights under the terms of the General Plan. Accordingly, the two petitions appear to raise the same issue regarding the Project's compliance with the City's General Plan.
Appellants assert their petition raises a distinct issue because the question of whether the Project is consistent with the General Plan was not actually litigated in the Sierra Club action. But as noted above, res judicata may bar issues that "could have been litigated." ( Federation of Hillside , supra ,
Whether appellants' challenge to the city council's 2015 resolutions and the prior challenge to the city council's 2010 resolutions constitute the same cause of action turns on whether "they are based on the same 'primary right.' " ( Federation of Hillside , supra ,
In arguing the city council's 2015 resolutions constitute a new wrong, appellants rely on
While Castaic Lake concluded the second petition could proceed due to " 'changed conditions and new facts which were not in existence at the time the action was filed' " ( Castaic Lake , supra ,
Similarly, in Federation of Hillside , supra ,
We do not find these cases inconsistent. Both Castaic Lake and Ballona Wetlands cite Federation of Hillside . And neither disputes the holding in Federation of Hillside -namely, that res judicata barred the petitioners' challenges in the second proceeding because, in part, "the material facts had not changed and the issues asserted in the later proceeding could have been asserted in the prior proceeding." ( Ballona Wetlands , supra ,
Accordingly, the key question is whether the city council's 2015 resolutions adopted new findings such that they constituted a new injury to appellants and a new wrong by the City. The city council's 2010 resolutions found, in relevant part, "The Project, as proposed and with recommended conditions and mitigation measures, will be consistent with the General Plan and Zoning Ordinance." Likewise, the 2015 resolutions found, in relevant part, "The Project, as proposed and with recommended conditions and mitigation measures, will be consistent with the General Plan and Zoning Ordinance." There is no dispute the Project proposal remains unchanged. And both the 2010 and 2015 resolutions found the Project "will be consistent with the General Plan and Zoning Ordinance." Accordingly, the city council's 2015 resolutions raised a new issue only if the "recommended conditions and mitigation measures" included new or revised conditions or measures that are at issue in appellants' petition.
In the Sierra Club action, the trial court reversed the EIR because it was deficient in that it (1) failed to address certain proposed mitigation measures in connection with traffic impacts; and (2) failed to support its cumulative noise impact analysis with substantial evidence, consider mitigation measures, or adopt a statement of overriding consideration. The revised EIR
addresses these two issues through revisions to (1) the executive summary matrix row regarding noise; (2) the section on noise, including thresholds of
Moreover, all of appellants' arguments regarding Policy LU-7 are identical to those raised and argued before the city council in 2010. Concerns regarding the Project's compliance with the General Plan and Policy LU-7 were raised, discussed, and evaluated in connection with the original EIR and Project approval. Nothing in the record suggests appellants' current petition materially differs from the General Plan consistency claim raised in the Sierra Club action or the issues raised in public hearings on the original EIR and Project approvals. Accordingly, appellants' petition is not based on changed material facts and raises the same claims as raised in the Sierra Club action.
b. Privity
Appellants next argue no privity exists between them, Sierra Club and SCCA because they (1) were not parties to the Sierra Club litigation, (2) are unaffiliated with the Sierra Club or SCCA, (3) did not coordinate with Sierra Club or SCCA on the prior litigation, and (4) seek redress for both public and private harms. In response, the City contends appellants are in privity with Sierra Club and SCCA because both petitions seek to bring claims on behalf of the public against a public entity.
" ' "The concept of privity ... refers 'to a mutual or successive relationship to the same rights of property, or to such an identification in interest of one person with another as to represent the same legal rights....' " ' " ( Roberson , supra ,
Here, both appellants' petition and the prior petition allege claims as, and on behalf of, citizens, taxpayers, property owners, and electors of Rohnert Park. While appellants argue their petition sets forth a private harm " 'because they will be directly and substantially affected by the adverse community impacts that may result from the Project,' " appellants fail to distinguish this harm from that alleged in the Sierra Club action. Nor do we see any meaningful distinction.
A similar argument was asserted and rejected in Roberson , supra ,
This case raises issues of harm to the community-namely, the detrimental impact to neighborhood supermarkets caused by having one located in a large commercial area. Despite their claims of personal harm, appellants do not allege any such harm apart from that incurred by the community. Likewise, Sierra Club and SCCA brought their petition on behalf of its members who are part of the community.
Within this framework, appellants' and Sierra Club's and SCCA's " ' "relationship to the subject matter of the litigation" ' " is identical. ( Castillo v. Glenair, Inc ., supra ,
Nor have appellants asserted their interest was not adequately represented in the Sierra Club litigation. (See, e.g., Assn. of Irritated Residents , supra ,
2. Public Policy Exception
Finally, appellants argue this court should consider their challenge because it raises a question of law regarding statutory interpretation. Even if the elements of res judicata are met, the California Supreme Court has held
Accordingly, appellants' petition is barred by res judicata. Even assuming appellants' petition is not barred by res judicata, we cannot conclude no reasonable person could have found the Project consistent with the General Plan and Policy LU-7.
B. Project Consistency with Policy LU-7
III. DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed. Defendant City of Rohnert Park may recover its costs on appeal. ( Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.278(a)(1), (2), (5).)
We concur:
Humes, P.J.
Banke, J.
Notes
In addition, the petitioners in Assn. of Irritated Residents submitted declarations indicating they were unaware of the prior action and had no reasonable expectation of being bound to that action, and Sierra Club failed to appeal the judgment due to a " 'clerical error.' " (Assn. of Irritated Residents, supra , 11 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1232-1233,
The parties also dispute whether appellants' petition is barred by the 90-day statute of limitations in Government Code section 65009. In arguing the 90-day limitations period bars appellants' petition, the City relies on Honig v. San Francisco Planning Dept. (2005)
See footnote *, ante .
