AZUL PACIFICO, INCORPORATED, a California corporation,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
CITY OF LOS ANGELES, a municipal corporation, Defendant-Appellant.
AZUL PACIFICO, INCORPORATED, a California corporation,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
CITY OF LOS ANGELES, a municipal corporation, Defendant-Appellee.
Nos. 90-55853, 90-56066.
United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted July 11, 1991.
Submission Vacated Aug. 29, 1991.
Resubmitted Oct. 1, 1991.
Decided Nov. 1, 1991.
Gwendolyn Ryder Poindexter, Deputy City Attorney, Los Angeles, Cal., for defendant-appellant.
Sherman L. Stacey, Santa Monica, Cal., for plaintiff-appellee.
David Pettit, Hedges, Powe & Caldwell, Los Angeles, Cal., for amici curiae, counties of Santa Barbara and Santa Cruz and cities Arroyo Grande, Carson, Cathedral City, Fremont, Lompoc, Morro Bay, Oceanside, San Jose, San Marcos and Santa Paula, Cal.
Bruce E. Stanton, Crosby & Stanton, San Jose, Cal., for amicus curiae, Golden State Mobilehome Owners League, Inc.
Timothy A. Bittle, Pacific Legal Foundation, Sacramento, Cal., for amicus curiae, Pacific Legal Foundation.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Central District of California.
Before POOLE, KOZINSKI and LEAVY, Circuit Judges.
KOZINSKI, Circuit Judge.
In Hall v. City of Santa Barbara,
This is the first appeal to reach this court after a trial on the merits of the takings claim; what was only a theory in Hall was found as fact by the district court. We consider the city of Los Angeles's appeal from the district court's determination that a provision of its rent cоntrol ordinance violates the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments' prohibition against taking of private property for public use without just compensation. Azul Pacifico, Inc. v. City of Los Angeles,
Facts
Denizens of mobile home parks own their dwelling units, or "coaches," but rent the spaces, or "pads," on which the coaches are installed. The mobile homes themselves really aren't: Moving a coach is a substantial and expensive undertaking. Consequently, vacating tenants generally sell their units to the incoming residents. In California, a landlord may not terminate or refuse to renew a tenant's lease except for cause (Cal.Civ.Code §§ 798.55, 798.56); generally cannot require removal of a mobile home from the park upon vacancy (id at § 798.73); and must approve a purchaser if he has the ability to pay the rent and will not create а disturbance (id at § 798.74). Moreover, Azul Pacifico's mobile home park and others in Los Angeles are subject to the city's Rent Stabilization Ordinance (RSO), which regulates the rent they can charge. Los Angeles Municipal Code (LAMC) Ch. XV, Art. I. In 1982 the city added a provision prohibiting landlords from raising the rent on mobile home pads when the coaches were vacated. LA Ordinance 156,597. This provision was repealed in 1984, and a substitute provision was adopted allowing landlords to raise the rent to the highest rent charged for a comparable site in the same park or 10 percent, whichever is less. LA Ordinance 158,891, codified at LAMC § 151.06F. It is this "vacancy control" provision which Azul Pacifico claims worked a taking of its property without compensation by transferring an interest in its property to the tenants.
In Hall, we held that the park owners would be entitled to сompensation under the takings clause if the tenants could transfer this property interest to others, the interest had a market value and it was in fact traded on a market.
Discussion
* The Supreme Court has established a two-pronged ripeness test for takings claims. First, the property owner must obtain a final administrative decision regarding the application of the ordinance to its property. Williamson County Regional Planning Comm. v. Hamilton Bank,
When the alleged taking occurs as a result of a physical occupation of the property, the landowner need not exhaust administrative remedies before suing in federal court: "Where there has been a physical invasion, the taking occurs at once, and nothing the city can do or say after that point will change that fact." Hall,
Furthermore, the California state courts have repeatedly held Hall-type takings claims to be non-compensable. See, for example, Casella v. City of Morgan Hill,
II
Hall recognized a three-part test for takings claims based on mobile home rent controls: First, does the governmental action constitute a taking? Second, does the action advance a legitimate governmental interest? And third, has just compensation been paid? Compensation must be provided when the first question is answered in the affirmative and either of the next two in the negative.
A. There is a fundamental distinction in takings jurisprudence between regulatory takings and takings effected by physical occupation. Compare Penn Central Transp. Co. v. New York City,
Since Hall, the Supreme Court has decided Pennell v. City of San Jose,
In Pennell, apartment building owners challenged a rent control ordinance which allowed rents to rise up to 8 percent every year, with a provision for administrative review of requests for greater increases. The hearing officer was charged with taking into account several factors, including "hardship to a tenant"; the owners alleged that this provision "accomplishes a transfer of the landlord's property to individual hardship tenants."
The regulation challenged in Florida Power controlled the rents utilities could charge for attaching cable to utility poles. The utility company relied on Loretto, which had held that a city ordinance authorizing a company to attach television cable equipment to privаte buildings effected a taking. The Supreme Court distinguished Loretto on the ground that the utilities were not required to grant cable companies space on the poles and therefore there was no physical occupation.
The city argues that our case is just like Florida Power because the mobile home tenants and park owners enter into lease agreements voluntarily. But the Court in Florida Power stated: "We do not decide today what the application of [Loretto ] would be if the FCC in a future case required utilities, over objection, to enter into, renew, or refrain from terminating pole attachment agreements." Id at 251-52 n. 6,
An examination of the three factors the Supreme Court highlighted in Florida Power supports this conclusion. First, Azul Pacifico is required to enter into agreements: When a tenant vacates and sells a coach, the park owner must rent the pad on which it sits to the purchaser. Cal.Civ.Code § 798.74. Second, the park owner must renew pad rental agreements. Id at §§ 798.55, 798.56. Finally, the park owner must refrain from terminating such agreements except in sharply circumscribed circumstances. Id.
Standing alone, these requirements of state law may well be constitutional. See, for example, Eamiello v. Liberty Mobile Home Sales,
In Hall, we held that the park owners would have a constitutional right to compensation for the taking of their property if they could prove
that the [challenged ordinance] has transferred a possessory interest in their land to each of their [ ] tenants; that this interest consists of the right to occupy the property in perpetuity while paying only a fraction of what it is worth in rent; and that this interest is transferable, has an established market and a market value.
Mobile home park owners effectively can't evict tenants, and they cannot charge market rent. See Cal.Civ.Code §§ 798.55, 798.56 (severely restricting landlords' ability to evict or refuse to renew tenants' leases); LAMC § 151.04 (prohibiting landlords from charging more than the controlled rent). The right to occupy the pad indefinitely while paying below-market rent is thus established by law. The district court's finding that this element of the Hall test is met is amply supported by the record. See
The district court also found that the RSO's vacancy control provision operated to transfer a property right from the park owner to the tenants. It further found that this interest was transferable, had a market value and was in fact traded on a market. Id. These findings are all supported by the record.
A tenant who sells his coach is able to command a premium for it; the premium represents the right to occupy the pad on which it sits at below-market rates. As the district court found, "it is the fact that rents cannot be raised more than ten percent when a tenant sells his mobile home and the buyer remains on the same pad that works the unconstitutional taking under Hall, not the state law requiring the landlord to renew a tenancy upon expiration of the original lease." Id at 776; see also Pinewood Estates,
This vacancy-control premium establishes the value of the property right transferred by the RSO from landlord to tenant. The city tries to avoid this conclusion by arguing that mobile home consumers were not able to assign a value to the property right transferred to tenants by the RSO. The district court properly dismissed this argument: "[T]he buyer's lack of knowledge of economics does not mean that the market does not exist, it merely shifts the knowledge about the value оf the property right from the buyers to the brokers, who act as agents of the buyers."
Because the district court's findings as to the factual predicates are not clearly erroneous, we agree with its conclusion that there was a taking of Azul Pacifico's property. See Hall,
B. We next consider whether the governmental action furthers a legitimate interest. Hall,
The city characterizes the Californiа mobile home market as a "monopoly," and argues that the RSO is an acceptable correction of "market failure." But the city argues from a false premise. There are almost 400,000 mobile home spaces in the state, as well as millions of houses, apartments and other dwellings; the various modes of housing are, with various elasticities, fungible. It is inconceivable that in such a market any person or group could artificially reduce the supply of housing and thus increase its price--the conventional definition of a monopoly.
In fact, the California housing market is not an example of "market failure" at all; it reflects the operation of normal market forces. According to the law of supply and demand, the market price of a product will rise as consumers want more of it, unless the supply incrеases commensurately. If the price of housing in Los Angeles is high, this is simply the free market's mechanism for ensuring efficient allocation of existing housing resources and creating incentives for an increase in the supply of housing which, eventually, will drive down the price.
The city argues that, while we wait for the invisible hand to do its work, unscrupulous park owners will take advantage of tenants, many of whom are elderly and on fixed incomes. We have previously recognized in the substantive due process context that this is a valid basis for governmental regulation of the landlord-tenant relationship. Sierra Lake,
In Nollan, the Court considered a state zoning commissiоn requirement that seaside landowners grant a public beach easement as a condition for obtaining a building permit. The Court agreed with the state that, if the regulation itself were a valid exercise of the police power, conditioning the permit on the grant of the easement would also be constitutionally permissible. It held, however, that the result would be different "if the condition substituted for the prohibition utterly fails to further the end advanced as the justification for the prohibition." Id at 837,
We interpret Nollan as holding that in cases brought under the takings clause we must undertake a close analysis of the means of protecting the asserted governmental interest. Here, the city aims to "safeguard tenants from excessive rent increases," and the "concomitant hardships and displacements." LAMC § 151.01. Apparently this is accomplished by rent control, which prevents landlords from arbitrarily raising rents to a level existing tenants cannot afford. The vacancy control is apparently intended to prevent the landlord from raising the rent between tenants. See
But vacancy control does not help incoming tenants in the case of mobile homes. The coach buyer will pay the same effective rent for the pad whether or not the landlord is permitted to raise the rent at vacancy. To the potential buyer, the total product--housing--is the relevant cost; how that cost is allocated between rent for the pad and mortgage payments on the coaсh is largely irrelevant. For example, a buyer who can afford to spend $1000 each month on housing is indifferent between a coach with a $500 mortgage payment on a $500 pad, and one with an $800 payment on a $200 pad.5 The record here establishes that the buyer considering a coach in a rent-controlled park will be required to pay much more for it than if he bought the coach in a non-rent-controlled park.
Nevertheless, the ordinance does protect existing tenants from being forced to sell their coaches at distress-sale prices in the event landlords were to set rents for new tenants so high that no one would want to buy the coach. See
C. The third question Hall directs us to answer is whether just compensation has been paid. Just compensation requirеs payment of the full monetary equivalent of the property taken. United States v. Reynolds,
III
Because we affirm the district court's carefully reasoned conclusion that the Los Angeles ordinance operates to take Azul Pacifico's property without just compensation, we must determine what amount of compensation is constitutionally required.
A. The property right taken by the city's vacancy control ordinance is the right to occupy indefinitely the space in the mobile home рark at below-market rent. Thus, the government action is a permanent physical taking for which Azul Pacifico must receive the full monetary equivalent as compensation. Loretto,
The district court held that a taking occurred each time a coach was sold, as each sale resulted in the transfer of an economic premium from park owner to tenant. The district court found 48 coach sales during the one-year periоd prior to the filing of the complaint and, based on its finding that the average premium was $20,880, awarded Azul Pacifico $1,002,240.7
The district court's approach reflects a misunderstanding of the theory of compensation applicable in cases such as these. The taking here occurred when the Los Angeles vacancy control ordinance was passed, not at the time of sale of the coaches. United States v. Dow,
The property right need not be monetized to effect a taking; all that's necessary under Hall is that the tenant be given an interest that is capable of being turned into cash. Hall,
B. The district court calculated damages by measuring the difference between the selling prices of coaches in vacancy-controlled parks and similar coaches in non-vacancy-controlled parks, and arrived at a value of $20,880.00 per coach sold.9 This represents the average premium charged on the sale of coaches in Azul Pacifico's park during the year preceding the bringing of this action.
The district court got it exactly right in using the premium created by the ordinance for the sale of coaches in Azul Pacifico's park as a measure of the value of the property right transferred from the park owner to the coach owners at the time of the taking. The premium charged for the sale of an on-site coach subject to rent control represents the tenant's right to occupy the mobile home pad at below-market rates for the expected duration of the ordinance. Thus, the premium equals the capitalized value of both the use value (foregone rents) and the possessory interest (the right to exclude). Cf. United States v. Petty Motor Co.,
Although we approve the district court's methodology in determining the level of сompensation, we disagree with the period it chose as a benchmark. The taking occurred when the Los Angles vacancy control ordinance went into effect in May 1982; compensation must be calculated from that date. De Anza,
The premiums charged on coach sales in 1986-87 certainly could reflect the value of the property right transferred when the ordinance took effect. But these premiums might have to be adjusted to reflect the situation in 1982, insofar as the market may have been different then than it was five years later. See Kirby Forest Industries,
IV
A. In Wilson v. Garcia,
The limitations period for takings claims brought under section 1983 begins to run the date the challenged ordinance is enacted. De Anza,
B. Azul Pacifico also stated a claim directly under the takings clause of the Constitution.11 The Fifth Amendment provides that "private property [shall not] be taken for public use, without just compensation."12 Azul Pacifico claims that the Los Angeles RSO operates to take its property for public use, and this suit is to recover compensation for that taking. In such cases, the Supreme Court has long held that "[t]he Constitution has declared that just compensation shall be paid." Monongahela Navigation Co. v. United States,
If there was any doubt on this score it was removed by the Supreme Court in First English. Rejecting the Solicitor General's argument that "the [Fifth] Amendment is ... not a remedial provision," the court stated:
The cases cited in the text, we think, refute the argument of the United States that "the Constitution does not, of its own force, furnish a basis for a court to award money damages against the government." Though arising in various factual and jurisdictiоnal settings, these cases make clear that it is the Constitution that dictates the remedy for interference with property rights amounting to a taking.
Although the Constitution gives Azul Pacifico a right of action, it does not provide a statute of limitations. In such situations, federal courts generally adopt the analogous state statute of limitations. See Wilson,
Courts will not adopt state limitations periods if doing so would contravene the governing federal policy. See Wilson,
Here, the challenged ordinance was enacted in May 1982 and the complaint was filed in April 1987--within both the six-year federal period and the five-year state period. Because the action was timely under either theory, we leave for another case the question of whether the state or federal limitations period applies.
V
The district court awarded Azul Pacifico damages and enjoined enforcement of the ordinance. This was error. The Fifth Amendment by its terms provides for just compensation in the event of a taking. It does not, however, prohibit governmental taking--it only requires that when a taking does occur the government pay for it. See First English,
Azul Pacifico appeals the district court's refusal to award expert witness fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988, which allows recovery of attorneys' fees in section 1983 actions. Because the section 1983 action is barred by the statute of limitations, Azul Pacifico has no right to recоver experts' fees under section 1988. For the same reason, the district court's award of attorneys' fees to Azul Pacifico pursuant to section 1988 is reversed.
Conclusion
The right of the tenant to transfer the property right created by the vacancy control provision distinguishes the physical occupations in this case and in Hall from rent control regulations that do not effect a taking. Unlike other types of rent control, mobile home vacancy control permits the outgoing tenant to preserve the benefits of rent control even after he no longer is renting. Hall,
The city may choose to create such а windfall for current coach owners. If it does so, however, it must spread the burden on all its citizens, not target one small class of individuals to foot the bill. See Nollan,
AFFIRMED in part, REVERSED in part, VACATED in part and REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. The panel will retain jurisdiction over any future proceedings. Each party shall bear its own costs on appeal.
Notes
In First English Evangelical Lutheran Church v. County of Los Angeles,
In Hall, the ordinance actually required the granting of a lease.
The city argues that Eamiello and another Connecticut case, Thompson v. Merlino Enterprises, Inc.,
The city mistakenly argues that the district court's determinations as to the Hall factors are questions of law reviewablе de novo. Although the answer to the ultimate question--was there a taking?--requires a legal conclusion, the predicates are factual determinations. So, for example, in United States v. Causby,
Income tax laws affect the figures slightly, but do not alter the analysis
The possibility that the statute might later be repealed does not convert the physical occupation into a temporary taking. See Hall,
The district court treated Azul Pacifico's claim as arising under section 1983, for which the applicable statute of limitations is one year. See Section IV.A. The district court relied on the continuing wrong theory, reasoning that Azul Pacifico was injured each time a coach in its park was sold. See United States v. Dickinson,
The number of coaches sold might be relevant to ensure a sufficiently large sample size for the per-coach premium to accurately measurе the value of the underlying property right, but there would be a taking even if, for some reason, no coaches were sold following passage of the ordinance
The city argues that the proper measure is the reduction in the market value of the mobile home park as a whole. The district court was entitled, however, to determine the market value of the park by aggregating the market values of all of the pads; the two figures are equivalent. Amici for the city criticize the district court's techniques for figuring the amount of the premium transferred, largely because its measurements were based on the much-maligned Kelly Blue Book for mobile home prices. We have previously approved of the use of the Kelly Blue Book as a measure of mobile home values for purposes of determining the premium charged on sale, however. Hall,
The ordinance was amended in June 1984, but the taking occurred when the property right was transferred from landlord to tenant, which was at the first imposition of vacancy control. De Anza,
In its complaint, Azul Pacifico alleged that enforcement of the RSO "constitutes a taking of property ... in violation of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution and a deprivation of civil rights [under section 1983]" (emphasis added)
The takings clause is made applicable to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy R.R. Co. v. Chicago,
Federal courts have jurisdiction because the claim is founded upon the Constitution. Jacobs,
The question of characterization--of what state remedy is most analogous--is one of federal law. Wilson,
The action is "inverse" because it is brought by the condemnee rather than the condemnor. Id
