Opinion
Plаintiffs Chandis Securities Company, M. H. Sherman Company and Sherman Foundation sued defendants the City of Dana Point and its city council seeking to invalidate the results of two referendums by which the city’s electorate failed to approve the adoption of a specific plan and a general plan amendment relating to plaintiffs’ property, and to allow development of the land. The trial сourt granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment and entered judgment for defendants. Plaintiffs contend the rejection of the referendums exceeded the city’s police powers, violated their right to equal protection of the law and constituted a taking of property without just compensation. In addition, plaintiffs argue the referendums are invalid because they violate the consistency requirеment of the Planning and Zoning Law (Gov. Code, § 65000 et seq.; all further statutory references are to the Government Code unless otherwise designated), and failed to satisfy the requirements of section 65589.5, subdivision (j). We find these arguments to be without merit and affirm.
Facts
Plaintiffs own approximately 120 acres of undeveloped land along the coast in Dana Point known as the Headlands. Before Dana Point’s incorporation, plаintiffs, the County of Orange and the California Coastal Commission had developed a specific plan for the Headlands designating 27 acres as visitor/recreation/commercial area, over 45 acres as recreation/open space/ conservation area and permitting construction of 2 hotels and a maximum of 792 residences. The plan was never implemented.
Danа Point was incorporated as a general law city in 1989. It adopted a general plan which designated the Headlands as a specific plan area, listed land-use designations of recreation/open space, residential and visitor/recreation/commercial, set guidelines allowing between 261 and 522 residential
Plaintiffs submitted a proposed specific plan for the Headlands in July 1992. After several public hearings and revisions, a plan was approved by the city council in April 1994. As approved, the plan provided for a maximum of 370 residential units, 1 hotel and 66.3 acres of recreation/open space/conservation area. In addition, the city council approved a general plan amendment to modify the recreation/open space/conservation element of the city’s general plan, and certified the Headlands environmental impact report (EIR) as аdequate and complete.
Petitions were timely filed placing referendums on the ballot to require voter approval of the general plan amendment (Measure C) and the Headlands’ specific plan (Measure D). On November 8, 1994, both measures failed to receive the support of a majority of the city’s voters, thus preventing enactment of the proposed specific ¡Man аnd the general plan amendment.
•I
Discussion
1. Constitutional Claims
Plaintiffs contend the failure to approve Measures C and D violated their rights to due process and equal protection of the law, and constituted a taking under the Fifth Amendment of the federal Constitution. We disagree.
Dana Point’s authority to regulate development of the Headlands is governed by the Planning and Zoning Law. In enacting this law, the Legislature found that “. . . California’s lаnd is an exhaustible resource . . . essential to the economy, environment and general well-being of the people of California . . .” (§ 65030), and “. . . decisions involving the future growth of the state . . . should be guided by an effective planning process, including the local general plan, and should proceed within the framework of officially approved statewide goals and policies directed to land use, population growth and distribution, development, open space, resource preservation and utilization, air and water quality, and other related physical, social and economic development factors . . .” (§ 65030.1). Thus, the Legislature has declared the state’s land use policies include “protect[ing] California’s land resource, to insure its preservation and use in ways which are economically and socially desirable in an attempt to improve the quality of life in California” (§ 65030), and ensuring “land use decisions be made with full
To implement the foregoing policies, each California city must “adopt a comprehensive, long-term general plan for the physical development of the . . . city” (§ 65300), which contains an integrated and internally consistent “statement of development policies . . . setting forth objectives, principles, standards, and plan proposals” (§ 65302), and cover at least the following seven areas, called “elements”: land use, traffic circulation, housing, conservation, open space, noise and safety. (§§ 65300.5, 65302, 65303; see also
DeVita
v.
County of Napa
(1995)
The process for preparing, adopting and amending a general plan and a specific plan is the same. (§§ 65350 et seq., 65453, subd. (a).) In cases such as this, where the municipality has a separate planning commission to review and recommend action on plans, and the commission has made a recommendation on the adoption or amendment of a plan, “The legislative body shall adopt or amend a . . . plan by resolution, which resolution shall be adopted by the affirmative vote of not less than a majority of the total membership of the legislative body. The legislative body may approve, modify, or disapprove the recommendаtion of the planning commission,” but “any substantial modification proposed by the legislative body not previously considered by the commission during its hearings, shall first be referred to the planning commission for its recommendation.” (§ 65356.) The adoption or amendment of a general plan or specific plan constitutes a legislative act. Thus, it is subject to the electorate’s exercise of the powеr of referendum.
(Yost
v.
Thomas
(1984)
Plaintiffs argue that since their proposed specific plan along with the proposed general plan amendment complied with Dana Point’s general plan, and the city council found this project superior to the alternative
Judicial review of the failure to approve these proposals is limited to whether the electorate’s decision was arbitrary or capricious.
(Mitchell
v.
County of Orange
(1985)
The nature and locale of the Headlands, the number of elements implicated by the proposed specific plan for it, the extensive hearings and potential adverse impacts resulting from development on the property, reflect the city council’s decision was not the only reasonable conclusion. In fact, the EIR prepared for the Headlands considered 11 other development alternatives, ranging from the level of development provided in the previous specific plan prepared when the property was under the сounty’s control to a no-development option.
Plaintiffs’ reliance on
Arnel Development Co.
v.
City of Costa Mesa
(1981)
This case involves referendums for the approval of a specific plan and a general plan amendment. Since timely petitions were filed to present the matters to the voters, the city council’s initial approval of the plan and amendment never becamе effective. (Elec. Code, § 9241.) The subsequent rejection by the voters simply maintained the status quo; it did not repeal a
Nor does the record support plaintiffs’ equal protection claim. “ ‘Absent the allegation of the invasion of fundamentаl rights or the existence of a suspect classification, there is no violation of equal protection unless the classification bears no rational relationship to a legitimate state interest. [Citations.] This is true even if some discrimination is alleged.’ ”
(Del Oro Hills
v.
City of Oceanside
(1995)
Plаintiffs also contend the electorate’s rejection of the specific plan and general plan amendment constituted a regulatory taking under the Fifth Amendment of the federal Constitution, thereby entitling them to compensation. We conclude a taking has not yet occurred. “A land use regulation does not effect a taking if it ‘substantially advance[s] legitimate state interests’ and does not ‘den[y] аn owner economically viable use of his land.’ [Citation.]”
(Dolan
v.
City of Tigard
(1994)
Implementation of the Planning and Zoning Law in this case substantially advances Dana Point’s interest in the orderly development of the city. As noted, the city’s general plan contemplates mixed use development on the Headlands. The present focus is on preparing a specific plan for development. There has not been a final decision denying plaintiffs all economically viable use of the property. To date, there has been no allegation or proof the city land use planning process has unduly delayed plaintiffs’ development of the Headlands.
But we hasten to add that, at some point, the city’s interest in the orderly development of the Headlands must givе way to plaintiffs’ right to use their property for some economically viable purpose. Given the cost, the amount of effort and the length of time it takes to prepare and approve land use proposals, unnecessary delays in approving a proposed development or repetitive denials of specific plans complying with the city’s general plan will amount to a taking requiring Dana Point to pay compensation to plaintiffs. Dana Point was incorporated in 1989 and adopted its current general plan in 1991. Consideration of the development proposal at issue here began in the latter part of 1992. After numerous hearings and revisions, the plan was finally presented to the city council in early 1994. The referendums further delayed a decision on the аpproval of the proposed plan until November 1994. While Dana Point may not have yet crossed the line between legitimate land use planning and inverse condemnation, it is undoubtedly very close to the edge.
For the foregoing reasons, we reject plaintiffs’ constitutional attacks on the referendums at this time.
2. Consistency Between the City’s General and Specific Plans
Plaintiffs contend the electorate’s rejection of the specific plan was invalid because it violated the requirement that land use regulations be consistent with the city’s general plan. While consistency is necessary between a general plan and a specific plan, that requirement has not been violated in this case.
In part, plaintiffs rely on section 65860 which requires consistency between a general plan and “zoning ordinances.” (§ 65860, subd. (a).) As plaintiffs note, casеs construing section 65860’s consistency requirement have invalidated initiatives and referendums which, if enacted, would result
Since this case concerns the rejection of a proposed specific plan, section 65860 is inapplicable. Nonetheless, the statutes governing specific plans also contain a consistency requirement. Section 65454 states, “No specific plan may be adopted or amended unless the proposed plan or amendment is consistent with the general plan.” But this case involves the preparation of a specific plan for a portion of a newly incorporated city in accordance with its adopted general plan. We are not confronted with the enаctment of a land use proposal at odds with the general plan. Upon Dana Point’s incorporation, the Headlands was designated a specific plan area under the city’s general plan and has been temporarily placed in a no-development category while a specific plan conforming to the general plan is prepared. The result of the Novembеr 1994 election was to maintain the status quo pending preparation of an approved specific plan for the Headlands. Thus, the election did not violate the Planning and Zoning law’s consistency requirement.
3. Section 65589.5, subdivision (j)
Finally, plaintiffs contend the electorate’s rejection of the Headlands’ proposed specific plan and the general plan amendment is invalid because it failed to make findings, based on substantial evidence, that the plan would have an adverse impact on public health or safety, and that no alternative method of satisfactorily mitigating or avoiding the impact exists. (§ 65589.5, subd. (j).) We reject this argument for two reasons.
First, section 65589.5 does not apply to this case. It concerns affordable housing developments. In part, subdivision (j) states a local agency cannоt disapprove a “housing development project” which complies with the general plan and zoning laws except “upon written findings supported by substantial evidence on the record that” the “project would have a specific, adverse impact upon the public health or safety” and “[t]here is no feasible method to satisfactorily mitigate or avoid the adverse impact.”
This case involves approval of a proposed specific plan, not a planning agency’s consideration of a housing development project. Section 65589.5 does not define the phrase “housing development project,” but the terms development, project and development project are defined in another chapter
Generally, identical words in different parts of the same act or in different statutes relating to the sаme subject matter are construed as having the same meaning.
(Dept. of Revenue of Ore.
v.
ACF Industries, Inc.
(1994)
Second, courts have ruled that burdensome statutory requirements mandating а legislative body provide notice, a public hearing and make findings to support its decision, need not be satisfied when the legislation is enacted by the electorate via initiative or referendum.
(Associated Home Builders etc., Inc.
v.
City of Livermore
(1976)
Thus, the failure to approve the referendums did not violate section 65589.5, subdivision (j).
The judgment is affirmed.
Sills, P. J., and Wallin, J., concurred.
Appellants’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied April 2, 1997.
