CITY OF BERKELEY, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. 1080 DELAWARE, LLC, Defendant and Appellant.
No. A142162
First Dist., Div. Three
Jan. 30, 2015
235 Cal. App. 4th 1056 | 185 Cal. Rptr. 3d 791
POLLAK, Acting P. J.; Siggins, J., and Jenkins, J., concurred.
Counsel
Baird Holm and David C. Levy for Plaintiff and Respondent.
Berkeley City Attorney‘s Office, Zach Cowan, City Attorney, and Laura McKinney, Deputy City Attorney, for Defendant and Appellant.
Opinion
POLLAK, Acting P. J.—Defendant 1080 Delaware, LLC (1080 Delaware), the owner of a mixed-use residential rental project in Berkeley, appeals from a judgment compelling it to comply with a condition in thе use permit for the project requiring compliance with the inclusionary housing ordinance of the City of Berkeley (City). Defendant contends the City may not enforce the condition, included in the use permit obtained by former owners of the property, because the ordinance has subsequently been held to have been preempted by the Costa-Hawkins Rental Housing Act (
Background
In July 2004, the City issued to Said Adeli-Nadjafi (Adeli) a use permit for the construction of a mixed-use building which currently has the address of 1080 Delaware Street, consisting of 51 residential rental units and ground floor commercial space. Condition 10 of the use permit provides as follows: “Before submission for building permit, the applicant shall submit floor plans and schedules, acceptable to the Zoning Officer, showing the location of each inclusionary unit and sales or rental рrices. Said plans and schedules must adequately demonstrate that the unit types are reasonably dispersed throughout the project, are of the same size and contain, on average, the same number of bedrooms as the market-rate units and that the unit rent or sales price complies with Chapter 23C.12 of the Zoning Ordinance.”
Chapter 23C.12 of the Berkeley Municipal Code (Chapter 23C.12), first adopted in 1986, sets forth what is referred to as the “Inclusionary Housing Ordinance.” Chapter 23C.12 was designed to comply with
Adeli (and his related company, Berkeley Delaware Court, LLC) did not complete construction of the Delaware Street project for more than seven years after obtaining the use permit. Adeli‘s financial difficulties led to the filing of two bankruptcy petitions. Ultimately in 2011, First-Citizens Bank & Trust Company (First-Citizens), which had financed the project, obtained title to the property by recording a deed in lieu of foreclosure. In 2013, First-Citizens sold the property to 1080 Delaware, its current owner.
Adeli executed the deed in lieu of foreclosure pursuant to a settlеment agreement with First-Citizens entered as of May 4, 2010, under which First-Citizens agreed not to record the instrument unless Adeli failed to meet its obligations under the settlement agreement. In August 2011, before Adeli defaulted and the deed in lieu was recorded, he entered into a “Regulatory Agreement” with the City, specifying the 10 “inclusionary units” in the project that would be rented or sold to low- and very-low-income households at less than market rates affordable to those households. Adeli then began renting units in the project.
In April 2012, prior to the purchase of the property by 1080 Delaware, its attorney wrote to the City, stating his opinion that neither the use permit nor the Regulatory Agreement applied to the project,2 that the City‘s Inclusionary Housing Ordinance was unenforceable following the Palmer decision, and that “should our client complete the purchase of the Project, our client does not intend to comply with the inclusionary requirements.” The City promptly indicated its disagreement. 1080 Delaware nonetheless proceeded with the purchase on April 26 and, subsequently, confirmed that it would not comply with condition 10 of the use permit or provide any inclusionary units in the project.
The answer of 1080 Delaware pleaded as affirmative defenses, among other things, that “[t]he Inclusionary Housing Ordinance is preempted by State law and void, in particular, by the rent decontrol provisions of the Costa-Hawkins Act, [Civil] Code [section] 1954.50 et seq. See Palmer/Sixth Street Properties, L.P. v. City of Los Angeles, supra, 175 Cal.App.4th 1396. To the extent the Use Permit or the Regulatory Agreement are relied upon by the City to implement or enforce the terms of the preempted Inclusionary Housing Ordinance, the Use Permit and the Regulatory Agreement are likewise void and unenforceable.” The answer also alleged that under paragraph 21.D of the Regulatory Agreement (see fn. 2, ante), the agreement “does not bind 1080 Delaware, a successor to an institutional lender who took title by deed in lieu of foreclоsure.”
The City eventually moved for summary adjudication and the court granted the motion as to the first cause of action but, as to the second cause of action, found triable issues and denied the motion. In granting the motion as to the first cause of action, the trial court reasoned as follows: “All parties appear to agree that Berkeley Municipal Code § 23C.12, which sеts forth inclusionary housing requirements for rental units, is preempted by the Costa-Hawkins Rental Housing Act, as held in Palmer/Sixth Street Properties LP v. City of Los Angeles, supra, 175 Cal.App.4th 1396. The City is precluded from enforcing a void ordinance, [¶] The City‘s First Cause of Action, however, does not seek to enforce
Following the entry of the summary adjudication order, the City dismissed the second cause of action with prejudice and the court entered judgment directing 1080 Delaware to “comply with Condition No. 10 of City of Berkeley Use Permit No. 02-10000081 forthwith by ‘submit[ting] floor plans and schedules, acceptable to the Zoning Officer, showing the location of eаch inclusionary unit and the sales or rental prices. Said plans and schedules must adequately demonstrate that the unit types are reasonably dispersed throughout the project, are of the same size and contain, on average, the same number of bedrooms as the market-rate units and that the unit rent or sales price complies with Chapter 23C.12 of the Zoning Ordinance.’ The requirement to comply with Condition #10 includes full compliance with Chapter 23C.12 of the Zoning Ordinance.”
Notice of appeal was timely filed by 1080 Delaware.
Discussion
As the parties agree, we review the issues in this case de novo, but we conclude that the trial court properly analyzed the legal issues presented. Although some of the wording in the City‘s complaint misleadingly suggests that the City is seeking to enforce the Inclusionary Housing Ordinance, neither the City‘s position nor the trial court‘s decision rests on the continuing enforceability of the ordinance. The parties agree, and the trial court explicitly acknowledged, that under Palmer, supra, 175 Cal.App.4th 1396, the City‘s Inclusionary Housing Ordinance has been preempted by the Costa-Hawkins Act. Thus, there is no dispute with the contention that the ordinance itself is now unenforceable. The issue, however, is whether the City may enforce condition 10 of the use permit, which requires comрliance with the ordinance, even though subsequent to issuance of the use permit the ordinance was held to have been preempted.
In the trial court, 1080 Delaware disputed this conclusion by reliance on the more recent decision of the California Supreme Court in Travis v. County of Santa Cruz (2004) 33 Cal.4th 757 [16 Cal.Rptr.3d 404, 94 P.3d 538] (Travis). However, the trial court correctly pointed out that 1080 Delaware misread Travis, and that this decision “clearly held that an action seeking to invalidate a permit condition based on an ordinance preempted by state law, filed by property owners (the Sokolows) who failed to timely challenge permit conditions through a petition for a writ of mandate, was in fact barred by their failure to do so. [Citation.] Second, to the extent that Travis contemplates that a party could file a separate action (other than a petition for writ of mandate) challenging a preempted or unconstitutional zoning ordinance, such an action would have to be filed within three years of the enactment of the statute that preempts the ordinance. [Citation.] Here, it is undisputed that [1080 Delaware] did not file any action challenging [Berkeley]
Moreover, the conditions of the permit remain enforceable against a subsequent owner оf the property. “Since [1080 Delaware‘s] predecessors in interest waived their right to challenge the permit‘s . . . condition because they specifically agreed to and complied with the condition and accepted the benefits afforded by the permits and such predecessors in interest could not transfer or assign to [1080 Delaware] any legal rights greater than they themselves possessed [citations], [1080 Delaware] obtained the property in question with the same limitations and restrictions which bound [its] predecessors in interest. . . . [1080 Delaware has] waived, by [its] purchase of deed-restricted lots, any right to a property interest greater than that conveyed by their predecessors in interest. As with the analogous situation of covenants which run with the land (
None of the cases cited by 1080 Delaware casts any doubt on these conclusions. In Bright Development v. City of Tracy (1993) 20 Cal.App.4th 783, 797 [24 Cal.Rptr.2d 618], the Court of Appeal held that a developer was not required to comply with the City of Tracy‘s policy to require the undergrounding of offsite utilities because the City of Traсy could not show that “a written ordinance, policy or standard . . . was in effect” when the developer‘s vesting tentative map application was deemed complete. In the present case, in contrast, the City adopted its inclusionary housing ordinance in 1986, long before the contested use permit was issued in 2004. In
Finally, there is no merit to 1080 Delaware‘s assertion that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment because of the triable issues the court found to exist as to the meaning and continuing effectiveness of the Regulatory Agreement. As the City argues, the Regulatory Agreement is subordinate to both the ordinance and the use permit. It was entered into to implement condition 10 of the use permit, as explicitly required by the provisions of the Inclusionary Housing Ordinance. Even if, as 1080 Delaware contends, the Regulatory Agreement does not survive the deed in lieu of foreclosure by which First-Citizens acquired title, condition 10 persists. If the Regulatory Agreement entered into by Adeli is no longer in effect, then under the terms of the ordinance and the trial court‘s judgment, 1080 Delaware must itself specify the units that it will lease at below market rates. With the dismissal of the second cause of action alleging a breach of the Regulatory Agreement, there was no impediment to the entry of final judgment determining that 1080 Delaware is bound by and must comply with condition 10 of the use permit.
Disposition
The judgment is affirmed.
Siggins, J., and Jenkins, J., concurred.
On February 26, 2015, the opinion was modified to read as printed above.
