CITY OF HESPERIA, Plaintiff and Appellant, v. LAKE ARROWHEAD COMMUNITY SERVICES DISTRICT et al., Defendants and Respondents; SUNPOWER CORPORATION SYSTEM, Real Party in Interest and Respondent.
D079956
COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT DIVISION ONE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
Filed 7/12/23
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
David S. Cohn, Judge.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Bernardino County, David S. Cohn, Judge. Affirmed.
Aleshire & Wynder, Eric L. Dunn, June S. Ailin, and Nicholas P. Dwyer for Plaintiff and Appellant.
Best Best & Krieger, Amy E. Hoyt and Amanda Daams; Stoel Rives and Lindsay D. Puckett for Defendants and Respondents Lake Arrowhead
Allen Matkins Leck Gamble Mallory & Natsis and Emily L. Murray for Real Party in Interest and Respondent, SunPower Corporation System.
I. INTRODUCTION
This appeal arises from a second lawsuit brought by the City of Hesperia (the City) against respondents Lake Arrowhead Community Services District and the Board of Directors of Lake Arrowhead Community Services District (jointly, the District) regarding a proposed 0.96-megawatt solar photovoltaic project (the Solar Project) that the District has been planning to develop on six acres of a 350-acre property it owns that is known as the Hesperia Farms Property.1 The Hesperia Farms Property is located within the City‘s municipal boundary and is generally subject to the City‘s zoning regulations.
The District began considering the development of the Solar Project with an eye toward the use of a state renewable energy self-generation bill credit transfer program (the RES-BCT program), as codified in
In August 2015, in anticipation of its use of the bill crediting system provided for under the RES-BCT program, the District entered into a Public Utilities Commission Rule 21 Generator Interconnection Agreement for Exporting Facilities (the Interconnection Agreement) with Southern California Edison (SCE), the investor-owned utility company that provides energy service to all of the District‘s facilities. The Interconnection Agreement authorizes the Solar Project‘s connection to SCE‘s electrical grid distribution system and provides that the District will receive a credit for its generation of electrical energy at the RES-BCT tariff rate that it may use to offset the cost of energy it consumes at other sites.
The District first approved its Solar Project in December 2015, after determining that the project was either absolutely exempt from the City‘s zoning regulations under
This court affirmed the trial court‘s judgment in City of Hesperia v. Lake Arrowhead Community Services Dist. (2019) 37 Cal.App.5th 734 (Hesperia I). In Hesperia I, we determined that the District‘s Solar Project was not exempt from the City‘s zoning regulations under
A few months after the District made its second no-feasible-alternative determination with respect to the Solar Project, the City filed a second petition for writ of mandate and complaint challenging the Solar Project. In this second action, the City asserts four causes of action against the District. In the first cause of action, the City challenges the District‘s eligibility to use the RES-BCT program with respect to the Solar Project as proposed on the Hesperia Farms Property; specifically, the City alleges that the Hesperia Farms Property is not within the District‘s “geographical boundaries” as required by
After full briefing and argument from the parties, the trial court ultimately denied the City‘s petition for a writ of mandate. The court rejected the City‘s CEQA challenge and concluded that the administrative record contains substantial evidence to support the District‘s no-feasible-alternative determination. The court also determined that the City‘s challеnge to the Solar Project‘s eligibility under the RES-BCT program was barred by the doctrine of laches. The court entered judgment in favor of the District.
The City now appeals from that judgment. On appeal, the City argues that the trial court erred in concluding that its challenge to the Solar Project‘s eligibility under the RES-BCT program was barred by laches. The City further argues that if this court concludes that the trial court‘s laches ruling was erroneous, we should also conclude that the Solar Project, as conceived of and approved by the District, fails to meet the requirements of the RES-BCT program because the proposed solar farm would not be “within the geographical boundary” of the District, as required by the language of
In response to the City‘s appeal, the District urges this court to affirm the trial court‘s laches ruling while also providing a number of alternative grounds to support affirming the trial court‘s determination that the City is unable to prevail on its first cause of action. The District also responds that even if this court concludes that the trial court‘s laches ruling is unsupported and if this court rejects all of the District‘s alternative procedural grounds for affirming the trial court‘s determination with respect to the first cause of action, the trial court‘s determination should still nevertheless be affirmed on the ground that the Solar Project, as proposed оn the Hesperia Farms Property, fulfills the requirements of the RES-BCT program, including the requirement that the energy producing facility be located “within the geographical boundaries” of the District. The District also contends that its determination that there are no feasible alternatives to the Solar Project as envisioned at the Hesperia Farms Property is supported by substantial evidence in the administrative record.
We conclude that the trial court did not err in rejecting the City‘s petition for writ of mandate. We therefore affirm the judgment.
II. BACKGROUND
A. Background regarding the District and the Hesperia Farms Property
Established in 1978 under the Community Services District Law (
The 350-acre Hesperia Farms Property is located approximately eight miles north-northwest of Lake Arrowhead. The Hesperia Farms Property consists of 10 adjacent parcels; eight of the parcels are located within the southeastern portion of the City, and two are located just outside the City‘s boundary. The District has owned the property since the 1970‘s; for decades, the District has pumped treated effluent from its wastewater treatment facilities to the Hesperia Effluent Management Site facility located at the Hesperia Farms Property. The treated wastewater is conveyed through the District‘s 10-mile outfall pipeline to four percolation ponds on the Hesperia Farms Property, through which it is reintroduced into the Mojave River groundwater basin.
B. The origination, initial planning, and approval of the proposed Solar Project
In response to Congressional authorization provided in 2007 and 2010, the United States Bureau of Reclamation conducted a study to evaluate potential water, wastewater, and alternative energy solutions to meet the District‘s increasing needs. The Bureau of Reclamation‘s study concluded that the expected demand for water would increase and exceed the District‘s available water supply sources by 2030, and that there would be a corresponding increase in the District‘s energy needs to deal with the projected increase in water and wastewater demands. The report included discussion of a SunPower Corporation evaluation of the Hesperia Farms Property that indicated that the site had a “high potential for a solar installation.” The report further suggested that “[a]ssuming [SunPower‘s] calculations are correct and valid, a full evaluation of the site‘s potential solar development should be conducted.”
During 2014 and 2015, in response to this report, the District considered design and financing options for developing a solar project for the purpose of offsetting the energy costs associated with its operations and facilities. For example, in January 2014, the District received an analysis from an outside engineering consultant regarding the potential development of solar power at its Hesperia Farms Property. (Hesperia I, supra, 37 Cal.App.5th at p. 742.) Then, in June 2014, the District created a solar power alternatives ad hoc committee, which eventually considered presentations from three solar power vendors for a potential solar project. (Ibid.)
The District ultimately settled on an option for installing a .96 megawatt solar project on approximately six of the 350 acres that comprise the Hesperia Farms Property—i.e., the Solar Project. The District determined that utilization of
In November 2014, District staff began to meet with members of the City‘s planning department and the City‘s manager to discuss the permitting process that would be required of the District to develop the Solar Project on the Hesperia Farms Property. At that time, City staff indicated a concern to the District that the Hesperia City Council would be disinclined to approve a permit for a solar project at that location, given that the City Council had repeatedly denied other proposed solar projects.8 The District nevertheless undertook the environmental review process under the CEQA (
On May 20, 2015, during the CEQA review process, the City sent a comment letter to the District regarding a proposed initial study and mitigated negative declaration for the Solar Project. In that letter, the City requested, among other things, that the District request from the City a “general plan amendment and zone change,” and also that the District relocate the Solar Project 660 feet to the north in order for the project to comply with a City ordinance requiring that solar systеms be located at least
At a publicly noticed meeting in August 2015, the District voted to authorize its general manager to execute a generator interconnection agreement with SCE under the RES-BCT program for the Solar Project. The City voiced no opposition to the District‘s authorization of an interconnection agreement with SCE in connection with the planned Solar Project. That same month, the District entered into the Interconnection Agreement with SCE, which authorized an anticipated solar project at the Hesperia Farms Property to be connected to SCE‘s electrical grid distribution system; pursuant to this agreement, the District would be able to credit its energy generation from a Hesperia Farms Property solar facility toward its consumption of energy at other District facilities.
On December 15, 2015, the District adopted the initial study and mitigated negative declaration (Final MND) and approved the Solar Project for the originally-planned site—i.e., a location on the Hesperia Farms Property that was within 660 feet of the neighboring parcel designated for agricultural use (the Original Location). The publicly circulated Final MND, the staff report for the District‘s board of directors agenda item related to the Solar Project approval, and the District‘s resolution adopting the Final MND all indicated that the Solar Project was being developed to generate alternative energy units for the purpose of obtaining credits to offset the District‘s consumption at other sites.
C. The prior litigation and appeal
In response to the District‘s December 15, 2015 resolution approving the Project and determining that the Solar Project was exempt from the City‘s zoning regulations, the City initiated the 2016 lawsuit by filing a petition and complaint seeking a writ of mandate and declaratory and injunctive relief. In the 2016 lawsuit, the City asserted three causes of action. In the first cause of action, the City alleged that the District lacked the authority to construct and operate a solar facility under the California Community Services District Law (CSDL;
In October 2016, the trial court ruled in favor of the District with respect to the first cause of action, concluding that the District did have the authority to construct and operate a solar facility. In its ruling, the trial court noted that the City had conceded that “‘[e]ntering into an agreement pursuant to the State‘s RES-BCT Program in order to produce electricity for Edison‘s grid in exchange for credits for energy used by the District‘s other facilities may be authorized under CSDL‘s general powers.‘” The court then explained that pursuant to the proposed Solar Project, “the electricity produced by the facility will be connected to the local electrical grid adjacent to the Project site and the electricity produced is expected to be metered into the regional grid and credits obtained to offset energy consumption by individual District facilities,” demonstrating that the District‘s Solar Project development was being completed pursuant to the RES-BCT program. The trial court rejected the idea that the Solar Project was not eligible for the RES-BCT program, commenting that “[t]he City does not offer any argument to demonstrate the Project does not fall within the requirements of the
As to the second cause of action, however, the trial court granted the City‘s requested relief, issuing the writ of mandate, on the grounds that (1) the exceptions provided for in
The District appealed the judgment with respect to the court‘s ruling as to the second cause of action—a ruling that effectively required the District to comply with the City‘s zoning ordinance. (Hesperia I, supra, 37 Cal.App.5th at p. 746.) The City did not file a cross-appeal regarding the trial court‘s ruling as to the first cause of action, in which the court determined that the District had the authority to construct and operate a solar facility to produce electricity for SCE under the RES-BCT program. (See id. at pp. 745-746.)
This court affirmed the trial court‘s ruling with respect to the second cause of action in favor of the City, but solely on the ground that the administrative record did not contain substantial evidence to support the District‘s no-feasible-alternative determination. (Hesperia I, supra, 37 Cal.App.5th at p. 766.) We reached that conclusion, however, after noting
D. The parties’ actions during a stay of the appeal
In 2017, during a nine-month stay of the appeal and before the issuance of this court‘s opinion in Hesperia I, the District applied to the City for a General Plan amendment and a conditional use permit for the Solar Project to be constructed in a location 660 feet to the north of the southern property line of the Hesperia Farms Property (the Updated Location). In August 2017, the District adopted an addendum to the Final MND and approved the Solar Project at the Updated Location.
The City‘s planning commission recommended that the City Council approve the District‘s application for the Solar Project to be completed at the Updated Location. Nevertheless, in January 2018, the City Council denied the District‘s appliсation without making findings. After the District notified the City of its failure to adopt findings to support the denial of the District‘s application, the City Council adopted findings and reissued the denial.
E. The District‘s actions post-Hesperia I
After this court issued its opinion in Hesperia I, the District retained the services of Tidewater Incorporated (Tidewater) for the purpose of preparing a technical memorandum that would evaluate the feasibility of installing a commercial solar energy system at other District-owned or District-permitted properties. Tidewater initially considered 61 potential locations for installation of an alternative energy system, all of which were parcels owned or leased by the District. Tidewater narrowed that initial list to six possible alternative sites, which it analyzed in detail according to a variety of economic, environmental, social, and technical criteria.
Staff at the District prepared a May 2020 report titled “Lake Arrowhead Community Services District—Alternatives to Proposed Solar Photovoltaic System on Hesperia Farms Property” (the Alternatives Report). The Alternatives Report documented the District‘s investigation into the possible alternatives to locating and operating the Solar Project at the Updated Location on the Hesperia Farms Property. In the Alternatives Report, District staff identified the proposed project‘s objectives as including implementing a renewable energy project that would be large enough to permit efficiencies of scale and provide for adequate bill credits to offset the District‘s energy costs. Staff considered and rejected “other forms of renewable energy as alternatives” to the Solar Project, including solar thermal, hydroelectric, wind, geothermal, and digester gas alternatives,
In the Alternatives Report, District staff also considered the use of alternative sites already owned or controlled by the District, as well as other sites that the District could acquire for use. For purposes of the Alternatives Report, District staff considered only other sites for potential acquisition that were within the District‘s service areas—i.e., the areas to which the District provides water and/or wastewater services to the public.
District staff concluded, based on the Tidewater and Sage reports, that the District would save approximately $3.67 million and that approximately 29 percent of the District‘s energy costs would be offset by the Solar Project as proposed at the Updated Location over a 30-year period.
At a regularly held public meeting on June 23, 2020, the District adopted Resolution No. 2020-04, in which it determined that there was no feasible alternative to the Solar Project at the Updated Location on the District‘s Hesperia Farms Property. This finding rendered the City‘s zoning regulations inapplicable to the Solar Project at the Hesperia Farms Property, pursuant to
F. The current action
Despite the District‘s proposed change to the location of the Solar Project on the Hesperia Farms Property to partially comply with the City‘s
On July 12, 2021, the trial court issued a tentative ruling in which it proposed granting the City‘s petition for writ of mandate on the ground that the Hesperia Farms Property is not located within the District‘s “geographical boundary” as required by
III.
DISCUSSION
In this appeal, the City pursues only limited theories of error on the part of the trial court. Specifically, the City asserts that the trial court erred in concluding that laches bars it from challenging the eligibility of the Solar Project on the Hesperia Farms Property for the RES-BCT program. The City further contends that the Solar Project, as proposed on the Hesperia Farms Property, is not eligible for the RES-BCT program because the Hesperia Farms Property is not within the District‘s “geographical boundary” as required under A. The parties’ requests for judicial notice
As an initial matter, we address two requests for judicial notice filed by the parties that remain pending as we consider the merits of the City‘s appeal. On July 11, 2022, the District filed a request for judicial notice, asking this court to take judicial notice of five sets of documents that it identifies as follows:The first and second sets of documents contain some legislative history related to the original enactment of“Exhibit A: California Bill Analysis, Senate Floor, 2007-2008 Regular Session, Assembly Bill 2466, August 12, 2008“;
“Exhibit B: California Bill Analysis, Senate Committee, 2015-2016 Regular Session, Assembly Bill 1773, Hearing Date June 21, 2016“;
“Exhibit C: Public Utilities Commission Resolution E-4283, Tariffs compliant with Public Utilities (PU) Code Section 2830 relating to Establishment of a Schedule for Local Government Renewable Energy Self-Generation Program, dated April 22, 2010“;
“Exhibit D: Letter from Public Utilities Commission to Southern California Edison re Supplemental Compliance Advice Filing Pursuant to Resolution E-4283 Regarding Establishment of Schedule RES-BCT Local Government Renewable Energy Self-Generation Bill Credit Transfer, dated July 12, 2010, and attached Advice Letter 2351-E-A, dated May 3, 2010“; and
“Exhibit E: Public Utilities Commission Rule 21 Generating Facility Interconnections, effective April 8, 2021.”
The City contends that these documents are relevant to whether it may be collaterally estopped from litigating the eligibility of the Solar Project on the Hesperia Farms Property for the RES-BCT program. Although the District has not opposed the City‘s request for judicial notice, we nevertheless decline to take judicial notice of these documents because we have no need to consider whether the City should be collaterally estopped from litigating the eligibility issue, given our conclusion that the trial court‘s judgment as to the first cause of action should be affirmed on other grounds. (See Guarantee Forklift, supra, 11 Cal.App.5th at p. 1075.)“Exhibit 1: [The District‘s] Answer to Petition for Writ of Mandate; Complaint for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief“;
“Exhibit 2: Real Party in Interest SunPower Corporation, Systems’ Verified Answer to Petitioner City of Hesperia‘s Petition for Writ of Mandate; Complaint for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief“;
“Exhibit 3: Petitioners’ Opening Brief in Support of Petition for Writ of Mandate“;
“Exhibit 4: Respondents’ Opposition to Petition for Writ of Mandate“; and
“Exhibit 5: Petitioner‘s Reply Brief in Support of Petition for Writ of Mandate.”
B. The trial court did not err in declining to grant a writ of mandate as to the City‘s first cause of action, which is based on the City‘s challenge that the Hesperia Farms Property “is not located within the geographical boundaries of the District”
In its first cause of action, which the City titles “Petition for Writ of Mandate - Code of Civil Procedure § 1085,” the City “challenges the District‘s use of the RES-BCT program for its Solar Project because it is not located within the ‘geographical boundary of the local government’ for purposes of the requirements of 1. The trial court‘s application of laches to bar the City‘s assertion that the Solar Project is ineligible for the RES-BCT program is supported by the record and does not constitute an abuse of discretion
Although the trial court declined to rule in favor of the City on the first cause of action, it did so because it determined that the District had succeeded in demonstrating that the affirmative defense of laches applied to bar the City‘s claim that the Solar Project, as planned on the Hesperia Farms Property, was not eligible for the RES-BCT program. Because the trial court found that laches was a determinative issue, we begin our consideration of the correctness of the trial court‘s judgment by reviewing its determination that the District‘s affirmative defense of laches operates to bar the City fromutility reaches its proportionate megawatt share of the program.16 SCE‘s proportionate share of the statewide 250 megawatt limit is 123.8 megawatts; once SCE reaches the 123.8 megawatt limit, SCE will no longer have to honor the RES-BCT tariff credit for governmental agencies seeking to pursue alternative off-site energy generation.
Nevertheless, the City argues that the District was not prejudiced by its delay in asserting the ineligibility of the Solar Project for the RES-BCT program because, according to the City, the District would have needed to go through the City‘s zoning process or conduct an alternatives analysis, regardless whether the City raised the RES-BCT eligibility issue earlier or not. However, if the District had known that the City would bring up an issue that it could have raised in the prior litigation and that the District‘s entire plan for the Solar Project was at risk from a determination that the Hesperia Farms Property was not eligible for the District‘s use of the RES-BCT program, it might have decided to seek a ruling as to that issue first, before undertaking the costly and time-consuming alternatives analysis. Alternatively, it might have made very different decisions about whether to
The City also argues that the ” ‘mere expenditure of money or effort on the part of a defendant is insufficient to show prejudice.’ ” However, the authority quoted by the City makes clear that the “mere expenditure of money or effort on the part of a defendant is insufficient to show prejudice” only in a particular situation—i.e., where the “expenditures” at issue “were not induced by the alleged delay in bringing this action.” (Austin v. Hallmark Oil Co. (1943) 21 Cal.2d 718, 735, italics added.) Here, the record demonstrates that the District was relying on the RES-BCT program from the vеry beginning of its interest in developing an alternative energy project at the Hesperia Farms location; if the District had been aware that the City was objecting to the Solar Project‘s eligibility for the program from the start, the District may have declined to spend years of time and expense in
In its reply brief in this case, the City also attempts to suggest that its raising of the RES-BCT program eligibility issue (for the first time) in its opposition brief on appeal in the 2016 lawsuit somehow placed the District “on notice before it even adopted the resolution that is the subject of this case that the City was finally aware of the location issue and would raise it.” However, as we have indicated, the manner in which City approached this issue was likely to have induced the District into believing that the City had acquiesced on the RES-BCT program eligibility question—not that the City would press the issue again at a later point in time. If the City believed that the question of RES-BCT program eligibility remained at issue, it could have filed a cross-appeal from the trial court‘s ruling in the 2016 litigation that the
The City also suggests that laches should not apply because “this is a new case . . . involving a new decision by the District.” However, the Solar Project is the very same Solar Project that the District has been pursuing since at least 2014, albeit with a de minimis adjustment of the site 660 feet away from the southern property line in order to satisfy at least one of the City‘s zoning requirements. The District has never veered from its initial selection of the Hesperia Farms Property as the location for the Solar Project during the five-plus years that the City and the District have been embroiled in a dispute over the project. Not only has the Solar Project‘s proposed location always been the Hesperia Farms Property, but nothing has changed with respect to the language of
As the trial court in this action determined, allowing the City to take a second bite of the proverbial apрle at this point in time would be unjust to the District. By delaying raising this issue for multiple years after the District entered into the Interconnection Agreement for the purpose of developing the Solar Project—when the City could have raised the issue prior to or even during the 2016 lawsuit—the City has prejudiced the District by not only inducing the District to pursue the Solar Project through lengthy and costly litigation and technical analysis, but by placing at risk the District‘s ability to benefit from the 2015 Interconnection Agreement that it entered with SCE.
We therefore conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in concluding that laches prevents the City from raising the question of the Solar Project‘s eligibility for the RES-BCT program.
2. Even if the trial court had erred with respect to the laches ruling, the City cannot demonstrate that the Solar Project is ineligible for the RES-BCT program
Although the trial court determined that it would have ruled in favor of the City but for the court‘s determination that laches applied to bar the City‘s belated assertion of the Solar Project‘s ineligibility for the RES-BCT program, we reach a different conclusion on the merits of the eligibility question. Our conclusion in this regard provides an alternative basis for our affirmance of the trial court‘s denial of the City‘s petition with respect to the first cause of action.
The City alleges in the first cause of action that the Hesperia Farms Property is not within the District‘s “geographical boundary,” as that term is used in subdivision (a)(4)(C) of
In considering an issue of statutory interpretation, ” ‘our primary task is to determine the lawmakers’ intent.’ ” (MacIsaac v. Waste Management Collection & Recycling, Inc. (2005) 134 Cal.App.4th 1076, 1082.) ” ‘We start with the statute‘s words, which are the most reliable indicator of legislative intent.’ [Citation.] ’ “We interpret relevant terms in light of their ordinary meaning, while also taking account of any related provisions and the overall structure of the statutory scheme to determine what intеrpretation best advances the Legislature‘s underlying purpose.” ’ [Citations.] ‘If we find the statutory language ambiguous or subject to more than one interpretation, we
As
As relevant here,
“(1) ‘Benefiting account’ means an electricity account, or more than one account, that satisfies any of the following:
“(A) The account or accounts are located within the geographical boundaries of a local government or, for a campus, within the geographical boundary of the city, county, or city and county in which the campus is located, with the account or accounts being mutually agreed upon by the local government or campus and an electrical corporation.” ( § 2830, subd. (a)(1)(A) , italics added.)
“(4) ‘Eligible renewable generating facility’ means a generation facility that meets all of the following requirements:
“(A) Has a generating capacity of no more than five megawatts.
“(B) Is an eligiblе renewable energy resource, as defined in Article 16 (commencing with
Section 399.11 ) of Part 1.“(C) Is located within the geographical boundary of the local government or, for a campus, within the geographical boundary of the city or city and county, if the campus is located in an incorporated area, or county, if the campus is located in an unincorporated area or, for a tribe, on land owned by or under the jurisdiction of the tribe.
“(D) Is owned by, operated by, or on property under the control of the local government, campus, or tribe.
“(E) Is sized to offset all or part of the electrical load of the benefiting account. For these purposes, premises that are leased by a local government, campus, or tribe are under the control of the local government, campus, or tribe.” (
§ 2830, subd. (a)(4) , italics added.)
Therefore, in order to give meaning to the phrase “geographical boundary,” we begin by looking to the words themselves to discern what the Legislature intended by stating that an eligible renewable generating facility is to be “located within the geographical boundary of the local government.” (See In re A.N., supra, 9 Cal.5th at p. 351 [first step in statutory analysis is to look at the words of the statute to discern legislative intent].) As the City notes, the Merriam-Webster Dictionary defines the word “geography” to include ” ‘a science that deals with the description, distribution, and interaction of the diverse physical, biological, and cultural features of the earth‘s surface’ ” and ” ‘the geographic features of an area.’ ” (https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/geography, as of April 26, 2022.) In common understanding, therefore, “geographical” is an adjective suggesting a relationship to land. A “boundary” is ” ‘something that indicates or fixes a limit or extent.’ ” (See <https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/boundary> [as of July 12, 2023 - <https://perma.cc/71193-ANZH>].) Thus, the most reasonable interpretation of the phrase “geographical boundary of a lоcal government” is that it refers to a fixed demarcation of a physical area of land governed by a local government; in other words, the “geographical boundary of a local
In applying this meaning of the phrase “geographical boundary of a local government,” we begin with the understanding that the area over which a governmental entity “governs” must be considered in relationship to the purpose, functions, and powers of the governmental entity at issue. This is because the governing authority of a particular governmental entity depends on the nature of that governmental entity and the functions with which it has been tasked. For example, a city or county is typically a general-purpose agency that engages in a broader variety of functions and has a greater number of powers than a special purpose agency, like the District, which is often tasked with a single or small set of functions and has more limited powers. (See 1 Martinez, Local Government Law (2d ed. 2012).) Special purpose agencies of local government, § 2:16 [“The key distinguishing factor between general purpose and special purpose units is in the scope of delegated powers granted by the sovereign to the entity in question,” and “the purposes which a special purpose unit is created to serve are much narrower than those of general purpose units.“].) Therefore, for a special purpose agency, such as the District, an “eligible renewable generating facility” under
A review of the history of the statute and legislative history material further supports our interpretation of the statute as applied in this case. As originally enacted in 2008,
In 2009,
Most recently, as we noted in footnote 19 in part III.B.2, ante,
What becomes clear from the Legislature‘s additions to
Although the City does not expressly say so, the City‘s argument that the Hesperia Farms Property is located outside of the District‘s “geographical boundary” appears to hinge on the idea that an area that is “governed by” the District is equivalent to the District‘s “service area“—i.e, the outer limit of the area over which the District has been authorized to provide water and/or wastewater services to the public. There is no dispute that the Hesperia Farms property is not located within District‘s water and wastewater service
We therefore reject the City‘s additional argument for reversal of the judgment on the ground that the Hesperia Farms Property is not within the
C. The trial court did not err with respect to its ruling as to the third cause of action
The City contends that its challenge to the eligibility of a solar farm on Hesperia Farms Property for purposes of the RES-BCT program also undermines the District‘s finding that there are no feasible alternatives to the Solar Project being located on the Hesperia Farms Property. The City argues that the District‘s alternatives analysis, which the District used to support its finding that there was no other feasible location than the Hesperia Farms Property for a solar farm project, suffered from “a fatal flaw in that it rests upon the assumption the Hesperia Farms site is an eligible site for a generating facility under the RES-BCT program.” As the City explains, under its view of the meaning of the
This remaining contention on appeal also fails. As previously discussed, we have concluded on the merits that the City has failed to establish that the Hesperia Farms Property is not eligible for the RES-BCT program. Thus, the “fatal flaw” that the City points to in the District‘s analysis (i.e. that it presupposes that the Solar Project would be eligible for RES-BCT program benefits) is no flaw at all. The City has failed to demonstrate that there is insufficient evidence to support the trial court‘s denial of the writ of mandate as to the City‘s third cause of action. Accordingly, we affirm.
IV. DISPOSITION
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed. The District is entitled to costs on appeal.
McCONNELL, P. J.
WE CONCUR:
IRION, J.
KELETY, J.
