Lead Opinion
Opinion
John M. Heidt and Mary Ann K. Heidt, as trustees of the John M. Heidt Family Trust, Anne Heidt Sebastian, and John K. Heidt (the Heidts) appeal from an order denying their motion for leave to intervene in an action brought by the City of Malibu (Malibu) and David Geffen against defendants Access for All, a public benefit corporation, public agencies California Coastal Commission and California Coastal Conservancy, and Peter Douglas and Sam Schuchat in their capacities as officers of the public agencies. The Heidts contend that the trial court abused its discretion in denying intervention, arguing that they have a “direct and immediate interest” in the litigation, that their interests are not being adequately protected by Geffen, and that intervention would not enlarge the issues in the case. Because we conclude there was no abuse of discretion in the denial of intervention, we affirm.
BACKGROUND
The Heidts, who are the heirs of “big band” leader Horace Heidt, own a beachfront house on Pacific Coast Highway in the Carbon Beach area of Malibu. Geffen, a well-known entertainment industry executive, owns a residence that is situated on four contiguous beachfront lots, one of which lies immediately to the west of the Heidt residence. (The shoreline at Carbon Beach runs east-west.) In 1983, Geffen applied to the Coastal Commission for a permit to make certain improvements to his property. The Heidts appeared at Coastal Commission hearings on the permit and urged that it not be granted. The Heidts did not prevail and a permit was issued. The permit included a condition that Geffen sign an offer to dedicate (OTD) easements “to the People of California or the [Coastal] Commission’s designee” that would give the public vertical and lateral access to the shoreline.
In 1991 and 2000, two additional development permits were issued to Geffen, both conditioned on Geffen signing OTD’s for additional lateral access. Again, Geffen did so.
On January 16, 2002, Access for All, the Coastal Commission, and the Coastal Conservancy entered into an agreement which provided that Access for All would manage the vertical easement and three lateral easements granted by Geffen. The agreement stated in part: “Access for All intends to operate [the] vertical easement from sunrise to sunset, consistent with Los Angeles County beach opening hours, as soon as possible. There is currently a wooden gate at the PCH sidewalk, presumably built by [Geffen], which could in theory be opened immediately. However, Access for All intends to work with the property owner to develop an access plan for sunrise to sunset access.” On January 17, a “Certificate of Acceptance” was recorded with the Los Angeles County Recorder. It stated that Access for All had accepted Geffen’s OTD’s and that the Coastal Commission acknowledged the acceptance.
On July 3, 2002, Geffen and Malibu filed a petition and complaint against defendants Coastal Commission, Coastal Conservancy, the officers of these agencies, and Access for All, with Geffen alleging three causes of action in mandate, 10 causes of action for injunctive and declaratory relief, and a cause of action for quiet title. Malibu’s allegations were limited to six of the causes of action. The gravamen of the petition and complaint was that the OTD’s were invalid and that the process by which Access for All had accepted the OTD’s violated constitutional and statutory law in several respects, including by failing to provide proper notice, by failing to be part of a statewide coastal access plan, and by failing to provide for environmental analysis. Defendants Coastal Commission, Coastal Conservancy, and their officers demurred to the petition and complaint, and to succeeding amended petitions and complaints, discussed below. (Access for All joined the demurrers of its codefendants.) The demurrer to the original complaint was sustained in part.
Geffen and Malibu thereafter filed a first amended petition and complaint. On December 6, 2002, a demurrer to this pleading was sustained in part, the trial court ruling that Geffen was barred from advancing any argument in this action that could have been made when he first signed the OTD’s.
Also on December 6, 2002, the Heidts filed a motion for leave to file a complaint in intervention. In their motion, the Heidts asserted that they had satisfied the requirements of Code of Civil Procedure section 387, subdivision (b), for mandatory intervention and alternatively that they should be granted permissive intervention under subdivision (a) of that section. (Further section references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.) Defendants opposed the Heidts’ motion. On January 14, 2003, in conjunction with a ruling regarding clarification of the December 6 order sustaining defendants’ demurrer, the Heidts’ motion was placed off calendar until a second amended petition and complaint had been filed.
A renewed request for intervention in the second amended petition and complaint was later denied without prejudice. Geffen and Malibu next filed their third amended petition and complaint, this time containing a total of two causes of action in mandate, six causes of action for declaratory and injunctive relief, and a cause of action for quiet title.
On September 8, 2003, in conjunction with a ruling partially sustaining a demurrer to the third amended complaint, the Heidts’ motion for intervention, which defendants had opposed, was denied.
The Heidts filed their notice of appeal from the trial court’s ruling on November 6, 2003.
RELEVANT LEGAL PRINCIPLES
Section 387, subdivision (a), provides that “[u]pon timely application, any person, who has an interest in the matter in litigation, or in the success of either of the parties, or an interest against both, may intervene in the action or proceeding. An intervention ... is made by complaint. . . filed by leave of the court. . . .” Stated differently, “ ‘the court has discretion to permit a nonparty to intervene in litigation pending between others, provided; [<J[] The nonparty has a direct and immediate interest in the litigation; and [][] The intervention will not enlarge the issues in the case; and [f] The reasons for intervention outweigh any opposition by the existing parties. [Citations.]’ [Citation.]” (Truck Ins. Exchange v. Superior Court (1997)
Under section 387, subdivision (b), “if the person seeking intervention claims an interest relating to the property or transaction which is the subject of the action and that person is so situated that the disposition of the action may as a practical matter impair or impede that person’s ability to protect that interest, unless that person’s interest is adequately represented by existing parties, the court shall, upon timely application, permit that person to intervene.”
DISCUSSION
Unlike their arguments in the trial court, the Heidts’ contentions on appeal do not separately address mandatory and permissive intervention. Rather, the contentions focus on whether the Heidts have shown a direct and immediate interest in the action, whether their interests are adequately protected by Geffen, and whether their intervention in the action will enlarge the issues. Defendants (except Access for All, which has not appeared on appeal) argue that none of these elements has been established because the Heidts’ interests are merely speculative and are adequately protected by Geffen, who has identical interests, and participation by the Heidts would unduly enlarge the litigation.
The Heidts first address the question of direct and immediate interest. They note that the vertical accessway, which includes a “privacy buffer,” is adjacent to their house and ask: “Why isn’t the Heidts’ interest at least as strong as those in Simpson Redwood Co. v. State of California (1987)
We initially focus on the latter three of the Heidts’ cases. In Weiner v. City of Los Angeles, supra,
In these three cases, the trial court exercised its discretion to allow intervention and no abuse was found. But there is nothing in the opinions which would suggest that a ruling denying discretionary intervention in this case would constitute an abuse of that discretion. Indeed, as noted by defendants, there are instances in which no abuse of discretion was found in the denial of a motion to intervene by parties whose property was proximate to property that was the subject of the action. (See Alhambra v. Jacob Bean Realty Co. (1934)
The fourth of the Heidts’ cited cases is, like the case before us, an appeal from the denial of a request for intervention. In Simpson Redwood Co. v. State of California, supra,
On appeal, the Simpson court held that the League had a sufficient interest to support intervention as a matter of discretion, noting that the League was instrumental in establishing the Park, that members of the League frequently used the Park, and that the League’s “reputation and integrity as a conservation organization will suffer if property which it acquired through donation and targeted for preservation is transferred to private ownership for exploitation.” {Simpson Redwood Co. v. State of California, supra,
After determining that the effect of delay that would be caused by intervention was not substantial, the Simpson court’s analysis concluded: “A final telling factor in our decision is the conviction that [the League’s] own substantial interests probably cannot be adequately served by the State’s sole participation in the suit, since it here seeks merely to protect its fee interest in the property, which may turn
“For all of the foregoing reasons,” the Simpson court held that the trial court’s denial of the League’s motion to intervene constituted an abuse of discretion. {Simpson Redwood Co. v. State of California, supra,
In relying on Simpson, the Heidts focus on language stating that the lack of direct harm to the League did not bar intervention. They also emphasize the language that a “ ‘ “substantial probability” ’ ” of the intervener’s interest being affected is “ ‘ “enough.” ’ ” (Simpson Redwood Co. v. State of California, supra,
The League’s interest was also “direct and immediate” {Truck Ins. Exchange v. Superior Court, supra,
The Simpson case also speaks to the question of whether the Heidts’ interests are adequately represented by Geffen. The Simpson court determined that the state did not necessarily share the League’s commitment to preservation of the parkland in its natural condition. Accordingly, the state might be amenable to resolving the litigation for monetary consideration, although the League would not. {Simpson Redwood Co. v. State of California, supra, 196 Cal.App.3d at pp. 1203-1204.) In contrast, the Heidts and Geffen have identical interests in preventing members of the public from accessing areas adjacent to their properties. And the Heidts have not claimed that Geffen has failed to pursue any available
The Heidts further assert that they “have a direct interest in enforcing [the ‘privacy buffer’] provision and in how it gets interpreted.” This interest does not support intervention. Inasmuch as there is nothing in the record to indicate how the provision will be interpreted in protecting the Heidts’ privacy, the Heidts’ interest is once again not immediate because they can only speculate that they will be dissatisfied with the interpretation. It is also significant that the Heidts’ concern about the privacy buffer is specific to them. Thus, inclusion of this issue would necessarily enlarge the litigation.
We are mindful that section 387 is to be liberally construed to permit intervention. But the decision whether to permit intervention remains a matter of judicial discretion, which is abused only “ ‘whenever, in its exercise, the court exceeds the bounds of reason, all of the circumstances before it being considered.’ ” (Denham v. Superior Court (1970)
DISPOSITION
The order under review is affirmed.
Suzukawa, J.,
Notes
Vertical access, which is roughly perpendicular to the shoreline, would enable members of the public to walk from Pacific Coast Highway to the shoreline. Lateral access would allow members of the public to walk along portions of the shoreline. (See La Costa Beach Homeowners’ Assn. v. California Coastal Com. (2002)
An appeal may be taken from an order denying a motion to intervene. (County of Alameda v. Carleson (1971)
Weiner v. City of Los Angeles, supra,
Judge of the Los Angeles Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
Dissenting Opinion
To me, this is a paradigm case for intervention—and I therefore dissent.
FACTS
A.
The relevant background facts are not disputed. John M. Heidt and Mary Ann K. Heidt own a relatively modest beach house (a 1940’s house on a 45-foot wide lot) adjacent to the more substantial property owned by David Geffen (a residence situated on four contiguous beachfront lots). In 1983, the Coastal Commission (over the Heidts’ objections) granted Geffen’s application for a permit to improve his property, subject to a condition that Geffen sign an “offer to dedicate” (OTD) vertical and lateral easements to the Coastal Commission’s designee to provide public access to the shoreline. The vertical access easement would run between Geffen’s property and the Heidts’ property, with “a privacy buffer of at least 9’ in width between the access way” and the Heidts’ property.
Under the terms of the 1983 OTD, the offer to dedicate remained open and could be accepted at any time within 21 years,
In January 2002, without consultation with Geffen as required by the OTD, the Coastal Commission conveyed the OTD to Access for All (a nonprofit organization), which accepted the OTD, prepared a Public Access Easement Management Plan, and moved ahead to open the vertical access as soon as possible.
B.
In July 2002, Geffen filed a petition for a writ of mandate and complaint to challenge the Coastal Commission’s transfer to Access for All and to stop Access for All from opening the vertical access at all or, alternatively, only after certain steps were taken.* *
On January 14, the trial court clarified its rulings on the demurrer and took the Heidts’ motion for leave to amend “off calendar because the proposed complaint in intervention makes allegations identical to those in [Geffen’s] first amended petition, to which a demurrer has been sustained. . . . The [Heidts] may recalendar their application to intervene at such time as [Geffen] file[s] a second amended petition .... [The Heidts] are ordered to set forth in any such application whether they only join in the allegations made by [Geffen] or, if not, ... to set forth what additional issues will be added to the proceeding if they are permitted to intervene.”
C.
Geffen filed a second amended petition and complaint on February 4, to which the Coastal Commission demurred on March 4. The petition sought three writs of mandate (§ 1085), one invalidating Geffen’s agreements with the Coastal Commission on the ground that the agreements violated a variety of laws, another commanding compliance with the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA), and the third compelling compliance with the Coastal Access Act; the complaint sought declaratory relief on several different grounds, and quiet title with regard to the Coastal Commission’s claim to a right of public access over Geffen’s property.
On March 26, the Heidts filed a new motion for leave to intervene in which they spelled out their compliance with the trial court’s earlier order, stating that their proposed complaint in intervention joined in all of Geffen’s claims except the one for quiet title and explaining their intent: “By joining with Geffen ... in [his] second amended complaint, [the Heidts] do not mean to suggest that their legal status is identical. For example, the Heidts have never applied to the Coastal Commission for any Coastal Development Permits or other entitlements^] have never offered to dedicate any of their property for public access [, and have not received any] benefit from the Coastal Development Permits received by Mr. Geffen.” The Heidts went on to list the steps that had been taken without notice to them, and conceded that, for this reason, their “legal position may vary from that of Geffen ... on issues such as statutes of limitation, estoppel, [and] waiver . . . .” The Coastal Commission once again opposed intervention.
On May 28, the trial court took the Coastal Commission’s demurrer off calendar, struck Geffen’s second amended complaint on its own motion, and denied without prejudice the Heidts’ motion for leave to intervene. With regard to intervention,
“Furthermore, the Heidts, unlike Geffen, assert a cause of action for damages for inverse condemnation, which cannot be heard in this department (Local Rule 2.5(i)), and which will require testimony of live witnesses and a potential jury trial. Final resolution of the dispute between the parties to this proceeding will therefore be delayed until the Heidts separately litigate their inverse condemnation claim. The intervention will therefore enlarge the issues in the case, and the reasons for intervention do not outweigh the opposition by the [Coastal Commission].” (Italics added.)
D.
Geffen filed his third amended petition and complaint on June 30, the Coastal Commission demurred at the end of July, the Heidts again moved to intervene (this time without a claim of inverse condemnation), and the Coastal Commission once again opposed intervention. The trial court overruled the demurrer in part, sustained it in part, and denied the Heidts’ motion to intervene:
“The Heidts will not be permitted to intervene in this proceeding because, as they acknowledge, their relationship to the public easements is far different from Geffen’s. The Heidts never offered to dedicate any of their property for public access, and never received any benefit from the Coastal Development permits sought and obtained by Geffen. The issues raised by Geffen are primarily those arising from the consensual relationship between Geffen and the Coastal Commission. The issues raised by the Heidts are far different and will greatly enlarge the issues that must be resolved in this case. Intervention is opposed by [the Coastal Commission] for that reason, and the reasons for intervention do not outweigh such opposition. The Heidts can protect their interests by filing a separate action. If necessary, the court can relate or consolidate the actions to the extent necessary to prevent conflicting rulings on common issues of law or fact.” (Italics added.) The Heidts’ appeal is from this order.
E.
The Heidts were out but the pleading war continued, with Geffen filing a fourth, fifth, and—finally—a sixth amended petition and complaint (on October 1, 2004). The operative pleading is now limited to five causes of action seeking declarations of Geffen’s rights in light of his allegations (1) that the OTD’s created unanticipated servitudes on the property; (2) that the Coastal Commission failed to follow the law in implementing the OTD’s; (3) that Geffen’s due process rights were violated; (4) that the Coastal Commission failed to conduct a supplemental environmental assessment before the OTD’s were accepted; and (5) that, at the times relevant to this action, the Coastal Commission was a legislative body that impermissibly exercised the powers of the executive or judicial branches of government.
The Coastal Commission finally answered on October 28, 2004, almost a full year after the Heidts filed their notice of appeal from the order denying their motion for leave to intervene. But the case
The record does not disclose whether or when Geffen answered the cross-complaint, or whether the case is yet at issue, or whether a trial date has been set.
DISCUSSION
The Heidts’ contention on this appeal is that the harm to them occurred when the OTD’s were transferred to and accepted by Access for All, without the required consultation with Geffen, or any notice to Geffen or the Heidts or other opportunity for them to express their opposition to the nature or scope of the planned public access. The concerns expressed by the Heidts—and by Geffen in his petition and complaint—are that there is no way for them to know whether Access for All (a nonprofit organization apparently formed for the sole purpose of accepting Geffen’s OTD’s) has the financial ability to maintain and insure the accessway for the benefit of the adjacent property owners, or whether Access for All has the means to provide necessary safeguards (such as controlling hours of access, providing public restroom facilities, arranging for trash collection, and so on). The Heidts also claim (as does Geffen) that the 19-year gap between the execution of the OTD’s by Geffen and the acceptance by Access for All has CEQA implications, and that Access for All’s vague plan fails to consider a number of significant environmental issues (including a dramatic increase in traffic on the Pacific Coast Highway). I agree with the Heidts’ contention that these issues cry out for intervention.
A.
As relevant, subdivision (a) of section 387 (permissive joinder) provides that, “[ujpon timely application, any person[] who has an interest in the matter in litigation, or in the success of either of the parties, or an interest against both, may intervene in the action or proceeding. . . .’’As relevant, subdivision (b) of section 387 (intervention as a matter of right) provides that, “if the person seeking intervention claims an interest relating to the property or transaction which is the subject of the action and that person is so situated that the disposition of the action may as a practical matter impair or impede that person’s ability to protect that interest, unless that person’s interest is adequately represented by existing parties, the court shall, upon timely application, permit that person to intervene.” (See California Physicians’ Service v. Superior Court (1980)
Concerns about whether intervention is proper must in my view be tempered by three basic rules of intervention. First, section 387 must be liberally construed in favor of intervention in any kind of action, legal or equitable. (Lincoln National Life Ins. Co. v. State Bd. of Equalization (1994)
B.
Where, as here, the putative interveners have claims related to the property and transactions that are the subject matter of the litigation, their right to intervene is not diminished by their independent interests. (Belt Casualty Co. v. Furman (1933)
On strikingly similar facts, Simpson Redwood Co. v. State of California, supra,
On appeal, Simpson claimed the League’s interest was indirect and remote (a claim echoed by the Coastal Commission in our case). The reviewing court agreed that an intervener’s interest in the litigation must be direct, not consequential, but explained that the nature of the necessary direct interest in the litigation is one that must be determined on the facts of each case, always mindful of the rule that section 387 should be liberally construed in favor of intervention. (Simpson Redwood Co. v. State of California, supra, 196 Cal.App.3d at pp. 1199-1200.) Although the League did not claim any interest in the land itself or claim any pecuniary harm, its interest in Simpson’s quiet title action was sufficient because the League contributed to the creation of the park surrounding the area, its members used the park, and because—for as long as the State owned the property—the League had a right to control the manner in which the subject property was developed. (Id. at pp. 1200-1202.) In my view, the Heidts’ interest in the use of Geffen’s property and his OTD’s is substantively indistinguishable from the League’s interest in the dispute between Simpson and the State.
Simpson (in another argument echoed by the Coastal Commission in our case) claimed intervention would cause delay and confusion. The reviewing court rejected the claim: “While [the League] undeniably intends to introduce new causes of action, our analysis of the nature of such new matters convinces us it will not delay the litigation, change the position of the parties, or even require introduction of additional evidence. . . . Resolution of [the issues raised by the League] will center upon essentially the same facts as those involved in the State’s claims .... We perceive no danger that the dedication issue
As the Simpson court also noted in this context, intervention should not be denied where, as here, the putative intervener would be forced to bring a separate action against one or more of the parties to the action into which intervention is sought. (Simpson Redwood Co. v. State of California, supra,
In Simpson, the court considered it significant that the League’s own substantial interests could not be adequately served by the State’s sole participation in the suit, since it sought merely to protect its fee interest in the property, which it might accomplish by a settlement that did not address the League’s concerns—which were unique and, as a result, “powerfully militate[d] in favor of intervention.” (Simpson Redwood Co. v. State of California, supra, 196 Cal.App.3d at pp. 1203-1204; see also People ex rel. Rominger v. County of Trinity (1983)
C.
As the Heidts put it in their brief, “[w]hat had been a vacant strip of Geffen’s land next to the Heidts’ front porch, closed
In my view, this is not a close case. Intervention should have been granted, and the order denying the Heidts’ motion for leave to intervene should be reversed.
A petition for a rehearing was denied May 24, 2005.
Photographs in the record on appeal show a path between the properties, along the exposed side of the Heidts’ house (there is a wall separating Geffen’s house from the path). The photographs were taken in August 2003.
The Public Access Easement Management Plan prepared by Access For All (which appears to have no real address, only a post office box number) offers a vague explanation of its intent vis-á-vis the vertical access, with a noticeable omission of any reference to the Heidts’ or their property: “Access for All intends to operate this vertical easement from sunrise to sunset, consistent with Los Angeles County beach opening hours, as soon as possible. There is currently a wooden gate at the PCH sidewalk, presumably built by [Geffen], which could in theory be opened immediately. However, Access for All intends to work with [Geffen] to develop an access plan for sunrise to sunset access. This may include a re-design with new gates, hopefully with a time lock mechanism. Due to the layout of the required access to the properties, signage is essential. Since the vertical easement is not contiguous with the lateral easements, the public’s use area must be made clear, and [Geffen’s] 10-foot privacy buffer must be explained. Signs will be installed and a schematic of the location and wording are attached; final wording will be submitted for review prior to installation.” Although the OTD includes lateral access in front of Geffen’s property, there is no such access right across the sandy beach owned by the Heidts—yet the plan fails to acknowledge the trespasses that are sure to occur once the vertical access is opened, and fails to acknowledge the absence of lifeguards and public toilets in the area.
The City of Malibu joined with Geffen in the original and several amended petitions, but ultimately withdrew and is not a party to the operative pleadings (Geffen’s sixth amended complaint, and the Coastal Commission’s cross-complaint) or to this appeal.
All section references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.
At oral argument, the Coastal Commission’s counsel represented that, notwithstanding the absence of any current petition for a writ of mandate, the case is being treated as a petition for a writ of mandate (§ 1085), that discovery has been conducted, that a hearing date has been set for later this year, and that there will be a hearing on declarations, not a trial with live testimony.
For the same reasons, I agree with the Heidts that the other cases they rely on (Weiner v. City of Los Angeles (1968)
I have said little about the Coastal Commission’s position because it is so obviously a matter of tactics, not law or equity. The Heidts’ position, right or wrong, is at a minimum stronger than Geffen’s because the OTD’s were issued over the Heidts’ opposition and without the slightest benefit to them. Aside from the sympathetic gloss this gives to their claims, there is the fact that they received no notice that, 19 years after Geffen got his permits, wheels that were frozen in place had started to turn and were rolling downhill and directly into their house. In any event, the cases relied on by the Coastal Commission are factually inapposite and legally irrelevant.
