Lead Opinion
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *1186 OPINION
Defendants, the owners of apartment buildings in the City of West Hollywood (City), seek review of a Court of Appeal judgment ordering them to comply with a City ordinance requiring a conditional use permit for the conversion of apartments into condominiums. Defendants contend they are exempt from the ordinance because at the time it was enacted they had secured final subdivision map approval and permission from the California Department of Real Estate to sell individual units in their buildings as condominiums.
For the reasons stated below, we agree with defendants and reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeal to the effect that the owners cannot convert their buildings into condominiums until they have complied with local conversion regulations, including those adopted after they received all the necessary approvals granted under the state regulatory scheme.
The citizens of West Hollywood voted to incorporate as a separate municipality on November 29, 1984, thereby assuming land use power that had been vested in the County of Los Angeles (County). On that date, the newly created city council enacted a moratorium on conversions of rental housing until a regulatory system could be instituted; nine months later, the council adopted ordinance No. 114U (Ordinance 114U), which amended the West Hollywood zoning ordinance by adding comprehensive regulations governing the conversion of multiple family rental units into condominiums.
In addition to establishing certain design standards — e.g., storage space, off-street parking — Ordinance 114U requires that the City make certain findings of fact before a conditional use permit for conversion can be approved, for example: (1) that the conversion will not adversely affect the supply of rental housing in the City, especially low- and moderate-income housing; and (2) that the vacancy factor of rental housing units in the City *1188 has exceeded 5 percent of the total housing inventory for a period of 90 days prior to conversion approval, unless (a) a new rental unit has been or will be added for each rental unit removed by conversion, (b) the developer will provide "inclusionary units or in-lieu fees," or (c) 80 percent of the existing tenants agree to purchase the units and no "substantial dislocation" of tenants will occur.
Prior to the City's incorporation, however, a number of apartment building owners within the City's future borders obtained tentative and final subdivision tract maps from the County to convert their existing rental units into condominiums, and, pursuant to a public report issued by the Department of Real Estate, secured approval for the sale of such condominiums. In 1986 the City filed a complaint for declaratory and injunctive relief, seeking to impose its condominium conversion regulations on the owners in this group who had not yet sold any units. The complaint alleged that 30 specific buildings with over 600 apartment units were subject to the ordinance.
The trial court denied the City's request for a preliminary injunction on the ground that defendants had (1) obtained preliminary and final tract map approval from the County, (2) recorded their final tract maps, and (3) obtained approval for the sale of the converted units from the Department of Real Estate. In reaching its decision, the trial court relied in part on Santa Monica Pines, Ltd. v. Rent Control Board (1984)
The Court of Appeal reversed with instructions to grant the preliminary injunction and overrule the demurrers. It held that defendants cannot convert their buildings into condominiums until they have complied with local conversion regulations, including those enacted after they obtained final tract map approval and permission to sell from the Department of Real Estate.
We granted review to decide whether defendants have a right under state law to convert their apartment units into condominiums because they complied with the state subdivision scheme.1 *1189
Further, as this court recognized in Griffin, supra,
(2a) Having established the prerequisites to condominium conversion, we must decide whether the City can impose additional conditions on defendants' right to convert even after they have obtained final subdivision tract map approval under the Map Act, met the requirements of the Common Interest Development Act, and obtained a final report granting the *1190 right to subdivide from the Department of Real Estate under the Subdivided Lands Act.
The issue arises because at the time the City enacted its ordinance, defendants had not yet sold a single unit as a condominium. Civil Code section
Defendants contend the requirement of the sale of a unit is purely technical. They reason that because they have satisfied all the elements necessary to the creation of a common interest development, the City cannot impose on them additional conditions. We agree with this contention. It is irrelevant whether defendants sold a unit before Ordinance 114U was enacted because they had already obtained all the necessary approvals to do so. Common ownership, which is achieved by sale of an individual unit, is only a definitional element of a condominium. (Ross, Condominium in California — The Verge of an Era (1963) 36 So.Cal.L.Rev. 351 ["Condominium means common ownership"].) It is not an element that must be satisfied before an owner's right to sell is immune from conditions imposed by a city on the exercise of that right.
Moreover, some of the Map Act's provisions are designed to safeguard the investments and expectations of developers involved in conversion projects. (See, e.g., §§ 66474.1, 66474.2, 65961.) We believe that setting a definite date for an owner to proceed with a condominium conversion free of subsequently enacted regulation comports with this intent.
Similar principles of fairness formed the basis of our unanimous holding in Youngblood v. Board of Supervisors
(1978)
Although the majority in Santa Monica Pines, supra,
We recognize that our conclusion is arguably inconsistent with the majority opinion in Santa Monica Pines. In that case the local rent control board denied developers who had obtained final subdivision map approval an exemption from a subsequently enacted rent control ordinance requiring them to satisfy additional conditions. After concluding that the developers had no vested right to proceed free of rent control, the majority also held that the local ordinance was not preempted by the Map Act. (4)(See fn. 5.) They reasoned that the City of Santa Monica's purpose in requiring apartment owners to obtain a permit before they could remove an apartment from the controlled rental housing market — i.e., to "effectuate the city's rent control law" — was distinct from the purposes of the Map Act, which was stated to be "fundamentally to control the design and improvement of subdivisions and to protect the buying public from exploitation." (Santa Monica Pines, supra,
Contrary to the City's contention, Griffin, supra,
Nor is this case controlled by Avco Community Developers,Inc. v. South Coast Regional Com. (1976)
Nor are we confronted by the same policy consideration that inspired the Avco decision. In that case we were concerned that to grant a developer a vested right to proceed on issuance of a subdivision map, or any other preliminary approval, would impair the government's right to control land *1193
use policy by impressing lots previously subdivided — but on which no building had been constructed — with an "exemption of indeterminate duration from the requirements of any future zoning laws." (Avco, supra, 17 Cal.3d at pp. 797-798; see alsoKappadahl v. Alcan Pacific Co. (1963)
We thus reject the City's contention that subsequently enacted legislation must be enforceable against a subdivider, absent a vested right to proceed, in order for cities to exercise meaningful planning and land use control. In this case we are concerned only with landowners in defendants' position, i.e., those who secured every necessary permit for a conversion project that required no further construction, and thus no additional government approvals. That defendants have yet to sell a unit is a trivial factor that has no effect on the City's zoning and planning power. Indeed, consequences to the zoning power are scarcely different from what inevitably results whenever a permit is deemed to be final.
Moreover, there is no substance to the distinction the City draws between its ability to regulate conversion when no units have been conveyed and its inability to do so when even a single unit in an apartment building has been sold. While a conveyance does complete the conversion process pursuant to Civil Code section
We also reject the City's claim that even though defendants have all the discretionary approvals necessary for condominium conversion, they still need, in the absence of vested rights, either a vesting tentative map or a development agreement in order to proceed free of subsequent local regulation.6 *1194 (5) The purpose of the vesting tentative map and the development agreement is to allow a developer who needs additional discretionary approvals to complete a long-term development project as approved, regardless of any intervening changes in local regulations. (See Januta Boyd, DevelopmentAgreements and Uncertainties in the Development Approval Process (1982) 5 Real Prop. L. Rptr. 49; § 66498.9 [vesting tentative map].) 2d In this instance defendants did not need a vesting tentative map or a development agreement with the City because no further discretionary permits were required in order for them to proceed.
First, section 27281.5 is inapplicable on its face to Ordinance 114U. The ordinance does not purport to limit defendants' right to convey their entire buildings, only their right to convert individual units for use as condominiums without obtaining a conditional use permit. Even if section 27281.5 could be read to require recording restrictions on conversions, however, the section also declares that it is not to be construed to diminish a governmental entity's authority to impose such restrictions. (§ 27281.5, subd. (c).) Local authorities have the power to regulate condominium conversions under both the Map Act (§ 66411) and the police power (Cal. Const., art. XI, § 7). (See Santa MonicaPines, supra, 35 Cal.3d at pp. 868-869.) Section 27281.5 by its terms does not diminish that authority.
Second, there is a general presumption that each person knows the governing law. (See, e.g., People v. Munroe (1893)
Finally, the conclusion that Ordinance 114U applies to defendants, even though the City did not record its restrictions against defendants' title, is supported by considering the consequences that would flow from a contrary holding. (SeeEstate of Ryan (1943)
The judgment of the Court of Appeal is reversed with directions to affirm the order of dismissal.
Lucas, C.J., Panelli, J., Arabian, J., and Baxter, J., concurred.
Subsequently, the City, under ordinance No. 245U, issued substitute conditional use permits approving the conversion of those units purchased while the appeal was pending in the Court of Appeal, and granting the right to convert other units pursuant to settlement agreements with the owners of entire apartment buildings.
Similarly, development agreements (§§ 65864-65869.5) between a developer and a local government limit the power of that government to apply newly enacted ordinances to ongoing developments. Unless otherwise provided in the agreement, the rules, regulations, and official policies governing permitted uses, density, design, improvement, and construction are those in effect when the agreement is executed. (§ 65866.)
Dissenting Opinion
The newly incorporated City of West Hollywood (City) sought to impose a permit requirement on condominium developers who had complied with the state scheme regulating condominium conversions, but who had not as yet sold any condominium units or undertaken any renovation. The majority frustrate the City's efforts to set land use policy by denying it the authority to regulate the change of use involved in a condominium conversion project, even though the developers failed to demonstrate any detrimental reliance on the final subdivision map approval they had obtained. Thus, the majority confer on those who plan condominium conversions without new construction a vested right to develop once they obtain final map approval, in flat contradiction of the vested rights doctrine which has been settled in this state for many years. Accordingly, I dissent.
It is well established that a municipality has authority to regulate land use within its boundaries unless the state has preempted that authority. (Cal. Const., art. XI, § 7; Gov. Code, §§ 66427, 66427.1, subd. (e), 66427.4, 65850.) The municipality's police power includes authority to regulate the conversion of rental housing to condominiums. (Griffin Development Co. v.City of Oxnard (1985)
We have made it clear that the requirements of the Map Act do not preempt local ordinances that require a condominium conversion use permit substantially the same as the permit requirement at issue here. (Griffin Development Co. v. City ofOxnard, supra, 39 Cal.3d at pp. 260-262.) The majority's assertion that the Map Act provides "the" requirements applicable to condominium conversion flouts our decisions in GriffinDevelopment and Santa Monica Pines and improperly denies the municipality's authority to regulate land use within the community.
Local governments planning for the future cannot be unduly hampered by land use decisions of the past. (Avco CommunityDevelopers, Inc. v. South Coast Regional Com. (1976)
The vested rights doctrine is based on the doctrine of equitable estoppel. (Avco Community Developers, Inc. v. SouthCoast Regional Com., supra,
Unless some vested right is involved, a developer has no right to demand that the law in effect at the time of his or her first application with the municipality be applied to the ultimate decision whether to permit subdivision, building, or conversion. (Santa Monica Pines, Ltd. v. Rent Control Board, supra,
While a developer has a right to a final subdivision map after complying with tentative map conditions (Youngblood v. Boardof Supervisors (1978)
It is also clear that the completion of the permit process itself does not convey any vested rights. Even after the issuance of a building permit, new ordinances may apply unless the developer has detrimentally relied on the permit to the extent that a vested right has developed. "[E]ven after a permit has been issued, it may be revoked by an administrative body on the basis of a subsequent change in the zoning laws unless the permittee has made substantial improvements in good faith reliance on the permit." (Selby Realty Co. v. City of SanBuenaventura (1973)
As Justice Mosk succinctly and correctly explained in an earlier case: "The rule long established in this state and in most other jurisdictions is that the mere acquisition of a building permit affords a builder no protection against a change in the zoning laws adopted after its issuance and that, in order to continue the construction of a project initiated prior to a change in the law, a builder must have obtained a vested right by making substantial expenditures for construction in good faith reliance on the permit prior to the effective date of the new law. [Citations.] Although the foregoing cases generally involve a change in the zoning law which thereafter prohibited a use previously permitted, the same principle is applicable where, as here, a further requirement is imposed by change in the law, i.e. the need for an additional permit. . . ." (San Diego CoastRegional Com. v. See the Sea, Limited (1973)
Thus, until today, neither the approval of a tentative or final subdivision map nor the completion of the permit process has been considered to confer a vested right to proceed with development free of the requirements of newly enacted land use ordinances. (Santa Monica Pines, Ltd. v. Rent Control Board, supra,
35 Cal. 3d at pp. 865-867; Avco Community Development, Inc. v.South Coast Regional Com., supra,
Accordingly, developers and their attorneys have heeded the following advice from the experts: "[T]he subdivider does not automatically obtain a vested right to complete the project on compliance with tentative map *1199 conditions and approval of the final map by the local agency. [Citations.] Until the developer's rights have vested under California's vested rights doctrine, the right to complete the project remains subject to subsequent police power enactments by the local agency and subsequent state legislation." (Curtin Merritt, Cal. Subdivision Map Act Practice, supra, § 6.28, at p. 146.) "Once a developer has obtained a use permit for a condominium project, together with tentative and final map approval, he is not necessarily `home free' with respect to building the project. The project may still have to run the gauntlet of a down-zoning referendum or adoption of a rent control ordinance." (1 Hanna, Cal. Condominium Handbook, supra, § 16.30, at p. 549.) I see no justification for the majority's deviation from settled law, which is apparently well understood among practitioners.
The majority opinion is inconsistent with legislative intent, as well as with case law and commentary. The Legislature does not consider final subdivision map approval under Government Code sections
The majority assert that fairness to the developer requires that new ordinances not apply after final map approval. They rely on Youngblood v. Board of Supervisors, supra,
Whether or not subdivision map approval is the last application process through which the state regulatory scheme requires the condominium developer who plans no building to go, approval of the map should not bar the application of later changes in land use law unless the developer can demonstrate detrimental reliance on the map approval. The developer in this case has not even attempted to demonstrate such detrimental reliance. I fail to see how a developer who merely plans to change the nature of ownership of a building, without undertaking any construction or other expenses, has detrimentally relied on the subdivision map approval to the extent that he or she is equitably entitled to estop the government from applying its general land use regulations to his property. The majority silently erode the vested rights doctrine when they confer what can only be termed a vested right to develop without requiring any showing of detrimental reliance.
Kennard, J., concurred.
Appellant's petition for a rehearing was denied April 25, 1991. Broussard, J., and Kennard, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted. *1201
