204 Cal. App. 3d 1124 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1988
Opinion
Community Development Commission of Mendocino County (CDC) appeals from a judgment denying issuance of a peremptory writ of mandate directing the City of Fort Bragg (Fort Bragg) to reinstate a conditional use permit which it found to have expired or to set aside its finding that the permit had expired. The judgment also denied declaratory relief to the effect that a City of Fort Bragg Municipal Ordinance is unconstitutional.
At issue in this appeal is the interpretation of Fort Bragg’s Municipal Code section 18.76.100 which provides for the expiration of conditional use permits in one year of the date of issuance “unless substantial evidence of use is in progress.” We hold the trial court erroneously interpreted this statute as requiring actual on-site construction. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment.
I
On October 26, 1982, CDC, a public housing agency, and Fort Bragg entered into an agreement requiring both parties to cooperate in the development of affordable housing; CDC agreed to obtain federal funding for the project and Fort Bragg agreed to facilitate construction by granting variances where reasonable and necessary. Thereafter, CDC transferred a preexisting Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) 30-unit housing commitment from unincorporated Mendocino County to Fort Bragg. HUD approved of the development of 30 units of affordable housing on 2 sites located by CDC; 19 units at 531 Cypress and 11 units at 558 South Sanderson Way. In this appeal we are concerned only with the South Sanderson Way development.
CDC applied for a use permit as to the Sanderson site only. It did not apply for a use permit as to the Cypress site as it had been informed by the
Following notice and a public hearing, on April 26, 1983, the zoning administrator for Fort Bragg approved CDC’s proposed 11-unit project at the Sanderson site, subject to numerous conditions such as water pressure, sewage, and drainage. CDC thereafter purchased the Sanderson property at a cost of $95,000, obtained HUD approvals for engineering and architectural studies, expended $85,000 on architects, civil engineers, soils engineers, a survey and a topographical map.
On July 3, 1984, Fort Bragg’s building inspector, James Fite, informed CDC by letter of the amount of fees required for CDC’s building permits on both the Cypress and Sanderson sites. In this letter, Fite also advised CDC that a planning department official discovered that the “use permit for Sanderson Way had expired as of April 26, 1984.”
Although CDC did not request an extension of USP 9-83, the zoning administrator, following public hearing, granted a one-year extension of the permit on July 24, 1984. When a neighbor appealed this determination, the Fort Bragg City Council conducted its own extension hearing on August 27, 1984, and reversed the previously granted extension. CDC’s position throughout these proceedings was that an extension was unnecessary as the original USP 9-83 had not expired. At the hearing CDC requested a determination of the validity of the original permit notwithstanding the city council’s decision concerning the appeal.
Thereafter, on October 22, 1984, the city council conducted a hearing to determine the validity of USP 9-83. Citing CDC’s expenditure of funds, hiring of numerous engineers and architects, removal of fixtures in preparation for construction, continued processing of the project with HUD and submittal of plans to the building department to obtain a permit, the city attorney presented his recommendation that the city council find the permit had not expired based on evidence of CDC’s substantial use of the permit. Further, the city attorney informed the city council that because of the particular requirements of the HUD approval process, CDC could not expend funds for the building permit fees until the construction contract was awarded to a contractor. Upon the payment of these fees and a valid use permit, the building inspector would issue the necessary building permits. At the hearing, future neighbors of the Sanderson project expressed their objections to it on the basis that they had not received notice of the initial April 1983 hearing at which USP 9-83 was granted and that it would introduce a blight to the community. The city council found that USP 9-83
At a December 17, 1984, public hearing to reconsider its decisions of August 27, 1984, and October 22, 1984, the city council reaffirmed its decisions.
On November 20, 1984, CDC and Rhonda Hornbeck,
The judgment denied CDC mandamus and injunctive relief and in the declaratory relief action determined that Municipal Code section 18.76.100 is valid and constitutional. In its statement of decision the trial court found that Fort Bragg had not abused its discretion in finding USP 9-83 was invalid or by reversing the zoning administrator’s extension of the permit. In connection with the permit’s validity, the trial court found that USP 9-83 expired on April 26, 1984, because “no substantial work” had been done on the property. The court set forth that under the terms of Municipal Code section 18.76.100, “substantial evidence of use in progress” had not been demonstrated by CDC, noting that residential use had not commenced on the property, and on-site construction expenses had not been incurred. The court stated “[t]he only activities undertaken by CDC with respect to this site related to steps preparatory to its application for a building permit.”
The court determined that Municipal Code section 18.76.100 was not vague. It found the ordinance to be valid and reasonably certain and capable of interpretation “in accordance with legislative intent and with a common understanding of the language used.” The court interpreted the purpose of the ordinance to be the automatic expiration of the permit when the permittee has “neither actually used the land for the purpose stated in the permit nor substantially begun construction work necessary for the use .... ‘[E]vidence of use’ requires that the permittee actually use or occupy the land to a substantial degree for the purpose stated in the permit.”
The court also found that the city council properly denied an extension of USP 9-83. In response to the estoppel claim, the court found that CDC had not performed substantial work in reliance on the permit or upon representations of city officials.
II
Validity of USP 9-83
CDC argues that the trial court erroneously construed Municipal Code section 18.76.100 as intending “to cause the automatic expiration of use permits where the permittee has neither actually used the land for the purpose stated in the permit nor substantially begun construction work necessary for the use.” Thus, CDC contends, the trial court incorrectly found that CDC’s failure to actually construct buildings on the Sanderson Way site constituted a lack of “substantial evidence of use in progress.” We agree and hold the trial court’s determination, that the permit had expired for lack of substantial evidence of use in progress, was arbitrary and contrary to authority.
It is settled that the purpose of statutes or ordinances providing for automatic expiration or revocation of use permits when work has not commenced or a use established is to prevent the reservation of land for future purposes when the permittee has no good faith intent to presently commence upon the proposed use. (Upton v. Gray (1969) 269 Cal.App.2d 352, 357 [74 Cal.Rptr. 783]; Morgan v. County of San Diego (1971) 19 Cal.App.3d 636, 641 [97 Cal.Rptr. 180].) In Morgan, the court examined the building department official’s exercise of discretion in determining whether the permit should be renewed. The permit provided for its own automatic expiration in six months, if not renewed. The official charged
As in Morgan, CDC’s development project herein involved complex governmental and financial commitments. HUD, as the financier of this low-cost housing development, required review and approval of each step of the project, from site location, to architectural and engineering studies, to the bidding of the actual construction contract. During the term of the use permit, CDC purchased the land, hired architects and engineers for requisite studies and continued to actively pursue the project with HUD. Further, the city council had been informed that the only reason a building permit had not been issued, other than the determination of an invalid use permit, was CDC’s failure to pay the building permit fees. The city council was also informed that the reason for this nonpayment was that HUD’s review process demanded such fees be paid by the contractor to whom the bid was awarded. A successful bidder on the construction contract had not been determined at the time CDC submitted its plans to the Fort Bragg building inspector for review. In fact, opening of the bid procedure had been delayed in July and August 1984 because of the city’s building permit review process and because of an appeal of the use permit extension.
The record in this case clearly demonstrates CDC was proceeding with a good faith intent to commence upon the proposed use. It is undisputed that CDC pursued and obtained a funding commitment from HUD; that it purchased the Sanderson property at a cost of $95,000; hired architects and engineers for the performance of preconstruction work at a cost of $85,000; had soil borings performed; arranged for the removal of two small structures; and submitted plans to Fort Bragg’s building inspection for “plan check review.” The trial court’s determination that substantial evidence of use was not shown because of the absence of actual on-site construction
Ill
We must next consider whether the trial court’s erroneous interpretation of the expiration provision prejudiced CDC and requires reversal of the judgment. Thus, we must examine the propriety of the trial court’s findings that, notwithstanding the permit’s expiration, it had been improperly issued in the first instance.
The city council, in determining that USP 9-83 was invalid, relied on three specific factual findings; that, CDC did not demonstrate substantial evidence of use of the permit; that mitigation measures contained in the negative declaration and conditions of approval for the project were insufficient to mitigate environmental impacts on traffic, drainage and water, and that written notice of the April 26, 1983, zoning administrator’s hearing was not received by property owners in the area. The trial court found the city council’s decision and findings did not constitute an abuse of discretion and were supported by the weight of the evidence.
The trial court’s determination does not withstand analysis. By the terms of Municipal Code section 18.76.100 itself, expiration would only occur if there was no substantial evidence of use in progress. Thus, citation to the project’s environmental impact is superfluous to a determination of expiration. Also, the city council seems to have been under the misconception that it was to determine whether notice was actually received by all the adjacent property owners as opposed to determining if proper notice was given.
Additionally, even if we were to construe the trial court’s determination of the permit’s invalidity, based on these reasons, as constituting an attempted revocation of the permit, the judgment would not be saved. A
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded. The trial court is directed to order reinstatement of use permit USP 9-83 and issue a writ of mandate commanding respondent Fort Bragg to issue a building permit. Appellants are awarded costs on appeal.
White, P. J., and Barry-Deal, J., concurred.
In its statement of decision, the trial court dismissed the case as to Rhonda Hornbeck.
All further statutory reference is to the Code of Civil Procedure unless otherwise noted.
In addition to Fort Bragg, the petition also named Leo G. Meskis, Andre Schade and Matthew V. Huber, members of the city council, as respondents. By pretrial order, the petition against these individuals was dismissed.
As we have decided the instant appeal on the basis of the validity of the original use permit, we need not consider CDC’s constitutional arguments that Municipal Code section 18.76.100 is unconstitutionally vague; that the expiration provision deprives a permittee of procedural due process; and that the city council’s decision of invalidity constituted a violation of equal protection.