CRESTA BELLA, LP, Plaintiff and Appellant, v. POWAY UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT, Defendant and Respondent.
No. D060789
Fourth Dist., Div. One.
July 31, 2013.
218 Cal. App. 4th 438
COUNSEL
Best Best & Krieger, James B. Gilpin, Tyree K. Dorward and Matthew L. Green for Defendant and Respondent.
OPINION
HALLER, J.—Poway Unified School District (the District) imposed school impact fees on Cresta Bella, LP (Cresta Bella), for a residential development
We hold that under the statutory scheme applicable to school impact fees, the fees should not be imposed for the square footage already in existence at the time of the new development project, absent a study that reasonably supports that reconstruction of preexisting square footage increases student population. The District‘s school impact fee study did not make this showing. Accordingly, Cresta Bella is entitled to a refund of the portion of the fees derived from the preexisting square footage in its project. We reverse the judgment and remand the matter to the trial court with instructions to grant the mandate petition and order the refund. Given our holding providing relief under the mandate petition, we need not reach the constitutional taking and declaratory relief claims.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
To pay for the construction of school facilities necessitated by student population increases, school districts are authorized to impose school impact fees for new residential construction. The fees are subject to statutorily defined maximum amounts for each square foot of the new residential construction. (
Cresta Bella owned an apartment complex consisting of 248 units and 258,169 square feet. It demolished this complex and built a new apartment complex consisting of 368 units and 371,612 square feet. Thus, the new
In June 2009, Cresta Bella paid the school impact fees under protest. Cresta Bella argued it should not have to pay fees for the preexisting square footage in the project because the District did not evaluate whether preexisting square footage in new residential construction impacts school facilities by increasing student population. It claimed the District had improperly charged fees for the entire square footage of its project, resulting in $1,004,277.41 in excess fees.1
After exhausting its administrative remedies, in May 2010 Cresta Bella filed a petition for writ of mandate in superior court seeking a refund of the alleged excess fees. It also pleaded causes of action alleging an unconstitutional taking and requesting declaratory relief. To refute Cresta Bella‘s challenge to the imposition of fees for the preexisting square footage, the District argued there was no improper fee calculation because in an attached exhibit (Exhibit H) the SFNA considers the impact of preexisting units in new residential construction.
After considering the parties’ evidentiary presentations and arguments, the trial court, citing Exhibit H of the SFNA, concluded that the District had not imposed an improper or unconstitutional fee. Accordingly, the court denied the writ petition and entered judgment in favor of the District on all claims.
DISCUSSION
To review Cresta Bella‘s challenge to the school impact fees, we first summarize the statutes and case authority governing school impact fees. We then set forth information in the SFNA and other matters relevant to the District‘s imposition of the fees and the trial court‘s decision denying Cresta Bella‘s request for a partial refund.
As we shall detail below, under the statutory scheme and relevant case authority, a school district that qualifies for a Level 2 fee must set the maximum amount of the fee based on a rather complex formula that incorporates a variety of statutorily defined variables. The Level 2 statutory formula setting the maximum fee does not allow the school district to recoup the total actual costs estimated for new school facilities necessitated by the
The District‘s SFNA concludes that the District may properly charge school impact fees for reconstruction of existing residential units (i.e., preexisting square footage) because the statutorily defined maximum Level 2 rate does not allow the District to recoup the estimated actual costs of constructing new school facilities to accommodate projected new students from newly added (nonpreexisting) square footage. However, as we shall explain, the SFNA does not contain any information showing that reconstruction of preexisting square footage contributes to an increase in student population in the District. Accordingly, the District‘s imposition of fees for the preexisting square footage in Cresta Bella‘s project does not pass the reasonable relationship test.
A. The Statutory Scheme
Legislation authorizing school impact fees was enacted to provide a ” ‘reasonable method of financing the expansion and construction of school facilities resulting from new economic development within the district.’ ” (Shapell Industries, Inc. v. Governing Board (1991) 1 Cal.App.4th 218, 227 [1 Cal.Rptr.2d 818] (Shapell).) To this end,
Further, the school district must calculate the maximum Level 2 fee that may be imposed per square foot of residential construction based on a formula set forth in
In addition to these specific provisions governing imposition of school impact fees on new residential development, the Government Code also contains provisions (known as the Mitigation Fee Act;
“[F]acilities fees are justified only to the extent that they are limited to the cost of increased services made necessary by virtue of the development. [Citations.] The Board imposing the fee must therefore show that a valid method was used for arriving at the fee in question, ‘one which established a reasonable relationship between the fee charged and the burden posed by the development.’ ” (Shapell, supra, 1 Cal.App.4th at p. 235.)
In the context of school impact fees, the reasonable relationship standard can be satisfied by showing (1) the projected total amount of new housing expected to be built within the district; (2) the estimated number of students to be generated by the new housing; and (3) the estimated cost to provide the necessary school facilities for that approximate number of students. (Shapell, supra, 1 Cal.App.4th at p. 235; Warmington Old Town Associates v. Tustin Unified School Dist. (2002) 101 Cal.App.4th 840, 860 [124 Cal.Rptr.2d 744] (Warmington).) This showing may properly be derived from districtwide estimations concerning anticipated new residential development and impact on school facilities. (Garrick Development Co. v. Hayward Unified School Dist. (1992) 3 Cal.App.4th 320, 335 [4 Cal.Rptr.2d 897] (Garrick); Canyon North Co. v. Conejo Valley Unified School Dist. (1993) 19 Cal.App.4th 243, 251 [23 Cal.Rptr.2d 495]; Warmington, supra, 101 Cal.App.4th at p. 862.) The district is not required to evaluate the impact of a particular development project before imposing fees on a developer; rather, the required nexus is established based on the justifiable imposition of fees “on a class of development projects rather than particular ones.” (Garrick, supra, 3 Cal.App.4th at p. 335.) Further, because the fee determination process “will necessarily involve predictions regarding population trends and future building costs, it is not to be expected that the figures will be exact. Nor will courts concern themselves with the District‘s methods of marshalling and evaluating scientific data. [Citations.] Yet the court must be able to assure itself that before imposing the fee the District engaged in a reasoned analysis designed to establish the requisite connection between the amount of the fee imposed and the burden created.” (Shapell, supra, 1 Cal.App.4th at p. 235.)
In Warmington, supra, 101 Cal.App.4th 840, the court recognized that the required reasonable relationship between school facility needs and fees on new residential construction does not necessarily exist when a district imposes fees on the demolition and reconstruction of already existing units. The Warmington court evaluated the statutory scheme and concluded that although the statutes did not require a district to exclude preexisting square footage from the fees for new residential construction, the district could reasonably include the preexisting square footage only if its fee study
Warmington held that under the reasonable relationship standard set forth in
B. The District‘s SFNA
As mandated by the Level 2 statute (
Using the statutory formula set forth in
In addition to calculating the Level 2 rate, the SFNA also evaluates whether the $3.89 Level 2 fee complied with the statutory reasonable relationship standard and concludes it did. In support of this conclusion, the SFNA compiles the actual costs of constructing existing schools in the District and using these figures calculates that the estimated 147 new students generated by the anticipated new residential housing in the District would actually result in $9,259,987 in school facility costs, which in turn could support a fee of $14.70 per square foot of new residential housing (i.e., $9,259,987 school facility cost divided by 629,770 total square feet of new future units). The SFNA concludes: “The amount to be included in the [Level 2 fee] is specified by statute. . . . The estimated average school facilities cost impacts on the School District per square foot of residential development is $14.70. As the actual school facilities cost impacts per square foot of residential construction is greater than the [Level 2 fee], it is reasonable for the School District to determine that the [Level 2 fee] of $3.89 per square foot . . . [is] roughly proportional and reasonably related to the actual impacts caused by residential development on the School District.”
In an attached exhibit (Exhibit H), the SFNA also considers an estimation that some of the projected new residential units would arise from “[r]esidential [r]edevelopment“; i.e., the demolition and replacement of existing units with new units. Based on a review of historical data, the SFNA estimates that 23 of the 269 new units would be replacement units, which would result in 131 estimated new students (instead of 147 new students). Using the actual cost data from past school construction in the District, the SFNA then calculates that the estimated actual school facilities costs for the 131 net new students would be $8,307,585, which translates to a fee of $13.19 per square foot of new residential housing (i.e., $8,307,585 total cost for net new students divided by 629,770 total square footage of all new units, including
After complying with the public review requirements and holding a public hearing on August 18, 2008, the District passed a resolution adopting the SFNA and “Level 2 Fees in the amount of $3.89 per square foot of new non-mitigated residential construction, including square footage realized as a result of demolition and reconstruction not previously mitigated . . . .” (Italics added, boldface omitted.) Thus, the District‘s resolution adopted the SFNA‘s recommendation that the fees be imposed on preexisting square footage.
When denying Cresta Bella‘s request for relief in the ensuing litigation, the trial court found that in Exhibit H of the SFNA, the District had considered the cost impact of the preexisting residential units. The court concluded the District‘s methodology satisfied the reasonable relationship test required by the statutory scheme and constitutional principles.
C. Analysis
A school district “has the initial burden of producing evidence sufficient to demonstrate . . . a reasonable relationship between the [school impact] fee charged and the burden posed by the development.” (Home Builders Assn. of Tulare/Kings Counties, Inc. v. City of Lemoore (2010) 185 Cal.App.4th 554, 562 [112 Cal.Rptr.3d 7].) If the district meets this burden, the developer challenging the fee must “show that the record before the local agency clearly did not support the underlying determinations regarding the reasonableness of the relationship between the fee and the development.”
In the context of school impact fees imposed on new residential development, the Warmington court recognized that the statutory reasonable relationship standard is satisfied if there is a connection between the new construction activity and an increase in student population. (Warmington, supra, 101 Cal.App.4th at p. 860.) Furthermore, in the context of fees on development that includes both newly added and preexisting square footage, Warmington held that although the statutory scheme does not mandate a credit for preexisting square footage, the imposition of fees on preexisting square footage nevertheless must pass muster under the reasonable relationship standard. To justify fees on preexisting square footage, Warmington interpreted the reasonable relationship standard to require a showing that reconstruction of preexisting square footage also contributes to an increase in student population. If the school district does not show this connection between replacement of preexisting square footage and increase in students, the fees may be imposed only on the newly added square footage that has been shown to increase student population. (Warmington, supra, 101 Cal.App.4th at pp. 854–867.)
We agree with Warmington‘s conclusions on these points. Given that the entire focus of the school impact fee statutory scheme is to impose development fees for increases in student population, the reasonable relationship standard properly turns on the connection between new construction and an increase in student population. (See, e.g.,
It is apparent from the record of the proceedings before the trial court that Cresta Bella did not dispute the District‘s calculation of the Level 2 fee of
Consistent with the reasonable relationship test delineated in Shapell, supra, 1 Cal.App.4th at page 235, the District‘s SFNA shows the projected amount of districtwide new housing is 629,770 square feet; the estimated number of students generated by this new housing is 147 students; and the estimated costs to provide school facilities for these new students is $9,259,987 or $14.70 per square foot of new residential construction. Further, in Exhibit H the SFNA reflects that under its methodology the demolition and reconstruction of preexisting units in residential construction projects will not generate new students. Thus, based on the preexisting units factor, the SFNA reduces the projected new students to 131 and the estimated school facilities costs to $8,307,585 or $13.19 per square foot. The SFNA then concludes that the District may reasonably impose fees on preexisting square footage because under the statutory formula setting the maximum Level 2 rate at $3.89 per square foot, the District cannot recoup all of its facilities costs generated by the estimated new residential construction.
The District argues that unlike the circumstances in Warmington, its imposition of the school impact fee on preexisting square footage satisfied the reasonable relationship standard because in Exhibit H the SFNA considers the reduced cost impact from preexisting square footage. We are not persuaded.
As stated, without a showing that reconstruction of preexisting square footage increases student population, there is no reasonable relationship
There is no information or analysis in the District‘s SFNA reflecting that the District can be expected to incur an increase in student population based on the demolition and reconstruction of preexisting square footage in the District‘s residential units. Under the analysis in Exhibit H, the District‘s position is that it is reasonable to charge fees for reconstruction of preexisting square footage (even though it has not been shown to increase student population) because (due to the statutory formula setting a maximum fee) the District cannot charge fees to fully recoup the costs generated by newly added square footage. Hence, in the District‘s view, fees on preexisting square footage are reasonable because a developer is not being charged more than the burden created by newly added square footage. The problem with this position is that it is the statutory cap, not the reconstruction of preexisting units, that has burdened the District with uncompensated costs arising from newly added units. In short, under the District‘s study, the reconstruction of preexisting units is not the cause of the increased financial burden on the District; rather, newly added units, combined with the statutory cap, cause this burden.
There may be circumstances in a particular school district‘s housing reconstruction trends that could support a correlation between reconstruction of preexisting residential units and the generation of new students; however, it is not contained in the SFNA under consideration in this case. Thus, the District did not carry its burden to produce evidence showing a reasonable relationship between the need for new school facilities and the replacement of preexisting square footage. Accordingly, the District‘s failure to exclude preexisting square footage from its fees for new residential construction was arbitrary and unreasonable under the statutory scheme, and Cresta Bella is entitled to a refund for the fees imposed on the preexisting square footage in its project.
Given our conclusion that Cresta Bella is entitled to a partial refund under the statutory reasonable relationship standard, we need not reach its constitutional taking claim nor its request for declaratory relief.
DISPOSITION
The judgment is reversed and the matter remanded to the trial court. The trial court shall grant the petition for writ of mandate and order a partial refund to Cresta Bella based on the portion of the fees derived from the preexisting square footage in the development project. Respondent to pay appellant‘s costs on appeal.
Huffman, Acting P. J., and Nares, J., concurred.
Notes
Subsequent unspecified statutory references are to the Government Code.
