EMBARCADERO MUNICIPAL IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT, Plaintiff and Appellant,
v.
COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA, et al., Defendants and Respondents.
Court of Appeal, Second District, Division Six.
*7 Goodwin & Associates, Robert E. Goodwin, Magda Lopez, Livermore, for Plaintiff and Appellant.
Stephen Shane Stark, County Counsel, Alan L. Seltzer, Chief Deputy, for Defendant and Respondent County of Santa Barbara.
Hatch and Parent, Stanley M. Roden, Steven A. Amerikaner, Joseph D. Allen, John D. Bakker, Santa Barbara, for Defendants and Respondents Goleta West *8 Sanitary District and Santa Barbara Metropolitan Transit District.
COFFEE, J.
Defendant County of Santa Barbara (County) approved a resort hotel development on a 73-acre beachfront parcel north of the City of Santa Barbara. The parcel is within the boundaries of plaintiff Embarcadero Municipal Improvement District (EMID). The County conditioned its approval of the hotel on the annexation of the parcel to two other special districts, defendants Goleta West Sanitary District (Sanitary District) and Santa Barbara Metropolitan Transit District (Transit District). The annexation could only go forward if the County and the affected districts agreed to an allocation of future tax increment generated by the hotel. EMID challenges the amount of tax increment the County allocated to it in the tax allocation agreement. The trial court sustained the demurrers of the defendants without leave to amend on the ground that the action is barred by the statute of limitations in Code of Civil Procedure section 863.
We conclude that the action is barred both by the statute of limitations and EMID's lack of standing. We will affirm the judgment.
FACTS
EMID was formed in 1960 and contains approximately 1,200 acres. Highway 101 separates the 73-acre parcel from the remainder of EMID's service area. EMID has not provided services to the parcel because, until recently, it was undeveloped. The remainder of the district contains a residential subdivision and agricultural land to which EMID provides or has provided sewer service, parks and recreation, drainage system and buffer-zone maintenance, trail installation and maintenance, insect control, trash collection, cable television installation and emergency services. From 1980 through 1998, EMID received 17.6 percent of the property taxes generated within its boundaries. The taxes are collected on its behalf by the County.
The County Board of Supervisors approved an application to build a resort hotel on the 73-acre parcel. One of the conditions of approval was annexation of the parcel to Sanitary District and Transit District.
On October 28, 1997, the County, Sanitary District and Transit District adopted joint resolutions agreeing to the following allocation of tax increment generated by the hotel for the tax year 1998-1999 and following: 10.26 percent to the County, 6 percent to Sanitary District, 0.354 percent to Transit District, and 1 percent to EMID. Because EMID failed to adopt a resolution agreeing to the property tax exchange, the County determined its property tax allocation. (Rev. & Tax Code, § 99.01, subd. (a)(4).)[1] After receiving the joint resolutions, the executive officer of SBLAFCO issued a certificate of filing, and SBLAFCO approved the annexation on October 30,1997.
After the annexation and further negotiations, the County raised EMID's allocation to 6 percent and reduced its share accordingly. The Sanitary District refused EMID's request to reallocate its 6 percent share.
EMID filed a petition for writ of mandate (traditional) and complaint for declaratory relief, injunction and constructive *9 trust on October 27, 1999, challenging the tax allocation agreement. EMID asserts that it was not given proper notice of the tax allocation negotiations and that various County officials unlawfully colluded to reduce EMID's rightful share of property tax revenues. The trial court sustained respondents' demurrers without leave to amend, ruling the tax allocation was "inextricably intertwined" with the annexation approval and subject to the 60-day statute of limitations in Code of Civil Procedure section 6.
On this appeal, EMID reiterates the arguments it made in the trial court that its lawsuit is not barred by Code of Civil Procedure section 863 because its challenge is not to the validity of the annexation but rather the tax allocation and the negotiation process that preceded it. It asserts its action is timely because it is governed by the three-year statute of limitations in Code of Civil Procedure section 338 and/or the four-year statute of limitations in Code of Civil Procedure section 343.
We asked the parties to provide supplemental briefing on the issue of EMID's standing to challenge the property tax allocation.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
When a demurrer is sustained, we determine whether the complaint states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. (Blank v. Kirwan (1985)
DISCUSSION
An annexation is a "reorganization" subject to the Cortese-Knox Local Government Reorganization Act of 1985, Government Code section 56000 et seq. (Act). The Act is a broad statutory scheme covering changes of organization of districts as well as cities. Government Code section 56100 declares in part, "... this division provides the sole and exclusive authority and procedure for the initiation, conduct and completion of changes of organization and reorganization of cities and districts." Each county has a local agency formation commission (LAFCO) charged with approving or disapproving proposed reorganizations. (Gov.Code, § 56325.)
For annexations involving special districts that will provide services not previously provided to an area, the affected districts must negotiate a tax allocation agreement with the county. (Rev. & Tax. Code, § 99, subd. (b)(4).) If the district(s) and county reach an agreement, it is forwarded to LAFCO. The LAFCO executive officer then issues a certificate of filing that permits the annexation proposal to be set for public hearing and approved. (Former Gov.Code, § 56828, subd. (g), repealed and reenacted as § 56658, subd. (g), without substantive change by Stats.2000, ch. 761, § 90.) If no tax allocation agreement is negotiated, the executive officer cannot issue a certificate of filing and the annexation proceedings terminate. (Rev. & Tax.Code, § 99, subd. (b)(6).)
Standing
Although not raised by the parties, it is necessary to address the threshold question of whether EMID has standing to challenge the property tax allocation. (See Pillsbury v. Karmgard (1994)
Ordinarily, a petitioner seeking a writ of mandate must show that it is beneficially interested in the outcome. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1086; Grant v. Board of Medical Examiners (1965)
In San Miguel Consolidated Fire Protection Dist. v. Davis (1994)
In its supplemental brief, EMID argues that San Miguel is inapplicable because it is not raising a constitutional challenge to any statute, but rather is challenging the implementation of admittedly valid statutes. This is a distinction without a difference for standing purposes. In Sacramento County Fire Protection Dist. v. Sacramento County Assessment Appeals Bd. (1999)
The court also rejected the district's argument that it had standing in mandate to contend the board wrongly exercised its judgment or discretion in reducing the assessed valuation of the property. "Although the District contends the Board committed a procedural lapse by failing to have the stipulation ... set forth sufficient *11 facts regarding valuation, the District's position, at its core, is that the Board wrongly exercised its judgment or discretion in reducing the assessed valuation of [the] property. Mandate is usually an inappropriate vehicle to enforce an allegedly wrongful exercise of a discretionary duty. [Citation.] More significantly, the District has neither a `vested right' nor a `property interest' in a particular assessed valuation for particular property." (Sacramento County Fire Protection Dist., supra,
If the district in Sacramento County Fire Protection Dist., supra, had no beneficial interest in taxes it had already received and spent, then EMID certainly can have no property interest in any portion of a future tax increment generated by new development to which it did not provide services in the past, nor intend to provide services in the future. The tax allocation agreement does not take away funds that were specifically appropriated for EMID's use. The agreement maintains EMID's historic 17.6 percent share in the property tax revenues generated from the area in which it provides services, and, in the event EMID begins providing services to the 73-acre property, the County is bound to renegotiate EMID's allocation.
The statutory scheme gives the County unfettered discretion to determine EMID's allocated share if EMID refused to agree. This legislative grant of discretion precludes EMID from having a property interest in any of the tax increment. (See Breneric Associates v. City of Del Mar (1998)
Statute of Limitations
Because we have determined that EMID lacks standing, the statute of limitations issue is moot. (Purcell v. Colonial Ins. Co. (1971)
Whether a statute of limitations applies ordinarily is a question of law. (People ex rel. Dept. of Conservation v. Triplett (1996)
*12 Government Code section 56100 states: "[T]his division provides the sole and exclusive authority and procedure for the initiation, conduct, and completion of changes of organization and reorganization of cities and districts." "An action to determine the validity of any change of organization or reorganization completed pursuant to this division shall be brought pursuant to Chapter 9 (commencing with Section 860) of Title 10 of Part 2 of the Code of Civil Procedure." (Gov.Code, § 56103.)
"[T]he purpose of the validation statutes is to provide a simple and uniform method for testing the validity of government action." (Moorpark Unified School Dist. v. Superior Court (1990)
The validating statutes contain a 60-day statute of limitations to further the important policy of speedy determination of the public agency's action. (Code Civ. Proc., § 863; Millbrae School Dist. v. Superior Court (1989)
No reported case has addressed the issue of whether a challenge to an intermediate step in an approval process governed by the validating statutes can be brought more than 60 days after the approval itself has become final. However, the declared purpose of the Act and cases interpreting it, as well as cases interpreting the validating statutes in other contexts, make clear that EMID cannot challenge an intermediate step in the annexation process long after the validity of the annexation itself has become conclusive.
In Hills for Everyone v. Local Agency Formation Commission of Orange County, supra,
*13 The complaint in Plunkett v. City of Lakewood (1975)
In Graydon v. Pasadena Redevelopment Agency (1980)
EMID cites no cases where a court has permitted an intermediate step in a completed reorganization to be challenged by a petition for writ of mandate after the expiration of the 60-day statute of limitations in Code of Civil Procedure section 863. In Greenwood Addition Homeowners Assn. v. City of San Marino (1993)
Those cases where the courts have permitted lawsuits brought beyond the 60-day period alleged illegal implementation of a validated action (see, e.g., City of Ontario v. Superior Court (1970)
We have found no authority supporting EMID's attempted distinction between those cases where a validation judgment was entered and here, where the annexation was validated by doing nothing. This is a recognized alternative provided by the validating statutes. (Friedland v. City of Long Beach, supra,
The tax allocation agreement pre-existed approval of the annexation and sufficient facts and circumstances existed to bring a challenge to the agreement during the 60 days following approval of the annexation. Therefore, Code of Civil Procedure section 870 precludes EMID from contending that the tax allocation agreement is invalid at this late date. (Bernardi v. City Council, supra,
EMID points out that former Government Code section 56842, subdivision (h) (repealed and reenacted as § 56810, subd. (h), without substantive change by Stats.2000, ch. 761, § 122) provides a three-year statute of limitations for challenging a tax allocation agreement adopted prior to a city's incorporation. EMID argues that this shows a legislative intent to subject challenges to tax allocation agreements adopted for other reorganizations to a three-year statute of limitations rather than the 60-day statute of limitations in Code of Civil Procedure section 863. We disagree. Under well-established rules of statutory construction, where an exception to a general rule is specified by statute, other exceptions cannot be implied or presumed [expressio unius est exclusio alterius]. (In re Lance W. (1985)
EMID argues that its constructive trust cause of action is governed by Code of Civil Procedure sections 338 or 343 and is timely. Not so. A constructive trust is not a substantive device but merely a remedy, and an action seeking to establish a constructive trust is subject to the limitation period of the underlying substantive right. If that substantive right is barred by the statute of limitations, the remedy necessarily fails. (Davies v. Krasna (1975)
The judgment is affirmed. Respondents are to recover costs.
YEGAN, Acting P.J., and PERREN, J., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] EMID alleges it adopted its own resolution providing for exchange of property tax revenue on November 2, 1997. The resolution is not contained in the record on appeal. Accepting the allegation as true, the resolution has no effect because it was adopted after the Santa Barbara Local Agency Formation Commission (SBLAFCO) approved the annexation.
[2] EMID admits it had actual notice of the SBLAFCO proceedings. (See Friedland v. City of Long Beach, supra,
