Opinion
Appellant -and landlord Leslie A. Garber appeals from the trial court’s mling granting respondent and tenant Julianne Jones Levit’s motion to quash service of summons. The underlying residential unlawful detainer action is based on a notice to terminate tenancy under San Francisco Administrative Code chapter 37 (Rent Ordinance), section 37.9 subdivision (a)(8), also known as the “owner move-in” provision. Appellant contends the trial court erred in granting the motion to quash and holding that section 37.9 subdivision (a)(8) (hereafter section 37.9(a)(8)), as amended by the 1998 Bierman Amendment, requires certain property owners to possess a 50 percent ownership interest in a subject property before evicting a tenant under the owner move-in provision. Appellant claims that section 37.9(a)(8), as amended by Proposition G (also enacted in 1998), only requires landlords to own a 25 percent ownership interest in a subject property before evicting a tenant under the owner move-in provision. We find the provisions in Proposition G superseded the Bierman Amendment and reverse the trial court’s ruling granting respondent’s motion to quash.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL SUMMARY
The underlying facts alleged in this case are as follows. Appellant recorded a 25 percent interest in 1830 Gough Street, San Francisco, California on September 16, 2004. On January 14, 2005, appellant served respondent, a tenant in the building, with a 60-day notice to vacate, citing the owner move-in provision of section 37.9(a)(8). Respondent failed to vacate the premises. Subsequently, appellant filed an unlawful detainer complaint on April 4, 2005 and served respondent.
Respondent moved to quash the service of summons on the ground that the complaint failed to state a cause of action for unlawful detainer under Delta Imports, Inc. v. Municipal Court (1983)
Appellant asks this court to rule that no municipal ordinance may dictate a minimum percentage of ownership requirement to effect an owner move-in eviction under constitutional principles. This record, however, does not provide sufficient facts or evidence for the court to consider whether a municipal ordinance may dictate a minimum percentage of ownership requirement to conduct an owner move-in eviction.
In the alternative, Appellant seeks a determination that section 37.9(a)(8) requires a minimum ownership of 25 percent, not 50 percent, for persons acquiring property after February 21, 1991, who want to evict under the owner move-in provision. Thus, the issue before the court is whether the passage of Proposition G in November 1998, which provides that the minimum percentage of ownership required for landlords acquiring property after February 21, 1991, is 25 percent, superseded the 50 percent ownership requirement for landlords acquiring property after July 1, 1997, found in the Bierman Amendment. The text of section 37.9(a)(8) as it is currently published states that the minimum level of ownership for landlords acquiring property after February 21, 1991, is 25 percent.
THE BIERMAN AMENDMENT AND PROPOSITION G
On September 22, 1998, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors (Board of Supervisors) amended the Rent Ordinance by implementing San Francisco Ordinance No. 293-98, otherwise known as the Bierman Amendment. The Bierman Amendment amended section 37.9(a)(8), among others. This amendment to section 37.9(a)(8) added an entirely new class of “landlords” who may terminate tenancies for purposes of an owner move-in. Because of prior amendments to the Rent Ordinance, the percentage of ownership required for landlords to evict under the owner move-in provision differs depending on the date the owner acquired an interest in the property. Landlords who became owners of record of the rental unit on or before February 21, 1991, require a 10 percent ownership interest. The percentage of ownership interest required for those owners whose interest was recorded after February 21, 1991, is 25 percent.
The text of Proposition G was submitted to the San Francisco Registrar of Voters (Registrar of Voters) on June 11, 1998, as required by San Francisco Municipal Elections Code section 300, subdivision (c).
Many of the changes proposed by Proposition G to section 37.9(a)(8) were equivalent to those imposed by the Bierman Amendment, and much of the language is identical. For example, both amendments require an owner to live in the unit for three years and both expand the definition of “spouse” to include individuals registered as domestic partners in some instances. Equivalent to the language of the Rent Ordinance before the Bierman Amendment, Proposition G provided that landlords are owners of record of at least 25 percent of the property if they became owners after February 21, 1991. But nowhere in the text of Proposition G was there a new 50 percent ownership requirement for landlords who became owners of record after July 1, 1997.
DISCUSSION
The issue before this court is whether Proposition G superseded the Bierman Amendment in its entirety or whether Proposition G merely amended section 37.9(a)(8) as that section had been amended by the Bierman Amendment prior to Proposition G’s enactment. The answer to this question will determine whether owners who acquire an interest in property after July 1, 1997, are required to own a 25 percent interest or a 50 percent interest in the property before they may evict a tenant under the owner move-in provision.
In unlawful detainer actions, a motion to quash service of process on the ground that the complaint fails to state a cause of action for unlawful detainer tests the sufficiency of the complaint. (Delta Imports, Inc. v. Municipal Court, supra,
In analyzing this issue, the timing of the competing amendments to section 37.9(a)(8) is critical to our determination. On June 11, 1998, the text of Proposition G was submitted to the Registrar of Voters;
When a statute is amended by two different acts, the one passed later in time is the operative law. (Jubelt v. Sketers (1948)
“ ‘Where a section is amended by two different acts, passed at different times, the last amendment repeals the first and operates as the only amendment to the original action [section].’ ” (Jubelt v. Sketers, supra,
Moreover, the text of the Bierman Amendment and the text of Proposition G conflict in a way that cannot be reconciled. The Bierman Amendment provides, in relevant part: “For purposes of this Section 37.9(a)(8) only, the term ‘landlord’ shall be defined as an owner of record on or before February 21, 1991 of at least 10 percent interest in the property, an owner of record on or before July 1, 1997 of at least 25 percent interest in the property,
Therefore, under the Bierman Amendment, the definition of a landlord includes an owner of record after February 21, 1991, and before July 1, 1997, of at least 25 percent interest in the property, or an owner of record after July 1, 1997, of at least 50 percent interest in the property.
On the other hand, Proposition G provides, “For purposes of this Section 37.9(a)(8) only, as to landlords who become owners of record of the rental unit on or before February 21, 1991, the term landlord shall be defined as an owner of record of at least 10% interest in the property or, for Section 37.9(a)(8)(i) only, two individuals registered as Domestic Partners as defined in San Francisco Administrative Code Chapter 62.1-62.8 whose combined ownership of record is at least 10 percent. For purposes of this Section 37.9(a)(8) only, as to landlords who become owners of record of the rental unit after February 21, 1991, the term ‘landlord’ shall be defined as an owner of record of at least 25% interest in the property or, for Section 37.9(a)(8)(i) only, two individuals registered as Domestic Partners as defined in San Francisco Administrative Code Chapter 62.1-62.8 whose combined ownership of record is at least 25%.” (Text of Prop. G amend, in italics.) Thus, under Proposition G, landlords are persons who record an ownership interest of at least 25 percent after February 21, 1991, or two individuals registered as domestic partners, as defined by the San Francisco Administrative Code, whose combined ownership of record is at least 25 percent.
Because the Bierman Amendment provides that a landlord is defined as an owner of record of at least a 50 percent interest in the property after July 1, 1997, and Proposition G provides that a landlord is a person who owns (or domestic partners who collectively own) a 25 percent interest in the property after February 21, 1991, these two provisions conflict as to the percentage of ownership interest necessary to effect an owner move-in eviction after July 1, 1997.
Respondent contends that there is no conflict because Proposition G is silent as to the percentage of ownership required after July 1, 1997. But the Bierman Amendment and Proposition G both address minimum ownership percentages and provide different requirements for effecting an owner move-in eviction. Moreover, both provisions substantially altered, reorganized, and renumbered section 37.9(a)(8). To reach respondent’s position, the court would be required to rewrite section 37.9(a)(8) by incorporating the language of both Proposition G and the Bierman Amendment. We decline to do so. Such action is the province of a legislative body or the voters, not the court.
Because the provisions conflict and are irreconcilable, the one passed later in time controls under the authorities cited above. Accordingly, Proposition G’s 25 percent ownership requirement for owners of record acquiring an interest in the property after February 21, 1991, prevails, and the Bierman Amendment’s 50 percent ownership requirement for owners of record acquiring an interest in the property after July 1, 1997, is no longer valid. As such, the trial court erred in finding that the Bierman Amendment’s 50 percent requirement was valid and respondent’s motion to quash should have been denied.
The order granting respondent’s motion to quash is hereby reversed.
Notes
Before Wick, P. J., Moscone, J., and Wiss, J.
In Cwynar the court found that while the plaintiffs ultimately may be able to allege a constitutional taking, there were no facts alleged in the complaint supporting such a claim at that time. (Cwynar v. City and County of San Francisco, supra,
San Francisco Municipal Elections Code section 300, subdivision (c) provides that measures proposed by initiative petition shall be submitted to the director of elections no fewer than 120 days before the date of the election for which the initiative is intended.
Various state and municipal statutes prohibit a legislative body from changing or amending an ordinance adopted through the initiative process after the ordinance is enacted. (See Elec. Code, § 9217 [providing that no ordinance that is proposed by initiative petition and adopted by the voters shall be repealed or amended except by a vote of the people unless allowed by the original ordinance]; S.F. Mun. Elec. Code, § 390 [providing that “[n]o measure approved by the electorate under the provisions of the Charter or this Code shall be subject to veto, amendment or repeal except by vote of the electorate, unless the measure otherwise provides”]; S.F. Charter, § 14.101 [“No initiative or declaration of policy approved by the voters shall be subject to veto, or to amendment or repeal except by the voters, unless such initiative or declaration of policy shall otherwise provide”].)
