ANDREA JOANNOU et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, v. CITY OF RANCHO PALOS VERDES et al., Defendants and Respondents.
No. B241035
Second Dist., Div. Eight
Sept. 12, 2013.
219 Cal. App. 4th 746
Law Offices of Douglas W. Beck and Douglas W. Beck for Plaintiffs and Appellants.
OPINION
RUBIN, J.—Plaintiffs Andrea Joannou and 25 Oak, LLC, appeal from the summary judgment entered in favor of defendant City of Rancho Palos Verdes (City) in their action to apply the Cullen Earthquake Act (
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In 1956, road construction by Los Angeles County in a then unincorporated area of the Palos Verdes Hills known as Portuguese Bend accidentally reactivated a subsurface prehistoric slide area. That incident sent just under one square mile of hillside property on an ongoing, slow-motion, downhill journey that inexorably leads to a bluff overlooking the Pacific Ocean. As a result, homes built in the area have moved along with the land, in some cases outside their original lot lines and onto neighboring parcels. Homeowners in the area have turned to innovative methods of anchoring their homes in place even as the landslide moves down the hill. Some landowners in the affected area have also accommodated each other over the years by treating the earth movements as a de facto readjustment of their respective property lines.
The City of Rancho Palos Verdes incorporated in 1972 and includes the Portuguese Bend area. The City then acquired title to the right of way for Palos Verdes Drive South, which cuts through the landslide area. In 1987, the City took title to a piece of land (lot 1) in the slide area that sits directly south of the roadway of Palos Verdes Drive. Sometime between 1956 and 1987, two homes that were originally located north of the roadway on lots 40 and 41 migrated approximately 300 feet south of the roadway and onto lot 1. Those homes are now located at 40 and 41 Cherryhill Lane.
In 2005, Joannou bought the house on 40 Cherryhill Lane. Although the house was in poor condition, it was still occupied by the seller. Joannou spent $30,000 to remodel the house and intended to have a new foundation built. Joannou put up a fence to keep trespassers out while repairs were made to the home, which apparently drew the attention of city building inspectors. The inspectors “red-tagged” as unsafe Joannou‘s home and the one that had moved along with it from lot 41 to 41 Cherryhill Lane.
Joannou sued the City to quiet title to a portion of lot 1 under the Cullen Earthquake Act (
The City moved for summary judgment on largely undisputed facts. The trial court granted summary adjudication of the first cause of action, concluding that the Cullen Act applied to only sudden earth movements that constituted disasters, not to gradual earth movements like the Portuguese Bend slide. The City was granted summary adjudication of the second cause of action because it claimed no right or title to the land where the houses on lots 40 and 41 originally were located. After judgment was entered for the City, Joannou and 25 Oak appealed, contending that the Cullen Act applied to their claim.3
DISCUSSION
1. Standard of Review and Rules of Statutory Interpretation
This appeal is from a summary judgment where the sole issue is one of statutory interpretation based on undisputed facts. Accordingly, we exercise independent review and apply the ordinary rules for construing statutory
Under the rules of statutory construction, our primary task is to determine the Legislature‘s intent. The first step in the interpretive process is to examine the Legislature‘s chosen language, which is the best indicator of legislative intent. Unless the statute supplies a definition of specific terms, we give the words used a plain and commonsense meaning. If the statutory language is clear and unambiguous, there is no need for judicial construction. (Alejo v. Torlakson (2013) 212 Cal.App.4th 768, 787 (Alejo).) We need not follow the plain meaning of a statute when doing so would frustrate its purpose or lead to absurd results. Therefore, even though the words chosen by the Legislature are the best indicator of its intent, we do not view the language in isolation. Instead, we construe the words of a statute in context with an eye to fulfilling the statutory purpose. (Ibid.)
A statute is unambiguous if a party‘s proposed interpretation is the only reasonable interpretation. However, if there is more than one reasonable interpretation of statutory language, then an ambiguity exists. (Mt. Hawley Ins. Co. v. Lopez (2013) 215 Cal.App.4th 1385, 1398 (Mt. Hawley Ins.).) If so, we resort to secondary rules of construction. These include maxims of construction, which express familiar insights about conventional language usage, the legislative history, and the wider historical circumstances of a statute‘s enactment.4 (Alejo, supra, 212 Cal.App.4th at p. 787.)
If the ambiguity is not resolved by these secondary rules of construction, we then apply reason, practicality, and common sense. (Alejo, supra, 212 Cal.App.4th at p. 788.) When doing so, we must consider the potential consequences of a particular interpretation. This includes not just the words chosen by the Legislature, but also matters such as context, the problem to be remedied, the history of the times, legislation on the same subject, public policy and contemporaneous construction. (Ibid.) These other matters are important because they elevate our analysis from an abstract exercise in semantics to the only reason we engage in the process at all—to determine the Legislature‘s intent in order to carry out the purpose of the law. (Ibid.)
2. The Cullen Earthquake Act
The Legislature enacted the Cullen Act in 1972 in response to the 1971 Sylmar Earthquake, which disturbed existing property lines by shifting the land in some areas by several feet. (Dept. Conservation, Enrolled Bill Rep. on
Cullen Act actions may be brought by a county or city where lands were affected by a disaster and by any other person or entity that owns or has an interest in land affected by the disaster. (
When reaching its conclusions, the trial court must “give effect to the changes in land boundaries caused by the disaster, mitigated, however,” by certain equitable considerations. (
The Legislature had several express purposes in mind when it passed the Cullen Act:
“(1) Making fully available for continued use and new development the entire area owned by each entity, whether public or private, which purpose can only be accomplished by reestablishing with certainty the present location of land boundaries.
“(2) Facilitating the sale, mortgage or lease of land parcels in the state.
“(3) Confirming and establishing the exact areas available for public use in streets, highways, flood control channels, public utility and other public ways.
“(4) Minimizing the loss of area by property owners whose boundaries have been disturbed by earth movements such as but not limited to slides, subsidence, lateral or vertical displacements or similar disasters caused by man or by earthquakes or other acts of God, by equitably reestablishing property lines or by allocating to adjacent owners areas of land released by the narrowing or relocating the lines of public streets, highways or other public ways, with the consent of the city, county or state, as the case may be, under whose jurisdiction such streets, highways or ways are vested, given for the promotion of the general welfare.
“(5) By declaring lots or parcels of land made substandard in size according to existing zoning laws as a result of compaction or other earth movement, of legal size according to such laws where no equitable adjustment of boundaries can be reasonably made.
“(6) Correcting existing public records by recording the results of judicial proceedings, including official maps which reflect the land boundaries reestablished subsequent to the disasters described in paragraph (4).
“(7) Permitting these ends to be accomplished in a single action in rem, brought with respect to a reasonably large land area affected by the disaster, rather than in numerous actions affecting single or a small number of parcels of land.” (Historical Note, 17A West‘s Ann. Code Civ. Proc. (1980 ed.) foll.
§ 751.50, p. 348 .)
3. The Term “Disaster” Does Not Include Gradual Earth Movements
The City contends that the Cullen Act‘s frequent references to “disasters” and adjusting boundaries as “fixed” by a disaster show that the Act was designed to apply to boundary disputes resulting from earth movements that qualify as disasters. (Renee J. v. Superior Court (2001) 26 Cal.4th 735, 743 [qualifying words or phrases in a statute will be applied to terms that precede or follow it when the sense of the entire act requires it].) Because the Cullen Act does not define disaster, the City asks us to apply the conventional definition of the term in the context of this case (Heritage Residential Care, Inc. v. Division of Labor Standards Enforcement (2011) 192 Cal.App.4th 75, 82), which they contend is limited to sudden or abrupt earth movements only.
Appellants concede that the Cullen Act applies only to earth movements that are disasters but contend that the term “disaster” is flexible enough to cover gradual earth movements and that their interpretation is consistent with both the legislative intent of the Cullen Act and the broad category of earth movements set forth in the Act.
This conclusion finds support in T. L. Enterprises, Inc. v. County of Los Angeles (1989) 215 Cal.App.3d 876 (T. L. Enterprises), which interpreted a statute that allowed real property owners to reduce the assessed value of their property if it was damaged by “disaster, misfortune, or calamity.” (
Turning to a dictionary definition, the court said a disaster was “‘a sudden calamitous event producing great material damage, loss, and distress.’ It similarly defines calamity . . . as ‘an extraordinarily grave event marked by great loss and lasting distress and affliction.’ Misfortune, ‘an instance of bad luck’ [citation], connotes a less serious incident than disaster or calamity. All require at a minimum some event out of the ordinary. [¶] Appellant has not shown that its loss was caused by such an occurrence. Although appellant undoubtedly considers the decrease in value a misfortune, it was the result of ordinary natural forces. Because it took place over a period of years appellant was not in the position of the victim of earthquake, flood, or fire: it could take steps to alleviate the consequences.” (T. L. Enterprises, supra, 215 Cal.App.3d at p. 880, italics added, quoting Webster‘s 3d New Internat. Dict., supra, at pp. 643, 314, 1443.) That is precisely what happened here.
Our conclusion that gradual, ongoing earth movements do not qualify as disasters also finds support in two other separate statutory schemes. We begin with two related rules of statutory construction. First, a term having a specific meaning in one area of the law normally should be given the same construction when it appears elsewhere. (Britts v. Superior Court (2006) 145 Cal.App.4th 1112, 1127.) Second, under this rule of statutory interpretation we presume the Legislature meant to give the same meaning to similar phrases unless a contrary intention appears. (Scottsdale Ins. Co. v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Ins. Co. (2005) 130 Cal.App.4th 890, 899.)6
One of the separate statutory schemes we rely on distinguishes earthquakes and other sudden earth movements from slow-moving slides like the one in Portuguese Bend.
In enacting these sections, the Legislature found that the “gradual movement of land, such as in prehistoric slide areas,” or from other loss of underground support “can result in danger to persons or property.” (
Thus, in
Application of the interpretive canon ejusdem generis is instructive at this point. Under that rule, when a general term or category is preceded or followed by specific words, the general category is restricted to those things that are similar to those specifically enumerated. (People v. Arias (2008) 45 Cal.4th 169, 180.) The Emergency Services Act‘s list of possible disasters includes some conditions that develop over time (drought, epidemics, plant and animal infestations) and others that are swift or instantaneous (fire, flood, storm). Earthquakes, which are instantaneous, are the only earth movement listed. (
As
We distill the following from these two disparate statutory schemes. First, the Legislature views slow-moving landslides as a type of earth movement that deserves separate treatment from rapid movements like earthquakes because the latter cause immediate damage while the former permit intervention before damage occurs. Second, the type of earth movements that qualifies as disasters under the Emergency Services Act are in the same
4. Ongoing and Gradual Earth Movements Are Not “Fixed” as Required by the Cullen Act
Even if the Cullen Act could be read to include gradual earth movements as disasters, the Act still would not apply because the landslide is ongoing, and therefore the affected land is not “fixed” as that term is used in the statute. Various sections of the Cullen Act contemplate that at the conclusion of litigation any judgment for the plaintiffs will establish new boundaries. (See, e.g.,
The property in question has been sliding for nearly 60 years. Moving land is not “fixed.” The record reflects that the land has been moving throughout this litigation and when the lawsuit is concluded the land will continue to move until it reaches the Pacific Ocean. In no sense of the word can it be said that the boundaries have become or will become fixed until perhaps it sadly splashes into the sea. Indeed the record seems to support the inference that nearly as soon as the ink is dry on the judgment appellants have sought in this case, a new application could be filed because the land would have moved again. Such repetitive applications are not contemplated by the Cullen Act, which assumes that at the end of the case the boundaries will have “been fixed.” Neither would a new boundary have been “reestablished” as is required by
5. The Legislative History of the Cullen Act Shows That It Excludes Gradual Earth Movements
To the extent any ambiguity exists concerning the Cullen Act‘s use of the terms “disaster” and “fixed,” we look to the Act‘s legislative history, including a failed attempt to amend the Act to expressly include slow-moving
A. Legislative History of the Cullen Act
When the Cullen Act was introduced in April 1972, the proposed legislation was dubbed the “Earthslide Relief Act.” (Legis. Counsel‘s Dig., Assem. Bill No. 2329 (1972 Reg. Sess.) as introduced.) It would apply when land boundaries were moved “by an act of God, consisting of an earthslide . . . .” However, the subject heading that prefaced the proposed bill described it as “An act relating to earthquakes.” (Ibid., original italics.)
The enrolled bill report said it was the “[r]esult of [sic] San Fernando earthquake,” and would “provide procedures for readjusting property boundaries and reestablishing title to such lands disturbed by earthquakes . . . .” (Dept. Conservation, Enrolled Bill Rep. on Assem. Bill No. 2329 (1972 Reg. Sess.) [date illegible].) A report of the Assembly Judiciary Committee said the proposed bill was designed to remedy title and boundary problems caused by the Sylmar Earthquake. No other causes of land movements were mentioned, but the report questioned why it was limited to naturally caused earthquakes, noting that a nuclear bomb test could set off an earthquake or tidal wave. (Assem. Com. on Judiciary, Rep. on Assem. Bill No. 2329 (1972 Reg. Sess.) May 22, 1972.)
The bill was then amended into its current form and renamed the “Earth Movement Disaster Act.” (Legis. Counsel‘s Dig., Assem. Amends. to Assem. Bill No. 2329 (1972 Reg. Sess.) May 24, 1972.) The Legislative Counsel‘s Digest said the bill had been expanded to apply to lands “disturbed by earthquakes and other disasters, including those resulting from acts of man.” (Ibid., italics added.) The bill was amended one more time to change its name to the “Cullen Earthquake Act.” (Legis. Counsel‘s Dig., Sen. Amends. to Assem. Bill No. 2329 (1972 Reg. Sess.) June 19, 1972.)
The City contends that this legislative history shows the Legislature had sudden events like earthquakes in mind when it enacted the Cullen Act.
B. The 2008 Failed Attempt to Amend the Cullen Act
In February 2008, a proposed amendment to the Cullen Act was introduced that would have changed
The proposed revision was amended a few months later to provide instead for a study by the California Geological Survey to determine whether a quiet title cause of action based on gradual earth movements “should be established.” (Sen. Com. on Judiciary, Analysis of Assem. Bill No. 2479 (2007-2008 Reg. Sess.) as amended June 30, 2008, p. 1.) The Judiciary Committee report said that a series of gradual earth movements in the Oakland Bay Area had prompted some litigants to assert remedies under the Cullen Act. An arbitrator hearing one such dispute ruled that the Cullen Act did not apply to gradual earth movements, prompting the bill‘s author to conclude that there was no existing authority that allowed for the readjustment of property lines in such cases. (Sen. Com. on Judiciary, Analysis of Assem. Bill No. 2479, supra, pp. 2-4.) The report also said that “the Cullen Act provides a remedy for landowners to reestablish land boundaries altered by abrupt movements caused by natural disasters. The author has identified a legitimate problem in that current law regarding the reestablishment of boundaries due to earth movements does not apply to scenarios where boundary lines have shifted due to gradual earth movements.” (Id. at pp. 5-6, italics added.)
As a general rule, unpassed legislation provides “‘very limited guidance‘” when interpreting existing legislation. (Grupe Development Co. v. Superior Court (1993) 4 Cal.4th 911, 922–923.) However, in some circumstances it may be a reliable indicator of existing legislative intent. (Gay Law Students Assn. v. Pacific Tel. & Tel. Co. (1979) 24 Cal.3d 458, 480, fn. 13; Seibert v. Sears, Roebuck & Co. (1975) 45 Cal.App.3d 1, 19.)
We believe the legislative history surrounding the unsuccessful attempts to address the issue of gradual earth movements does offer some guidance to our interpretation of the Cullen Act. The initial amendment would have changed the Cullen Act by deleting all references to disasters and state instead that it applied to “any earth movement, abrupt or gradual . . . .” The Legislative Counsel‘s Digest said this amendment would specify that the Act applied to such earth movements.8 Although “specify” is capable of more than one meaning, its use instead of “clarify” at least suggests that “disaster” as used in the Cullen Act does not include gradual earth movements and that a change was considered to address that omission. The Judiciary Committee‘s report on the amended version of that proposal—calling for a study of the issue—said the intent was to determine whether a cause of action arising from gradual earth movements “should be established,” and that the Act applied to only abrupt movements. These statements also lend support to our conclusion.9 (Sen. Com. on Judiciary, Analysis of Assem. Bill No. 2479 (2007-2008 Reg. Sess.), supra, p. 1.)
6. Conclusion: The Cullen Act Does Not Apply to Gradual Earth Movements
Summing up, the conventional meaning of “disaster” as applied to earth movements does not include gradual and ongoing earth movements like the Portuguese Bend slide. As discussed above, this conclusion finds support in the Emergency Services Act‘s reference to earthquakes as disasters as well as in the government tort immunity provisions that distinguish between gradual and rapid earth movements because the former pose a risk of harm over time that can be abated. It also finds support in the 2008 failed attempts to address the issue of gradual earth movements in the Cullen Act. We believe this definition is consistent with and applies to the Cullen Act.
As previously discussed, the entire statutory scheme is predicated on the need to equitably readjust property boundaries that have become fixed after a disaster. The judgment in such an action must determine the boundaries of the affected property “as fixed by the disaster” and then approve and order the filing of a new plat map to serve as the official map for those properties. (
The Portuguese Bend slide has been in progress for 57 years and counting. Nothing about it is “fixed.” As a result, there is no way to comply with the Act‘s requirements or satisfy the Legislature‘s intent of establishing certainty over the new land boundaries in a single conclusive action. We sympathize with appellants’ plight and share their concern that the absence of an effective remedy in cases like this may lead to inequitable results.10 We also agree that it is an issue the Cullen Act could have addressed. However, the gradual movement of land in the Portuguese Bend area is not a disaster as that term is commonly understood or as intended by the Cullen Act.11
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed. The parties shall bear their own costs on appeal.
Bigelow, P. J., and Epstein, J.,* concurred.
*Presiding Justice of the Court of Appeal, Second Appellate District, Division Four, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
