Opinion
Rеgency Outdoor Advertising, Inc., appeals from the trial court’s order denying its petition for writ of mandate directing the City of West Hollywood to invalidate a zoning amendment because the city did not review the amendment’s environmental effects. We affirm.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In the mid-1990’s, West Hollywood adopted its specific plan for Sunset Boulevard to govern that street’s development. One of the plan’s goals was to spruce up bare walls on the sides of buildings. One way to relieve the visual monotony of blank walls was to place “tall wall signs” on them. For our purposes here, tall wall signs are illuminated outdoor advertising signs of at least 5,000 square feet.
Befоre 1998, the city did not allow tall wall signs on the sides of buildings with windows. In 1998, the city amended its zoning ordinance to allow tall wall signs where windows were less than 15 percent of the “image area.” The city intended the image area rule to mean no more than 15 percent of the sign could cover windows.
*828 Appellant Regency Outdoоr Advertising, Inc., is in the billboard and sign business. In 2000, the city permitted Regency to place a tall wall sign on the building at 9229 Sunset Boulevard (9229 Sunset). At the time, the city found Regency’s sign did not require review under the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA). (Pub. Resources Code, § 21000 et seq.)
In 2001, the city again amended its tall wall sign ordinance. Deleting the phrase “image arеa,” the amendment permitted tall wall signs only where windows covered less than 15 percent of the “wall on which the tall wall sign is placed.” The city claimed the new language better reflected its reason for allowing tall wall signs, which was to break up the monotony of buildings with bare sides; the side of a building whose surface arеa was at least 15 percent windows was, on the other hand, sufficiently varied not to need such help to be visually interesting. The 2001 amendment compelled Regency to remove its tall wall sign from 9229 Sunset because windows covered about 25 percent of the wall. 1
In 2004, the city contemplated amending its tall wall sign ordinance to restore its original “image area” language. Although about a dozen other tall wall signs stood in the city, the proposed amendment affected only 9229 Sunset. Objecting to the amendment, Regency noted that the change to the ordinance’s language in 2001 from 15 percent of the “image area” to 15 percent of the wall had forced Regency to remove its sign from 9299 Sunset, resulting since then in three years’ lost income. Complaining that competitors (real parties in interest Elevation Media and Sunset Sierra Properties, Inc.) now owned the prospective right to place a tall wall sign on 9229 Sunset, Regency alleged the city was playing political favorites by reviving the earlier language. Regency also objected then, and argues now on appeal, that the city needed to review the restored language’s potential environmental effects under CEQA.
Undeterred by Regency’s objections, the city adopted Ordinance No. 04-684, which stated the “image area may include the use of windows, provided that *829 windows comprise no more than 15 percent of the image area . . . .” The city asserted that restoring the ordinance’s original “image area” language allowed no more than erection of a tall wall sign at 9229 Sunset, thе same spot where four years earlier Regency had placed its own tall wall sign without an environmental review. Invoking CEQA’s “commonsense” exemption, the city declared it did not need to review the amendment under CEQA because the city could say with “certainty” there was “no possibility” the amendment would have significаnt environmental effects even under CEQA’s broad definition of effects encompassing, for example, visual blight and noise. (Pub. Resources Code, § 21060.5; Cal. Code Regs., tit. 14, §§ 15382, 15061, subd. (b)(3).)
In response to the amended ordinance, Regency filed a petition for a writ of mandate to invalidate the amendment because the city had nоt subjected it to CEQA review. The trial court sua sponte directed the parties to brief Regency’s standing under CEQA and
Waste Management of Alameda County
v.
County of Alameda
(2000)
DISCUSSION
Legal standing to petition for a writ of mandate ordinarily requires the petitiоner to have a beneficial interest in the writ’s issuance. As our Supreme Court explained in
Carsten v. Psychology Examining Com.
(1980)
Waste Management
involved two cоmpeting landfills in separate water districts regulated by different regional water boards. The water board overseeing the first landfill allowed the landfill to accept a particular type of waste without undergoing CEQA review. But, when the second landfill applied for a permit to accept a similar type of waste, the second water board forced it to conduct an environmental review under CEQA.
(Waste Management, supra,
79 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1230-1231.) To level the playing field by erasing what it perceived to be the first landfill’s unfair advantage, the second landfill filed a petition for a writ of mandate to force the first landfill to perform a CEQA review, tоo. (
The
Waste Management
court found the second landfill had no standing under CEQA to file a petition.
(Waste Management, supra,
Regency contends the trial court erroneously relied on
Waste Management
because the decision is distinguishable in three ways. We find none of the distinctions apposite. As its first distinction, Regency notes the tall wall sign ordinance was a law of general application for the entire city.
Waste Management,
in contrast, involved an application for a single permit. In support of the distinction’s rеlevance, Regency cites
Dunn-Edwards Corp. v. South Coast Air Quality Management Dist.
(1993)
The second distinction Regency draws between Waste Management and the city’s amended ordinance is the Waste Management landfills were several miles apart and not subject to each other’s water board. In contrast, the amended ordinance reached Regency’s activities because its main offices are within city limits and it owns other billboards in the city. Describing itself as having а “geographical nexus” to the amended ordinance, Regency contrasts its link to the city with what it calls the “geographical boundary” (really a gap) between the Waste Management landfills.
The distinction does not persuade us.
Waste Management
discussed the landfills’ distance from each other and their emptying into different bodies of water as reasons the landfills did not affect each оther’s environment.
(Waste
Management,
supra,
Regency contends it has an interest in the amended ordinance that is over and above the general public’s because the public does not own billboards or tall wall signs—only Regency and a handful of other companies
*832
do so. Thus, Regency concludes, it has a beneficial interest in the ordinance’s fate. We note Regency is correct that the ordinance more directly affects Regency than the general public. But the amendment does not have
environmental
effects on Regency that are any greater than the effects it has on other businesses and property owners in thе city. Hence, the amendment does not bestow CEQA standing on Regency.
(Waste Management, supra,
The third distinction Regency draws between itself and Waste Management is the landfill sought to encumber its competitor with the burden of CEQA review. Here, however, Regency’s petition impоses that burden on the city, which is not a competitor of Regency. That distinction says nothing, however, about Regency’s having a beneficial interest in a petition to compel CEQA review.
Regency contends that instead of relying on
Waste Management,
the trial court should have found
Burrtec Waste Industries, Inc. v City of Colton
(2002)
Regency also contends it has “citizen standing” under CEQA. Ordinarily, corporations may not exercise citizen standing because they are not citizens (even if the law considers them “persons.”)
(Waste Management,
*833
supra,
Regency asserts it satisfied the criteria for citizen standing because it had a continuing interest in the environmental effects of billboards. As evidence, it cites four lawsuits it has filed to compel competing billboard companies to comply with CEQA. The trial court drew an inference from Regency’s lawsuits different, however, from what Regency urged. Noting that Regency had a financial interest in each lawsuit’s outcome, the court found they demonstrated Regency used CEQA challenges to advance its competitive and commercial interests. The court observed, “[t]hree of the four proceedings are to challenge approvals for billboards given to Regency’s competitors, just as this proceeding is, and the fourth proceeding is to contest permits for billboards granted to a developer that would compete with billboards erected and maintained by Regency in the City of West Hollywood.” To dispel the aura of self interest masquerading as environmentalism, some evidence is likely to exist of a party’s engagement in environmental issues where it had nothing to gain financially. The trial court found Regency’s gaggle of lawsuits was not such evidence.
Regency also cites
Marshall
v.
Pasadena Unified School Dist.
(2004)
*834 DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed. Respondents to recover their costs on appeal.
Boland, J., and Flier, J., concurred.
Notes
When the city loosened its tall wall sign ordinance in 1998, the city’s planning staff calculated 9229 Sunset was not eligible for a tall wall sign because windows covered more than 15 percent of the side of thе building. In its opening brief, Regency implies that the tall wall sign permit it sought and received in 2000 therefore violated the city’s ordinance. The city rejects Regency’s implication, however, arguing the city found when it granted Regency’s permit that the planning staff had misinterpreted the 15 percent rule. According to the city, the tеst was not whether windows made up more than 15 percent of the wall’s surface, but instead that no more than 15 percent of the sign cover windows, a test the ordinance tried to capture in the phrase “image area.” Be that as it may, the lawfulness of Regency’s permit is not at issue in this appeal.
By affirming the trial сourt’s judgment based on Regency’s lack of standing, we do not reach the merits of Regency’s claim that CEQA’s commonsense exemption did not apply to excuse the amended ordinance from environmental review.
If Regency construes Dunn-Edwards’s silence about standing as showing standing was presumed to exist, the same principle applies that a case is not authority for a proposition it does not discuss.
