Opinion
— Feridoun Rezai appeals the judgment entered against him on his causes of action against the City of Tustin and for him on his breach of contract cause of action against Orange Coast Title Company, contending the trial court erred by: (1) granting Tustin judgment on the pleadings; and (2) limiting damages in the judgment against Orange Coast to $102. We affirm.
In March 1989 after a public hearing, Tustin’s planning commission granted Rezai a conditional use permit to construct an 11-unit apartment project. After the building permit was issued and construction began, Tustin received complaints from nearby residents that they had not received notice of the hearing. Tustin determined the list Rezai had submitted omitted several property owners who were entitled to notice.
Rezai had originally submitted a list to Tustin which he had personally checked for accuracy, but he failed to submit the addresses on gummed *448 labels as required. A Tustin employee directed him to Orange Coast, which sold the lists printed on proper labels. Rezai bought the list for $102 and took it to Tustin in its unopened brown envelope. Among the documents in the envelope was a receipt which contained a verification of correctness but limited liability to the price of the list.
Based on the complaints and the determination notice had been inadequate, Tustin revoked Rezai’s building permit in March 1990. A properly noticed public hearing was held in April and the planning commission denied Rezai’s application for another conditional use permit. Rezai appealed to the city council, which continued the matter twice to allow Rezai and the property owners to work out a compromise. In June a final hearing was held and the council approved a conditional use permit for the compromise plans which significantly scaled back the project.
In August, Rezai filed a claim with Tustin under Government Code section 910 for damages arising from the revocation of the original conditional use permit and building permit. Tustin rejected the claim in September and Rezai filed a suit for breach of contract, promissory estoppel, violation of statutes and ordinances, and declaratory relief. The trial court granted Tustin’s motion for judgment on the pleadings.
I
Rezai contends the trial court erred by granting Tustin judgment on the pleadings. The court did so on the ground Rezai had not exhausted his administrative remedies because he failed to seek administrative mandamus before suing for damages.
Usually, “a proceeding [for a writ of administrative mandate] under Code of Civil Procedure section 1094.5 is the exclusive remedy for judicial review of the quasi-adjudicatory administrative action of the local-level agency. [Citation.] Unless a party seeks a declaration a statute or ordinance controlling development is facially unconstitutional as applied to all property governed and not to a particular parcel of land, an action for declaratory relief may not be had. [Citations.] An action for declaratory relief is not appropriate to review the validity of an administrative decision. [Citations.] Rather, the proper method to challenge the validity of conditions imposed on a building permit is administrative mandamus under Code of Civil Procedure section 1094.5. [Citations.] ‘A landowner cannot challenge a condition imposed upon the granting of a permit after acquiescence in the condition by either specifically agreeing to the condition or failing to challenge its validity, and accepting the benefits afforded by the permit.’
*449
[Citations.]”
(City of Santee
v.
Superior Court
(1991)
The purpose behind the rule has been explained in cases limiting the availability of inverse condemnation proceedings when sufficient administrative remedies exist.
(Salton Bay Marina, Inc.
v.
Imperial Irrigation Dist.
(1985)
Air Quality Products, Inc.
v.
State of California
(1979)
City of Santee
v.
Superior Court, supra,
Similarly, in
Pfeiffer
v.
City of La Mesa, supra,
Courts, including ours, have recognized an exception to the general rule. In
Laguna Village, Inc.
v.
County of Orange
(1985)
Rezai’s case does not involve a fee condition nor permits obtained in stages, as in Laguna Village, Inc. and McLain Western #7. 1 However, the analogy is apt. Rezai obtained his initial conditional use permit and embarked on substantial construction before his building permit and conditional use permit were revoked. The second conditional use permit imposed conditions that had not been part of the first permit.
Although the situations are similar, the exception to the rule requiring resort to administrative mandamus should not be applied here. First, in
Laguna Village, Inc.
and
McLain Western #1
the landowners apparently alleged that delaying the project to seek administrative mandamus would
*451
cause them considerable financial loss.
(Laguna Village, Inc.
v.
County of Orange, supra,
Second, we do not believe the exception should be applied where the landowner does not seek the refund of a fee, but seeks damages arising from conditions restricting the development or requiring additional amenities. In the former circumstance, the amount in controversy is fixed and does not vary based upon any decision by the administrative body or construction of the project. But in the latter, the claimed damages are uncertain and become irrevocable when the project is built. Liability for such damages, if the project is built without a decision by way of administrative mandamus and the city has erred, would have the same chilling effect on planning decisions eschewed by the courts in
Agins
v.
City of Tiburon, supra,
Rezai cites cases for the proposition administrative mandamus is not a prerequisite to a suit for damages.
(Young
v.
City of Inglewood
(1979)
*452 Rezai claims he could not have sought administrative mandamus because there was nothing to review, the city attorney 3 having revoked his permit without any hearing at all. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 1094.5, subd. (a) [court inquires into validity of “the result of a proceeding [for which] a hearing is required”].) He errs in his premise. Although the March 9, 1990, notice and order he received stated the permits were immediately revoked, it spoke of a new public hearing to be held in the near future. A month later the new public hearing was held before the planning commission, followed by city council hearings.
The hearings were effectively to determine the propriety of the initial revocation. The planning commission and city council could have granted the new conditional use permit under the same terms and conditions as the first one. Rezai does not claim he was prevented during the hearings from arguing the first permit had been wrongfully revoked. Nothing stopped him from pursuing administrative mandamus after the second conditional use permit significantly changed the development. 4 By all appearances, Rezai opted to do what the authority we have discussed prohibits: accept the benefits of the second conditional use permit and sue for damages based on the limitations it contained.
Rezai claims Tustin waived any right to require administrative mandamus proceedings before a suit was filed because it failed to advise him of the availability of the writ and the time limits for filing a petition. Code of Civil Procedure section 1094.6, subdivision (b) provides a 90-day limitation for filing a petition for writ of mandate and subdivision (e) of the section requires the public entity to give the landowner notice of that time period. In
El Dorado Palm Springs, Ltd.
v.
Rent Review Com.
(1991)
Rezai argues Tustin should be estopped from raising the mandamus requirement because its failure to give him notice caused him to proceed with the modified project. But, he did not plead estoppel in his complaint, so there are no factual allegations supporting the claim. To establish estoppel, he would have had to show Tustin intended for him to act on its failure to advise, or its conduct must have been such that Rezai could reasonably
*453
believe that is what Tustin intended.
(County of Sonoma
v.
Rex
(1991)
In any event, application of equitable estoppel in not appropriate. As noted in
County of Sonoma
v.
Rex, supra,
Here, for the reasons we have discussed, it is important that the landowner not be allowed to proceed with a project which has been scaled back to conform with the community’s interest and then seek damages from the public fisc, when a prompt determination concerning the revocation of the prior permit might have quickly resolved any problem. The trial court was correct in granting judgment on the pleadings based on Rezai’s failure to pursue administrative mandamus. We need not consider other potential bases for the court’s ruling.
II *
The judgment is affirmed. Respondents are entitled to their costs on appeal.
Sills, P. J., and Sonenshine, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied September 14, 1994.
Notes
Indeed, Rezai has not relied upon them as authority.
Rezai contends administrative mandamus is not an administrative remedy, but a judicial one, relying on
Swartzendruber
v.
City of San Diego
(1992)
Although Rezai refers to the city attorney, the notice and order he received was sent by the community development department.
Indeed, even if the two proceedings were distinct, Rezai does not explain what prevented him from seeking a hearing on the revocation, and pursuing administrative mandamus if none were given or he was displeased with the result.
See footnote, ante, page 443.
