Opinion
A landowner seeks to avoid the effect of an irrevocable offer to dedicate land for public use. The dedication was made by a prior owner of the land in 1983, in return for a development permit. We conclude that the current landowner’s inverse condemnation claim arrives 20 years too late. All challenges to a condition placed on a development permit had to be asserted at the time the final permit decision was made and the condition was imposed. The challenge in this case was waived by the prior owner’s failure to pursue its judicial remedies for an unjust taking of private property. The present landowner is bound by that waiver. We affirm the judgment in favor of the state.
ALLEGATIONS
Serra Canyon Company, Ltd. (Serra) acquired unimproved oceanfront property in Malibu (the Property) as part of lawsuit settlement in 1992. The prior owner of the Property was The Adamson Companies (Adamson).
Adamson executed the OTD on December 6, 1983, and it was promptly recorded. The OTD is binding on Adamson and its successors in interest for a period of 21 years. Recording an acceptance of the OTD within the 21-year period gives the state fee title to the Property.
The Commission transferred its rights in the OTD to the California Coastal Conservancy (the Conservancy). In August 2002, the Conservancy adopted a resolution to accept the OTD, and drew up plans for the construction of public improvements on the Property. The Conservancy expected to record its acceptance of the OTD in September 2002.
Instead, Serra filed this lawsuit seeking declaratory relief and an injunction, in an attempt to stop the Conservancy from recording documents that would transfer legal ownership of the Property to the state. Serra asserts that it has not received just compensation for the Property, as required by the federal Constitution. Requiring Adamson to cede ownership of the Property as a condition of granting a permit to expand its mobilehome park was involuntary and unconstitutional; therefore, Serra contends, any attempt to “accept” the OTD is void. Serra desires a judicial declaration that the OTD is void and seeks to enjoin the Conservancy from recording its acceptance of the OTD. Serra also requests the issuance of a writ of mandate to prohibit the Commission from assigning the OTD to the Conservancy.
THE TRIAL COURT’S RULINGS
The trial court denied a temporary restraining order, finding that Serra’s predecessor in interest, Adamson, failed to timely seek writ review of the Commission’s demand for an OTD. Adamson accepted the benefit of the development permit, without challenging the burden of the OTD. As the successor in interest, Serra stands in the shoes of Adamson and is barred by the statute of limitations from contesting the OTD.
Respondents demurred to Serra’s first amended complaint. The court sustained the demurrers to each cause of action on the grounds that they are barred by a 60-day statute of limitations for seeking relief from actions taken by the Commission. The court concluded that Adamson waived Serra’s right to challenge the OTD. The complaint was dismissed with prejudice, and judgment was entered in favor of respondents.
DISCUSSION
1. Appeal and Review
Appeal lies from the dismissal order and judgment after demurrers are sustained without leave to amend. (Code Civ. Proc., § 581d;
Diaz
v.
United California Bank
(1977)
2. Statute of Limitations and Waiver
The Commission’s permit approval of Adamson’s mobilehome park expansion contains the condition that Serra now finds noxious. The time to challenge the condition was back in 1981, by pursuing a petition for a writ of mandate under Code of Civil Procedure section 1094.5. Serra’s 2002 lawsuit is far too late.
The controlling authority for us is this court’s opinion in
Ojavan Investors, Inc. v. California Coastal Com.
(1994)
This court concluded that Ojavan’s claims were barred by the statute of limitations, because the Public Resources Code requires an aggrieved landowner to petition for review within 60 days after the Commission’s decision becomes final.
(Ojavan, supra,
The reasoning in Ojavan applies here. Adamson agreed to the condition imposed by the Commission and executed the OTD, thereby accepting the benefit of the permit to expand its mobilehome park within the coastal zone. Adamson did not seek judicial intervention to avoid the condition. Serra, the successor owner of the Property, is bound by Adamson’s waiver of its right to seek timely writ review.
The condition imposed by the Commission became final in 1981. In 1983, Adamson executed and recorded the OTD, then proceeded to expand its mobilehome park as allowed by the permit. By its own terms, the OTD is binding on Serra, as Adamson’s successor in interest. The Commission’s preparations to accept the OTD are a formality, occurring over 20 years after the permit decision became final. The period in which to challenge the original permit was not revived in 2002, when the OTD was about to be recorded by the Conservancy. (See
Ojavan, supra,
Serra maintains that the 60-day limitations period does not apply because the Commission is carrying out an unconstitutional taking of Serra’s property. The Fifth Amendment requires the payment of just compensation for public taking of private property.
(First Lutheran Church
v.
Los Angeles County
(1987)
Serra is not the first property owner to attempt a belated inverse condemnation action, years after the Commission issues a conditional permit. Attempts to make an end run around the 60-day writ petition limitations period in Public Resources Code section 30801 do not succeed.
Compliance with procedural writ requirements “remains a necessary predicate to institution of inverse condemnation proceedings.”
(Rossco Holdings Inc.
v.
State of California
(1989)
The rule requiring timely writ review holds true even when the aggrieved individuals asserting inverse condemnation are successors in interest to prior owners who accepted the burdens and benefits of the Commission’s conditional permits. (Ojavan, supra, 26 Cal.App.4th at pp. 524—525.) The plaintiffs in Ojavan acquired coastal land that was burdened by development restrictions recorded by the prior owner. This court concluded that the absence of a timely writ petition by the prior owner “results in waiver of any inverse condemnation and related claims” for the successor in interest. (Id. at p. 524.)
“Quite clearly, a property owner seeking to recover on an inverse condemnation claim against the Commission in a case such as this must first establish the invalidity of the condition the Commission sought to impose. An administrative mandate proceeding provides the proper vehicle for such a challenge. Even in the
post-First Lutheran
world, requiring that an inverse condemnation claim be joined with an administrative mandate action filed within 60 days after the Commission decision becomes final serves the salutary purpose of promptly alerting the Commission that its decision is being questioned and that the State may be liable for inverse condemnation damages.”
(California Coastal Com.
v.
Superior Court
(1989)
It bears noting that the proper administrative procedures were followed in the case Serra relies upon,
Nollan v. California Coastal Comm’n.
(1987)
Serra attempts to avoid the finality of the Commission’s original permit decision by arguing that it is merely challenging the Conservancy’s acceptance of the OTD. No matter how the action is styled, it remains a collateral attack on a decision that has been final for two decades. The current claim derives solely from the Commission’s 1981 permit condition, not from the formalities involved in enforcing that condition. The derivation is plain from an examination of Serra’s first amended complaint, which alleges that the Commission’s OTD condition bears no relationship to the expansion of Adamson’s mobilehome park, seven miles distant from the Property. The Conservancy’s actions in accepting the OTD do not revive the expired period in which to challenge the condition when it was originally imposed in 1981.
The opinion in
Daniel v. County of Santa Barbara
(9th Cir. 2002)
The Ninth Circuit concluded that the Daniels’ claims were time-barred, whether based on the Commission’s original exaction of the OTD in the 1970’s, or on the county’s acceptance of the OTD in the 1990’s.
(Daniel, supra,
The reasoning of
Daniel
applies with equal force to the OTD involved in the present appeal. The Commission imposed the OTD condition in 1981, and though the state’s exercise of its regulatory power was final at that time, any challenge to the exercise of power was waived. This case is factually distinguishable from
Palazzolo v. Rhode Island
(2001)
The
Daniel
case answers Serra’s contention that the Commission had to stop all efforts to accept existing OTD’s after the
Nolían
case was decided in 1987. As noted by the
Daniel
court, there is no doubt that a government body has the constitutional power to regulate or seize private property; the only issue is whether (or how much) it must pay for the property.
(Daniel, supra,
4. Retroactivity
Serra argues in its reply brief, for the first time, that the
Nollan
case operates retroactively, reaching back to invalidate onerous permit conditions that were imposed years before
Nollan
was decided. Serra waived this argument on appeal by failing to raise it in the trial court or in its opening brief.
(Heiner
v.
Kmart Corp.
(2000)
The argument fails, in any event. In
Hensler,
the state Supreme Court noted that
First Lutheran Church v. Los Angeles County, supra,
The same analysis applies here. No one pursued a judicial challenge to the OTD condition in this case when it was imposed in 1981. Neither Nollan nor any of the other Supreme Court cases cited by Serra operate retroactively to revive takings claims that were waived by inaction. There is no authority for allowing a takings claim to be made 20 years after the expiration of the applicable statute of limitations for challenging a final state land use permit decision.
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed.
Nott, J., and Doi Todd, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied October 20, 2004. Werdegar, J., did not participate therein. Brown, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
Public Resources Code section 30801 provides, “Any aggrieved person shall have a right to judicial review of any decision or action of the [coastal] commission by filing a petition for a writ of mandate . . . within 60 days after the decision or action has become final.”
