SPOSFI argues on appeal that the trial court erred in denying a motion to augment the record, in determining that SPOSFI failed to timely raise challenges to the ordinance under the San Francisco Planning Code and CEQA and therefore waived them, and in determining that the ordinance does not conflict with the Ellis Act. In the unpublished portion of this opinion we conclude that SPOSFI has not shown error with respect to the record or waiver. In the published portion, we conclude that the ordinance is preempted by the Ellis Act because it requires a property owner who exercises Ellis Act rights to wait 10 years before being eligible for a permit to make alterations. Therefore, we shall reverse the judgment.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Before San Francisco Ordinance No. 286-13 (Ordinance No. 286-13) was adopted in December 2013, section 181 of San Francisco's Planning Code generally prohibited the enlargement, alteration or reconstruction of "nonconforming units," which are legal residential housing units that exceed the currently-permitted density for the zoning district in which they are located.
A. Initial Proposal to Allow Changes to Nonconforming Units
In January 2013, Supervisor John Avalos introduced a proposed ordinance that would modify the Planning Code in several different respects, including by allowing
The Commission held a hearing on the proposed ordinance in July 2013. In advance of the hearing, Department staff prepared an executive summary, which raised the possibility that allowing changes to nonconforming units might have unintended consequences. Staff explained that "very often nonconforming units are among the city's most affordable housing stock, and are often subject to rent control." Allowing changes to those units "would provide increased flexibility, which could encourage the improvement, expansion, or production of family-sized housing," but that "[a]lternatively, the amendments could result in expansions that would increase the cost of the units, including rental units, such that they are no longer affordable." The Department could not predict the effects of changing the law, "but encourage[d] decision-makers to carefully consider these potential impacts to the city's most affordable, yet unsubsidized, form of housing."
At the Commission meeting, a memorandum from Supervisor Avalos was circulated proposing amendments to the ordinance, including two that related to nonconforming units. To preserve the affordability of nonconforming units, Supervisor Avalos proposed prohibiting alterations that would extend beyond the building envelope as it existed on January 1, 2013. To prevent owners from evicting tenants for the purpose of altering units, he proposed prohibiting alterations if a building had a "no-fault" eviction, including an Ellis Act eviction under section 37.9, subdivision (a)(13) of the Administrative Code,
At the close of the hearing, the Commission adopted a recommendation that the portion of the proposed ordinance concerned with allowing enlargements and alterations of nonconforming units be split from the remainder of the proposal, and continued to September 2013.
About 10 days after the July 2013 hearing, Supervisor Avalos introduced a new proposed ordinance that would permit enlargement, alteration, or reconstruction of a nonconforming unit if the building is located in a zoning district where residential use is principally permitted so long as the enlargement, alteration, or reconstruction did not extend beyond the building envelope as it existed on January 1, 2013. The Board transmitted the proposed ordinance to the Department for environmental review, and the Department determined that the ordinance was not a project for purposes of CEQA.
The Commission held a hearing on the new proposed ordinance in September 2013. In advance of the hearing, Department staff prepared an executive summary stating that the limitation of changes to the existing building envelope reduced the likelihood that expanding nonconforming units would make them less affordable. At the hearing, Supervisor Avalos's aide, Jeremy Pollock, informed the Commission that Supervisor Avalos's office and the city attorney were "working on language that would not allow for alterations in units that had had an eviction, a no fault eviction within the last 10 years." Pollock explained, "[W]e're basically looking to model that [language] on other places in the Planning Code that have restrictions on
During discussion of the proposed ordinance by the Commission, Department staff member Sophie Hayward noted that Supervisor Avalos "has been very clear to date as to the changes that he is hoping to make to this ordinance, which relates to language regarding no-fault eviction. If any other substantive change were made it would be automatically referred back to the Planning Commission." Commissioner Antonini, the only member of the Commission to vote against the ordinance, cited the proposed amendment regarding no-fault evictions as a reason for his opposition: "It reminds me of the garage door. We went through a discussion on a property ... and the present owners had nothing to do with the evictions that happened many years before, ... and they just wanted to provide garages for their own use. And [a supervisor] introduced this legislation to link them to something that happened well before and they had no control over. [¶] Ten years is a long time and you could have ownership changes. So just on the basis of that being part of this legislation, I think parts of this have some good uses, but I think that in particular I don't like." The Commission voted to approve the proposed ordinance by a vote of 6 to 1.
The Board's Land Use and Economic Development Committee (Land Use Committee or Committee) considered the ordinance and solicited public comment at a meeting in November 2013. At the meeting, Supervisor Avalos's aide Pollock asked the Committee to adopt the amendment that alterations not be allowed for 10 years where no-fault evictions had occurred, and to continue the item for two weeks, anticipating that the language of the amendment would be available before the next hearing. Pollock explained that the purpose of the amendment was to avoid creating an incentive for owners to evict tenants, renovate the units, and then rent or sell them at a higher rate. The Committee asked for public comment; none was forthcoming; and the Committee then voted to accept the amendment and continue the
The proposed ordinance was discussed again at a December 9, 2013 meeting of the Committee. As reflected in the meeting notice, the ordinance to be discussed did not permit owners to make changes if tenants had been evicted under certain Rent Ordinance provisions. Supervisor Avalos spoke about the ordinance at some length, and explained that the ordinance included "safeguards to ensure that allowing alterations to [nonconforming] units won't have unintended consequences that reduce their affordability or encourage displacement of tenants." During the public comment period, two representatives of SPOSFI spoke. President Nuney Rickan expressed concerns that
At the December 10 Board meeting, the proposed ordinance passed unanimously on the first reading. On December 16, the Board received a letter from SPOSFI, dated December 13, 2013, objecting to the ordinance. For the first time, SPOSFI claimed that in passing the ordinance the Board would violate CEQA and the San Francisco Charter. SPOSFI also contended the ordinance was facially defective and preempted under the Ellis Act.
The Board passed the ordinance unanimously on second reading on December 17, 2013. On December 26, Mayor Lee signed the ordinance, numbered 286-13.
C. Trial Court Proceedings
SPOSFI filed a petition for writ of mandate and complaint for declaratory relief. The trial court heard argument, and subsequently denied the petition in its entirety. Judgment was entered for the City, and this appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
"In reviewing a judgment on a petition for writ of mandate, '[w]e review the trial court's findings of fact for substantial evidence and review its legal conclusions, including its interpretation of statutory provisions, under a de novo standard of review. [Citations.]' " ( Ashlan Park Center LLC v. Crow (2015)
E. Ellis Act Challenge
SPOSFI argues that on its face the ordinance is preempted by the Ellis Act, on
1. Applicable Law
The Ellis Act prohibits local governments from "compel[ing] the owner of any residential real property to offer, or to continue to offer, accommodations in the property for rent or lease...." ( Gov. Code, § 7060, subd. (a).
Local legislation that conflicts with state law is preempted by state law and is void. ( Johnson , supra ,
2. Analysis
SPOSFI argues that the ordinance is preempted on its face because, by imposing a 10-year waiting period on the modification of a non-conforming unit where a tenant was evicted under the Ellis Act, it penalizes a property owner's exercise of Ellis Act rights. The City raises three arguments in response: First, SPOSFI cannot state a facial challenge to the ordinance; second, the imposition of the 10-year waiting period falls within the City's authority to regulate land use and mitigate impacts on displaced tenants; third, the ordinance does not conflict with the Ellis Act because it does not impose a prohibitive price on exiting the rental business.
We conclude that SPOSFI has the better argument. Our analysis draws heavily
The Court of Appeal in SFAA recognized that under the Ellis Act the City " 'retains its traditional police power to regulate the subsequent use of the property after the property's removal from the rental housing market,' " including " 'the particulars of the demolition and the redevelopment of the property after it is withdrawn from the rental market.' " ( SFAA , supra,
It is a straightforward matter to apply SFAA to the facts here. By imposing a 10-year waiting period on alterations to non-conforming units where property owners have exercised their Ellis Act rights, the ordinance penalizes property owners who leave the rental market. The ordinance does not regulate the particulars of the remodeling of a nonconforming unit, but rather prohibits any such changes for a period of 10 years after the property owner exits the rental business. By imposing such a prohibition on property owners who have left the rental market, the ordinance challenged here improperly enters the field of substantive eviction controls over such property owners. (See SFAA , supra ,
Contrary to the City's argument, SPOSFI has appropriately stated a facial challenge to the ordinance. Under the ordinance here, in every case where a property owner exercises the Ellis Act right to withdraw a nonconforming rental unit from the residential market, the property owner is met with a locally-imposed legal barrier: a 10-year waiting period before the unit can be remodeled. In this respect, the ordinance impedes property owners from exercising their Ellis Act rights to withdraw residential units from the rental market. It does not matter that the waiting period occurs after the Ellis Act eviction, rather than before it. (See SFAA , supra ,
Nor are we persuaded that the 10-year waiting period is nothing more than a provision that governs "the demolition and redevelopment of residential property." (§ 7060.7, subd. (b).) As in SFAA , the 10-year waiting period here is "more akin to a substantive requirement triggered upon a landlord's notice of intent to remove a rental unit from the rental housing market than to local regulation of 'the particulars of the demolition and the redevelopment of the property after it is withdrawn.' " ( SFAA , supra ,
The City argues that even if the ordinance penalizes the exercise of Ellis Act rights it does not impose a "prohibitive price" on exiting the rental business. In the context of Ellis Act jurisprudence, a "prohibitive price" on a property owner's exercise of Ellis Act rights is an "inevitable and undue burden," ( SFAA , supra ,
Here, an inevitable burden of exercising Ellis Act rights is a prohibition against altering a non-conforming unit for 10 years. The City argues that the burden is reasonable because it "merely" requires property owners to observe the 10-year reoccupancy period recognized in the Ellis Act. (See § 7060.2, subd. (c) [authorizing public entities to require property owners who offer a unit for rent within 10 years of its removal from the rental market to offer the unit to the displaced tenant].) But the ordinance does more than that. It does not simply require that a unit that is returned to the market be offered to the displaced tenant: it imposes a waiting period on the alteration of nonconforming units where an Ellis Act eviction has taken place, no matter the use to which the unit is put. Like the 10-year waiting period on mergers analyzed in SFAA , the ordinance here "imposes a mandatory restriction on the rights of property owners that far exceeds the scope of permissible local governance delineated by the Ellis Act." ( SFAA ,
We conclude that because it imposes a 10-year waiting period for alterations of properties that have been withdrawn from rental use under the Ellis Act, Planning Code section 181, subdivision (c)(3) conflicts with, and is preempted by, the Ellis Act.
The judgment is reversed and the matter is remanded with directions to the trial court to enter an order enjoining the City from enforcing Planning Code section 181, subdivision (c)(3) as to property owners undertaking no-fault evictions under the Ellis Act. Appellant shall recover its costs on appeal.
We concur:
Kline, P.J.
Richman, J.
Notes
Nonconforming units were legally constructed before current zoning districts were established, and therefore generally exist in older buildings. If a building contains more units than currently permitted by the zoning district, the units must be designated as "conforming" or "nonconforming." Building owners choose which units to designate as conforming or nonconforming.
The Administrative Code establishes procedures for landlords to follow in withdrawing units from the rental market, requires relocation payments to tenants, and imposes restrictions on the return of withdrawn units to the rental market. (Admin. Code, § 37.9A.)
The California Environmental Quality Act, Public Resources Code section 21000 et seq.
The memorandum stated, "I would like to propose an additional amendment to prevent owners from evicting tenants to ... alter a nonconforming unit.... To accomplish this ... [¶] Section 181 would be amended so that nonconforming units could not be altered 'if the building has had one or more 'no-fault' evictions, as defined in 37.9(a)(7)-(13) of the Administrative Code, with each eviction associated with a separate unit(s) within the past ten years."
The remainder of the original proposal subsequently became Ordinance No. 287-13, which, among other things, amended Planning Code section 317, subdivision (e)(4) to impose five- to 10-year waiting periods on mergers of residential units if a tenant was evicted under Administrative Code sections 37.9, subdivision (a)(8) through 37.9, subdivision (a)(14). Our colleagues in Division Three affirmed a trial court ruling that the amended Planning Code section was preempted by the Ellis Act in San Francisco Apartment Association v. City and County of San Francisco (2016)
We granted appellant's unopposed request that we take judicial notice of a senate committee's bill analysis of Senate Bill No. 948 (1999-2000 Reg. Sess.), which discusses amendments made to the Ellis Act.
See footnote *, ante .
Subsequent undesignated statutory references are to the Government Code.
These rights and remedies include the following: Ellis Act evictions require at least 120 days' notice; seniors and disabled individuals who have lived in their units for one year or more require at least one year's notice. (Admin. Code, § 37.9A, subd. (f)(4).) A tenant evicted under the Ellis Act is entitled to relocation money, half of which must be paid at the time the eviction notice is served. (Id. , § 37.9A, subd. (e)(3).) If a unit removed from the rental market under the Ellis Act is returned to the rental market within two years, the displaced tenant may sue for actual and exemplary damages. (Id. , § 37.9A, subd. (d)(1).) In addition, the City can bring a civil proceeding against the owner for exemplary damages for displacement of tenants. (Id. , § 37.9A, subd. (d)(2).) If the unit is returned to the rental market within five years, it must be re-rented at the old rate. (Id. , § 37.9A, subd. (b).) If the unit is returned to the rental market within 10 years, the evicted tenant has a right of first refusal. (Id. , § 37.9A, subd. (c).)
