We find, as explained herein, that the statutes governing the imposition of school impact fees do not require a school district to separately analyze the impact of a unique subtype of residential construction not contemplated in the statute. To hold otherwise would disrupt the school district's
I. BACKGROUND
This case is situated at the intersection of two statutes. One is the Mitigation Fee Act, codified as Government Code sections 66000 through
The other statute comprises detailed legislation governing the imposition of school impact fees on private development projects. ( Ed. Code, § 17620 ; Gov. Code, §§ 65995, 65995.5, 65995.7.) The Legislature has declared the financing of school facilities and the mitigation of development-related impacts on the need for school facilities to be "matters of statewide concern." ( § 65995, subd. (e).) State statute authorizes a school district to levy fees on new construction in its service area for school facilities to accommodate a growing student population. To impose a school impact fee, a school district must determine the reasonable relationship required under the Mitigation Fee Act.
A . The Agricultural Employee Housing Project
Tanimura & Antle Fresh Foods, Inc. (T&A), is the developer of a 100-unit agricultural employee housing complex (the project) located within the boundaries of the Salinas Union High School District (the District) in Monterey County.
The county board of supervisors approved the project in September 2015. The board issued a resolution to adopt a mitigated negative declaration under CEQA
B . Adoption of School Impact Fees
Around the same time that T&A applied for project approval, the governing board of the District adopted a "Level 2" school impact fee on new residential construction in its service area. A Level 2 fee requires the school district to demonstrate need based on statutory prerequisites.
The parties disputed the applicability of the Level 2 fee to the project. T&A eventually tendered the fee amount of $294,210 to the District under protest. (§ 66020, subd. (a) [procedures to protest imposition of fees].)
C . Petition for Writ of Mandate and Court Trial
T&A filed a petition for writ of mandate in the Monterey County Superior Court seeking declaratory relief and a refund of the fee paid, plus interest. T&A challenged the Level 2 fee under section 66001 as not reasonably related to the need for school facilities. It stressed that the project's design and approval for agricultural employees only, without dependents, meant that it would not generate new students for the district. Since the employees-only designation was among the conditions recorded on title, T&A argued that the project was "not the typical type of residential project" covered by the District's needs analysis.
The District responded that the reasonable relationship requirement applies to the type of development project on which the fee is imposed, not to a specific development. School districts otherwise would have "to somehow anticipate and separately analyze ... every conceivable variation of residential development that might be proposed, including even legally questionable permutations, during the year-long life-span of a district's developer fee." The District argued that school districts are not required to anticipate alternate housing types or to determine whether a project actually generates enrollment at the rate anticipated by the needs analysis. The District pointed to express statutory exemptions for government-financed migrant worker housing (§ 65995.1, subd. (b)) as support for the argument that nonexempt housing types are included within the general class of residential development.
The District also contended based in part on a passage in the board's resolution and on the deposition testimony of the county's resource manager that the "adult employees only" designation was not a condition of the project. According to the District, the county recognized the potentially discriminatory ramification of excluding children and so determined that T&A would submit the occupancy limitation in its project description, which the county would merely approve. T&A objected to the District's references to housing discrimination and to its proffer of related evidence as irrelevant and inadmissible.
At a bench trial, counsel for T&A clarified that it was not challenging the District's needs analysis generally, but only the reasonable relationship between the fee "and this particular type of project." Counsel for the District countered that unlike a project's physical composition, a property owner's intent for use of the property does not create a different "type" or class of development, especially when that intent may be unlawful. The District urged
D . Order Granting Peremptory Writ of Mandate to Refund Fees
The trial court entered an intended statement of decision in favor of T&A. The court cited three Court of Appeal decisions that led "to the inescapable conclusion that ... there are no facts to support a reasonable relationship between the fees and the project's impact on school enrollment." The decisions are Shapell Industries , Inc . v . Governing Board (1991)
The trial court reasoned that although section 66001, subdivision (a) directs a school district to determine the required reasonable relationship based on "type" of development, "case law-and common sense-preclude the application of an overbroad label in a fee study that does not account for a project's actual impact." The court explained that the SFNA "lumped all residential development into one category of 'residential construction' without taking into account that no children would live in this type of development." It sustained T&A's objections to the evidence related to
After additional briefing by the parties, the trial court issued a minute order stating that it had not modified its intended statement of decision which became the final statement of decision. The court issued a final order and judgment and peremptory writ of mandamus on November 8, 2017. This appeal followed.
II. DISCUSSION
The District, supported by amici curiae briefs from the Coalition for Adequate School Housing and Education Legal Alliance of the California School Boards Association, contends that if the trial court's ruling is upheld, it will have wide-ranging implications for school funding. They claim that to avoid paying school impact fees, developers can characterize projects as a different "type" than that covered by the fee analysis, for which a fee has been established. T&A responds that to impose fees on a project that does not burden schools is contrary to the reasonable relationship requirement, which
A. Statutory Framework
School impact fees emerged as a way for local governments to accommodate growing student populations perpetuated by new development. ( Shapell , supra , 1 Cal.App.4th at pp. 225-226,
In 1986, the Legislature "substantially revised and expanded" early statutory authorization for school impact fees imposed by local government. ( Shapell , supra ,
" Section 65995.5 provides for a Level 2 fee that may be used when the school district meets certain statutorily specified criteria that show a particular need for additional funds for school construction." ( Cresta Bella , supra , 218 Cal.App.4th at pp. 445-446,
The statute limits the expenditure of Level 2 fees to "solely ... the school facilities identified in the needs analysis as being attributable to projected enrollment growth from the construction of new residential units." ( § 65995.5, subd. (f).) This restriction mirrors in part the broader reasonable relationship requirement for developer fees under the Mitigation Fee Act.
The Mitigation Fee Act applies to a monetary exaction imposed by a local agency as a condition of approval of a development project to defray public facility costs related to the project. ( § 66000, subd. (b) ; Ehrlich , supra ,
The court in Shapell invoked a three-part standard to determine compliance with the nexus requirement in the context of school impact fees. ( Shapell , supra ,
B. Standard of Review and Burden of Proof
The District's establishment of the Level 2 fee on new residential development was a quasi-legislative action. ( SummerHill Winchester LLC v . Campbell Union School Dist . (2018)
A school district establishing a school impact fee "has the initial burden of producing evidence sufficient to demonstrate that it used a valid method for imposing the fee in question, one that established a reasonable
C . Analysis
The District frames the question on appeal by asking whether a real estate developer can "avoid paying school impact fees by professing an intention to employ the potentially illegal tactic of excluding families from a new residential development?" It challenges T&A's characterization of the project "as a 'unique sub-type of migrant farmworker employee housing,' " arguing there is no statutory authority for a developer to "create a separate 'type' of residential development by merely declaring an intention to exclude families." Amici curiae supporting the District further argue that the trial court's ruling improperly creates a de facto, nonstatutory exemption for atypical housing projects that fall outside the range of project data covered by the school district's fee analysis.
T&A responds that imposition of the Level 2 fee on the project in this case was arbitrary and lacked evidentiary support because any nexus between the fee and the school facilities necessitated by residential development in the district did not extend to T&A's agricultural employees-only project, which it argues was not a type of residential development analyzed by the District's needs analysis. T&A disagrees that the developer's intent or any evidence related to a discrimination argument is relevant, since the condition pertaining to adult employees only is specified in the county's approval of the project and is recorded on title as part of the development plan.
1 . Developer "Intent " Does Not Drive the Determination of Project "Type "
We dispel the notion that T&A's intent not to house children in the proposed project dominates the reasonable relationship analysis. The premise of the District's argument is that the county avoided conditioning its approval of the project on a potentially unlawful restriction against children and
The trial court did not abuse its discretion by sustaining T&A's objections to the evidence regarding discrimination. Both parties recognize that whether the project's adults-only designation could be challenged under fair housing laws is not at issue in this case. Instead, the District seeks to show that the county's approval of the project was formulated to refrain from imposing a condition that would preclude children, due to concerns about discrimination.
The District relies on a statement in the mitigated negative declaration finding in the board resolution approving the project. It says, "The project is not conditioned to preclude residents with children as this is what was requested in the application and evaluated in the Initial Study."
The District's focus on the county's ostensible effort to sidestep the exclusionary condition distracts from what was actually approved. The conditions of approval for the combined development permit plainly state that "[t]he project is for agricultural employees only, without dependents." This condition is reinforced throughout the board resolution approving the project, including in the project description findings, the consistency findings, and the mitigated negative declaration findings.
By contrast, the statement touted by the District as showing the project was not conditioned to preclude residents with children appears only once, in a paragraph responding to public comment related to the impact on public services. It is, at best, ambiguous in meaning and contradictory of the condition of approval which states that the project is for agricultural employees only, without dependents. This evidence does not negate the conditions of approval and the recorded agreement. Accordingly, we find that it is not the developer's stated intent but the recorded terms of government agency approval that determine project "type" for purposes of the reasonable relationship analysis under the applicable statutes.
2 . The Statutory Scheme Does Not Mandate Analysis of the Adult Employees-only Housing Project as a Distinct "Type " of Residential Development
We turn to whether the District was required to separately analyze the
The District and amici curiae stress that designation of the project as agricultural employee housing does not qualify it as a separate "type" of residential development within the meaning of section 66001 and outside the scope of the Level 2 fee for new residential construction. The District emphasizes that the statutory language and case authority do not require project-specific reasonable relationship findings for the imposition of a districtwide school impact fee. The District also points to exceptions in the statute for certain types of development, including government-financed agricultural migrant worker housing, to show that non-excepted types of development come within the umbrella of residential construction.
There is no dispute for purposes of this appeal that the District was authorized to establish a school impact fee to fund facilities necessitated by new residential development in the District's service area.
The trial court took a similar view, finding "no facts to support a reasonable relationship between the fees and the project's impact on school enrollment" since "no children would live in this type of development." The court rejected "an overbroad label in a fee study that does not account for a project's actual impact." The trial court's reasoning is logically sound and thoughtfully articulated. We find, however, that it fails to reconcile its project-specific focus with the controlling statutes. As stated earlier, we accord no deference to the trial court's decision and review the District's action only to determine whether it was arbitrary, capricious, or lacking evidentiary support. ( SummerHill , supra , 30 Cal.App.5th at pp. 552-553,
We are not convinced that the unique or atypical designation of a residential development-in this case restricting occupancy to seasonal farmworkers without dependents-qualifies it for separate consideration as a "type" of residential development under the relevant statutes. "In interpreting a statute, our primary goal is to determine and give effect to the underlying purpose of the law. [Citation.]
The Mitigation Fee Act broadly defines "development project" as "any project undertaken for the purpose of development." ( § 66000, subd. (a).) This makes sense because section 66001 is not limited to school impact fees but "governs a wide range of local agency actions taken under differing statutory requirements." ( Garrick , supra ,
In Garrick , the Court of Appeal explained that section 66001, subdivision (a) 's reference to "use and need in relation to a 'type' of development project ... applies to an initial, quasi-legislative adoption of development fees" ( Garrick , supra ,
To discern what a "type" of development project means in any specific context-here the imposition of school impact fees-requires us to look beyond section 66001 to the statutory framework governing the subject of the fee. In doing so, we attempt to construe the statutory provisions in a way that is internally consistent and reasonable in view of the statute's plain meaning, legislative history, and background ( Goodman v . Lozano , supra ,
The authorizing statute for school impact fees identifies three categories of construction against which a school district's governing board may levy a fee. ( Ed. Code, § 17620, subd. (a)(1).) These are "new commercial and industrial construction" ( id ., § 17620, subd. (a)(1)(A) ), "new residential construction" ( id ., § 17620, subd. (a)(1)(B) ), and subject to specified limitations, "other residential construction, only if the resulting increase in assessable space exceeds 500 square feet" ( id ., § 17620, subd. (a)(1)(C) ). "[C]onstruction" means "new construction and reconstruction of existing building for residential, commercial, or industrial." ( Gov. Code, § 65995, subd. (d) ; Ed. Code, § 17620, subd. (a)(2).) The definition excludes certain facilities, such as those that are "used exclusively for religious purposes" or that are government "owned and occupied ...." ( § 65995, subd. (d).) It also categorizes hotels, inns, and "other lodging for which the maximum term of occupancy for guests does not exceed 30 days" as " 'commercial or industrial construction' " but excludes from the commercial/industrial category "any residential hotel ...." (Ibid .)
In this second category, the statutory formula to calculate the maximum allowable Level 2 "square foot fee" ( § 65995.5, subd. (c) ) requires the sum cost, derived in part from the number of unhoused pupils, to be divided "by the projected total square footage of assessable space of residential units anticipated to be constructed during the next five-year period in the school district or the city and
The same definition of "residential units" applies to section 65995.6, governing the SFNA. ( § 65995.5, subd. (g).) The statute directs the school district to base its projection of unhoused pupils "generated by new residential units" on the "historical student generation rates of new residential units constructed during the previous five years that are of a similar type of unit to those anticipated to be constructed either in the school district or the city or county in which the school district is located .... For purposes of this paragraph, 'type' means a single family detached, single family attached, or multifamily unit." (§ 65995.6, subd. (a), italics added.)
Despite the breadth of housing arrangements defined as "residential" under section 65995.5, none describe employee-only housing like that proposed by T&A. It is therefore unsurprising that, as T&A points out, neither the District's board resolution adopting the Level 2 fee, nor the needs analysis it relied on, address "an adult agricultural employee-only type of residential development that will not allow children or other non-employee dependents."
The first of these guideposts, discussed above, is the language of section 66001, subdivision (a) as it pertains to quasi-legislative determinations by a government agency. We concluded that tying the reasonable relationship standard to "the type of development project on which the fee is imposed" ( § 66001, subd. (a)(3), (4) ) enables quasi-legislative action. In this case, for example, the District established the Level 2 fee prospectively upon "residential construction of $3.00 per square foot of residential development" located within its service area. To construe "type of development project" more narrowly risks conflating the statutory distinction between subdivision (a) of section 66001, as it applies to quasi-legislative fee determinations, and subdivision (b), as it applies to adjudicatory or ad-hoc fee determinations.
Garrick provides insight into this distinction. The school district in Garrick imposed school impact fees on new residential development under former Government Code section 53080 (now Education Code section 17620 ) and section 65995. ( Garrick , supra ,
The observation that future facilities needs based on projected residential development provides a sufficient nexus to satisfy section 66001 finds support in the relevant legislative history. In enacting former section 53080, the Legislature declared the need for "a comprehensive school facilities finance program" (Stats. 1986, ch. 887, § 7(d), p. 3080) to address overcrowded school facilities due to development and population growth in many areas of the state. (Stats. 1986, ch. 887, § 7(a), p. 3080.) It found "that the levying of appropriate fees by school district governing boards at the rates authorized by this act is a reasonable method of financing the expansion and construction of school facilities resulting from new economic development within the district." (Stats. 1986, ch. 887, § 7(e), p. 3080; see also Shapell , supra ,
Although Education Code section 17620 replaced former
The second guidepost is that in crafting the law that authorizes the imposition of school impact fees and governs their implementation, the
It is significant that the resulting legislative scheme provides what appears to be a comprehensive set of definitions under the statutes and only limited, express exceptions for certain project subtypes. The statutes authorize a school district to levy a fee "against any construction within the boundaries of the district" ( Ed. Code, § 17620, subd. (a)(1) ), define "construction" broadly to mean the "construction and reconstruction of existing building for residential, commercial, or industrial" ( § 65995, subd. (d) ), include a range of housing subtypes for consideration in assessing the impact of new residential construction, including residential hotels ( § 65995.5, subd. (g) ), and even include short-term lodging like hotels under commercial or industrial construction ( § 65995, subd. (d) ). The limited exceptions to imposition of school impact fees are facilities used exclusively for religious purposes, private day schools, and state-owned facilities ( § 65995, subd. (d) ), senior citizen housing and residential care facilities for the elderly (§ 65995.1, subd. (a)), and government housing for agricultural migrant workers (§ 65995.1, subd. (b)).
The paradigm that emerges is one of comprehensive coverage of construction types with limited, explicit exceptions, and apparent sensitivity to treatment of housing types with minimal potential to add children to the school district (i.e., providing for senior housing and care facilities to be assessed as commercial or industrial). Yet the Legislature made no express provision for employee-only housing. Even more telling, the Legislature exempted government -financed agricultural migrant worker housing from school impact fees but omitted any mention of privately-financed farmworker housing. This leads us
The California Supreme Court's analysis of a class of fee types under section 65995 is instructive. In Grupe , the court determined that a school district's " 'special tax' " ( Grupe , supra ,
So too here, the absence of any reference to employee-only or adult-only housing "may well be explained by reference to history" ( Grupe , supra ,
We agree with the assessment in Loyola . To construe the designation of agricultural employee-only housing as a distinct "type" would contravene the Legislature's intent "to include virtually all construction except that exempted by sections 65995 et seq." ( Loyola , supra ,
Both cases involved the imposition of school impact fees on residential redevelopment, and each time the court found that the fee study failed to determine a reasonable relationship between redevelopment construction on preexisting square footage and school facilities needs. ( Cresta Bella , supra ,
In Warmington , the redevelopment project decreased the number of residential housing units from 56 apartment units to 38 single family homes. ( Warmington , supra ,
Cresta Bella closely followed Warmington . ( Cresta Bella , supra , 218 Cal.App.4th at pp. 442, 451,
The appellate court reasoned that contrary to showing a connection between replacement of preexisting square footage and the generation of new students, the district's needs analysis in fact found that "replacement of preexisting units does not generate new students because the units were already in existence prior to the new construction." ( Cresta Bella , supra ,
T&A contends that Warmington and Cresta Bella support its position that a fee study that analyzes only general types of residential development cannot be the basis for imposing impact fees on a different type of residential project
Here, by contrast, the distinguishing characteristic that renders imposition of the Level 2 fee problematic is the project's designation for adults only, without dependents. Unlike the general category of redevelopment construction, this designation is not itself a "type" contemplated in the statute (as shown above), and it is highly project specific. Because the Legislature did not identify adults-only or even employee specific housing for either an exception or alternative treatment under the statute, we believe it would be incongruous to fault the needs analysis for failing to consider it.
The third guidepost is practical. "Statutes are to be given a reasonable and commonsense interpretation consistent with the apparent legislative
We recognize that there are contrary views about what is the "reasonable and commonsense interpretation" ( Dyna-Med , supra ,
According to T&A, the District's needs analysis failed to establish the requisite reasonable relationship because it neither addressed "a type of residential project that will not allow children" nor proposed a method to estimate whether such a project "will in fact generate additional students." But to adopt T&A's position would have the practical effect of requiring a school district to expand its needs analysis to address the projected impact on school facilities of undefined, variant subtypes of residential construction not contemplated in the statute. We find such a consequence inconsistent with the purpose of section 66001, insofar as subdivision (a) enables the imposition of quasi-legislative fees that are applied prospectively. (See Shapell , supra , 1 Cal.App.4th at pp. 231-232,
Nor are we persuaded by T & A's contention that the imposition of the fee on its project contradicts the nexus and proportionality principles that underlie the reasonable relationship standard. (See Ehrlich , supra ,
We conclude, based on our review of the statutory schemes, that the District was not required to anticipate and analyze agricultural employee-only housing (as a distinct subtype of residential housing) in the school facilities needs analysis under section 65995.6 for purposes of satisfying the reasonable relationship requirement under section 66001, subdivision (a).
3 . Imposition of the Level 2 Fee Was Not Arbitrary or Capricious
Our conclusion that the District was not required under the statutes to analyze adult-employee-only housing as a separate "type" of development
There is no dispute for purposes of this appeal that T&A's agricultural employee housing project is "residential."
Nothing in the record or in T&A's opposition on appeal suggests that the District's methodology was invalid or failed to satisfy the three-part showing articulated in Shapell . The SFNA projected the total amount of new residential units expected to be built, approximated the number of students that would be generated by the new housing, and estimated the related cost-burden imposed on the District's school facilities. (See Shapell , supra ,
The argument that the District lacked evidentiary support and failed to demonstrate a rational connection between the Level 2 fee and the project turns on the unique designation of the project as adults -only employee housing. That is, the question of a sufficient, reasonable relationship to the school impact fees arises only by virtue of the project's designation as housing for adults only, without dependents. But the feature of being restricted to adults is entirely project specific. It returns us full circle to whether T&A's project constituted a distinct "type" of development project requiring separate analysis under both section 66001 and the school impact fees statutory scheme. Having dispensed with that question as a
Because the District met its initial burden of demonstrating the validity of the Level 2 fee as based upon a reasonable relationship between the fee charged and the burden posed by residential development in its service area, we turn to T&A's showing in the protest action. ( Home Builders , supra ,
The Van Camp declaration, for example, states that T&A's seasonal farmworkers leave their children at permanent homes in other locations during the seven-month growing season, including with relatives if both parents come to work. That may be the case; but as the District points out, it is also possible that children accompany a parent or parents for the seven-month season, and whether placed with local friends, relatives, or elsewhere, those children enroll in school. Without any supporting documentation, the Van Camp declaration is inadequate to disturb the District's districtwide assessment of the impact of new residential housing. (See Loyola , supra ,
T&A also points to the limits of the SFNA conducted by the District. Kevin Sullivan, who oversaw the SFNA in this case, testified that in his understanding, all development is classified as either commercial/industrial or residential, and all residential development generates additional students and is subject to paying school fees unless it is senior-restricted housing (and thus charged a commercial/industrial rate) or it satisfies a statutory exemption. Sullivan also acknowledged that the student generation rate analysis for the SFNA did not include any kind of residential development that does not allow children. According to T&A, Sullivan's explanation demonstrates that the proposition that all types of new residential development are projected to
This circular reasoning is not persuasive when we consider that the information purportedly missing from the District's SFNA is a uniquely specific feature of the agricultural employee housing project which neither alters the "type" of construction subject to fees under the statute (see Gov. Code, §§ 66001, subd. (a), 65995, subd. (d) ; Ed. Code, § 17620, subd. (a)(1)(A)-(C) ) nor qualifies for any legislatively-determined exception or exemption (see §§ 65995, subd. (d), 65995.1 ).
We conclude that the statutory scheme does not require separate analysis of "subtypes" of residential development not contemplated by the statute. As a result, the District's needs analysis adequately determined a reasonable relationship between the Level 2 fee's use, the need for school facilities, and new residential development in the District. Imposition of the Level 2 fee was not arbitrary or entirely lacking in evidentiary support for failing to account for the actual impact of T&A's adults-only project, because nothing in the statute requires the school district imposing a quasi-legislative fee to justify its action based on a project's actual impact.
The judgment is reversed. Costs on appeal are awarded to the Salinas Union High School District.
WE CONCUR:
Elia, J.
Grover, J.
Notes
Unspecified statutory references are to the Government Code.
The factual background is drawn from the evidence admitted at trial. We take judicial notice of those matters properly noticed by the superior court as set forth in its intended statement of decision filed on September 8, 2017. (Evid. Code, § 459, subd. (a).)
California Environmental Quality Act (Pub. Res. Code, § 21050 et seq. ).
There are several alternative statutory formulas that dictate the maximum fee a school district can impose for each square foot of new construction. (§§ 65995, 65995.5, 65995.7.) These are commonly known as Level 1, Level 2, and Level 3 fees. (Cresta Bella , LP v . Poway Unified School Dist . (2013)
Later legislative enactments repealed Government Code section 53080 et seq. and effectively replaced it with provisions added to the Education Code. (See Stats. 1996, ch. 277, § 3, p. 2180 [adding Ed. Code, § 17620 ], §§ 7-14, p. 2219 [repealing Gov. Code § 53080 et seq. ], § 15, p. 2219 [stating that the provisions added are substantially the same as existing provisions relating to the same subject matter].)
" 'Unhoused pupils' " are students who lack seats in existing school facilities. (Cresta Bella , supra ,
The cited statement appears in a finding responding to public comment related to the impact on public services. The entire passage reads: "The Initial Study evaluated that no students would be generated by the project because the project is defined as employee housing with no dependents. The applicant has alternative housing available for employees with families .... The project is not conditioned to preclude residents with children as this is what was requested in the application and evaluated in the Initial Study . Any change to this would require an amendment to this Combined Development Permit." (Italics added.)
For example, the project description findings note that T&A "provides housing for employees with dependents at other locations ...." The consistency finding references a county ordinance for farmworker housing and explains that "[n]o children's play area is provided because it is expected that the occupants of the units will be employees without dependents." The findings in response to public comment about compliance with federal and state housing guidelines, as well as about impacts on the affected elementary school district (which is not the subject of this case), state that federal guidelines referring to rural development of multi-family rental housing units do not apply, that "[i]f families occupy the units, the applicant would be required to apply for an amendment to the General Development Plan," and that "[i]f the project description ever changes, the applicant will be required to apply for an amendment to the [general development plan] which would trigger additional environmental review and consideration of the impact on schools."
Other grounds raised in T&A's petition for writ of mandate and complaint challenging the Level 2 fee imposed against it, including timeliness, are not at issue in this appeal.
" 'Residential hotel' means any building containing six or more guestrooms or efficiency units ..., intended or designed to be used ... for sleeping purposes by guests, which is also the primary residence of those guests ...." (Health & Saf. Code, § 50519, subd. (b)(1).)
" 'Stock cooperative' means a development in which a corporation is formed or availed of, primarily for the purpose of holding title to ... improved real property, and ... the shareholders of the corporation receive a right of exclusive occupancy in a portion of the real property, title to which is held by the corporation." (Civ. Code, § 4190, subd. (a).)
The District identified the "types of new residential development" in the needs analysis as "including but not limited to single- and multi-family units ..., single- and multi-family units in redevelopment projects, single- and multi-family units that replace demolished units (to the extent that the new units are larger than the demolished units), additions of residential space to existing single- and multi-family units, manufactured homes, mobile homes and condominiums ...."
Section 65995.1 limits fees on the construction of new senior citizen housing and residential care facilities for the elderly only to those applicable "in the case of commercial or industrial development." (§ 65995.1, subd. (a).) The statute entirely exempts from fees "agricultural migrant worker housing which is owned by the state and which is subject to a contract" under certain provisions of the Health and Safety Code. (§ 65995.1, subd. (b).)
T&A requests that this court take judicial notice of sections of the Monterey County Code of Ordinances (MCCO) that pertain to agricultural employee housing. These include MCCO section 21.06.014, which defines "agricultural employee housing," and section 21.66.060, which regulates the permitting of agricultural employee housing. T&A contends that these ordinance sections are relevant to the District's argument that the project is not a separate "type" of residential development from that addressed in the SFNA to support imposition of the Level 2 fee. The District opposes the request for judicial notice on the grounds that it failed at the outset to satisfy the requirements of California Rules of Court, rule 8.252(a), and has not justified presenting the MCCO sections for the first time on appeal. T&A responds that although the MCCO sections were not presented to the trial court, as legal authority they fall outside the general rule that reviewing courts should not take judicial notice of evidence not in the record before the trial court. (See Vons Companies , Inc . v . Seabest Foods , Inc . (1996)
Evidence Code section 459 requires this court to take judicial notice of the requested MCCO sections even though they were not presented to the trial court for judicial notice. (Evid. Code, § 451, subd. (a) ["Judicial notice shall be taken of ... public statutory law of this state"] (italics added); id ., 459, subd. (a) ["The reviewing court shall take judicial notice of ... each matter that the trial court was required to notice under Section 451"]; see Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.252(a).)
The record reflects that early discussions between the county and the District's sister school district for grades K through 8 grappled with whether the commercial rate or the residential rate should apply to T&A's project.
