Adamson Companies v. City of Malibu

854 F. Supp. 1476, 94 Daily Journal DAR 9158, 1994 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7909, 1994 WL 257126
CourtDistrict Court, C.D. California
DecidedJune 6, 1994
DocketCV 92-1027 MRP, CV 92-1028 MRP
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 854 F. Supp. 1476 (Adamson Companies v. City of Malibu) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, C.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adamson Companies v. City of Malibu, 854 F. Supp. 1476, 94 Daily Journal DAR 9158, 1994 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7909, 1994 WL 257126 (C.D. Cal. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION

PFAELZER, District Judge.

I. BACKGROUND

On December 3, 1991, the City of Malibu (“City”) acting through its City Council (“City Council”) adopted a mobile home rent control ordinance (“rent control ordinance”). Malibu Municipal Code, Article VI, Chapter 7, Ordinance 48-U. Plaintiffs The Kissel Co. (“Kissel”) and The Adamson Companies (“Adamson”) are the owners of the only two mobile home parks within the City. Kissel owns a park called Paradise Cove Mobile Home Park (“Paradise Cove”) and Adamson owns a park called Point Dume Club (“Point Dume”).

The plaintiffs brought these companion cases to obtain a judgment that the rent control ordinance violates the constitutional guarantees of substantive due process and equal protection, as well as the guarantee against taking property without just compensation under the Fifth Amendment. 1

Mobile home rentals are quite different from apartment rentals. The “tenant” buys a mobile home or “coach” which he then places on a space or “pad” in a mobile home *1481 park. In California, the tenants usually rent or lease the space from a park owner. In addition to the investment in the coach and its initial placement, most tenants invest in permanent improvements such as landscaping, decks and patios. Likewise, the park owner makes an investment not only in the land, but also in providing facilities for the use of the tenants, such as private roads, plumbing and common areas. Thus, unlike an ordinary rental, both the park owner and the tenant make substantial capital investments in a mobile home tenancy.

Mobile homes, despite their name, are not usually mobile. Once placed in a park, few are moved. 2 This is principally due to the cost of moving a coach which is often equal to or greater than the value of the coach itself. Also, many mobile home parks will not accept older coaches so that after a time, the coach may be rendered effectively immobile. Thus, the park owner, absent regulation, theoretically has the power to exact a premium from the tenant who, as a practical matter, cannot move the coach.

In this situation, if the tenant decides to live elsewhere, he does not move the coach, but rather sells it “in place.” The buyer, then, becomes the new tenant. The California Mobile Home Residency Law, not challenged here, forbids the termination of a mobile home tenancy without cause, as well as the assessment of transfer fees, and requires that the park owner accept any buyer of the coach as a tenant so long as the purchaser has the ability to pay the rent. Cal.Civ.Code § 798 et seq. As a consequence of the tenant’s guaranteed occupancy and his freedom to sell without penalty, any economic power the park owner might potentially have over the tenant is significantly lessened.

A number of jurisdictions, including the City, also have enacted rent control ordinances to protect mobile home tenants because of a concern that the California Mobile Home Residency Law does not go far enough. The economic justification most often advanced for such ordinances is that even though the space is freely marketable by the tenants, the park owner can, by raising the rent to unreasonable levels, effectively destroy the tenant’s ability to realize a fair return on his investment by selling the coach in place. Theoretically, in a free market, such behavior would eventually put the park owner out of business because there would be other park owners willing to offer mobile home spaces on more reasonable terms. The City argues, however, that there is no operational market, but rather a monopoly 3 on the part of the park owner created by the scarcity of mobile home spaces. The existence of this monopoly is a further justification claimed by the City for the enactment of the rent control ordinance.

A. The Bent Control Ordinance

The rent control ordinance applies to all mobile home spaces in the City with the exception of those spaces subject to long-term leases governed by state law. The plaintiffs challenge the following provisions of the rent control ordinance:

1. Rent Rollback — The rent control ordinance requires that mobile home rents be rolled back to the rates in effect on December 31, 1984 and then adjusted by the City Manager according to the terms of the Los Angeles County Rent Control Ordinance and Park Conversion Ordinance (“LA Ordinance”). The LA Ordinance had governed the rents in Paradise Cove prior to the incorporation of the City in 1991. Rent Control Ordinance § 6701 B, 6705 C. Point Dume was exempt from the LA Ordinance. 4 In effect the rollback gives the rent control ordinance an eight year retroactive application.

*1482 2. Rent Control — The rent control ordinance allows increases in rents per year only up to 75% of the increase in the Consumer Price Index or 5%, whichever is less. Rent Control Ordinance § 6708 A.

3. Rent Freezes — The rent control ordinance prohibits any rent increases prior to March 28, 1993, thereby freezing rents in the parks for two years after its enactment. Rent Control Ordinance § 6708 A. Additionally, upon the expiration of any exempt long-term lease, the ordinance freezes rents for three years thereafter. Id. The ordinance provides one exception to the three year freeze at the expiration of long term leases. If the park owner does not increase the rent pursuant to the lease between March 28, 1992 and March 28,1993, no formula increases are allowed for one year following the expiration of the lease. Id.

4. Vacancy Control — Upon the vacancy of a space, the rent control ordinance originally allowed an increase of not more than 18% over the last rent in effect prior to a vacancy. 5 Rent Control Ordinance § 6708 B. In September 1992, the City Council amended the rent control ordinance to reduce the allowable increase to 10% when a vacancy occurs. Rent Control Ordinance § 6708 B., as amended, September 16, 1992.

5. Closure Conversion Restrictions — Initially, the rent control ordinance required that if the park owner wished to close the park, it was required to prepare a “conversion impact report” which, among other things, required the payment of relocation costs. Rent Control Ordinance § 6723 D.2.g. The ordinance required the park owner to “take steps to mitigate the adverse impact on the tenants, not to exceed the reasonable costs of relocation.” Rent Control Ordinance § 6723 D.3. Under the original ordinance, if a tenant elected not to relocate upon conversion, the park owner was required to purchase the mobile home at 15% above its in-place market value. Rent Control Ordinance § 6723 D.3.a.

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854 F. Supp. 1476, 94 Daily Journal DAR 9158, 1994 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7909, 1994 WL 257126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adamson-companies-v-city-of-malibu-cacd-1994.