Advanced Real Estate Services Inc. v. Superior Court

196 Cal. App. 4th 338, 128 Cal. Rptr. 3d 166, 2011 Cal. App. LEXIS 699
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 7, 2011
DocketNo. G044596
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 196 Cal. App. 4th 338 (Advanced Real Estate Services Inc. v. Superior Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Advanced Real Estate Services Inc. v. Superior Court, 196 Cal. App. 4th 338, 128 Cal. Rptr. 3d 166, 2011 Cal. App. LEXIS 699 (Cal. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Opinion

RYLAARSDAM, Acting P. J.

INTRODUCTION

In 2009 the Legislature passed section 3884.2 of the Food and Agricultural Code providing for the sale of the Orange County Fairgrounds (the [341]*341Fairgrounds). In November 2010, the executive branch Department of General Services (the Department) accepted the bid of Facilities Management West, Inc. (Facilities Management), to buy the Fairgrounds for $100 million, consisting of $20 million down, with the remaining $80 million to be paid off over the course of 35 years.

A disparate group consisting of rival bidders, friends of the Orange County Fair, a state senator, an Assemblymember, and a Costa Mesa council member brought this suit to stop the sale. The trial court issued a temporary restraining order on November 17, 2010, precluding any further action on the part of the Department to consummate the sale of the Fairgrounds. However, the trial court ordered the temporary restraining order lifted on December 21, which would have allowed the sale to go through. On that day, in response to a petition for a writ of supersedeas from the opponents of the sale, this court stepped in and issued a stay, stopping the sale from going forward until we could consider the issues raised.

Having heard oral argument and having considered the issues, we now grant the requested writ of supersedeas. In a word, this sale cannot go forward. There are two main reasons.

First, the Legislature required the Department to provide the Legislature with an explicit comparison between the Fairgrounds’s fair market value and any deal which the Department proposed to make. (Food & Agr. Code, § 3884.2, subd. (d)(2) & (3); all undesignated statutory references in this opinion are to that code.) The Department, however, neglected to provide that comparison. Indeed, the Department’s claim that the deal it made automatically equaled the fair market value of the property contradicted the position it had taken only a few months earlier in a previous round of bidding. In that round, the Department apparently had a good idea of the fair market value of the property, and decided that none of the bids it had received had come sufficiently close to be accepted.

Second, the bidding process itself was flawed by the total absence of any bid protest procedures. In section 3884.2, subdivision (c) the Legislature had required the sale of the Fairgrounds be “pursuant to a public bidding process designed to obtain the highest, most certain return for the state from a responsible bidder.” (Italics added.) Here, however, the Department implemented a bidding system that contained no safeguards to ensure responsibility, or even that bids be materially responsive to the Department’s own request for proposals.

These two flaws in the procedure by which Facilities Management was awarded the sale—particularly the failure to provide the Legislature a comparison between the fair market value of the property and the terms actually [342]*342proposed by the winning bidder—mean that the proposed sale cannot be consummated. While the second flaw (the absence of a bid protest mechanism) might, in theory, be cured by simply sending the matter back to the Department to allow for administrative challenges to the bids received, the first flaw (failure to give the Legislature the comparison it wanted) is necessarily fatal. The Legislature reserved for itself the opportunity to veto the sale if it was not satisfied with the terms of the sale in comparison with the fair market value of the Fairgrounds. It never got that opportunity.

We therefore grant the requested writ of supersedeas. In practical terms, the result of our decision is to void the proposed sale and require the Department to start all over again, if the Governor so chooses.

FACTS

1. The 2009 Legislation

In 2009 the Legislature passed, and then Governor Schwarzenegger signed, Assembly Bill No. 4X 22 (2009-2010 4th Ex. Sess.), which provides for the sale of certain items of real estate owned by the State of California, with the proceeds to end up in the state’s general fund. One of the items Of real estate to be sold is the land currently being used as the Orange County Fairgrounds.

Assembly Bill No. 4X 22 (2009-2010 4th Ex. Sess.) added several new statutes to both the Government Code and the Food and Agricultural Code. The provisions specifically covering the Fairgrounds were new sections 3884.1 and 3884.2 to the Food and Agricultural Code. Subdivision (c) of section 3884.2 directs the Department to conduct the sale of the Fairgrounds “pursuant to a public bidding process designed to obtain the highest, most certain return for the state from a responsible bidder.”

2. The Bidding

a. The first request for proposals

An initial request for proposal was issued by the Department in September 2009 and provided for a public auction after bids were opened. Facilities Management was the high bidder at $55 million, but, in the auction held in January 2010, another firm, Craig Real Estate, presented the highest bid at $56.5 million. However, in March, the Department rejected the $56.5 million bid as being, in the words of one of its senior real estate officers, “not the highest and most certain return,” i.e., too low.

One should bookmark that fact: The Department at the time obviously had a good idea of the Fairground’s fair market value independent of whatever bid happened to be the highest.

[343]*343b. A possible private deal

So, in the spring of 2010, the City of Costa Mesa began efforts to put its own deal together. Those efforts resulted in a proposed three-way deal between Facilities Management, the Department, and a joint powers authority controlled by the City of Costa Mesa. Facilities Management would provide the money and obtain a long-term lease on the property from the joint powers authority: The price was $96 million, and the deal provided for a minimum downpayment of $19.2 million, a promissory note for the balance, installment payments not to exceed 40 years, a fixed payment schedule for those installments, sale of the property “as is,” and (though this would go without saying given the private nature of the deal) no auction. However, since the transaction was obviously being concluded without a public bidding process as required by section 3884.2, the agreement also recognized that the Legislature would need to enact further legislation.

c. The second request for proposals

The Legislature did not take any action on the privately negotiated sale, so in August 2010 the Department issued a second request for proposals. The salient points of the Department’s request for proposals are these: The Department reserved the power not to accept any bid. Unlike the first request, there would be no auction after the bidding. The bid deadline was September 30. The final selection would be made October 14. The Legislature was to receive notice within the week, i.e., by October 21. The minimum terms were: A downpayment of $20 million and any installment payments were not to exceed 40 years pursuant to a fixed payment schedule (so, for example, a bidder could not vary its payments depending on how much money the property was earning).

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196 Cal. App. 4th 338, 128 Cal. Rptr. 3d 166, 2011 Cal. App. LEXIS 699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/advanced-real-estate-services-inc-v-superior-court-calctapp-2011.