Attard v. Board of Supervisors of Contra Costa County

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 29, 2017
DocketA138702
StatusPublished

This text of Attard v. Board of Supervisors of Contra Costa County (Attard v. Board of Supervisors of Contra Costa County) 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
Attard v. Board of Supervisors of Contra Costa County, (Cal. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Filed 8/29/17 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FOUR

PAUL G. ATTARD et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, A138702 v. BOARD OF SUPERVISORS OF (Contra Costa County CONTRA COSTA COUNTY et al., Super. Ct. No. N10-0835) Defendants and Respondents.

The plaintiffs in this action, Paul and Tamara Attard (Attards), formulated a creative solution to circumstances constraining development on their two properties in Contra Costa County (County), but they failed to obtain the necessary regulatory approvals for their plan. Notwithstanding that failure, the county issued them permits to develop the properties, including a permit for construction of an 8400-square foot home. By the time the county discovered its error and notified the Attards, they had made substantial progress toward installing a foundation for the new home on one of the properties. The county nonetheless revoked the permits, a decision that was affirmed by the county Board of Supervisors (Board). The Attards filed a petition for writ of mandate challenging the revocation. In the petition, they contended the County was precluded from revoking their permits under the doctrines of vested rights and equitable estoppel. In addition, they contended they were exempt from local regulatory authority under the doctrine of sovereign immunity and were denied due process by the evident bias of one Board member. The trial court denied the writ petition, and we affirm that decision.

1 I BACKGROUND The Attards are the owners of an undeveloped 5-acre parcel at 1000 Fish Ranch Road in an unincorporated portion of the County (Fish Ranch Road property). The Fish Ranch Road property is located on the north side of Highway 24, near the east portal of the Caldecott Tunnel (the tunnel), approximately one mile west of the urban limit line of the Town of Orinda. Although the property is designated open space in the county’s general plan, its zoning allows the construction of one single family home per parcel. The Attards allege that they are also the owners of the two parcels constituting the 3-acre property at 21 Old Tunnel Road (Old Tunnel Road property).1 The Old Tunnel Road property is also located near the east portal of the tunnel in an unincorporated portion of the County, although on the opposite side of Highway 24. It has the same zoning as the Fish Ranch Road property and is similarly distant from urban development. A. Sewage Disposal Through The Tunnel. The chief barrier to development of the Attards’ properties appears to be devising an acceptable means for sewage treatment. The County requires every structure to be connected either to a sanitary sewer, if a connection is available, or to an “individual system” for sewage disposal. (Contra Costa County Code, § 420-6.301.) Because the properties are located well outside local urban limits, they are not served by any municipal sewage system. Beginning in 2003, the Attards attempted to obtain County approval of two different means for individual sewage disposal on the Fish Ranch Road property, a septic system and a holding tank system, but they were unsuccessful. Difficulties with sewage disposal had also thwarted development on the Old Tunnel Road property. Apparently having concluded that connection to a sanitary sewer was the only way to develop their two properties, the Attards found an undeniably creative solution. In

1 The actual ownership of the Old Tunnel Road property is unclear. The administrative record reflects only that one Tamara Lewis, presumably the former name of Tamara Attard, is one of several owners of one of the parcels under 1984 grant deed. Because the County has not objected to the Attards’ standing to pursue this action with respect to the Old Tunnel Road property, the issue of ownership is immaterial.

2 January 2005, an Attard family company, the Bayseng Spice Company (Bayseng), entered into a contract (the tunnel agreement) with the state Department of Transportation (CalTrans).2 Under the tunnel agreement, Bayseng agreed to reconstruct the tunnel’s sewage disposal system in return for the right to connect the Fish Ranch Road and Old Tunnel Road properties to the rebuilt system. At the time, the east portal of the tunnel had a single restroom, served by a septic system. Bayseng committed to build a sewer lateral across the Old Tunnel Road property, connect that lateral to the east portal restroom facilities, and run a sewage line from those facilities through the tunnel, by way of an existing air duct. After emerging on the tunnel’s west side, this line would connect to an existing restroom there, which was provided sewage service by the City of Oakland (Oakland). Bayseng also agreed to upgrade the existing sewer line running from the west portal restroom to Oakland’s facilities. It was intended that the Fish Ranch Road property would tie into the lateral to be built on the Old Tunnel Road property, thereby providing both properties with sewage treatment and disposal by the Oakland sewer system. Bayseng agreed not only to pay all construction costs, but also to pay for upkeep of the new system. Under the tunnel agreement, Bayseng was responsible for obtaining the permits necessary to carry out the plan from the County, Oakland, and Alameda County, as well as encroachment permits from the state. At some point in 2007, work under the tunnel agreement had been completed, and a sewer line connected the Fish Ranch Road and Old Tunnel Road properties to Oakland’s sewer system. The total cost of the improvements to the Attards was estimated at $800,000. The Attards were less diligent in securing the proper permits. While an encroachment permit was eventually issued by CalTrans, allowing Bayseng to build a sewer line through the tunnel and connect it to a sewer pipe on the Old Tunnel Road property, the permit was issued nunc pro tunc, well after the work had been completed.

2 Bayseng was in the business of collecting and drying bay leaves and maintained a mailing address at the Old Tunnel Road property. The nature of Bayseng’s operations at the property, if any, is unclear from the record.

3 The Attards never obtained a permit from Oakland allowing them to use the Oakland sewer system, nor did the county issue a permit authorizing construction of sewer lines on the Old Tunnel Road property. Perhaps most important, neither the Attards nor Oakland obtained the consent of the county Local Agency Formation Commission (LAFCo) to Oakland’s provision of sewage treatment service to parcels located outside its jurisdictional boundary, as required by state law. (Gov. Code, § 56133, subds. (a), (f).) Nonetheless, as discussed below, the Attards obtained permits for development on both of the properties from the County in reliance on the facilities constructed pursuant to the tunnel agreement. B. The Fish Ranch Road Permit. In October 2005, the Attards applied to the County for a permit authorizing the construction of the foundation for a 4400-square foot residence on the Fish Ranch Road property. At the time, the County maintained a “One Stop” permit policy. The purpose of the policy was to insure that all the necessary agencies within the County reviewed those aspects of a permit application for which the agencies were responsible before any permit issued. As a practical matter, this required the application materials, in the words of a former planner, “to be routed, reviewed by, and discussed amongst Planning, Building Inspection, the Fire District, the Sanitary District, and Environmental Health, as appropriate,” depending upon the issues raised by the application.

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Bluebook (online)
Attard v. Board of Supervisors of Contra Costa County, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/attard-v-board-of-supervisors-of-contra-costa-county-calctapp-2017.