Avenida San Juan Partnership v. City of San Clemente

201 Cal. App. 4th 1256, 135 Cal. Rptr. 3d 570, 2011 Cal. App. LEXIS 1564
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 14, 2011
DocketNos. G043479, G043534
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 201 Cal. App. 4th 1256 (Avenida San Juan Partnership v. City of San Clemente) 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
Avenida San Juan Partnership v. City of San Clemente, 201 Cal. App. 4th 1256, 135 Cal. Rptr. 3d 570, 2011 Cal. App. LEXIS 1564 (Cal. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Opinion

RYLAARSDAM, Acting P. J.

The City of San Clemente (the City) appeals from a conditional judgment in favor of Avenida San Juan Partnership (the owners). The City imposed an “RVL” or “residential, very low” set of land use restrictions on an undeveloped 2.85-acre parcel in the middle of a residential tract otherwise zoned “Residential, Low Density Zone.” The RVL designation limits parcels to one dwelling per 20 acres. Residential, low (RL) by contrast, allows at least four dwellings per acre. There were two phases of trial. In phase one, the trial court concluded the restrictions constituted spot zoning. It issued [1260]*1260a writ of mandate declaring the resolution denying the owners’ application to develop four houses on the property null and void and ordered the City to adopt a new resolution vacating the resolution denying the owners’ application.

The City asked for a stay of the writ. The stay was granted. In phase two, there was a trial on the owners’ request for damages. The court found a compensable taking, using the “Penn Central factors” test. (See Penn Central Transp. Co. v. New York City (1978) 438 U.S. 104 [57 L.Ed.2d 631, 98 S.Ct. 2646] (Penn Central)) The court entered a conditional judgment. The judgment gave the City the choice of either complying with the writ of mandate or paying $1.3 million in damages for the value of the property taken by the RVL restrictions.

We affirm the judgment so far as the trial court gave the City the choice of either complying with the writ of mandate or paying inverse condemnation damages. The City’s refusal to lift the imposition of the RVL restriction on this particular parcel was arbitrary and capricious. As the trial court also found, applying the factors enumerated by Penn Central, that refusal to lift the RVL restrictions imposed specifically on this parcel constituted a taking. Further, this litigation was timely. This action is in substance an “as applied” challenge to the City’s denial of requested changes to the City’s land use scheme which otherwise works a peculiar hardship on the particular parcel at issue here, not a general attack on RVL zoning as such. However, we reverse the judgment to afford the trial court the opportunity to reconsider the fair market value of the property.

FACTS

1. Background

The subject parcel consists of an undeveloped 2.85 acres on a slope that fronts Avenida San Juan. When the owners bought it in 1980, the zoning allowed six dwellings per acre.

In the early 1980’s the owners wanted to develop four houses on the property. Their plans were well within the existing land use restrictions. The City approved plans to subdivide the property allowing for four single family lots. These lots would be connected to the street by a cul-de-sac road. Construction of the road required considerable grading, but the City specifically found that there were no geological obstacles to developing the property with four residences. A city resolution at the time stated that “ ‘all competent evidence before the City Council indicates that the site is developable without danger to adjacent properties.’ ”

[1261]*1261Opposition arose in the neighborhood. In 1983 a landslide occurred in the Verde Canyon area, which is generally located to the southwest of the subject parcel and lies behind the homes which front the southern side of Avenida San Juan. The landslide did not involve the subject parcel. Even so, a group of neighbors petitioned the City to make the subject parcel open space. The City attorney at the time, however, opined that rezoning the parcel as open space would be a compensable taking. The City engineer said there was no reason to reconsider the tentative parcel map approval already given. The property remained zoned six houses per acre. However, the owners did not develop it at the time.

2. The 1993 and 1996 RVL Restrictions

In 1993, the City amended its general plan to create RVL zoning and impose it on several properties, including the subject property. All parcels surrounding the subject property, however, were zoned RL. RVL zoning in San Clemente allows only one residence for every 20 acres. RL zoning allows four dwellings per acre.

The City did not get around to formally rezoning the property from “R-l-B-1” to the one-dwelling-per-20 acres RVL until 1996. In mid-February of that year the City approved changing the zoning for a variety of properties to correspond to the 1993 amended general plan.

The general plan states that the purpose of RVL zoning is to preserve open space in canyons. RVL zoning, under the terms of the City’s ordinance, is intended to apply to cases of “significant acreage.” The subject parcel is 2.85 acres. It is not a canyon. It is a slope. The ordinance says nothing about slopes.

The ordinance specifically recites that the purpose of RVL zoning is to “preserve currently undeveloped canyons which are either geologically unstable, or aesthetic open-space, or biological resources.” There is no dispute that the parcel does not contain “any sensitive biological resources.”

3. The 2006 Variance Application and 2007 Denial

None of the partners in the partnership actually found out about the downzoning from R-l-B-1 to RVL until 2004. That year they hired a civil engineer to help them once again try to develop the property.

[1262]*1262In early September 2006 the owners submitted a development application to build four dwellings on the 2.85 acres. Specifically, the application sought a general plan amendment, zoning amendment, tentative parcel map, site plan permit, conditional use permit, and variance.

Some five months later, in February 2007, the city planning commission recommended denial of the application. The owners sought review by the city council. At a meeting of the city council on July 24, 2007, a resolution was approved denying the application.

4. The Ensuing Litigation

a. Trial level

i. Writ of mandate

Within 40 days, on August 29, 2007, the owners filed suit in federal court. They alleged, among other claims, inverse condemnation based on the spot zoning of the property. A number of city officials were added as nominal defendants. The federal court granted a motion to dismiss, but with leave to amend. After the owners amended their complaint in federal court, they filed this action in state court and dismissed the federal action.

There is no argument on appeal that the dismissal with leave to amend by the federal court has any sort of preclusive effect. The City accepts that the August 29, 2007 filing date in federal court is the one on which the litigation commenced for purposes of the statute of limitations. (See 28 U.S.C. § 1367(d).)

The parties agreed to an order bifurcating the trial. The trial court was first to consider the owners’ request for administrative mandate. Remaining issues were to be decided in a second phase.

The writ of mandate phase was heard by Judge Stock.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
201 Cal. App. 4th 1256, 135 Cal. Rptr. 3d 570, 2011 Cal. App. LEXIS 1564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/avenida-san-juan-partnership-v-city-of-san-clemente-calctapp-2011.