BMC Promise Way, LLC v. County of San Benito

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 1, 2021
DocketH046707
StatusPublished

This text of BMC Promise Way, LLC v. County of San Benito (BMC Promise Way, LLC v. County of San Benito) 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
BMC Promise Way, LLC v. County of San Benito, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 11/1/21; Certified for Publication 12/1/21 (order attached)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

BMC PROMISE WAY, LLC, H046707 (San Benito County Plaintiff and Appellant, Super. Ct. No. CU1500056)

v.

COUNTY OF SAN BENITO et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

A tax sharing agreement between the County of San Benito and the City of Hollister requires the city to pay the county a fixed fee (referred to as the “Additional Amount”) per residential unit constructed on land annexed into the city from the county during the period covered by that agreement. Plaintiff’s predecessor in interest entered into an annexation agreement with the city under which it agreed to comply with “all applicable provisions” of that tax sharing agreement in return for the city’s agreement to annex certain land. When plaintiff purchased the annexed land and sought to develop it into two subdivision projects, the city informed plaintiff that it was liable for the Additional Amount fees. Plaintiff paid the fees under protest and then sued both the city and the county seeking a declaration of its rights and duties under various written instruments. Following a court trial, judgment was entered against plaintiff. Plaintiff seeks to demonstrate on appeal that it is not liable for the Additional Amount fees. Plaintiff contends that neither the annexation agreement nor the 1999 tax sharing agreement requires plaintiff to pay the Additional Amount to the city; and even if the annexation agreement imposed the Additional Amount fees, plaintiff is not liable for them because they violate the Mitigation Fee Act and federal constitutional constraints on development fees as monetary exactions. For the reasons stated here, we will affirm the denial of relief because plaintiff is contractually liable for the Additional Amount by the terms of the annexation agreement, and any challenge to the calculation of the Additional Amount is both beyond the scope of plaintiff’s declaratory relief action and barred by applicable statutes of limitations. I. TRIAL COURT PROCEEDINGS A. TAX SHARING AGREEMENTS BETWEEN THE CITY AND COUNTY The city and the county entered into a “Master Agreement for Tax Transfer Upon Annexation” in 1999 (the 1999 tax sharing agreement). (Capitalization omitted.) The stated intent of the agreement is that “any annexation and development of residential property shall be fiscally neutral to the City and County.” The agreement applies to “all those local agency boundary changes defined in Revenue and Taxation Code section 95(e) as jurisdictional changes, occurring during the applicable period of this agreement, where County is the affected county and City is an affected city.” Among other taxes and payments, Term 5(b)(i) of the agreement requires the city to pay the county the Additional Amount: “City shall pay to County an additional amount for property annexed as residential property within the affected territory in an amount equal to $7,000 for each single family dwelling unit ultimately created within the affected territory.” The agreement further provides: “The Additional Amount owed by the City to County shall accrue at the time City issues a building permit for any structure on a particular parcel of land within the affected territory.” The formula to calculate the Additional Amount was to be “adjusted annually ... based on changes in the Consumer Price Index.” The city agreed to pay the Additional Amount “regardless of the revenue source” the city identified to make the payments. To ensure payment of the Additional Amount, the city agreed that the county could “deduct the Additional Amount then owed ... from City’s 2 property tax allocation whether such allocation is derived from the affected territory or any area within the incorporated territory” of the city. By its terms the agreement was effective until January 1, 2010. The city and the county entered into a new master agreement for tax transfer in 2011. As under the 1999 tax sharing agreement, the city agreed to pay an Additional Amount for each residential unit. Two relevant elements of the 2011 agreement are different: the Additional Amount under the 2011 agreement was $9,500 per unit, and the amount would accrue when the city signed off on a final occupancy permit for any structure on a particular parcel of land (rather than when a building permit was issued). B. ANNEXATION AGREEMENT Plaintiff’s predecessor in interest (Rajkovich) entered into an annexation agreement with the city that was recorded against the affected property in 2000. (The parties to this appeal agree that the annexation agreement applies to the property encompassing both subdivisions at issue here.) In return for the city approving Rajkovich’s application to annex the property, Rajkovich agreed “to hold and use the Property in compliance with and subject to all City ordinances, resolutions, and policies, and in compliance with all applicable provisions of the Tax Sharing Agreement” between the city and the county. The annexation agreement continues: “As a condition of annexation, [Rajkovich] agrees to comply with all applicable provisions of the above- referenced Tax Sharing Agreement including without limitation those provisions relating to Allocations and Payments (section 5), which require, without limitation, payment of a $7,000 residential unit fee for each residential unit developed within the Property.” The recorded annexation agreement states that its conditions “shall be binding on all of [Rajkovich’s] heirs, successors and assigns and shall run with the Property.” It further provides that it “shall not be revoked or modified without the prior consent of the City Council of the City of Hollister and shall be recorded against the Property and each part thereof and shall be binding on all persons or legal entities succeeding to [Rajkovich’s] 3 interest in and to the Property or any part thereof.” The county’s Local Agency Formation Commission approved annexation of the property into the city in 2002. C. HOMESTEAD AND SADDLEBROOK PROJECT APPROVALS The city’s Planning Commission approved a tentative subdivision map in 2013 for Rajkovich to develop part of the annexed land into what is referred to as the Homestead project. Condition of approval No. 43 refers to the annexation agreement, stating that the project is “subject to the terms and conditions set forth in the annexation agreement entered into between” Rajkovich and the city. (The parties agree that plaintiff acquired from Rajkovich all of the property covered by the annexation agreement, though neither points to evidence in the record reflecting that transfer.) The city’s Planning Commission approved a tentative subdivision map in 2015 for plaintiff to develop the remainder of the land covered by the annexation agreement into what is referred to as the Saddlebrook project. Unlike the Homestead project, nothing in the Saddlebrook approval expressly references the annexation agreement. But condition of approval No. 40 requires plaintiff to “pay all fees including all fees required by reimbursable agreements, drainage agreements, improvement plan checking fees and inspection fees as well as any applicable fees pursuant to the Public Works Master plan.” D. LITIGATION When plaintiff sought building permits for the Homestead and Saddlebrook projects, the city or the county apparently informed plaintiff that it would have to pay the Additional Amount for each residential unit it developed. Plaintiff paid the city over $1.3 million under protest to cover the Additional Amount fees for the residential units it planned to build in the Homestead and Saddlebrook projects. Plaintiff then filed a separate lawsuit for each project, naming both the city and the county as defendants.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
BMC Promise Way, LLC v. County of San Benito, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bmc-promise-way-llc-v-county-of-san-benito-calctapp-2021.