Capistrano Taxpayers Ass'n v. City of San Juan Capistrano

235 Cal. App. 4th 1493, 186 Cal. Rptr. 3d 362, 2015 Cal. App. LEXIS 330
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 20, 2015
DocketG048969
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 235 Cal. App. 4th 1493 (Capistrano Taxpayers Ass'n v. City of San Juan Capistrano) 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
Capistrano Taxpayers Ass'n v. City of San Juan Capistrano, 235 Cal. App. 4th 1493, 186 Cal. Rptr. 3d 362, 2015 Cal. App. LEXIS 330 (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Opinion

BEDSWORTH, Acting P. J.

I. INTRODUCTION

Southern California is a “semi-desert with a desert heart.” 1 Visionary engineers and scientists have done a remarkable job of making our home habitable, and too many of us south of the Tehachapis never give a thought to *1497 its remarkable reclamation. In his brilliant — if opinionated — classic Cadillac Desert, the late Marc Reisner laments how little appreciation there is of “how difficult it will be just to hang on to the beachhead they have made.” 2

In this case we deal with parties who have an acute appreciation of how tenuous the beachhead is, and how desperately we all must fight to protect it. But they disagree about what steps are allowable — or required — to accomplish that task. We are called upon to determine not what is the right — or even the more reasonable — approach to the beachhead’s preservation, but what is the one chosen by the state’s voters.

We hope there are future scientists, engineers, and legislators with the wisdom to envision and enact water plans to keep our beloved Cadillac Desert habitable. But that is not the court’s mandate. Our job — and it is daunting enough — is solely to determine what water plans the voters and legislators of the past have put in place, and to determine whether the trial court’s rulings complied with those plans.

We conclude the trial court erred in holding that Proposition 218 does not allow public water agencies to pass on to their customers the capital costs of improvements to provide additional increments of water — such as building a recycling plant. Its findings were that future water provided by the improvement is not immediately available to customers. (See Cal. Const., art. XIII D, § 6, subd. (b)(4) [no fees “may be imposed for a service unless that service is actually used by, or immediately available to, the owner of the property in question”].) But, as applied to water delivery, the phrase “a service” cannot be read to differentiate between recycled water and traditional, potable water. Water service is already “immediately available” to all customers, and continued water service is assured by such capital improvements as water recycling plants. That satisfies the constitutional and statutory requirements.

However, the trial court did not err in ruling that Proposition 218 requires public water agencies to calculate the actual costs of providing water at various levels of usage. Article XIII D, section 6, subdivision (b)(3) of the California Constitution, as interpreted by our Supreme Court in Bighorn-Desert View Water Agency v. Verjil (2006) 39 Cal.4th 205, 221 [46 Cal.Rptr.3d 73, 138 P.3d 220] (Bighorn) provides that water rates must reflect the “ ‘cost of the service attributable’ ” to a given parcel. 3 While tiered, or inclined rates that go up progressively in relation to usage are perfectly *1498 consonant with article XIII D, section 6, subdivision (b)(3) and Bighorn, the tiers must still correspond to the actual cost of providing service at a given level of usage. The water agency here did not try to calculate the cost of actually providing water at its various tier levels. It merely allocated all its costs among the price tier levels, based not on costs, but on predetermined usage budgets. Accordingly, the trial court correctly determined the agency had failed to carry the burden imposed on it by another part of Proposition 218 (art. XIII D, § 6, subd. (b)(5)) 4 of showing it had complied with the requirement water fees not exceed the cost of service attributable to a parcel at least without a vote of the electorate. That part of the judgment must be affirmed.

II. FACTS

Sometimes cities are themselves customers of a water district, the best example in the case law being the City of Palmdale, which successfully invoked Proposition 218 to challenge the rates it was paying to a water district. (See City of Palmdale v. Palmdale Water Dist. (2011) 198 Cal.App.4th 926 [131 Cal.Rptr.3d 373] (Palmdale).) And sometimes cities are, as in the present case, their own water district. As amicus curiae Association of California Water Agencies (ACWA) points out, government water suppliers in California are a diverse lot that includes municipal water districts, irrigation districts, county water districts, and, in some cases, cities themselves. To focus on its specific role in this case as a municipal water supplier — as distinct from its role as the provider of municipal services which consume water such as parks, city landscaping or public golf courses — we will refer to appellant City of San Juan Capistrano as “City Water.”

In February 2010, City Water adopted a new water rate structure recommended by a consulting firm. The way City Water calculated the new rate structure is well described in City Water’s supplemental brief of November 25, 2014. 5 City Water followed a pattern generally recommended by a manual used by public water agencies throughout the western United States known as the “M-l” manual. It first ascertained its total costs, including things like debt service on previous infrastructural improvements. It then *1499 identified components of its costs, such as the cost of billing and the cost of water treatment. Next it identified classes of customers, differentiating, for example, between “regular lot” residential customers and “large lot” residential customers, and between construction customers and agricultural customers. Then, in regard to each class, City Water calculated four possible budgets of water usage, based on historical data for usage patterns: low, reasonable, excessive and very excessive.

The four budgets were then used as the basis for four distinct “tiers” of pricing. 6 For residential customers, tier 1, the low budget, was assumed to be exclusively indoor usage, based on World Health Organization guidelines concerning the “minimum quantity of water required for survival,” with adjustments for things like “low-flush toilets and other high-efficiency appliances.” Tier 2, the reasonable budget, included an outdoor allocation based on “typical landscapes,” and assumed “use of native plants and drought-tolerant plants.” The final two tiers were based on budgets of what City Water considers excessive usages of water or overuse volumes. Using these four budgets of consumption levels, City Water allocated its total costs in such a way that the anticipated revenues from all four tiers would equal its total costs, and thus the four-tier system would be, taken as a whole, revenue neutral, and City Water would not make a profit on its pricing structure.

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Bluebook (online)
235 Cal. App. 4th 1493, 186 Cal. Rptr. 3d 362, 2015 Cal. App. LEXIS 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capistrano-taxpayers-assn-v-city-of-san-juan-capistrano-calctapp-2015.