C.O.M.E.T. v. City of Redlands CA4/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 25, 2024
DocketG063087
StatusUnpublished

This text of C.O.M.E.T. v. City of Redlands CA4/3 (C.O.M.E.T. v. City of Redlands CA4/3) 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
C.O.M.E.T. v. City of Redlands CA4/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 10/25/24 C.O.M.E.T. v. City of Redlands CA4/3

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8. 1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

C.O.M.E.T.,

Plaintiff and Appellant, G063087

v. (Super. Ct. No. CIVDS1906437)

CITY OF REDLANDS, OPINION

Defendant and Respondent.

Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Bernardino, Donald R. Alvarez, Judge. Affirmed. Law Office of Joyce Caraway and Joyce Caraway for Plaintiff and Appellant. Best Best & Krieger, Scott W. Ditfurth, Holland P. Stewart, and Carl C. Jones for Defendant and Respondent. * * * This is an action brought by Citizens of Mentone Empowered Together, (C.O.M.E.T.), against the City of Riverside and the San Bernardino 1 County Local Area Formation Commission (“LAFCO”) to challenge the validity of a series of property annexations and annexation agreements between the City of Redlands and owners of properties in the unincorporated area of nearby Mentone. Although such property annexations must be challenged through what is known as a “reverse validation” cause of action—an in rem proceeding that must be brought within 60 days of the date of annexation— C.O.M.E.T.’s initial complaint included no such cause of action. Instead, it was pleaded as an ordinary complaint against two named parties plus Doe defendants, who are alleged to have proximately caused the injuries and damages alleged. The scope of the complaint was whittled down through a series of demurrers. After the court ruled that C.O.M.E.T. was required to challenge the property annexations through a cause of action for reverse validation, it subsequently sustained a demurrer to that cause of action finding it was barred by the statute of limitations. The court later granted summary judgment against C.O.M.E.T. on its causes of action for declaratory relief and intentional and negligent misrepresentation. C.O.M.E.T. appealed. We affirm. C.O.M.E.T.’s reverse validation cause of action, first alleged in C.O.M.E.T.’s second amended complaint, was barred by the statute of limitations. C.O.M.E.T.’s failure to challenge any individual annexation

1 LAFCOs are “administrative bodies created by the Legislature to oversee urban development. [Citation.] Each county in California is required to have a LAFCO.” (Protect Agricultural Land v. Stanislaus County Local Agency Formation Com. (2016) 223 Cal.App.4th 550, 557-558; § 56325.)

2 decision within the statutory period makes each decision immune from any later challenge. That immunity, in turn, means that neither a cause of action based on misrepresentation, nor a declaratory relief cause of action challenging the legality of annexations, can provide C.O.M.E.T. with the relief it now seeks. We find no error in any of the trial court’s other rulings, and we conclude that to the extent C.O.M.E.T. sought to obtain relief based upon harm allegedly inflicted on individual property developers, it lacked standing to do so. FACTS C.O.M.E.T.’s initial complaint alleged that it “is a 501(c)(3) organization in the unincorporated, rural territory of Mentone,” which is an area abutting the east side of Redlands; it purports to represent all residents and property owners in Mentone. C.O.M.E.T. stated there are too many residents of Mentone to list individually and thus it requested certification of 2 this case as a class action. The complaint alleged that in the 1970’s, “LAFCO placed Mentone in Redlands’ ‘sphere of influence,”’ and that “[o]ver the years, Redlands purchased all of the water companies located in Mentone.” Mentone is therefore dependent on Redlands for all of its potable water. Historically, Redlands has provided water service to properties outside its city limits, including Mentone. However, in 1997, Redlands’s voters passed Measure U, which provided that as a general rule, Redlands would not provide utility services to

2 Our record contains no evidence that C.O.M.E.T. ever pursued class action certification; its opening brief on appeal makes no argument related to such certification.

3 areas outside its city limits until those areas were annexed to the city. But Redlands would allegedly extend utility services to areas outside the city if (1) those areas are not contiguous to the city and thus not eligible for 3 immediate annexation; and (2) the city and landowner had entered into a properly recorded and binding agreement establishing covenants running with the land that obligate the landowner to comply with Redlands’s development standards, pay all capital improvement and other development fees that would apply if the property were within city limits, and agree to annexation at Redlands’s request. The complaint also alleged that “Redlands demands payment of ‘development impact fees,”’ relating to police, fire, and library services, as well as other development fees, as a condition of providing water and sewer service, despite the fact it does not provide those other services in Mentone, all in violation of Government Code section 66001. Finally, the complaint alleged Redlands is obligated to provide Environmental Impact Reports to LAFCO relating to the conversion of Mentone’s agricultural land when it is converted to residential use; instead, the complaint continues, Redlands provides LAFCO with Mitigated Negative Declarations, which do not satisfy its obligations, and LAFCO has endorsed that practice. Based on those factual allegations, C.O.M.E.T. stated causes of action for (1) civil extortion; (2) injunction (seeking to enjoin Redlands from continuing its allegedly extortionate acts); (3) declaratory relief seeking a

3 “Unless otherwise provided in this division, territory may not be annexed to a city unless it is contiguous to the city at the time the proposal is initiated pursuant to this part.” (Govt. Code, § 56741.)

4 declaration that Redlands’ conduct is extortionate and violates applicable law; (4) rescission of all prior annexation agreements and restoration of properties to “Mentone territory”; (5) equitable estoppel to restore Redlands’s pre-Measure U water provision policies; (6) unfair business practices; and (7) quo warranto. Although C.O.M.E.T. explicitly sought rescission of annexation agreements allegedly entered into between Redlands and multiple third party developers, it never identified those developers, nor did it name them as parties to the litigation. After Redlands contacted C.O.M.E.T.’s counsel and expressed its intention to demur to the complaint, C.O.M.E.T. voluntarily agreed to file a first amended complaint. Our record does not include that pleading. In November 2019, the court denied C.O.M.E.T.’s motion for a preliminary injunction. It noted that Redlands’ opposition to the motion argued that any challenge to a “sphere of influence” or annexation determination must be brought as a reverse “validation” proceeding pursuant to Government Code section 56103 and Code of Civil Procedure sections 860 and 863, and that such an action is required to be brought within 60 days of the challenged action. The court concluded that argument was “generally well taken,” and pointed to the fact that a reverse validation proceeding “‘is an in rem action whose effect is binding on the agency and on all other persons.” (Quoting In re Quanitification Settlement Agreement Cases (2011) 201 Cal.App.4th 758, 833.) The court noted that “if no interested party brings a reverse validation action within the mandated 60 days, then a public agency’s action is forever immune from attack ‘whether it is legally valid or not.’”

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Bluebook (online)
C.O.M.E.T. v. City of Redlands CA4/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/comet-v-city-of-redlands-ca43-calctapp-2024.