Decea v. County of Ventura

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 15, 2021
DocketB302086
StatusPublished

This text of Decea v. County of Ventura (Decea v. County of Ventura) 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
Decea v. County of Ventura, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 1/15/21

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION SIX

STEVEN DECEA, as Trustee, etc.,

Appellant, Vv.

COUNTY OF VENTURA,

Respondent.

2d Civ. No. B3802086 (Super. Ct. No. 56-2018- 00519378-CU-PT-VTA) (Ventura County)

Appellant bought a house in the Lake Sherwood community

of Ventura County in 2007. The house sits within “Parcel A” on a

map recorded by a former owner in 1974. The 1974 map also

includes historical lot lines from a subdivision map recorded by

the original developers in 1923. Parcel A overlays three of these

historical lots and parts of two others. They total 1.04 acres. !

In 2017, appellant sought to reconfigure Parcel A into two

half-acre lots. The plan stalled when the County Surveyor (the

“County’) told him Parcel A consisted of one legal lot, not five.

! A copy of the 1974 map is included here as Appendix 1. This meant appellant could not subdivide the property without falling below the area’s one-acre minimum lot size. Appellant disputed the validity of the 1974 parcel map and whether the former owner legally merged the five original lots into one. The County did not change its position.

Appellant sought relief by petitioning for “exclusion” under the Subdivision Map Act (“The Act”; Gov. Code, § 66410 et seq.).? He sought orders declaring the 1974 parcel map void and restoration of the historical lot lines. The trial court dismissed the petition based on the doctrine of laches and entered judgment without reaching Decea’s legal arguments. We affirm.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Lake Sherwood is an unincorporated community in Ventura County surrounding a man-made eponymous reservoir.® A 1923 tract map (“1923 map’) subdivided the area along Lake Sherwood’s south shore into quarter-acre residential lots. Much of the surrounding land remained part of a large ranch property that passed through a succession of owners, including William Randolph Hearst, until the Murdock Development Company (“MDC”) acquired it in the mid-1980s.

The late Jack Speirs bought one of the quarter-acre south shore lots in 1950. He expanded his property’s footprint over the next two decades by acquiring adjacent properties as they came to market. This included lot numbers 62, 65, 66, 67, and part of

2 Unlabeled statutory references in this opinion are to the Government Code.

3 The reservoir and surrounding woods were the location for the 1922 film, Robin Hood, as well as the more famous 1938 “Golden Age” iteration, The Adventures of Robin Hood; hence “Lake Sherwood.” 68. Longtime neighbor William Dickerson bought lot 64 about the same time Speirs moved to the area. Together they purchased lot 63 to ensure it remained undeveloped, with each taking an undivided 50 percent interest.

Speirs hired Dennis Landberg to survey the properties he and Dickerson owned. Landberg submitted parcel map 17PM72 to the Ventura County Recorder in 1974 (“1974 map”).4 The 1974 map included the 1923 map’s original lot lines but made two significant changes. First, it added a bold border around the outer boundaries of lots 65, 66, 67 and 68 and labeled them collectively as “Parcel A.” Second, it split lot 63 into two pieces, with one piece going into Parcel A and the other grouped with Dickerson’s lot 64 to form “Parcel B.” Speirs’s lot 62 remained separate from both Parcel A and B. The reasons Speirs prepared and recorded the 1974 map are unclear, though the record suggests he and Dickerson used the parcel map process to legally divide lot 63 without violating minimum lot size requirements.

The Legislature amended The Act several times over the next decade. Among these amendments were statutes permitting local agencies® to reduce housing density by merging lots

4 An owner must record an approved parcel map to divide property and sell, lease, or finance the divided parcels. (See 7 Miller & Starr, Cal. Real Estate (4th ed. 2020) § 20:10, pp. 42-43.) The Act currently limits the use of parcel maps to those subdivisions creating four or fewer lots. (§§ 66426, 66428, subd. (a).) Those creating five or more lots must proceed by tentative and final map. (§ 66426.)

5 “Local agency’ is defined as “a city, county or city and county.” (§ 66420.) considered too small for a neighborhood or zone. (§ 66451.10 et seq.) They could do so only after holding hearings at which affected owners could present evidence opposing merger. (§§ 66451.13, 66451.14, 66451.15.) Agencies could make a merger determination without hearing if the affected owners did not request one within 30 days of receiving notice. (§ 66451.17.)

These new merger laws were implicated when, in 1984, MDC informed the County of its plans to acquire and develop properties around Lake Sherwood. MDC and the County’s Planning Division began preparing an area plan providing for high-end residences, a country club, a Jack Nicklaus-designed golf course, and substantial open space dedications.® The County sent merger notices to those who owned undeveloped lots falling below the one-acre minimum lot size.’ Speirs learned the County planned to merge lot 62 into Dickerson’s Parcel B.

Speirs appeared before County officials on June 26, 1985 and July 10, 1985 to discuss the proposed merger. He did not directly address whether the 1974 map effectuated a merger of lots 63, 65, 66, 67, and 68 into Parcel A. Rather, his discussion with officials focused on a lot line error he identified on the 1974 map near Parcel B.? He confirmed hiring Landberg to survey his

6 The Board of Supervisors ultimately approved the Lake Sherwood/Hidden Valley Area Plan in 1987.

7 An acre equals 43,560 square feet.

® Locating the errant lot line is difficult because we cannot see what Speirs pointed out on the 1974 map since only the audio recordings remain. The location of the error, however, neither informs nor affects this appeal. property and Dickerson’s but denied knowing about the error until he saw the map at the hearing. Speirs urged the County not to “kick [him] in the teeth” by using the incorrect lot line when they had discretion to fix the problem. A hearing official responded the County’s “hands [were] tied” because the 1974 map was the official public record but encouraged him to contact Landberg about submitting a corrected map. Speirs took no further action.

Speirs passed away in 2002. His heirs sold Parcel A to John and Annette Matrisciano, who sold it to appellant Steven Decea (“Decea”) in 2007.° Ten years later, Decea decided to subdivide Parcel A into two “buildable” half-acre lots. He began the process by requesting certificates of compliance for lots 63, 65, 66, 67, and 68 from the County in January of 2017. The County declined informing Decea that Parcel A was “a single discrete parcel” created by Speirs’s 1974 map, not five as represented by Decea. This meant Decea could not subdivide the 1.04 acre property without running afoul of Lake Sherwood’s one- acre lot size minimum.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Decea petitioned to exclude his property from the 1974 map in October of 2018. (§ 66499.21 et seq.) He sought an order voiding the map because Speirs and Dickerson did not consent to Dennis Landberg recording it in 1974. Decea claimed that even if the map were properly recorded, it would not erase the 1923 lots and merge them into Parcel A. His evidence included excerpts of

° Decea purchased the property, and later brought this action, in his capacity as Trustee of the Steven Decea 2005 Family Trust U.T.D. December 30, 2005. audio recordings of John Speirs and County officials discussing the parcel map at two administrative hearings in 1985. Decea’s petition cited frequently to the Sixth District's van’t Rood v.

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