Dills v. Redwoods Associates, Ltd.

28 Cal. App. 4th 888, 33 Cal. Rptr. 2d 838, 94 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 7495, 94 Daily Journal DAR 13671, 1994 Cal. App. LEXIS 987
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 28, 1994
DocketC016304
StatusPublished
Cited by118 cases

This text of 28 Cal. App. 4th 888 (Dills v. Redwoods Associates, Ltd.) 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
Dills v. Redwoods Associates, Ltd., 28 Cal. App. 4th 888, 33 Cal. Rptr. 2d 838, 94 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 7495, 94 Daily Journal DAR 13671, 1994 Cal. App. LEXIS 987 (Cal. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

Opinion

DAVIS, J.

At issue in this case is whether a mobilehome park owner may charge resident mobilehome owners for the cost of capital improvements as a variable-expense item supplemental to a fixed base rent. We hold that nothing in Civil Code section 798.31 (undesignated section references will be to this code) precludes this practice, capital expenses being a traditional component of rent and there being nothing in the statutory language expressing a concern with the way rent itself is structured. Consequently, we shall affirm the judgment of dismissal entered after the trial court sustained the defendants’ demurrer.

*890 I. Background

As we are reviewing a demurrer, we assume the truth of all wellpled facts in the complaint. (Knickerbocker v. City of Stockton (1988) 199 Cal.App.3d 235, 238 [244 Cal.Rptr. 764].) The pertinent allegations are few.

Plaintiffs Leland L. Dills and Paul Stuart each own mobilehomes located within a mobilehome park owned and operated by the several defendants (whom we shall collectively designate as Redwoods). Plaintiff Dills has resided in the park since 1984, plaintiff Stuart since 1976. On May 1, 1990, plaintiff Dills executed a five-year lease agreement offered by Redwoods. Plaintiff Stuart declined to sign a lease, but since May 1990 has been paying rent on a month-to-month basis which is equal to that calculated under the terms of the written lease.

The lease contains the following provisions for rent. “Base rent” is a specific amount payable on the first of each month. On each subsequent anniversary date of the lease, base rent is to be increased by a “base rent adjustment” consisting of four components. The rent first may be increased by a factor equal to 90 percent of the annual increase in the Consumer Price Index. Both property taxes and any “governmental required services” (e.g., water, sewer, and garbage collection) can then be added to the base rent when such charges exceed specified threshold levels. The final component is the subject of this dispute. 1 It is intended to recover the cost of capital expenditures, in particular “capital additions, improvements, compulsory expenditures, betterments, and the deductible with respect to any insurable loss or major repairs ... to existing capital facilities.” These capital expenditures are to be amortized over a period of 5 years, incurring an “imputed interest” at a rate of 2 percent above the prime rate, and are to be allocated evenly among the 278 mobilehome spaces in the park. “The pass-through of these expenditures will furthermore be held as a component separate from the base rent and will drop off completely after the 60th payment of the monthly charge.” This pass-through provision applies to expenditures exceeding $25,000. Residents are provided an opportunity to vote to approve or disapprove “noncompulsory expenditures,” but “compulsory expenditures” are not subject to resident approval. The agreement defines “compulsory expenditures” as those which are “either mandated by government *891 decrees” or items which “if left unrepaired would adversely affect the serviceability and/or habitability of the park, i.e. roads, clubhouse roof, etc.”

Plaintiffs allege that beginning in May 1990, Redwoods began adding a $15 charge to their monthly rent bills to cover the cost of repairs to roads within the mobilehome park. This charge was described as their prorated share of $172,000, amortized over 60 months at 12 percent interest. (The plaintiffs do not assert Redwoods improperly calculated this sum.) Believing this charge to be a violation of section 798.31, plaintiffs filed the instant action seeking declaratory and injunctive relief, as well as compensatory damages.

II. Discussion

There is but one decision construing the meaning of section 798.31 2 as applied to the pass-through of capital expenditures. In Karrin v. Ocean-Aire Mobile Home Estates (1991) 1 Cal.App.4th 1066 [2 Cal.Rptr.2d 581], a tenant challenged a monthly capital assessment for road improvements. (Id. at p. 1068.) The City of Oxnard had enacted a rent control ordinance permitting park owners to “segregate and separately bill the actual cost for a capital improvement for as long as the owner amortizes the capital improvement.” (Ibid.) This rent control ordinance defined rent as being exclusive of pass-throughs for capital expenditures. (Id. at pp. 1068-1069.) A pass-through could be imposed only with the approval of the majority of the residents of a mobilehome park. (Id. at p. 1069.) The court concluded that to the extent the ordinance purported to authorize the pass-through, it was invalid as conflicting with section 798.31. (1 Cal.4th at p. 1071.) The court also held that the pass-through itself was prohibited by the statute. (Id. at p. 1073.)

The court pointed out that the statute allows charges only for rent, utilities, and incidental reasonable charges for services actually rendered. (1 Cal.App.4th at p. 1070.) “The Legislature intended ‘to [limit strictly] the ability of park management to collect fees from any source except... for services performed.’ ” (Id. at p. 1071.) The assessment at issue was neither a charge for utilities nor for services rendered. (Id. at p. 1073.) The court noted both that the ordinance specifically distinguished the capital assessment pass-through from rent (id. at p. 1071) and that the park owner “sought this charge as a capital improvement assessment, not as rent. [Defendant] has not billed this charge as rent, but as an assessment payable separately on a *892 monthly basis over a 19-year period specifically to pay for repairing internal roadways” (id. at p. 1073). 3

In the case at bar, the trial court found the capital expenditure pass-through provision valid, relying upon the fact the lease agreement characterized the capital improvement charge as part of the “annual rent adjustment” component of rent. It concluded the present case is distinguishable from Karrin because the plaintiffs had advance notice of the components the park owners intended to include in their calculation of rent. Reviewing this question of law de novo (Karrin v. Ocean-Aire Mobile Home Estates, supra, 1 Cal.App.4th at p. 1070), we agree the breakdown of rent into separately calculated base-rent and capital-improvement components does not invalidate the capital component.

The plaintiffs, as they must, concede that it is a park owner’s right to charge rent at whatever level desired which the market will bear. (Gregory v. City of San Juan Capistrano (1983) 142 Cal.App.3d 72, 85 [191 Cal.Rptr. 47].) However, plaintiffs assert that section 798.31 provides park residents with protections limiting the manner in which rent may be calculated. Redwoods argues that so long as the rental agreement labels the charge as a component of rent, it is outside section 798.31’s ambit.

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28 Cal. App. 4th 888, 33 Cal. Rptr. 2d 838, 94 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 7495, 94 Daily Journal DAR 13671, 1994 Cal. App. LEXIS 987, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dills-v-redwoods-associates-ltd-calctapp-1994.