El Rovia Mobile Home Park, LLC v. City of El Monte

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 23, 2020
DocketB295640
StatusPublished

This text of El Rovia Mobile Home Park, LLC v. City of El Monte (El Rovia Mobile Home Park, LLC v. City of El Monte) 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
El Rovia Mobile Home Park, LLC v. City of El Monte, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 4/23/20 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FIVE

EL ROVIA MOBILE HOME PARK, B295640 LLC, (Los Angeles County Petitioner and Appellant, Super. Ct. No. BS172209)

v.

CITY OF EL MONTE,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Mitchell L. Beckloff, Judge. Affirmed.

Dowdall Law Offices and Terry R. Dowdall for Petitioner and Appellant.

Olivarez Madruga Lemieux O’Neill and Rick R. Olivarez; Demetriou, Del Guercio, Springer & Francis, Jeffrey Z. B. Springer and Leslie M. Del Guercio for Defendant and Respondent. __________________________ INTRODUCTION After respondent City of El Monte (the City) enacted rent control for all mobilehome parks, petitioner El Rovia Mobile Home Park, LLC (El Rovia LLC) applied for a base year rent adjustment to $665 per month per space. The City agreed that El Rovia Park (the Park) space rents were below market value, but found that the lawful rent for the 2012 base year was $525 per month. El Rovia LLC appealed this decision to an administrative law judge, who agreed with the City’s findings. El Rovia LLC then sought a writ of administrative mandamus. In the writ proceeding, El Rovia LLC claimed that the base rent year should have been 2015, not 2012, and the base rent should be $665, not $525. The trial court denied the writ. At the heart of the dispute is the City’s 2015 rent control Ordinance No. 2860, which at least for some purposes states that in the calculation of rents, the base year is the “2012 calendar” year. (El Monte Ord. No. 2860, Mun. Code § 8.70.080, subd. (C)(1).)1 El Rovia LLC contends that the City’s use of 2012 as the base year violates the holding in Vega v. City of West Hollywood (1990) 223 Cal.App.3d 1342 (Vega). It claims the administrative law judge “arbitrarily refus[ed] to adjust the base date rent to one that reflects general market conditions.”2 Specifically, El Rovia

1 Ordinance 2860 was later codified in El Monte Municipal Code section 8.70.010 et seq. Where appropriate, we use the Municipal Code citation.

2 In Vega, the Court of Appeal held that the California Constitution required municipalities implementing rent control to allow property owners “to start rent calculations with a base date rent similar to other comparable properties.” (Vega, supra,

2 LLC asserts the base rent year should have been 2015 (not 2012, the year identified in the rent control ordinance and utilized by the City) and argues substantial evidence does not support the finding that $525 was the reasonable base rent. We affirm, concluding that the administrative law judge applied the correct base year for rent control and substantial evidence supported its findings of the base year rent. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND 1. Rent Control History in the City In 2012, the City enacted Ordinance No. 2811, which established rent control for large mobilehome parks in the City.3 The ordinance placed a moratorium on mobilehome rent increases in the two largest parks (Brookside with 421 spaces and Daleview with 175 spaces). It did not apply to smaller mobilehome parks such as the Park, which had only 77 spaces. As part of its rent control process, the City retained an expert to evaluate mobilehome rental rates. In a report dated July 25, 2013 (the Waronzof Report), the expert expressed concern that the largest mobilehome park in the City, Brookside, had significantly higher rents than other mobilehome parks in the City and the region. The report also observed that most of the mobilehome park residents in the City were in the lower

223 Cal.App.3d at p. 1352.) Vega’s focus is not on the date selected as the base rent date under rent control, but on the rent level that properly reflects the market conditions on that date.

3 We mention Ordinance No. 2811, and later Ordinance No. 2829, only for historical purposes. The present dispute is governed by Ordinance No. 2860, enacted in 2015.

3 income range; and many parks in the City were smaller and older than those in the region surrounding the City. In September 2013, the City approved its second rent control law, Ordinance No. 2829.4 That ordinance placed ceilings on rental rates and rent increases only at the two largest mobilehome parks in the City. The ordinance acknowledged concerns expressed in the Waronzof study: there was a shortage of housing in California; 80 percent of households in mobile homes in the City were in poverty; relocation of mobile homes is difficult, costly, and damages the home; mobilehome parks are susceptible to excessive and unfair rent increases due to private sector ownership; and monthly rents for certain mobilehome spaces in the City had exceeded the average rent for area apartments. The 2013 ordinance also required the City to retain a consultant to conduct another demographic and economic study of mobilehome housing in the City. This study was subsequently undertaken by Dr. Kenneth K. Baar, MAI, a recognized expert on mobilehome park issues.5 Baar found that mobilehome rent control in the City was triggered by exceptional rent increases in one large park (Brookside), which contained about one-third of all the mobilehome park spaces in the City. Baar observed that rent increases in the other parks had not been a matter of serious concern.

4 Again, we mention this second ordinance only to give historical perspective.

5 MAI stands for Member Appraisal Institute, and refers to a professional designation for real estate appraisal.

4 2. Ordinance No. 2860 On August 4, 2015, the city council approved Ordinance No. 2860, which replaced the earlier rent control ordinances and extended rent control to all mobilehome parks in the City, regardless of size. It is this law that drives the present dispute. In the preamble of Ordinance No. 2860, the city council acknowledged California’s severe housing shortage, the unique problems associated with mobilehome ownership, the prior efforts to regulate a segment of mobilehome parks in the City, and the Baar report. Section 8.70.010, subdivision (A) describes the purposes of the ordinance as preventing excessive and unreasonable rent increases, preserving available mobilehome spaces in the City, enabling mobilehome owners to preserve equity in their mobile homes, permitting park owners to receive a fair return on their investment, and preserving affordable spaces for rent in the City. Ordinance No. 2860 states that no rent can be charged in excess of the rent in effect as of July 1, 2015, unless the City authorizes the increase through an application process. (§ 8.70.050.) The ordinance identifies 2012 as the base year for rent and rebuttably presumes the net operating income received by the park owner in 2012 was fair and reasonable. (§ 8.70.080, subd. (C)(1).) The ordinance states: “It is expected that a rent increase within the limits of [the Consumer Price Index (CPI) increase provision after the base year rent is established] will provide the mobilehome park owner with a fair and reasonable return.” (§ 8.70.080, subd. (A).) A rent increase is authorized in the following situations: (1) a rise in the CPI (§ 8.70.060), (2) in-place sales of mobilehomes (§ 8.70.075), (3) maintenance of a fair return standard

5 (§ 8.70.080), and (4) new capital improvements (§ 8.70.100). The fair return standard in section 8.70.080 is evaluated with a maintenance of net operating income (MNOI) formula for assessing the necessity for increases. The MNOI formula offsets a park owner’s operating income by its operating expenses, and compares the base year’s net operating income to the year in which the owner applies for a rent increase. (§ 8.70.080, subd.

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Bluebook (online)
El Rovia Mobile Home Park, LLC v. City of El Monte, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/el-rovia-mobile-home-park-llc-v-city-of-el-monte-calctapp-2020.