Everett v. Mountains Recreation etc. Auth.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 13, 2015
DocketB254753
StatusPublished

This text of Everett v. Mountains Recreation etc. Auth. (Everett v. Mountains Recreation etc. Auth.) 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
Everett v. Mountains Recreation etc. Auth., (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 7/15/15; pub. order 8/13/15 (see end of opn.)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION EIGHT

DANNY EVERETT et al., B254753

Plaintiffs and Appellants, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. BC466880) v.

MOUNTAINS RECREATION AND CONSERVANCY AUTHORITY,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. Anthony J. Mohr and James C. Chalfant, Judges. Affirmed.

Law Offices of David R. Greifinger, David R. Greifinger; Goldstein Legal Services, Howard A. Goldstein; Arias, Ozzello & Gignac, Mark A. Ozzello, Mike Arias and Arnold Wang for Plaintiffs and Appellants.

Gilchrist & Rutter, Thomas W. Casparian and Yen N. Hope for Defendant and Respondent.

___________________________________ Plaintiff, putative class representative and appellant Danny Everett, appeals from a judgment of dismissal after an order sustaining a demurrer to a class action complaint. The paramount issue on appeal is whether the Mountains Recreation and Conservancy Authority (MRCA) is unlawfully imposing administrative penalties –– in substantive effect fines for moving traffic violations –– on motor vehicle owners. Everett alleges the monetary penalties are being imposed on vehicle owners based on evidence obtained from an automated video camera traffic enforcement system that is operating in violation of the Vehicle Code. He alleges that the evidence supporting MRCA’s penalties consists of no more than an image of a license plate, and does not show the actual driver who committed the moving traffic violation as required by the Vehicle Code. We hold that the MRCA’s automated video camera traffic enforcement system is not operating in violation of the Vehicle Code. FACTS As always in reviewing a ruling on a demurrer, we accept as true all properly pleaded facts, as well as facts which are subject to judicial notice, but not deductions or conclusions of law or fact. (See, e.g., Zelig v. County of Los Angeles (2002) 27 Cal.4th 1112, 1126.) In accord with these principles, the facts in Everett’s case, as settled in the context of his pleading and MRCA’s demurrer, are as follows. Background The Conservancy is a public entity formed by a “joint exercise of powers agreement” (see Gov. Code, § 6502) between the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy, a public agency within the state’s Natural Resources Agency (see Pub. Res. Code, § 33200 et seq.), and two local recreation and park districts (see Pub. Res. Code, § 5780 et seq.), the Conejo Recreation and Park District, and the Rancho Simi Recreation and Park District. Under the terms of the joint exercise of powers agreement, MRCA has been given designated powers to manage a number of parkland properties for the three

2 contracting agencies. In short, three public agencies which own parkland property created a fourth public agency to manage their properties.1 In 2003, MRCA adopted an ordinance establishing rules, regulations and punishments for the parklands under its control. During the following years, MRCA regularly amended its ordinance. In 2010, MRCA adopted the form of its ordinance which is at issue in Everett’s current case and which is known as the “Mountains Recreation and Conservancy Authority Park Ordinance” (hereafter the MRCA Ordinance). The MRCA Ordinance governs such matters as park hours, smoking and fire restrictions, and the prohibition of alcoholic beverages. Chapter 4 of the MRCA Ordinance governs “Vehicle Use.” Section 4.0 of the MRCA Ordinance provides: “Traffic control. (a) No person shall drive any vehicle, as defined in the California Vehicle Code, upon any MRCA owned or managed parkland, roadway or parking areas except upon, and subject to, any posted traffic control signs and/or pavement markings. Traffic control signs include, but are not limited to, stop signs, speed limit signs, directional signs, turning signs, road closure signs, road hours of operation sign, commercial truck restrictions, and signs limiting vehicle use on trails. . . . “(b) No currently registered owner of a motor vehicle shall allow or permit his or her vehicle to be operated in violation of § 4.0(a).”

MRCA Ordinance Section 4.2 authorizes MRCA to use “automated” photographic or video equipment to enforce section 4.0 of the ordinance. Section 4.2.1 of the MRCA Ordinance provides:

1 For a general review of joint power agreements in California, see the Senate Local Government Committee’s publication, Governments Working Together –– A Citizen’s Guide to Joint Powers Agreements (August 2007). http://senweb03.senate.ca.gov/committee/standing/GOVERNANCE/GWTFinalversion2. pdf (accessed March 18, 2015).

3 “Enforcement. (a) The only penalty for a violation of § 4.0 that is enforced by means of automated motor vehicle enforcement shall be by imposition of an administrative penalty pursuant to § 5.4, as authorized by Government Code § 53069.4. “(b) The only means of enforcement of § 4.0(b) shall be by the imposition of an administrative penalty pursuant to § 5.4, as authorized pursuant to Government Code § 53069.4.”

Section 5.4 of the MRCA Ordinance provides: “Automated motor vehicle enforcement. Any violation of § 4.0 which is enforced by means of automated motor vehicle enforcement pursuant to § 4.2 shall be deemed a noncriminal violation for which no points authorized by the California Vehicle Code (‘Point System for License Suspension’) shall be assigned to the owner or driver of the vehicle. The only penalty for a violation of § 4.0 that is enforced by means of automated motor vehicle enforcement shall be by imposition of an administrative penalty pursuant to § 5.4, as authorized pursuant to Government Code § 53069.4.”

Under Government Code section 53069.4, subdivision (a), a local agency may make a violation of any ordinance adopted by the agency “subject to an administrative fine or penalty.” When a local agency elects to do so, Government Code section 53069.4, subdivision (a), commands that the local agency “shall set forth by ordinance the administrative procedures that shall govern the imposition, enforcement, collection, and administrative review by the local agency of those administrative fines or penalties.” At the same time, however, Government Code section 53069.4, subdivision (a), does not specifically dictate any particular procedure which must be afforded a person in connection with an agency’s administrative procedures for imposing, enforcing and administratively reviewing the agency’s administrative fines or penalties.

4 In accord with the provisions of the MRCA Ordinance noted above, MRCA has erected stop signs on certain publicly travelled roadways in the parklands that it controls, and has installed automated video camera traffic enforcement systems at certain of those stop sign locations. MRCA’s automated video camera traffic enforcement systems do not record an image of a driver; the automated systems only records a video image of the license plates of a vehicle. At a stop sign where a MRCA automated video camera traffic enforcement system is installed, an in-ground sensor detects when an approaching vehicle is not slowing at the stop sign and triggers a video camera which is saved to a computer system. Later, a park ranger reviews the video. When the ranger visually observes a failure to stop, he prepares an “administrative citation” and mails it to the vehicle’s registered owner. MRCA Ordinance section 4.2.3(a) grants a registered owner of a vehicle the right to contest a MRCA administrative citation at a MRCA “administrative appeal hearing.” At such a hearing, “the image that served as a basis of the [administrative] citation shall be prima facie evidence” of a violation MRCA Ordinance section 4.0.

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Everett v. Mountains Recreation etc. Auth., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/everett-v-mountains-recreation-etc-auth-calctapp-2015.