Fisher v. City of Berkeley
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Opinions
Opinion
MOSK, J.
Plaintiffs, a group of landlords who own property in the City of Berkeley, appeal from a judgment of the Alameda County Superior Court holding defendants’ rent control ordinance constitutional on its face. We substantially affirm the judgment.
Plaintiffs claim that defendants’ ordinance conflicts with, and hence is preempted by, federal antitrust law because it is a combination that unreasonably restrains interstate commerce in violation of section 1 of the Sherman Antitrust Act (Act or Sherman Act). (15 U.S.C.) They also claim that it constitutes monopolization, or attempted monopolization, in violation of section 2 of the Act. {Ibid.) Although price fixing by private business enterprises is clearly illegal per se, we hold that the per se rule of illegality does not apply to the municipal defendants’ price-fixing ordinance in this case. Nor can such a municipal regulation be reviewed pursuant to the traditional rule of reason, under which validity would be judged solely by the regulation’s effect on competition. Instead, we have determined that when [652]*652the validity of an ordinance is challenged under the federal antitrust laws, courts must adapt traditional antitrust rules in order to accommodate municipal governments’ legitimate interest in enacting economic and social regulations concerning local health, safety and welfare. We conclude that if a municipal regulation has a proper local purpose, is rationally related to the municipality’s legitimate exercise of its police power, and operates in an evenhanded manner, it must be upheld against a claim that it conflicts with section 1 or 2 of the Sherman Act unless the plaintiff demonstrates that the city’s purposes could be achieved as effectively by means that would have a less intrusive impact on federal antitrust policies. No such means have been proposed. Under the foregoing test the ordinance in question has not been shown to conflict with federal antitrust laws.
We also conclude that defendants’ ordinance is facially constitutional under both the federal and state due process clauses: a rent control ordinance is valid if it guarantees each landlord a fair return on his investment; it need not guarantee a fair return on the value of property. Furthermore, the ordinance on its face provides for reasonably prompt access to adjustment procedures for those landlords seeking to increase rents. Additionally, we conclude that the rent withholding provisions of the ordinance do not violate landlords’ due process rights, nor are such provisions preempted by general state law. Finally, however, we have determined that the ordinance is invalid to the extent it purports to create an evidentiary presumption affecting the burden of proof in regard to retaliatory evictions, but that such a provision is severable, and does not affect the validity of the remainder of the ordinance.
Background and Procedure
In June 1980 the Berkeley electorate enacted initiative “Measure D,” the “Rent Stabilization and Eviction for Good Cause Ordinance,” (hereafter ordinance). The ordinance affects approximately 23,000 rental units.
Section 3 sets out the purpose of the ordinance: It is intended “to regulate residential rent increases in the City of Berkeley and to protect tenants from unwarranted rent increases and arbitrary, discriminatory, or retaliatory evictions, in order to help maintain the diversity of the Berkeley community and to ensure compliance with legal obligations relating to the rental of housing. This legislation is designed to address the City of Berkeley’s housing crisis, preserve the public peace, health and safety, and advance the housing policies of this City with regard to low and fixed income persons, minorities, students, handicapped, and the aged.”
Section 5 exempts from the ordinance government-owned units, transient units, cooperatives, hospitals, certain small owner-occupied buildings, and [653]*653all newly constructed buildings. Section 6 establishes a rent stabilization board (Board) of nine commissioners, and sets out its powers, duties, rules and procedures, as well as a means of ending rent control if the city’s vacancy rate surpasses 5 percent. Section 8 requires landlords to register with the Board, furnish specified information, and pay a registration fee for each unit.
Section 10 establishes base rent ceilings1 that landlords may not exceed except as permitted by the Board under sections 11 and 12. Section 11 provides for annual general adjustment of rent ceilings to cover increases or decreases relating to utilities and taxes. In making such general adjustment, the Board is given authority to adopt a general formula based on available data relating to such expenses. If a landlord is not satisfied with this general increase, he may petition the Board for an individual adjustment under section 12. In ruling on this petition the Board must consider many nonexclusive factors, including a landlord’s individual costs, but in no event may it deny a rent increase needed to allow a landlord a “fair return on investment. ”
Section 13 prohibits evictions except for enumerated factors constituting “good cause.” Section 14 prohibits retaliatory evictions, and states that any eviction action taken against a tenant within six months of the tenant’s assertion of rights under the ordinance shall be “presumed” to be retaliatory.
Section 15 sets out remedies, including rent withholding, both for a landlord’s violation of rent ceilings and failure to register. Section 16 is a severability clause. Section 17 declares that the provisions of the ordinance may not be waived. Section 18 provides for judicial review of any act of the Board.
Plaintiffs filed suit in August 1980 seeking injunctive and declaratory relief against enforcement of the ordinance. They alleged the ordinance is unconstitutional on its face and as applied. The trial court granted defendants’ motion for judgment on the pleadings, declaring the ordinance constitutional on its face. The court granted plaintiffs leave to amend to allege facts showing that the ordinance is unconstitutional as applied, but plaintiffs subsequently dismissed this aspect of the complaint. Plaintiffs appeal from the trial court’s order granting defendants judgment on the pleadings. The [654]*654sole question before us, therefore, is whether the ordinance is invalid on its face.2
After the case was fully briefed on the merits in the Court of Appeal, but before that court rendered its decision, the United States Supreme Court decided Community Communications Co. v. City of Boulder (1982) 455 U.S. 40 [70 L.Ed.2d 810, 102 S.Ct. 835], holding a home rule municipality subject to federal antitrust scrutiny. We granted hearing, and soon thereafter the issue of the effect of Boulder, and antitrust law generally, was raised for the first time by amicus curiae. Both parties and additional amici curiae for both parties were granted leave to file, and have filed, supplemental briefs addressing inter alia antitrust issues generally, and the Boulder issue specifically.
Therefore, although plaintiffs claim the ordinance is facially invalid in whole or in part on due process and statutory grounds, they also assert that an alleged conflict between the ordinance and federal antitrust law presents a threshold issue dispositive of this appeal. Defendants likewise request that we address and resolve plaintiffs’ antitrust contentions.3
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Opinion
MOSK, J.
Plaintiffs, a group of landlords who own property in the City of Berkeley, appeal from a judgment of the Alameda County Superior Court holding defendants’ rent control ordinance constitutional on its face. We substantially affirm the judgment.
Plaintiffs claim that defendants’ ordinance conflicts with, and hence is preempted by, federal antitrust law because it is a combination that unreasonably restrains interstate commerce in violation of section 1 of the Sherman Antitrust Act (Act or Sherman Act). (15 U.S.C.) They also claim that it constitutes monopolization, or attempted monopolization, in violation of section 2 of the Act. {Ibid.) Although price fixing by private business enterprises is clearly illegal per se, we hold that the per se rule of illegality does not apply to the municipal defendants’ price-fixing ordinance in this case. Nor can such a municipal regulation be reviewed pursuant to the traditional rule of reason, under which validity would be judged solely by the regulation’s effect on competition. Instead, we have determined that when [652]*652the validity of an ordinance is challenged under the federal antitrust laws, courts must adapt traditional antitrust rules in order to accommodate municipal governments’ legitimate interest in enacting economic and social regulations concerning local health, safety and welfare. We conclude that if a municipal regulation has a proper local purpose, is rationally related to the municipality’s legitimate exercise of its police power, and operates in an evenhanded manner, it must be upheld against a claim that it conflicts with section 1 or 2 of the Sherman Act unless the plaintiff demonstrates that the city’s purposes could be achieved as effectively by means that would have a less intrusive impact on federal antitrust policies. No such means have been proposed. Under the foregoing test the ordinance in question has not been shown to conflict with federal antitrust laws.
We also conclude that defendants’ ordinance is facially constitutional under both the federal and state due process clauses: a rent control ordinance is valid if it guarantees each landlord a fair return on his investment; it need not guarantee a fair return on the value of property. Furthermore, the ordinance on its face provides for reasonably prompt access to adjustment procedures for those landlords seeking to increase rents. Additionally, we conclude that the rent withholding provisions of the ordinance do not violate landlords’ due process rights, nor are such provisions preempted by general state law. Finally, however, we have determined that the ordinance is invalid to the extent it purports to create an evidentiary presumption affecting the burden of proof in regard to retaliatory evictions, but that such a provision is severable, and does not affect the validity of the remainder of the ordinance.
Background and Procedure
In June 1980 the Berkeley electorate enacted initiative “Measure D,” the “Rent Stabilization and Eviction for Good Cause Ordinance,” (hereafter ordinance). The ordinance affects approximately 23,000 rental units.
Section 3 sets out the purpose of the ordinance: It is intended “to regulate residential rent increases in the City of Berkeley and to protect tenants from unwarranted rent increases and arbitrary, discriminatory, or retaliatory evictions, in order to help maintain the diversity of the Berkeley community and to ensure compliance with legal obligations relating to the rental of housing. This legislation is designed to address the City of Berkeley’s housing crisis, preserve the public peace, health and safety, and advance the housing policies of this City with regard to low and fixed income persons, minorities, students, handicapped, and the aged.”
Section 5 exempts from the ordinance government-owned units, transient units, cooperatives, hospitals, certain small owner-occupied buildings, and [653]*653all newly constructed buildings. Section 6 establishes a rent stabilization board (Board) of nine commissioners, and sets out its powers, duties, rules and procedures, as well as a means of ending rent control if the city’s vacancy rate surpasses 5 percent. Section 8 requires landlords to register with the Board, furnish specified information, and pay a registration fee for each unit.
Section 10 establishes base rent ceilings1 that landlords may not exceed except as permitted by the Board under sections 11 and 12. Section 11 provides for annual general adjustment of rent ceilings to cover increases or decreases relating to utilities and taxes. In making such general adjustment, the Board is given authority to adopt a general formula based on available data relating to such expenses. If a landlord is not satisfied with this general increase, he may petition the Board for an individual adjustment under section 12. In ruling on this petition the Board must consider many nonexclusive factors, including a landlord’s individual costs, but in no event may it deny a rent increase needed to allow a landlord a “fair return on investment. ”
Section 13 prohibits evictions except for enumerated factors constituting “good cause.” Section 14 prohibits retaliatory evictions, and states that any eviction action taken against a tenant within six months of the tenant’s assertion of rights under the ordinance shall be “presumed” to be retaliatory.
Section 15 sets out remedies, including rent withholding, both for a landlord’s violation of rent ceilings and failure to register. Section 16 is a severability clause. Section 17 declares that the provisions of the ordinance may not be waived. Section 18 provides for judicial review of any act of the Board.
Plaintiffs filed suit in August 1980 seeking injunctive and declaratory relief against enforcement of the ordinance. They alleged the ordinance is unconstitutional on its face and as applied. The trial court granted defendants’ motion for judgment on the pleadings, declaring the ordinance constitutional on its face. The court granted plaintiffs leave to amend to allege facts showing that the ordinance is unconstitutional as applied, but plaintiffs subsequently dismissed this aspect of the complaint. Plaintiffs appeal from the trial court’s order granting defendants judgment on the pleadings. The [654]*654sole question before us, therefore, is whether the ordinance is invalid on its face.2
After the case was fully briefed on the merits in the Court of Appeal, but before that court rendered its decision, the United States Supreme Court decided Community Communications Co. v. City of Boulder (1982) 455 U.S. 40 [70 L.Ed.2d 810, 102 S.Ct. 835], holding a home rule municipality subject to federal antitrust scrutiny. We granted hearing, and soon thereafter the issue of the effect of Boulder, and antitrust law generally, was raised for the first time by amicus curiae. Both parties and additional amici curiae for both parties were granted leave to file, and have filed, supplemental briefs addressing inter alia antitrust issues generally, and the Boulder issue specifically.
Therefore, although plaintiffs claim the ordinance is facially invalid in whole or in part on due process and statutory grounds, they also assert that an alleged conflict between the ordinance and federal antitrust law presents a threshold issue dispositive of this appeal. Defendants likewise request that we address and resolve plaintiffs’ antitrust contentions.3 Because of the extreme importance of the issues presented, we proceed to analyze plaintiffs’ antitrust claims.
[655]*655I. Antitrust Issues
In Birkenfeld v. City of Berkeley (1976) 17 Cal.3d 129 [130 Cal.Rptr. 465, 550 P.2d 1001], we held Berkeley’s former rent control ordinance facially unconstitutional because its procedures for rent adjustment were “inexcusably cumbersome” and would have deprived landlords of due process if permitted to take effect. (Id. at p. 173.) Before reaching that conclusion, however, we addressed the threshold question of the city’s power to provide for rent control. We observed that our Constitution confers on all cities and counties the power to “make and enforce within [their] limits all local, police, sanitary, and other ordinances and regulations not in conflict with general laws” (Cal. Const., art. XI, § 7) and noted that “[a] city’s police power under this provision can be applied only within its own territory and is subject to displacement by general state law but otherwise is as broad as the police power exercisable by the Legislature itself.” (17 Cal.3d at p. 140.) Although there is extensive regulation governing various aspects of landlord-tenant relations, “California has no state rent control statute.” (Id. at p. 141.) We therefore concluded that the Berkeley ordinance was within the city’s police power: there was “no legislative indication of ‘a paramount state concern [which] will not tolerate further or additional local action.’” (Id. at p. 142, quoting In re Hubbard (1964) 62 Cal.2d 119, 128 [41 Cal.Rptr. 393, 396 P.2d 809].)
Conceding that local rent control is not preempted by state law, plaintiffs champion federal antitrust law in order to attack Birkenfeld’s premise that the police power of a city is as broad as that power exercisable by the Legislature.
Plaintiffs observe that although our state Constitution grants cities police power equal to that of the state, we are duty-bound under the supremacy clause of the federal Constitution (art. VI, cl. 2) to invalidate a municipal regulation that on its face violates paramount federal law. (Sail’er Inn, Inc. v. Kirby (1971) 5 Cal.3d 1, 10-11 [95 Cal.Rptr. 329, 485 P.2d 529, 46 [656]*656A.L.R.3d 351].) They argue that (1) the city’s ordinance, on its face, conflicts with federal antitrust law; that (2) under Boulder, the ordinance is not exempt from antitrust scrutiny, and hence (3) defendants have no authority to enforce the regulation in question. We clearly have jurisdiction to decide such claims. (Rice v. Norman Williams Co. (1982) 458 U.S. 654, 659-661 [73 L.Ed.2d 1042, 1049-1051, 102 S.Ct. 3294]; see Rice v. Alcoholic Bev. etc. Appeals Bd. (1978) 21 Cal.3d 431, 439-446 [146 Cal.Rptr. 585, 579 P.2d 476, 96 A.L.R.3d 613] [state retail price maintenance scheme for distilled liquor invalidated under § 1 of the Sherman Act]; Midcal Aluminum, Inc. v. Rice (1979) 90 Cal.App.3d 979, 982-984 [153 Cal.Rptr. 757] [enjoining enforcement of state wholesale price maintenance scheme for wine as invalid under § 1 of the Act], affd. sub nom. California Retail Liquor Dealers Ass’n v. Midcal Aluminum, Inc. (1980) 445 U.S. 97 [63 L.Ed.2d 233, 100 S.Ct. 937]; Capiscean Corp. v. Alcoholic Bev. etc. Appeals Bd. (1979) 87 Cal.App.3d 996, 999-1000 [151 Cal.Rptr. 492] [invalidating state retail price maintenance scheme under Rice v. Alcoholic Bev. etc. Appeals Bd., supra, 21 Cal.3d 431].)4
A. State Action, Municipal Action, and Federal Antitrust Law
In order to prohibit private businesses from practicing various anticompetitive activities in interstate commerce, nearly a century ago the United States Congress exercised its broad authority under the commerce clause (U.S. Const., art. I, § 8, cl. 3) to enact the Sherman Act. (Pub.L. No. 51-190, 26 Stat. 209 (1890) codified as amended at 15 U.S.C. §§ 1-7; see Parker v. Brown (1943) 317 U.S. 341, 351 [87 L.Ed. 315, 326, 63 S.Ct. 307], citing Remarks of Sen. Sherman, 21 Cong, Rec. 2457, 2562 (1890).) Two sections of the Act are relevant to the present case. Section 1 declares all contracts, combinations or conspiracies in restraint of interstate commerce to be illegal. Section 2 declares that the act of monopolizing, or attempting to monopolize any part of interstate commerce is illegal. Quite obviously, if defendants’ ordinance conflicts with the Act, and further, if it is not exempt from antitrust scrutiny, the supremacy clause of the federal Constitution requires that we declare the ordinance invalid.
[657]*657Over 40 years ago, the Supreme Court in Parker, supra, held this state’s raisin marketing program, which restricted competition and maintained prices in order to protect the local raisin market, was not subject to federal antitrust scrutiny. The court found “nothing in the language of the Sherman Act or in its history which suggests that its purpose was to restrain a state or its officers or agents from activities directed by its legislature. In a dual system of government in which, under the Constitution, the states are sovereign, save only as Congress may constitutionally subtract from their authority, an unexpressed purpose to nullify a state’s control over its officers and agents is not lightly to be attributed to Congress, [f] The Sherman Act makes no mention of the state as such, and gives no hint that it was intended to restrain state action or official action directed by a state. ... [1] There is no suggestion of a purpose to restrain state action in the Act’s legislative history.” (317 U.S. at pp. 350-351 [87 L.Ed. at p. 326].) The Parker court concluded that “[t]he state in adopting and enforcing the . . . program . . . as a sovereign, imposed the restraint as an act of government which the Sherman Act did not undertake to prohibit.” (Id. at p. 352 [87 L.Ed. at p. 327].)
In a series of cases over the last decade the United States Supreme Court has considered the extent to which private, or nongovernmental, business enterprises may come under the protection conferred in Parker.5 And in two [658]*658recent decisions, the court has addressed the conditions under which local governments may gain Parker protection. The first case, City of Lafayette v. Louisiana Power & Light Co. (1978) 435 U.S. 389 [55 L.Ed.2d 364, 98 S.Ct. 1123], involved two Louisiana municipalities that owned and operated their own electric utility systems. Louisiana Power alleged that the municipalities had engaged in illegal tying arrangements with their customers.
The majority rejected the municipalities’ contention that antitrust laws were intended to protect only against abuses by private businesses and are not applicable to municipalities that “exist to serve the public weal.” (Id. at p. 403 [55 L.Ed.2d at p. 376].) The court observed that the defendants were not motivated solely by desire to benefit the public. Instead, like “[e]very business enterprise” (ibid.), their decisions may be motivated by the goal of “realizing maximum benefits to [themselves] without regard to extraterritorial impact and regional efficiency. ” (Id. at p. 404 [55 L.Ed.2d at p. 377].) A majority therefore rejected the argument that the two municipalities—both of which “act[ed] as owners and providers of services” (id. at p. 408 [55 L.Ed.2d at p. 379]), were immune from antitrust scrutiny.
A plurality opinion by Justice Brennan then rejected the contention that municipalities, simply by reason of their status as such, are exempt from antitrust laws. “Parker’s limitation of the exemption ... to ‘official action directed by [the] state,’ arises from the basis for the ‘state action’ doctrine— that given our ‘dual system of government in which, under the Constitution, the states are sovereign, save only as Congress may constitutionally subtract from their authority,’ 317 U.S., at 351, a congressional purpose to subject to antitrust control the States’ acts of government will not lightly be inferred. To extend that doctrine to municipalities would be inconsistent with that limitation. Cities are not themselves sovereign; they do not receive all the federal deference of the States that create them.” (435 U.S. at pp. 411-412 [55 L.Ed.2d at p. 382].) Still, the plurality suggested, a municipality [659]*659could come under the Parker exemption if it acts pursuant to state policy to displace competition with regulation or monopoly public service. Deviating slightly from the court’s requirement in the private business enterprise cases that the state must have “compelled” the conduct in order for the activity to come within the Parker exemption {ante, pp. 657-658, fn. 5), the plurality stated that state direction or authorization of the anticompetitive conduct would be sufficient to trigger the exemption for municipalities. (Id. at p. 417 [55 L.Ed.2d at pp. 385-386],)6
In a concurrence, Chief Justice Burger emphasized his view that the municipalities’ ownership and operation of utility companies constituted business activities pursuant to their proprietary functions (id. at p. 422-425 [55 L.Ed.2d at pp. 388-391]), and hence any question of exemption should meet the more stringent “compulsion” standard applicable to private parties seeking the protection of Parker. The Chief Justice appeared to suggest that municipalities’ nonproprietary activities should be exempt from antitrust scrutiny.
Four years later the United States Supreme Court decided Community Communications Co. v. City of Boulder, supra, 455 U.S. 40. The city, apparently acting in its regulatory capacity, placed a moratorium on expansion of plaintiff’s cable television service for three months in order to allow competing companies to make bids to enter a new geographic market under a proposed model ordinance.7 Plaintiff sued to enjoin the moratorium, claiming inter alia that it constituted a conspiracy between the city and a potential competitor, and that it restrained trade in violation of section 1 of the Sherman Act. The district court granted an injunction, rejecting the city’s argument that its actions were protected as a valid exercise of its police power, or that it was exempt from antitrust scrutiny under Parker. A divided Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed, distinguishing Lafayette on the ground that, in contrast to the activity in that case, “no proprietary interest of the City is here involved.” (630 F.2d 704, 708.) The United States Supreme Court in turn reversed, holding over the dissent of Justice Rehnquist that the city’s ordinance “cannot be exempt from antitrust scrutiny unless it constitutes the action of the State . . . itself in its sovereign capacity, see Parker, or unless it constitutes municipal action in furtherance or implementation of clearly articulated and affirmatively expressed state policy, see City of Lafayette . . . .” (Boulder, supra, 455 U.S. 40, 52 [70 [660]*660L.Ed.2d 810, 819].) The court rejected the city’s argument that merely because the state, under its home rule amendment, had vested the city with “ ‘ “every power theretofore possessed by the legislature ... in local and municipal affairs’”” (id. at p. 52 [70 L.Ed.2d at p. 819], italics in original), regulation of cable television was therefore an “ ‘act of government’ performed by the city acting as the state in local matters . . . .” (Id. at p. 53 [70 L.Ed.2d at p. 820], italics in original.) Granting of home-rule power, the court reasoned, merely indicates neutrality respecting the challenged actions, and does not satisfy the “ ‘clear articulation and affirmative expression’ ” of state policy requirement. (Id. at p. 55 [70 L.Ed.2d at p. 821].) The court reiterated the Lafayette plurality’s view that the Parker exemption is premised on sovereignty, and that because municipalities are not sovereign, they fall outside the exemption. (Id. at pp. 50-51 [70 L.Ed.2d at p. 818].)
Accordingly, much of the parties’ energy in the present case has been directed toward arguing their respective views as to whether defendants’ ordinance falls within or without the Boulder state action exemption.8 Consideration of Boulder's exemption standard at this stage in our analysis, however, is premature. Application of the state action exemption principle becomes necessary only after we determine that there is “truly a conflict between the Sherman Act and the challenged regulatory scheme.” (First American Title Co. of South Dakota v. South Dakota Land Title Ass’n (8th Cir. 1983) 714 F.2d 1439, 1452; see also Rice v. Norman Williams Co., supra, 458 U.S. 654, 662, fn. 9 [73 L.Ed.2d 1042, 1052]; Midcal, supra, 445 U.S. 97, 102 [63 L.Ed.2d 233, 241]; Parker, supra, 317 U.S. 341, 350 [87 L.Ed. 315, 325-326]; Rice, supra, 21 Cal.3d 431, 439-446; LewisWestco & Co. v. Alcoholic Bev. etc. Appeals Bd. (1982) 136 Cal.App.3d 829, 834-837 [186 Cal.Rptr. 552].)
B. Facial Validity of the Ordinance Under Section 1 of the Sherman Act
Plaintiffs contend that the ordinance, on its face, conflicts with, and hence is preempted by, section 1 of the Sherman Act. (See ante, fn. 8.) [661]*661That section states: “Every contract, combination ... or conspiracy, in restraint of trade or commerce among the several States . . . is . . . declared to be illegal.” (15 U.S.C. § 1.)
Defendants and amici broadly respond that no provision of the Act was intended to apply to city ordinances designed to protect or further local health, safety, or general welfare, and hence the ordinance in question cannot violate the antitrust laws. They suggest that only local legislation designed to achieve commercial or proprietary interests—either from city ownership of property or through fees or taxes pursuant to franchise awards—are properly subject to antitrust scrutiny.
Although defendants’ view has rational appeal, we are bound by the United States Supreme Court’s implicit rejection of that theory in Lafayette and Boulder. In both of those cases the court addressed the applicability of state action exemption to municipal defendants. However, in order to reach the question of exemption from antitrust laws, in both decisions the court necessarily assumed that each case presented a violation of antitrust laws. (E.g., First American Title Co., supra, 714 F.2d 1439, 1451-1452.) While standing alone, Lafayette could be read to support defendants’ view that only the commercial activities of municipalities are subject to antitrust scrutiny (Lafayette, 435 U.S. 389, 418-426 [55 L.Ed.2d 364, 386-391], Burger, C. J., conc.), we must conclude that Boulder forecloses any argument that the Act does not apply to a municipality’s “noncommercial” activities. The alleged anticompetitive activity in that case concerned merely the imposition of a three-month moratorium on expansion of petitioner’s cable television franchise while the city studied the need for increased regulation. Whereas the facts of Boulder strongly suggest that the moratorium was imposed pursuant to the city’s regulatory authority, still the court’s resolution of the state action exemption issue necessarily assumed an antitrust violation; moreover, the court did not even mention the possibility of a broader, preliminary exemption from antitrust scrutiny for “nonproprietary” municipal activity.9
Therefore, we must conclude that the United States Supreme Court necessarily and implicitly rejected defendants’ view in Boulder. (McMahon, [662]*662Recent Significant Developments in “State Action” and Noerr-Pennington Exemptions: From Boulder to the “Sham” Exception (1983) 14 Toledo L.Rev. 531, 540-541.) As we shall explain below, however, defendants are correct when they assert that the antitrust laws are aimed chiefly at commercial activities. And, as demonstrated below, this fact must influence the question of how, and to what extent, traditional antitrust rules apply to municipal defendants.
We turn now to plaintiffs’ claim under section 1 of the Sherman Act. To prove a facial conflict with section 1 in the present case, plaintiffs must establish as a matter of law (a) that two or more “persons” acted in concert, (b) that the activities complained of affect interstate commerce, and (c) that the action constitutes an unreasonable restraint on commerce.10 A court may invalidate an ordinance in the abstract “only if it mandates or authorizes conduct that necessarily constitutes a violation of the antitrust laws in all cases, or if it places irresistible pressure on a private party to violate the antitrust laws in order to comply with the statute.” (Rice v. Norman Williams Co., supra, 458 U.S. 654, 661 [73 L.Ed.2d 1042, 1051].)
Both parties vigorously contest whether in this case plaintiffs can or cannot prove the requisite concerted action and effect on interstate commerce. Although we do not agree with plaintiffs’ suggestion that these “technical” requirements should be ignored in a facial attack seeking “mere invalidation” instead of damages {ante, fn. 10), we need not address these issues now11 because we have determined that, in any event, plaintiffs cannot prove that the ordinance on its face mandates an unreasonable restraint [663]*663of trade and hence irreconciliably conflicts with section 1 of the Sherman Act. (458 U.S. at p. 661 [73 L.Ed.2d at p. 1051].)12
1. Unreasonable Restraint
a. Application of Traditional Antitrust Law to Municipal Defendants
We recognize at the onset that this case forces us to wander off the map and travel cross country without the benefit of trail or compass. Although Boulder clearly held municipalities subject to antitrust laws, the court specifically declined to address the issue of the applicability of traditional antitrust rules or standards against which municipal defendants are to be judged. (Boulder, supra, 455 U.S. 40, 56, fn. 20 [70 L.Ed.2d 810, 822].) Significantly, however, the Boulder court strongly suggested that municipalities and private business enterprises may be subject to different standards: the court repeated Lafayette's suggestion that “ ‘[i]t may be that certain activities which might appear anticompetitive when engaged in by private parties, take on a different complexion when adopted by a local government.’” (Ibid., citing Lafayette, supra, 435 U.S. 389, 417, fn. 48 [55 L.Ed.2d 364, 385].) Similarly, the Boulder dissent observed that under the majority’s rule, the courts “must now adapt antitrust principles to adjudicate Sherman Act challenges to local regulation of the economy.” (455 U.S. at p. 65 [70 L.Ed.2d at p. 828].) Anticompetitive conduct by a municipality in exercise of its legitimate police power is indeed of a “different complexion” than similar conduct engaged in by private business enterprises and therefore, as the Boulder court suggested, courts must adapt or modify the application of traditional antitrust rules when reviewing the acts of municipal defendants.
The United States Supreme Court has often noted that the purpose of antitrust law is the regulation of anticompetitive business practices. The Sherman Act relates to “ ‘business competition’ ” (Apex Hosiery Co. v. Leader (1940) 310 U.S. 469, 493, fn. 15 [84 L.Ed. 1311, 1323, 60 S.Ct. 982, 128 A.L.R. 1044]) and is designed to regulate “combinations of business and capital organized to suppress commercial competition . . . .” (United States v. South-Eastern Underwriters Ass’n (1944) 322 U.S. 533, 553 [88 L.Ed. 1440, 1458, 64 S.Ct. 1162]; see also Parker, supra, 317 U.S. 341, 351 [87 L.Ed. 315, 326]; 1 Kintner, Federal Antitrust Law (1980) § 4.18 [summarizing an exhaustive analysis of the legislative history of the Act]; cf. Bork, Legislative Intent and the Policy of the Sherman Act (1966) 9 J.L. & Econ. 7.) One commentator has observed that “[t]he Court [664]*664has been reluctant to apply antitrust laws to the conduct of those who are not engaged in commercial activities.” (Vanderstar, Liability of Municipalities Under the Antitrust Laws: Litigation Strategies (1983) 32 Cath.U.L.Rev. 395, 397-398.) Indeed, the court has said that the Act “is aimed primarily at combinations having commercial objectives and is applied only to a very limited extent to organizations, like labor unions, which normally have other objectives.” (Klor’s, Inc. v. Broadway-Hale Stores, Inc. (1959) 359 U.S. 207, 213, fn. 7 [3 L.Ed.2d 741, 745, 79 S.Ct. 705].) Similarly, the court noted in Goldfarb, supra, that it would be “unrealistic” to “automatically . . . apply to the professions antitrust concepts which originated in other areas.” (421 U.S. 773, 788, fn. 17 [44 L.Ed.2d 572, 585].)
Traditional antitrust rules have been fashioned over the years in the context of private business regulation. Many of the rules are premised implicitly, sometimes explicitly, on assumptions about how rational business competitors behave in their quest for greater profit. Municipal governments, on the other hand, most often act on the basis of different motives. Unlike a private business, a municipal government’s decision to displace competition is generally motivated by the purpose of furthering local health, safety or welfare. When acting in its regulatory capacity, a local government is both authorized to act in accordance with, and entrusted with the duty of serving, the public weal. Just as courts should proceed cautiously lest they might unnecessarily interfere with rights of local self-governance (Frug, The City as a Legal Concept (1980) 93 Harv.L.Rev. 1059; Cirace, An Economic Analysis of the “State-Municipal Action” Antitrust Cases (1982) 61 Tex.L.Rev. 481, 490, fn. 50, 514; 1 DeTocqueville, Democracy in America (Mayer ed., Lawrence trans. 1969) pp. 90-91 and passim), so too courts must be attentive and sensitive to the legitimate motives behind municipal regulations. Therefore, contrary to the urging of plaintiffs and amici, we will not mechanically apply to municipalities rules of law fashioned exclusively in the different context of private business regulation. Such standards will no doubt be helpful in formulating rules for the application of antitrust principles to municipalities, but if unbending application of traditional standards would prove too inflexible to accommodate legitimate governmental objectives that motivate municipal regulation, we will not hesitate to cautiously depart from traditional rules. (Shenefield, The Parker v. Brown State Action Doctrine and the New Federalism of Antitrust (1982) 51 Antitrust L.J. 337, 346; Note, The Application of Antitrust Laws to Municipal Activities (1979) 79 Colum.L.Rev. 518, 539-543; Note, Home Rule and the Sherman Act After Boulder: Cities Between a Rock and a Hard Place (1983) 49 Brooklyn L.Rev. 259, 291-297 [hereinafter cited Home Rule]; The Supreme Court, 1981 Term (1982) 96 Harv.L.Rev. 268, 272-276.)13
[665]*665b. The Two Traditional Standards: The Rule of Reason, and the Rule of Per Se Illegality
Although the prohibition in section 1 of “[e]very contract, combination ... or conspiracy, in restraint of trade” was at first applied literally to invalidate all such restraints (e.g., United States v. Trans-Missouri Freight Ass’n (1897) 166 U.S. 290, 328 [41 L.Ed. 1007, 1023, 17 S.Ct. 540] [“the plain and ordinary meaning of . . . [section 1] is not limited to that kind of contract alone which is an unreasonable restraint of trade, but all contracts are included . . .” within the section’s proscription]), the court soon retreated from this manichean view of the Act, holding it was not intended to strike down restraints merely ancillary or incidental to another legitimate purpose. (United States v. Addyston Pipe & Steel Co. (6th Cir. 1898) 85 F. 271, 282, mod. and affd. sub nom. Addyston Pipe & Steel Co. v. United States (1899) 175 U.S. 211, 244 [44 L.Ed. 136, 148-149, 20 S.Ct. 96].) In Standard Oil Co. v. United States (1911) 221 U.S. 1 [55 L.Ed. 619, 31 S.Ct. 502], the court announced that the Act “evidenced the intent not to restrain the right to make and enforce contracts . . . which did not unduly restrain interstate or foreign commerce, but to protect that commerce from being restrained by methods . . . which would constitute an interference,— that is, an undue restraint.” (Id. at p. 60 [55 L.Ed. at p. 645]; see also United States v. American Tobacco Co. (1911) 221 U.S. 106, 179 [55 L.Ed. 663, 693-694, 31 S.Ct. 632] [“restraint of trade” covers only those acts that “injuriously restraint] trade”].) Today, under what has become termed the “rule of reason,” many restraints are analyzed in light of their economic effects on market conditions, and may be upheld if “reasonable,” i.e., if the restraint “merely regulates and perhaps thereby promotes competition” instead of suppressing or destroying competition. (Chicago Bd. of Trade v. United States (1918) 246 U.S. 231, 238 [62 L.Ed. 683, 687, 38 S.Ct. 242].)
Some types of restraints, however, were never given such accommodating review. Cartels—agreements among producers to set prices above the competitive level by lowering production—were early declared illegal “per se,” and the courts refused to consider arguments that prices set by a cartel were “reasonable.” (Note, Fixing the Price Fixing Confusion: A Rule of Reason Approach (1983) 92 Yale L.J. 706, 710-712 [hereinafter Price Fixing Confusion].) Whereas these cases focused on cartel behavior (e.g., United States v. Trenton Potteries Co. (1927) 273 U.S. 392 [71 L.Ed. 700, 47 S.Ct. 377, 50 A.L.R. 989]; see Price Fixing Confusion, supra, at p. 712, fn. 38; Comment, The Per Se Illegality of Price-Fixing—Sans Power, Purpose, or Effect (1952) 19 U.Chi.L.Rev. 837, 855) and refused to consider economic reasonableness on the assumption that cartels were themselves evils to be eradicated (e.g., Bork, supra, 9 J.L. & Econ. at p. 11), the United States Supreme Court in 1940 significantly expanded the universe of price-related
[666]*666agreements subject to an irrebuttable presumption of illegality. In United States v. Socony-Vacuum Oil Co. (1940) 310 U.S. 150 [84 L.Ed. 1129, 60 S.Ct. 811], the court, through Justice Douglas, inferred the existence of a cartel from the defendants’ agreement to buy surplus oil. Socony, however, focused on price fixing itself rather than the inferred cartel; the court stated that whether the parties actually could or did succeed in fixing prices was irrelevant, and broadly characterized the proscribed conduct of price fixing: “Under the Sherman Act a combination formed for the purpose and with the effect of raising, depressing, fixing, pegging, or stabilizing the price of a commodity ... is illegal per se. ...” (Id. at p. 223 [84 L.Ed. at p. 1168].) “[T]he machinery employed ... is immaterial.” (Ibid.) “Any combination which tampers with price structures is engaged in an unlawful activity.” (Id. at p. 221 [84 L.Ed. at p. 1167].)
The focus of attention since Socony has been on whether defendants have in any way agreed on a course of conduct affecting prices: if the label “price fixing” is found to fit the conduct in question,14 the courts have mechanically declared such conduct illegal “even though no invidious purpose or harmful economic consequences have been established, and even though the economic results of the conduct may be of net benefit to consumers.” (Price Fixing Confusion, supra, 92 Yale L.J. at p. 714; see Arizona v. Maricopa County Medical Soc’y (1982) 457 U.S. 332 [73 L.Ed.2d 48, 102 S.Ct. 2466] [member physicians’ “foundations” to set maximum fees charged to insurance plan patients illegal per se price fixing].) The per se rule reflects an irrebuttable presumption that, if the court were to subject the conduct in question to a full-blown inquiry, a violation would be found under the traditional rule of reason. (Id. at p. 344 [73 L.Ed.2d at pp. 58-59]; Northern Pac. Ry. v. United States (1958) 356 U.S. 1, 5 [2 L.Ed.2d 545, 549, 78 S.Ct. 514].)
Although the price-fixing illegal per se rule has its adherents, and is asserted to be economically reliable and administratively efficient,15 it has also [667]*667suffered steady and growing criticism as an often arbitrary, mechanical, and inconsistently applied rule that ignores the realities of market power and net economic effects.16 Of course, we are not here concerned with the wisdom or efficacy of the per se rule as it applies to price fixing in the typical case against private business defendants. Nevertheless, we question whether the rule should be extended to cover the municipal defendants in this case. Therefore, although plaintiffs urge us to declare the ordinance facially invalid because it represents blatant, albeit government-imposed, vertical and horizontal17 fixing of maximum prices, we must first pause to consider whether these municipal defendants should be subject to the per se rule, the rule of reason, or a more accommodating standard.
c. Purpose and Applicability of the Per Se Rule Against Price Fixing
Of course, “it is . . . improper to dispose of an antitrust case by invoking a per se rule unless the challenged practice really fits the policy and rationale of the rule.” (Elman, “Petrified Opinions” and Competitive Realities (1966) 66 Colum.L.Rev. 625, 627; cf., Boulder, supra, 455 U.S. 40, 65 [70 L.Ed.2d 810, 827], Rehnquist, J., dis. [questioning whether per se rules of illegality will apply to municipal defendants in the same manner as they apply to private business defendants].) Because we determine below that the two principal justifications for the rule’s application to private business enterprises—economic reliability and ease of administration18—are not implicated in the situation before us, we must conclude that the per se rule has no place in this case.
[668]*668(i) Economic Reliability
The per se rule is thought to be economically reliable because, the courts assume, price fixing almost always has anticompetitive effects and almost never has procompetitive effects or “redeeming virtue.” Although it is unquestionable that the United States Supreme Court has long viewed price fixing by private business enterprises as illegal per se (e.g., Monsanto Co. v. Spray-Rite Service Corp. (1984) 465 U.S. 752, 761 [79 L.Ed.2d 775, 783, 104 S.Ct. 1464, 1469]), we note that the court has never addressed the question whether the same rule applies to the same conduct by municipalities. Moreover, just as the Supreme Court in the past has declined to apply the per se rule in circumstances that pose previously unaddressed questions of economic effect (cf. White Motor Co. v. United States (1963) 372 U.S. 253, 261 [9 L.Ed.2d 738, 745, 83 S.Ct. 696] [refusing to apply a new per se rule]; but see, Maricopa, supra, 457 U.S. 332, 349 [73 L.Ed.2d 48, 61] [applying an established per se rule to a “new” industry]), we too are reluctant to announce at this early stage, and without the benefit of any evidence regarding the economic consequences of locally imposed rent controls, that price fixing implemented by a local government necessarily produces negative net anticompetitive effects or that it lacks “any redeeming virtue.” (Continental T. V, Inc. v. GTE Sylvania Inc. (1977) 433 U.S. 36, 50 [53 L.Ed.2d 568, 580, 97 S.Ct. 2549]; see post, pp. 670-671, fn. 20.)
The court’s conclusion that price fixing by private business defendants is “invariably anticompetitive,” is based on a fear that even if prices are reasonable when set, by sanctioning such behavior the courts would facilitate fixing of unreasonable prices in the future. (Socony, supra, 310 U.S. 150, 221 [84 L.Ed. 1129, 1167]; Trenton Potteries, supra, 273 U.S. 392, 397 [71 L.Ed. 700, 705].) In the context of price fixing by a cartel, the Trenton Potteries court observed that “[t]he aim and result of every price-fixing agreement, if effective, is the elimination of one form of competition. The power to fix prices, whether reasonably exercised or not, involves power to control the market and to fix arbitrary and unreasonable prices. The reasonable price fixed today may through economic and business changes become the unreasonable price of tomorrow. Once established, it may be maintained unchanged because of the absence of competition secured by the agreement for a price reasonable when fixed.” (273 U.S. 392, 397 [71 L.Ed. 700, 705].) The Socony court echoed this concern, noting that “'[t]hose who controlled the prices would control or effectively dominate the market. And those who were in that strategic position would have it in their power to destroy or drastically impair the competitive system.” (310 U.S. 150, 221 [84 L.Ed. 1129, 1167].)
The court’s fear of facilitating such “predatory” activity is grounded on assumptions about how unrestrained business competitors will act if given [669]*669the opportunity. These assumptions have no place in the present case, however. There is nothing to suggest that the named defendants are acting for their own selfish purposes with a view toward securing market control and hence price control in the future. Quite the contrary, defendants’ sole and only legitimate purpose is to serve the public welfare as described in section 3 of the ordinance. When that purpose no longer exists—i.e., when annual average citywide rental vacancies exceed 5 percent over a six-month period—the ordinance provides for lifting of rent controls until the vacancy rate again falls below 5 percent. (§ 6, subd. (q).) We therefore conclude that neither the presumption that price fixing is invariably anticompetitive, nor the fear of facilitating “predatory” practices—both concerns that have been expressed by the United States Supreme Court in the context of analyzing the conduct of private business defendants—justifies application of the per se rule to municipalities acting in their legitimate governmental capacities.
(ii) Ease of Administration
The per se rule is also said to be justified by its ease of judicial administration. Both the Trenton Potteries and the Socony courts further explained refusal to inquire into the reasonableness of set prices on the ground that such a review would necessitate constant detailed supervision and analysis by the government to assure that reasonable prices remain reasonable as economic conditions vary. (273 U.S. 392, 397-398 [71 L.Ed. 700, 705-706]; 310 U.S. 150, 221 [84 L.Ed. 1129, 1167].)19 Recently, the Maricopa court stated that the high costs associated with “elaborate inquiry into . . . reasonableness” was a major justification for analyzing maximum price fixing in the health care industry under the per se rule. (457 U.S. 332, 343-344 [73 L.Ed.2d 48, 57-58].)
Certainly, the judicial task is easier when the question is changed from “does the conduct unreasonably restrain competition” to “have defendants engaged in price fixing.” Resort to this rule of administrative convenience, however, can be justified only if the costs “of formulating the rule, and of the overinclusiveness that inevitably accompanies it—are less than the attendant savings in administrative costs.” (Price Fixing Confusion, supra, 92 Yale L.J. at p. 709; see also United States v. Container Corp. (1969) 393 U.S. 333, 341 [21 L.Ed.2d 526, 532, 89 S.Ct. 510] (Marshall, J., dis.); Ehrlich & Posner, An Economic Analysis of Legal Rulemaking (1974) 3 J. Legal Stud. 257, 264-273; Easterbrook, Maximum Price Fixing, supra, 48 U.Chi.L.Rev. 886, 909-910; Bohling, A Simplified Rule of Reason for [670]*670Vertical Restraints: Integrating Social Goals, Economic Analysis, and Sylvania (1979) 64 Iowa L.Rev. 461, 490-491.)
The potential for overinclusiveness in the present case is apparent. Whereas the United States Supreme Court in Trenton Potteries and Socony based its refusal to consider whether private business defendants had set reasonable prices largely on the absence of administrative supervision and on the impracticality of constant judicial review of such prices, the present case presents a different situation. By express provision of the ordinance, it is the Board’s duty constantly to review and, if necessary, to adjust rents in order to assure each landlord a “fair return on his investment.” On the face of the ordinance, rents would “be subject to continuous administrative supervision and readjustment in light of changed conditions” (Socony, supra, 310 U.S. 150, 221 [84 L.Ed. 1129, 1167]) without requiring any involvement by the courts unless a landlord chooses to exercise his right to appeal his individual adjustment. Moreover, costs of administering the program are borne by the local agency: the ordinance is designed to allow the Board efficiently to address and resolve adjustment disputes and to be financially self-supporting.
We therefore must conclude that application of the “ease of administration” justification for the per se rule would, in the present case, improperly remove from judicial scrutiny an elaborate government-enforced maximum price control and adjustment scheme not contemplated by the court’s previous cases dealing with private business defendants. (See Posner, The Proper Relationship Between State Regulation and the Federal Antitrust Laws (1974) 49 N.Y.U. L.Rev. 693, 706.) We cannot say that probable economic harm, together with social costs resulting from absence of a per se rule, outweighs the risk of condemning, without any detailed inquiry, a local government’s heretofore presumed legitimate exercise of its police powers. (Cf. Bohling, supra, 64 Iowa L.Rev. at p. 491.) In our view, maximum rents price fixing, implemented by local government, is simply not of the same character as price fixing among private business defendants.20
[671]*671Because we find neither the economic reliability justification nor the ease of administration justification applicable to municipal defendants’ alleged anticompetitive behavior, we decline to subject these defendants to analysis under the per se rule.21 We turn, instead, to the rule of reason. If this were a typical case in which it was determined that a per se rule did not apply to a claim of facial conflict with the Sherman Act, our inquiry would end here and the parties would be left to litigate their antitrust claims at trial under the rule of reason. (Rice v. Norman Williams Co., supra, 458 U.S. 654, 661 [73 L.Ed.2d 1042, 1050].) We cannot take that course in this appeal, however, because, as we conclude below, the rule of reason as presently formulated is inapplicable to review of alleged conflict between a municipal regulation and the Sherman Act.
d. Applicability of the Rule of Reason
In National Soc. of Professional Engineers v. U. S. (1978) 435 U.S. 679 [55 L.Ed.2d 637, 98 S.Ct. 1355] the court held a professional association’s price maintenance scheme illegal per se. Before reaching that conclusion, however, the court reviewed the defendant’s claim that its conduct was legal under the rule of reason because it was motivated by a desire to forestall [672]*672decreased quality, and hence public harm, that might result if there was unrestrained competitive bidding among engineers. The court rejected the defendant’s public welfare argument: “[cjontrary to its name, the Rule [of Reason] does not open the field of antitrust inquiry to any argument in favor of a challenged restraint that may fall within the realm of reason. Instead, it focuses directly on the challenged restraint’s impact on competitive conditions.” (Id. at p. 688 [55 L.Ed.2d at p. 648]; Chicago Bd. of Trade, supra, 246 U.S. 231, 238 [62 L.Ed. 683, 687]; Standard Oil, supra, 221 U.S. 1, 58 [55 L.Ed. 619, 644].) The court made clear that under the rule of reason, inquiry is limited to whether the challenged conduct promotes or suppresses competition. (435 U.S. at p. 691 [55 L.Ed.2d at p. 650].) The parties will not be heard to argue, and a court may not consider, whether a policy favoring competition is in the public interest. (Id. at p. 692 [55 L.Ed.2d at p. 650].)
As stated above, however, we will not mechanically apply to municipal defendants rules of law developed exclusively in the context of determining private business antitrust liability. Whereas private business is motivated chiefly by the goal of increasing profits, the only legitimate purpose for municipal action is promotion of public health, safety and welfare. If courts were to judge municipal conduct under the rule of reason as it applies to private business enterprises, i.e., solely by the effect of the restraint on competition, most municipal actions would be found to violate the law: “[cjompetition simply does not and cannot further the interests that lie behind most social welfare legislation.” (Boulder, supra, 455 U.S. 40, 66 [70 L.Ed.2d 810, 828], Rehnquist, J., dis.) At the least, such regulations would be declared void; at worst, local governments might be subject to treble damages.22 We cannot believe that Congress intended such results to flow from a municipality’s heretofore presumed legitimate exercise of its police power.23 (Id., at p. 67 [70 L.Ed.2d at p. 829] [“If municipalities are permitted only to enact ordinances that are consistent with the procompetitive policies of the Sherman Act, a municipality’s power to regulate the economy would be all but destroyed.”]; Vanderstar, supra, 32 Cath.U.L.Rev. at pp. 397-400; Handler, The Current Attack on the Parker v. Brown State Action Doctrine (1976) 76 Colum.L.Rev. 1, 15; Hovenkamp, Tying Arrangements in the Real Estate Market: Federal Antitrust Law and Local Land Development Policy (1981) 33 Hastings L.J. 325, 335.)
[673]*673To prevent unwarranted interference with a municipal government’s legitimate exercise of its police power, and to accommodate the motives that underlie local government regulation (cf. e.g., Elzinga, The Goals of Antitrust Law: Other Than Competition and Efficiency, What Else Counts? (1977) 125 U.Pa.L.Rev. 1191), courts must develop tests that recognize a public welfare “defense” to alleged violation of the antitrust laws by municipalities. (Boulder, supra, 455 U.S. at pp. 66-67 [70 L.Ed.2d at pp. 828-829], Rehnquist, J., dis.; Home Rule, supra, 49 Brooklyn L.Rev. at pp. 294-295; Note, The Application of Antitrust Laws to Municipal Activities (1979) 79 Colum.L.Rev. 518, 539-543; The Supreme Court, 1981 Term (1982) 96 Harv.L.Rev. 62, 268, 275.)24
e. Facial Validity of the Ordinance Under a Modified Standard
We do not mean to suggest that rejection of the traditional rule of reason test in this case harkens return to “the same wide-ranging, essentially standardless inquiry into the reasonableness of local regulation” reminiscent of Lochner v. New York (1905) 198 U.S. 45 [49 L.Ed. 937, 25 S.Ct. 539], (Boulder, supra, 455 U.S. at p. 67 [70 L.Ed.2d at p. 829], Rehnquist, J., dis.) Whereas the primary evil of the Lochner approach was an overly strict emphasis on the ends-means nexus that in turn allowed judges wide latitude to impose their own standards of reasonableness on economic and social legislation, such jurisprudence has no place in our analysis of a municipal regulation’s potential conflict with the antitrust laws.25
[674]*674In articulating an appropriate test by which to review municipal actions alleged to conflict with the federal antitrust laws, we seek on the one hand a test that is sufficiently flexible to accommodate the interest of local government in promoting public health, safety and welfare programs or regulations. At the same time, we favor a standard that is not toothless; mere incantation of a purpose to promote the public welfare should not insulate municipal regulations from invalidation under the supremacy clause. Local governments should not be judged under a standard that will guarantee validity even for improperly motivated or implemented26 anticompetitive municipal regulations or commercial enterprises that plainly undermine the objectives of the federal antitrust laws.
We turn for initial guidance to the United States Supreme Court’s commerce clause cases. State or local regulation will be upheld against commerce clause attack if the regulation (1) does not discriminate against interstate commerce and (2) bears a rational relationship to a legitimate local purpose. In addition, the extent to which the court will permit burdens on interstate commerce depends on (3) the nature of the local interest, and whether it could be promoted with a lesser impact on interstate activities. Once these elements are satisfied, the court applies a balancing test: a regulation will be upheld unless its incidental burdens on interstate commerce are clearly excessive in relation to the putative local benefits. (E.g., Edgar v. MITE Corp. (1982) 457 U.S. 624, 643-646 [73 L.Ed.2d 269, 283-285, 102 S.Ct. 2629] [striking down state business takeover act]; Kassel v. Consolidated Freightways Corp. (1981) 450 U.S. 662, 671-679 [67 L.Ed.2d 580, 587-592, 101 S.Ct. 1309] [striking down state truck length statute]; Minnesota v. Clover Leaf Creamery Co. (1981) 449 U.S. 456, 471-474 [66 L.Ed.2d 659, 673-675, 101 S.Ct. 715] [upholding state law banning plastic and nonreturnable milk containers]; Hughes v. Oklahoma (1979) 441 U.S. 322, 336-338 [60 L.Ed.2d 250, 261-263, 99 S.Ct. 1727] [striking down state regulation of minnow trade]; Pike v. Bruce Church, Inc. (1970) 397 [675]*675U.S. 137, 142 [25 L.Ed.2d 174, 178, 90 S.Ct. 844] [striking down state law on packaging of cantalopes]; Dean Milk Co. v. Madison (1951) 340 U.S. 349, 353-356 [95 L.Ed. 329, 332-334, 71 S.Ct. 295] [striking down local milk regulation].)
With appropriate modifications, we believe that a test modeled after the court’s commerce clause cases will provide a workable standard for judging alleged conflict between municipal ordinances and the federal antitrust laws. We will, however, depart from the United States Supreme Court’s commerce clause test in one significant respect. We will not apply the wide-ranging, essentially standardless cost-benefit analysis employed in the court’s recent “balancing” decisions. (See, e.g., MITE Corp., supra, 457 U.S. 624 [73 L.Ed.2d 269]; Kassel, supra, 450 U.S. 662 [67 L.Ed.2d 580]; Clover Leaf Creamery, supra, 449 U.S. 456 [66 L.Ed.2d 659]; see generally, Eule, Laying the Dormant Commerce Clause to Rest (1982) 91 Yale L.J. 425 [criticizing the court’s balancing approach, and proposing an alternate standard]; Maltz, How Much Regulation is too Much—An Examination of Commerce Clause Jurisprudence (1981) 50 Geo.Wash.L.Rev. 47 [same]; Tushnet, Rethinking the Dormant Commerce Clause 1979 Wis.L.Rev. 125 [same].) Balancing a municipality’s need for particular local health, safety and welfare regulations or programs against often incommensurable alleged anticompetitive effects is a task for which courts are not well suited. On the other hand, a standard applicable to municipalities must be capable of considering those economic efficiency factors that underlie federal antitrust policy.
Adapting the court’s commerce clause test to this facial section 1 attack on a municipal rent control ordinance, we conclude that if a municipal regulation has a proper local purpose, is rationally related to the municipality’s legitimate exercise of its police power,27 and operates in an even handed manner, it must be upheld against a claim that it conflicts with section 1 of the Sherman Act unless the plaintiff demonstrates that the city’s purposes could be achieved as effectively by means that would have a less intrusive impact on federal antitrust policies.28
[676]*676Applying this test to the present case, we first observe that our decision in Birkenfeld forecloses any suggestion that the regulation is not supported by a legitimate purpose. There are no allegations of conflict of interest or illegal collusion in the enactment or drafting of the ordinance. Moreover, “[i]t has long been settled that [municipal police] power extends to objectives in furtherance of the public peace, safety, morals, health and welfare and ‘is not a circumscribed prerogative, but is elastic and, in keeping with the growth of knowledge and the belief in the popular mind of the need for its application, capable of expansion to meet existing conditions of modern life.’ ” (17 Cal.3d 129, 160.)
Nor can it be suggested at this late date that rent control is not rationally related to the municipality’s legitimate exercise of its police power. We observed in Birkenfeld that, as in the present case, “[t]he charter amendment includes in its stated purposes for imposing rent control the alleviation of the ill effects of the exploitation of a housing shortage by the charging of exorbitant rents to the detriment of the public health and welfare of the city and particularly its underprivileged groups. [Citation.] The amendment thus states on its face the existence of conditions in the city under which residential rent controls are reasonably related to promotion of the public health and welfare and are therefore within the police power.” {Ibid.) Furthermore, Birkenfeld very clearly establishes that, even absent a so-called “housing emergency,” local regulation of rents for the purposes stated in section 3 of the present ordinance is a rational exercise of the municipality’s police power. (Id. at pp. 153-164; Carson Mobilehome Park Owners’ Assn. v. City of Carson (1983) 35 Cal.3d 184, 189, fn. 4 [197 Cal.Rptr. 284, 672 P.2d 1297].)
Neither can plaintiffs demonstrate that the regulation fails to operate in an even handed manner. The only possible theory of discriminatory treatment of similarly situated landlords concerns section 5, subdivision (f), of the ordinance. When the regulation was passed, this provision exempted “[r]ental units in a residential property which is divided into a maximum of four (4) units where one of such units is occupied by the landlord as his/ her principal residence,”29 but limited the exemption to “rental units that [677]*677would have been exempt under the provisions of this Ordinance had this Ordinance been in effect on December 31, 1979.” Plaintiffs do not challenge the exemption itself; instead, they challenge subdivision (f), to the extent that it excludes from the exemption any property that became owner-occupied after December 31, 1979.
As defendants point out, however, the challenged exclusion from the exemption bears a debatable rational relationship to the purposes of the ordinance. The Berkeley electorate could reasonably have determined that the exclusion was desirable to prevent some landlords from avoiding application of the ordinance by evicting tenants and moving into their rental property after the provisions of the proposed ordinance became known. (See Baar, Guidelines for Drafting Rent Control Laws: Lessons of a Decade (1983) 35 Rutgers L.Rev. 723, 758 & fn. 128 [suggesting that in jurisdictions without the exemption limitation, such abuse is widespread].)30 Because the disparate treatment afforded similarly situated landlords is supported by a debatable rational basis, this aspect of plaintiffs’ challenge must also be rejected. (Clover Leaf Creamery, supra, 449 U.S. 456, 464 [66 L.Ed.2d 659, 668]; New Orleans v. Dukes (1976) 427 U.S. 297, 303 [49 L.Ed.2d 511, 516, 96 S.Ct. 2513]; Hale v. Morgan (1978) 22 Cal.3d 388, 395 [149 Cal.Rptr. 375, 584 P.2d 512].)
Finally, plaintiffs suggest no alternative, equally effective approach to achieving defendants’ legitimate local purposes by means that would have a less intrusive impact on federal antitrust policies. Indeed, such a showing could be made only after extensive evidence has been taken in the trial court. We therefore hold that plaintiffs have failed to establish that the ordinance on its face conflicts with section 1 of the Sherman Act.
C. Facial Validity of the Ordinance Under Section 2 of the Sherman Act
Plaintiffs also assert that the ordinance on its face violates section 2 of the Act. That section provides inter alia that “[e]very person who shall monopolize, or attempt to monopolize, or combine or conspire with any other person or persons, to monopolize any part of the trade or commerce among the several States . . . shall be deemed guilty of a felony . . . .” (15 U.S.C. § 2.)
In the context of reviewing the legality of private business conduct, the United States Supreme Court has established that the “offense” of mono[678]*678polization consists of two elements: (1) possession of “monopoly power” in the relevant market, and (2) willful acquisition of that power. (United States v. Grinnell Corp. (1966) 384 U.S. 563, 570-571 [16 L.Ed.2d 778, 785-786, 86 S.Ct. 1698].) “Monopoly power” has been defined as the “power to control prices or exclude competition.” (United States v. du Pont Co. (1956) 351 U.S. 377, 391 & fn. 18 [100 L.Ed. 1264, 1278-1279, 76 S.Ct. 994].) The existence of such power may be inferred from a defendant’s predominant share of the relevant market. (Grinnell, supra, 384 U.S. at p. 571 [16 L.Ed.2d at p. 786] [87 percent of market is monopoly power]; American Tobacco Co. v. United States (1946) 328 U.S. 781, 797 [90 L.Ed. 1575, 1587, 66 S.Ct. 1125] [two-thirds to 80 percent of market is monopoly power].) Seizing on these principles, plaintiffs claim the ordinance is “obviously” invalid because it represents a willful acquisition of power to control prices of all covered rental units in Berkeley—23,000 of the 27,000 units in that city.
Although plaintiffs’ claim would likely have merit if defendants were private business parties and if the restraint was proved to affect interstate commerce, for reasons discussed above we will not mechanically apply to municipal defendants, rules of law fashioned exclusively in the context of private business regulation. Instead, and assuming, over defendants’ vehement protestations, that section 2 of the Act applies to a party that is not itself a competitor in the relevant market that it is accused of monopolizing, we apply the test articulated ante, at page 675.
As explained previously, the stated objectives of the ordinance indicate a legitimate local purpose. Plaintiffs do not contend that the ordinance was implemented through misconduct, conflict of interest, or in order to affect discrimination—all factors that would tend to rebut defendants’ claim of a legitimate purpose. (See Cirace, supra, 61 Tex.L.Rev. at p. 498.) It is established that the means invoked by defendants’ ordinance is a rational exercise of the municipality’s police power. Plaintiffs have cited no evidence tending to show that the ordinance fails to regulate similarly situated competitors in a reasonably evenhanded manner. Finally, they suggest no equally effective alternative to accomplish these legitimate local purposes by means that would have a less intrusive impact on federal antitrust policies. We therefore conclude that plaintiffs have failed to establish that the ordinance on its face conflicts with section 2 of the Sherman Act.
Because we determine that plaintiffs have not established a conflict with the Act, we do not address whether the ordinance may be exempt from antitrust scrutiny under Boulder. (Rice v. Norman Williams Co., supra, 458 U.S. at p. 662, fn. 9 [73 L.Ed.2d at p. 1042].) We proceed to analyze plaintiffs’ additional constitutional and statutory contentions.
[679]*679II. Rent Control Issues31
A. Facial Validity of the Ordinance’s “Fair Return” Standard
The primary dispute in the trial court and one of the primary substantive questions posed on this appeal concerns whether a rent control ordinance is facially constitutional if it provides that a landlord is to receive a fair return on his investment rather than a fair return on the value of his property.32 The parties, assisted by amici curiae on both sides of the issue, have vigorously briefed and argued their respective views. We must stress at the outset, however, the limited scope of our inquiry in facial challenges such as this. As we made clear in Birkenfeld, whether rental regulations are fair or confiscatory depends ultimately on the result reached. (17 Cal.3d 129, 165.) That determination, of course, can only be made by analyzing a challenge to the regulation as applied. Nevertheless, we will declare a regulation invalid on its face “when its terms will not permit those who administer it to avoid confiscatory results in its application to the complaining parties.” (Id. at p. 165; see also Cotati Alliance for Better Housing v. City of Cotati (1983) 148 Cal.App.3d 280, 287, 291 [195 Cal.Rptr. 825]; Hutton Park Gardens v. Town Council (1975) 68 N.J. 543 [350 A.2d 1, 14-16].)
For more than a decade, rent control agencies throughout this state and the nation have employed a veritable smorgasbord of administrative stan[680]*680dards by which to determine rent ceilings. (Carson, supra, 35 Cal.3d 184, 188 [“just, fair and reasonable”]; Cotati Alliance, supra, 148 Cal.App.3d at p. 286 [“fair and reasonable return on investment”]; Palos Verdes Shores Mobile Estates, Ltd. v. City of Los Angeles (1983) 142 Cal.App.3d 362, 371 [190 Cal.Rptr. 866] [“just and reasonable return” based on the “maintenance of profit” approach]; Gregory v. City of San Juan Capistrano (1983) 142 Cal.App.3d 72, 86 [191 Cal.Rptr. 47] [interpreting “return on investment” as requiring a “just and reasonable return on the fair market value of [landlords’] property”]; see also Baar, Guidelines for Drafting Rent Control Laws: Lessons of a Decade (1983) 35 Rutgers L.Rev. 723, 781-817 [describing and analyzing the following standards: (1) cash flow/return on gross rent; (2) return on equity (investment); (3) return on value; (4) percentage net operating income; and (5) maintenance of net operating income] ; Comment, Rethinking Rent Control: An Analysis of “Fair Return” (1981) 12 Rutgers L.J. 617, 640-648 [hereinafter cited Fair Return]; Comment, Rent Control and Landlords’ Property Rights: The Reasonable Return Doctrine Revived (1980) 33 Rutgers L.Rev. 165 [hereinafter cited Reasonable Return Doctriné].) As we recently stressed in Carson, “[r]ent control agencies are not obliged by either the state or federal Constitution to fix rents by application of any particular method or formula.” (35 Cal.3d at p. 191, citing Power Comm’n v. Pipeline Co. (1942) 315 U.S. 575, 586 [86 L.Ed. 1037, 1049-1050, 62 S.Ct. 736]; Power Comm’n v. Hope Gas Co. (1944) 320 U.S. 591, 601-602 [88 L.Ed. 333, 344, 64 S.Ct. 281].)
In view of this oft-quoted and oft-followed principle, we are not persuaded by plaintiffs’ and amici’s apparent contention that the much criticized return on value standard33—or any of its varia[681]*681tions34—is required to be employed by the Board in the present case. We reiterate that selection of an administrative standard by which to set rent ceilings is a task for local governments—in this case the voters themselves— and not the courts. Our only concern in this appeal is whether defendants’ fair return on investment standard, on its face, will not permit those who administer it to avoid confiscatory results.35 (Birkenfeld, supra, 17 Cal.3d [682]*682at p. 165; Power Comm’n v. Pipeline Co., supra, 315 U.S. at pp. 585-586 [86 L.Ed. at pp. 1049-1050]; Hutton Park, supra, 350 A.2d at pp. 13-16.) If we conclude that the fair return on investment standard affords the Board sufficient flexibility to avoid confiscatory results, we must uphold the ordinance. (Cotati Alliance, supra, 148 Cal.App.3d at pp. 289-291.)
Plaintiffs and amici posit a number of due process obstacles and practical difficulties that the Board may face in administering the return on investment standard, but none will prevent the Board from avoiding confiscatory results.
1. Adjustment of Landlords’ Frozen May 1980 Profit Amount, and Consideration of the Effect of Inflation
One of plaintiffs’ primary complaints is that section 11 of the ordinance locks landlords into the fixed dollar amount of profit they earned in May 1980,36 and that in order for the Board to avoid confining those landlords who invested long ago with preinflation dollars to their May 1980 profit amount, it must be free under section 12 of the ordinance to take into consideration the effect of inflation on individual landlords’ investments37 and award fair returns based on “adjusted” investment figures.38
[683]*683Clearly, if the fixed amount of a landlord’s profit remains the same year after year his return will in time diminish in real value: it is obvious that a $1,000 “profit” in 1990 will have a much lower value than the same dollar amount of profit in 1980. Furthermore, although a fixed profit amount may produce a reasonable or fair return on investment for low-risk investments such as bonds, we must agree with plaintiffs that investment in rental units contemplates a higher risk and hence, in times of high inflation and when viewed in the long term, demands more than mere maintenance of an existing profit amount. (Cotati Alliance, supra, 148 Cal.App.3d at p. 295; Hutton Park Gardens v. Town Council, supra, 350 A.2d 1, 15 [a just and reasonable return on investment is one that is generally commensurate with returns on investments in other enterprises having comparable risks].) Therefore, although defendants’ ordinance may properly restrict landlords’ profits on their rental investments, it may not indefinitely freeze the dollar amount of those profits without eventually causing confiscatory results. (Cotati Alliance, supra, at p. 293 [“If the net operating profit of a landlord continues to be the identical number of dollars, there is in time a real diminution to the landlord which eventually becomes confiscatory.”].)
In determining the facial validity of the ordinance against plaintiffs’ claim that it must be interpreted to require the Board to account for the effect of inflation on investment in determining a landlord’s amount of profit or return, we adhere to the rule earlier stressed, that whether a regulation produces a return that is confiscatory or fair depends ultimately on the result, and that we will invalidate an ordinance on its face only if its terms preclude avoidance of confiscatory results.
First, it is not apparent that the ordinance on its face precludes alternative means of adjusting landlords’ frozen May 1980 profit amounts.39 Moreover, even assuming arguendo that a confiscatory result might occur in a future individual case if the Board fails to invoke measures necessary to adjust the dollar amount of a landlord’s May 1980 profit, this would still provide us no basis on which to invalidate the entire ordinance, or its administrative “fair return on investment” standard. Unlike Birkenfeld, in which we de[684]*684termined that inherent and unnecessary procedural defects inevitably deprived all landlords of due process “except perhaps for a lucky few” (17 Cal.3d at p. 172), in this case, by contrast, it is unknown what percentage of landlords might be able to prove unconstitutional confiscation if the Board fails to consider the effect of inflation on dollars invested in order to adjust a landlord’s frozen profit amount. Nor do we have before us any evidence to suggest that when faced with such a prospect, the Board will decline to invoke measures within its powers to adjust individual profit amounts. In this regard we observe that “[i]t is tó be presumed that the board will exercise its powers in conformity with the requirements of the Constitution; and if it does act unfairly, the fault lies with the board and not the statute.” (Butterworth v. Boyd (1938) 12 Cal.2d 140, 149 [82 P.2d 434, 126 A.L.R. 838].) Until we are required to review a specific challenge to the Board’s application of the ordinance, we note simply that, as defendants themselves concede {ante, p. 682, fn. 37), the ordinance is not drawn so narrowly as to preclude consideration of the effect of inflation on a landlord’s investment in those cases in which the Board might deem it necessary to take that factor into account in order to avoid causing a confiscatory result.40
2. Irrational Discrimination
Plaintiffs also argue that the investment standard denies equal protection because it will result in different rent ceilings for comparably valued rental units. This issue was raised and properly decided in Cotati Alliance, in which the court observed that such disparate treatment bears a debatable rational relationship to a legitimate public purpose: the voters could have reasonably concluded that the investment standard, more effectively than a value-based standard, ensures noninflated, reasonable rents for citizens in times of high inflation. (Cotati Alliance, supra, 148 Cal.App.3d 280, 292; see Hale v. Morgan (1978) 22 Cal.3d 388, 395 [149 Cal.Rptr. 375, 584 P.2d 512].)
[685]*6853. Ascertaining the Extent of a Landlord’s “Investment”
Plaintiffs next predict problems applying the investment standard to landlords who, for various reasons, have made little or no cash investment. However, those who purchased with no down payment, improved property years ago with “preinflation dollars,” or who obtained property through gift or inheritance, need not be deprived of a fair return simply because they made no initial monetary investment. The ordinance does not confine “investment” to such a restrictive definition. The Board, therefore, is not precluded, in appropriate cases, from considering as “investment,” a landlord’s personal labor in improving his property. (Cotati Alliance, supra, 148 Cal.App.3d at pp. 287, 289.) Nor is the Board precluded from imputing the transferor’s “investment,” adjusted as might be necessary, to landlords who obtained property by gift or inheritance. (Ibid.; Fair Return, supra, 12 Rutgers L.J. at p. 645.) Furthermore, the ordinance does not preclude the Board from considering “forms of investment such as mortgage payments toward principal, [or] cash invested in later improvements in the property” (Cotati Alliance, 148 Cal.App.3d at p. 287), or, with certain exceptions,41 the terms of a landlord’s individual financing obligations. In fact, the ordinance directly provides for such flexible application of the investment standard. Subdivision (i) of section 12 provides that “[n]o provision of this Ordinance shall be applied so as to prohibit the Board from granting an individual rent adjustment that is demonstrated necessary by the landlord to provide the landlord with a fair return on investment.”
4. Deprivation of Full Long-term Appreciation
Finally, amicus for plaintiffs appears to argue that the ordinance’s investment standard is unconstitutional on its face because it unfairly deprives landlords of full long-term appreciation on the value of their regulated property. The thrust of this contention is apparently aimed at establishing that, as a matter of due process, rent control ordinances must guarantee all landlords a fair return on the full market value of their property. This issue was also raised in Cotati Alliance, in which the court observed that “[s]ome lessening of appreciation is a necessary consequence of any rent control, since future appreciation is to a significant extent a function of increased rental income. [Citation.] It is one of the very sources of long-term appreciation—inflated rents—that rent control measures are intended to restrict.” (148 Cal.App.3d at p. 290.)42
[686]*686The fallacy of plaintiffs’ contention is readily apparent. Any price-setting regulation, like most other police power regulations of property rights, has the inevitable effect of reducing the value of regulated properties. But it has long been held that such reduction in property value does not by itself render a regulation unconstitutional. Police power legislation results in a confiscatory “taking” only when the owner has been deprived of substantially all reasonable use of the property. (Agins v. City of Tiburon (1979) 24 Cal.3d 266, 277 [157 Cal.Rptr. 372, 598 P.2d 25], affd. (1980) 447 U.S. 255 [65 L.Ed.2d 106, 100 S.Ct. 2138].) Even a significant diminution in value is insufficient to establish a confiscatory taking. (Euclid v. Ambler Realty Co. (1926) 272 U.S. 365 [71 L.Ed. 303, 47 S.Ct. 114, 54 A.L.R. 1016] [75 percent reduction in value because of zoning law insufficient to establish a taking]; Hadacheck v. Sebastian (1915) 239 U.S. 394 [60 L.Ed. 348, 36 S.Ct. 143] [nearly 90 percent reduction in value because of use restriction insufficient to establish a taking].) As the United States Supreme Court noted in Hope Gas Co., supra, 320 U.S. at page 601 [88 L.Ed. at page 344], “[t]he fixing of prices, like other applications of the police power, may reduce the value of the property which is being regulated. But the fact that the value is reduced does not mean that the regulation is invalid.” (Accord, Penn. Central Transp. Co. v. New York City (1978) 438 U.S. 104, 131 [57 L.Ed.2d 631, 652, 98 S.Ct. 2646] [diminution in property value, standing alone, cannot establish a “taking”]; Permian Basin Area Rate Cases (1968) 390 U.S. 747, 769 [20 L.Ed.2d 312, 337, 88 S.Ct. 1344] [“No constitutional objection arises from the imposition of maximum prices merely because ... the value of regulated property is reduced as a consequence of regulation.”].)
Thus, although we need not articulate in this facial attack the precise constitutional standard that all administrative rent control standards must meet (ante, p. 681, fn. 35), we can state with certainty that a rent control ordinance need not provide for a fair return on the value of a landlord’s property in order to survive a facial challenge. We conclude that defendants’ fair return on investment standard will not preclude the Board from avoiding confiscatory results, and hence the administrative standard established in the ordinance is constitutionally valid on its face. (Cal. Const., art. I, § 7; accord, Oceanside Mobilehome Park Owners’ Assn. v. City of Oceanside (1984) 157 Cal.App.3d 887, 897-900 [204 Cal.Rptr. 239]; Cotati Alliance, supra, 148 Cal.App.3d at pp. 288-289, and cases and authorities cited.)43
[687]*687 B. Facial Validity of the Ordinance’s Rent Adjustment Procedures
As we observed recently in Carson, “[when] rent ceilings of an indefinite duration are established, a mechanism must be provided for granting those increases necessary to permit landlords a just and reasonable return. ‘The mechanism is sufficient for the required purpose only if it is capable of providing adjustments in maximum rents without a substantially greater incidence and degree of delay than is practically necessary.’ ” (35 Cal.3d at p. 191, quoting Birkenfeld, supra, 17 Cal.3d at p. 169.) As plaintiffs observe, “[pjroperty may be as effectively taken by long-continued and unreasonable delay in putting an end to confiscatory rates as by an express affirmance of them . . . .” (Smith v. Illinois Bell Tel. Co. (1926) 270 U.S. 587, 591 [70 L.Ed. 747, 749, 46 S.Ct. 408].)
Of course, some delays are inherent in any rent control scheme. But, “only those delays which are longer than practically necessary to achieve the legitimate purposes of the legislation are constitutionally proscribed.” (Carson, supra, 35 Cal.3d at p. 192; Birkenfeld, supra, 17 Cal.3d at pp. 169, 173.)
The test used to review the facial validity of defendants’ adjustment procedures is the same one used above to review the ordinances’ administrative standard for individual maximum rent adjustments under section 12. We will declare the adjustment procedures invalid only if the ordinance on its face will not permit the Board to avoid confiscatory results. Although in Birkenfeld we found Berkeley’s former ordinance facially unconstitutional on this basis because, by its terms, it precluded reasonably prompt action in most cases, the ordinance before us now contains none of the problems found in the former regulation.
The prior ordinance had no provision for “general rental adjustments for all or any class of rental units based on generally applicable factors such as property taxes.” (Birkenfeld, 17 Cal.3d at p. 171.) Although we recently recognized in Carson that a rent control ordinance need not have a general adjustment provision to pass constitutional muster (35 Cal.3d at p. 194), such a mechanism will be required when the “magnitude of the job to be done” (Birkenfeld, at p. 169) so demands. Since we decided Birkenfeld the number of rental units in Berkeley subject to rent control has increased to 23,000. However, the exact mechanism found wanting in 1976 is present in the ordinance before us now in section 1144—a comprehensive scheme [688]*688that provides for annual45 across the board adjustment based on “cost” factors.
The adjustment for all landlords under section 11 is designed to allow landlords to retain the generally same dollar amount of profit in subsequent years that they received in May 1980. In order to acquire rent increases that [689]*689reflect cost increases not imposed on other landlords generally, or in order to seek an increase in dollar amount of return (i.e., the dollar amount of profit), a landlord must secure an individual adjustment pursuant to section 12, subdivision c.46 And, as observed ante at pages 682-684, unless land[690]*690lords have reasonable access to such individual adjustments, the ordinance has the potential for producing unconstitutional results.
In comparison to the procedures for individual adjustment in Berkeley’s former regulation—which, we said, “put the Board in a procedural strait jacket” (Birkenfeld, supra, 17 Cal.3d at p. 171)—the ordinance before us now is solicitous of due process. The initiative drafters apparently studied Birkenfeld, and took it to heart: every major procedural failing that we noted in the former ordinance has been addressed, and additional procedural protections not previously mentioned have been included.
The previous Berkeley ordinance found invalid in Birkenfeld (1) did not allow a landlord to file a petition for rent adjustment unless it was accompanied by a certificate of building code compliance from the city’s building code department; (2) gave the Board no power to consolidate petitions for units in the same building, unless the tenants consented; and (3) gave the Board (five members each paid a maximum of $2,400 per year) no power to delegate the holding of hearings to hearing officers, or even to members or panels of the Board. (17 Cal.3d at pp. 170-171.) As defendants point out, none of these “defects” appear in the new ordinance: (1) there is no requirement that a landlord’s petition be accompanied by a certificate from the building department, or from anyone else;47 (2) the Board is expressly given the power to consolidate a landlord’s petitions for units in the same building—whether or not the tenants consent;48 and (3) the ordinance expressly gives the Board the power to appoint hearing officers to hold hearings,49 and the hearing officers are authorized to issue decisions that are [691]*691final unless appealed to the Board.50 Additionally, the new ordinance imposes a time limit of 120 days on all decisions on landlord petitions.51
Defendants’ new ordinance clearly avoids the confiscatory delays inherent in the former regulation’s unit-by-unit procedure. It provides for general city wide increases to cover common costs, and its individual adjustment procedures are designed to assure reasonably prompt consideration of landlords’ claims.52 These procedures are reasonably related to achievement of the ordinance’s stated purpose of, inter alia, preventing excessive rents. By its own terms, the ordinance will permit the Board to avoid confiscatory results; we therefore conclude that the ordinance, on its face, guarantees plaintiffs due process. (Cal. Const., art. I, § 7; Birkenfeld, supra, 17 Cal.3d at pp. 165, 173.)
C. Unreasonable Restraint on Alienation
At the same time that mechanical application of the fair return on investment standard may have the potential to produce confiscatory results in some individual cases (ante, pp. 682-684) it is also recognized that the standard has the potential for awarding windfall returns to recent investors whose purchase prices and interest rates are high. If this latter aspect were unregulated, use of the investment standard might defeat the purpose of rent [692]*692price regulation. To prevent this result, defendants’ ordinance, like others in the state (see Baar, supra, 35 Rutgers L.Rev. at p. 788, fn. 249), contains two “antispeculation” clauses that prohibit the Board from considering certain increases in mortgage interest payments when those increases occur after adoption of the ordinance. (Id. at pp. 788, 792.) Thus, except when refinancing is necessary to make capital improvements or in cases of individual hardship to buyers, section 12, subdivisions d and e,53 preclude the Board from authorizing an individual rent increase because of increased interest or other expenses resulting from sale or refinancing of rental property, if the landlord could reasonably have foreseen that such increased expenses could not be covered by the “existing” rent schedule.
Plaintiffs do not challenge the constitutional reasonableness of the classification created by these restrictions; instead, they claim these provisions constitute unreasonable restraints on alienation in that they will inhibit sales of rental property at a fair market value in violation of Civil Code section 711. That section states simply, “[c]onditions restraining alienation, when repugnant to the interest created, are void.” Plaintiffs’ contention, however, ignores ordinance section 12, subdivision i, which cautions, “[n]o provision of this Ordinance shall be applied so as to prohibit the Board from granting an individual rent adjustment that is demonstrated necessary by the landlord to provide the landlord with a fair return on investment.” This safety valve overrides all other provisions of the ordinance and averts any danger that subdivisions d and e might prevent a purchaser from realizing a fair return, and thus prevents any unreasonable restraint on alienation. (See generally Wellenkamp v. Bank of America (1978) 21 Cal.3d 943, 948 [148 Cal.Rptr. 379, 582 P.2d 970].)
Furthermore, even if the two subdivisions were assumed to create an unreasonable restraint, we are persuaded by defendants’ contention that Civ[693]*693il Code section 711 does not, and was never intended to, apply to municipal ordinances. Our review of that statute and the many cases that apply it reveals that it addresses only private restraints on alienation, and not government regulations. (Cf. 3 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (8th ed. 1973) Real Property, § 314, p. 2024 [the rule against restraints on alienation “is directed against the provisions in contracts or conveyances. It has no application to disabling restraints established by express statute.”]; Rest., Property, pp. 2377, 2381.) None of the cases cited by plaintiffs or amici supports a contrary view.
D. Retaliatory Eviction Presumption
Typically, rent control schemes include eviction controls that require “good cause” in order for a landlord to bring an eviction action. Without such controls, “the security of tenure objectives of rent control laws could be undermined and the threat of eviction could be used to nullify the operation of rent regulations.” (Baar, supra, 35 Rutgers L.Rev. at p. 833.)
Accordingly, section 14 of the ordinance54 restates this court’s established holding that a landlord’s retaliation against a tenant for the tenant’s assertion or exercise of rights is a defense to eviction. (Schweiger v. Superior Court (1970) 3 Cal.3d 507, 517 [90 Cal.Rptr. 729, 476 P.2d 97].) The section then provides that, in an action by the landlord to recover possession or in an affirmative action taken by the tenant for damages, “evidence of the assertion or exercise by the tenant of rights under this Ordinance within six months prior to the alleged act of retaliation shall create a presumption that the landlord’s act was retaliatory.” As originally enacted, the section provided that “ ‘ [pjresumption’ means that the Court must find the existence of the fact presumed unless and until evidence is introduced which would support a finding of its nonexistence.” After the trial court’s judgment in this case the latter sentence was amended in 1982 (see ante, p. 654, fn. 2) to [694]*694read, “ ‘[pjresumption’ means that the Court must find the existence of the fact presumed unless and until its nonexistence is proven by a preponderance of the evidence.”
Questions regarding the legality of the preamendment presumption are clearly moot. Nevertheless, it would be imprudent to avoid analysis of plaintiffs’ challenges to the amended language at this time. Clearly, those parts of section 14 that were simply reenacted by the amendment are properly before us now. (Carter v. Stevens (1930) 208 Cal. 649, 651 [284 P. 217].) The question regarding the effect of the amendment is purely one of law (Carman v. Alvord (1982) 31 Cal.3d 318, 324 [182 Cal.Rptr. 506, 644 P.2d 192]); moreover, the question arises in a facial attack on appeal from an order denying an injunction, and therefore is properly resolved by this court at this time. (Complete Service Bureau v. San Diego Med. Soc. (1954) 43 Cal.2d 201, 207 [272 P.2d 497]; Cal-Dak Co. v. Sav-On Drugs, Inc. (1953) 40 Cal.2d 492, 496-497 [254 P.2d 497].)
1. Classification of the Presumption
Plaintiffs claim that section 14 purports to create a presumption affecting the burden of proof, and that such presumptions created by municipal ordinance are preempted by state law. (Evid. Code, § 500.) Defendants apparently respond that section 14 creates merely a presumption affecting the burden of producing or going forward with evidence, and that, even if it does create a presumption affecting the burden of proof, section 500 and other relevant sections of the Evidence Code allow such a presumption.
a. Presumption Affecting the Burden of Producing Evidence
The burden of producing evidence refers to a party’s obligation to introduce evidence sufficient to establish a prima facie case, or, in other words, sufficient to avoid nonsuit. (Evid. Code, § 110.) “A presumption affecting the burden of producing evidence is a presumption established to implement no public policy other than to facilitate the determination of the particular action in which the presumption is applied.” (Evid. Code, § 603.) The code makes clear that the purpose of such a rebuttable presumption relates solely to judicial efficiency, and does not rest on any public policy extrinsic to the action in which it is invoked. A presumption affecting the burden of producing evidence is based on an underlying logical inference that the presumed fact very likely follows from the proved fact; the presumption is designed to avoid unnecessary proof of facts likely to be true if not disputed. Especially relevant to the present case, such a rebuttable presumption is designed to place the responsibility for establishing the nonexistence of certain facts on the party most able to do so. As observed in the California [695]*695Law Revision Commission’s comment on section 603, “[t]he presumptions described in [that section] are not expressions of policy; they are expressions of experience. They are intended solely to eliminate the need for the trier of fact to reason from the proven or established fact to the presumed fact and to forestall argument over the existence of the presumed fact when there is no evidence tending to prove the nonexistence of the presumed fact.”
If the presumption established in section 14 affects the burden of producing evidence, a tenant who shows an assertion or exercise of rights under the ordinance within six months of an eviction proceeding will have established either (1) a prima facie defense to eviction (and will hence avoid nonsuit), or (2) a prima facie case for damages, unless the landlord rebuts the presumption by evidence supporting its nonexistence by a preponderance of the evidence. (Evid. Code, §§ 110, 604.) As noted in the Assembly Committee on the Judiciary’s comment on section 604, “[s]uch a presumption is merely a preliminary assumption in the absence of contrary evidence.”
b. Presumption Affecting the Burden of Proof
The burden of proof, on the other hand, refers to a party’s obligation to establish by evidence a requisite degree of belief concerning a fact in the mind of the trier of fact. (Evid. Code, § 115.) Unlike presumptions affecting the burden of producing evidence, which exist merely to expedite resolution of disputes, “[a] presumption affecting the burden of proof is a presumption established to implement some public policy other than to facilitate the determination of the particular action in which the presumption is applied, such as the policy in favor of establishment of a parent and child relationship, the validity of marriage, the stability of titles to property . . . .” (Evid. Code, § 605.) The purpose of such a rebuttable presumption relates to public policy goals “other than or in addition to the policy of facilitating the trial of actions.” (Cal. Law Revision Com. com. on Evid. Code, § 605.) As the California Law Revision Commission observes, “[frequently, presumptions affecting the burden of proof are designed to facilitate determination of the action in which they are applied. Superficially, therefore, such presumptions may appear merely to be presumptions affecting the burden of producing evidence. What makes a presumption one affecting the burden of proof is the fact that there is always some further reason of policy for the establishment of the presumption. It is the existence of this further basis in policy that distinguishes a presumption affecting the burden of proof from a presumption affecting the burden of producing evidence.” (Ibid.)
If a presumption affecting the burden of proof is established by section 14, a tenant who shows an assertion or exercise of rights under the ordi[696]*696nance within six months of the eviction proceeding will effectively shift to the landlord the burden of disproving the tenant’s defense or case for damages, by requiring the landlord to prove to the trier of fact, by a preponderance of the evidence, that eviction was not retaliatory. (Evid. Code, §§ 115, 606.) In other words, unlike presumptions affecting the burden of producing evidence, which would merely protect a tenant against nonsuit, a presumption affecting the burden of proof would shift the ultimate responsibility of persuasion to the landlord.
c. Presumption Created by the Amendment
Defendants concede that it is difficult to classify the presumption created by section 14. Plaintiffs implicitly recognize the same problem: although they characterized the amended presumption in earlier briefs as a valid presumption affecting the burden of producing evidence, in recent briefs they claim it is an invalid presumption affecting the burden of proof.
Viewing the section’s language in the context of the entire ordinance, and in light of the earlier preamendment version, we must agree with plaintiffs that the amended section 14 presumption affects the burden of proof. Regarding the latter point first, we note that the preamendment language paralleled Evidence Code section 604’s description of the effect of a presumption affecting the burden of producing evidence: former section 14 specified that “the Court must find the existence of the fact presumed unless and until evidence is introduced which would support a finding of its nonexistence.” Evidence Code section 604 similarly provides that a presumption affecting the burden of producing evidence “require[s] the trier of fact to assume the existence of the presumed fact unless and until evidence is introduced which would support a finding of its nonexistence.”
It thus seems reasonably clear that the former section established a presumption affecting the burden of producing evidence. It would also be reasonable to assume that the amendment was intended to change, rather than simply restate or clarify, the original presumption. First, the amendment specifically omitted reference to introduction of evidence that would support a finding of the presumed fact’s nonexistence—and therefore it departs from the express language of Evidence Code section 604. Moreover, to the extent the amendment was intended to clarify and restate the previous presumption that affected only the burden of producing evidence, the new section would quite obviously be a failure—because its language describes that kind of presumption even less clearly than did its predecessor.
The suggestion that the amendment was intended to implement a presumption affecting the burden of proof, and not merely one affecting the [697]*697burden of producing evidence, is further supported by defendants’ own description of the purpose of the amended presumption. Defendants claim the presumption is intended to further the municipality’s policy against retaliatory evictions and to promote the policy of encouraging tenants to exercise their rights under the ordinance. In view of the previous section’s subsequent amendment—and because, as defendants admit, section 14 is designed to further policies extrinsic to, or in addition to, the policy of facilitating determination of particular eviction actions—we must conclude that the amended section creates a presumption affecting the burden of proof.
2. Direct Preemption by the Evidence Code
Although municipalities have power to enact ordinances creating substantive defenses to eviction (Birkenfeld, supra, 17 Cal.3d 129, 149), such legislation is invalid to the extent it conflicts with general state law. (Id. at p. 152; Cal. Const., art. XI, § 7.) Plaintiffs claim that section 14, as amended, directly conflicts with Evidence Code section 500, which states; “Except as otherwise provided by law, a party has the burden of proof as to each fact the existence or nonexistence of which is essential to the claim for relief or defense that he is asserting.” They note that under section 14, proof of retaliation is “essential” to establishing the tenant’s defense or claim for relief; therefore, they argue, Evidence Code section 500, requires that the tenant prove the fact of retaliation.
Defendants respond that Evidence Code section 500 by its own terms does not apply to situations “otherwise provided [for] by law.” Plaintiffs, in turn, maintain that this exception does not contemplate local ordinances or charter amendments.
The term “law,” as used in Evidence Code section 500, is defined as including “constitutional, statutory, and decisional law.” (Evid. Code, § 160.) Defendants contend that section 160 was not intended to exclude local ordinances as a source of “law,” but was merely intended to make clear that the term “law” includes judicial decisions. (See Cal. Law Revision Com. com. to § 160.) They therefore invite us to construe “statutory” as including ordinances.
Indeed, there have been cases in which courts have suggested that the term “statute” embraces local ordinances. (City of Los Angeles v. Belridge Oil Co. (1954) 42 Cal.2d 823, 833-834 [271 P.2d 5]; King Mfg. Co. v. Augusta (1928) 277 U.S. 100, 102-114 [72 L.Ed. 801, 804-810, 48 S.Ct. 489].) Neither of those cases, however, assists defendants. In Belridge we observed that a city licensing ordinance could be construed as a statute under the statute of limitations; in King the United States Supreme Court [698]*698construed an ordinance as a statute for the purpose of satisfying jurisdiction. But, in neither case did the court address issues remotely approaching the question posed here: whether a local ordinance can be deemed a “statute” for purposes of deviating from the established rules of evidence relating to burden of proof.
The answer to this question would seem so settled that, like other firm rules of law, few courts have recently had occasion to address the issue. Long before enactment of Evidence Code sections 500 and 160, we suggested that municipal governments have no authority to depart from the common law of evidence. (Orena v. City of Santa Barbara (1891) 91 Cal. 621, 629 [28 P. 268] [an “ordinance is void ... [to the extent that it purports to] lay down rules of evidence . . . .”].) Similarly, commentators have maintained that, “[w]ithout express authority the general rules of evidence or procedure may not be changed by ordinance by a municipal corporation” (9 McQuillin, Municipal Corporations (3d ed. 1978) § 27.45, p. 670; see also 2 Dillon, Municipal Corporations (5th ed. 1911) § 643, p. 983), and that, “[ujnlike the legislature, the governing body of a municipal corporation has no power to prescribe rules of evidence for the guidance of courts. Therefore, a municipal ordinance . . . concerning the burden of proof [is void].” (31 Cal.Jur.3d, Evidence, § 5, at p. 37.) See also Cohen v. St. Louis Merchants’ Bridge Terminal Ry. (1916) 193 Mo.App. 69 [181 S.W. 1080, 1081-1082] (“ ‘the city cannot by ordinance in any wise change or alter the ordinary rules of evidence applicable in this court’ ”); Fitch v. Pinckard (1842) 4 Scam. 69, 78 (5 Ill. 72, 81) (“[T]he [municipal] corporation exceeded its powers, in declaring that the collector’s deed should be evidence of a compliance with all the prerequisites of the ordinance. The legislature alone possesses the power to make, change, or alter the rules of evidence.”); cf., The City Council v. Dunn (S.C. 1821) 1 McCord 333 (in absence of statutory provision to the contrary, an ordinance may not depart from the common law rules of evidence).
Given this background, we cannot believe that the Legislature, when it enacted Evidence Code sections 500 and 160 in 1965, ever intended municipal ordinances to come within the exception clause of Evidence Code section 500. Whether the Evidence Code directly or by implication preempts a local ordinance that purports to create a presumption shifting the burden of producing evidence is a separate issue, on which we reserve decision. (See Evid. Code, § 550, subd. (b).) For now, we conclude that the Legislature deliberately excluded ordinances from those sources of law that may change the traditional allocation of the burden of proof, and that the presumption in section 14 shifting the burden of proof, on its face, directly conflicts with the Evidence Code. (§ 500.) To that extent, the ordinance is invalid.
[699]*699 E. Due Process and Preemption Challenges to the Ordinance’s Rent Withholding Provisions
Section 1555 sets out remedies for landlords’ violations of the ordinance— e.g., failure to register pursuant to section 8,56 or charging of rents above [700]*700those permitted under sections 11 and 12. Section 15, subdivision (a), provides for tenant-initiated remedies: under subsection (1) of that subdivision, a tenant may petition the Board for permission to withhold rent until the landlord complies with the ordinance. Subsection (2) permits the same withholding remedy, even without Board permission, and provides a defense to unlawful detainer if the tenant believes in good faith that the landlord has not complied with the ordinance.57 Subsection (3) permits a tenant to sue for injunctive relief, and subsection (4) permits a tenant to sue the landlord for money damages.
Subdivision (c) permits the city attorney to sue landlords for injunctive relief, and subdivision (d) permits the Board to do the same. Subdivision (e) permits the Board to settle claims on behalf of tenants.
Plaintiffs focus on the rent withholding provisions of subdivision (a), subsections (1) and (2), which they claim are preempted by state law. Additionally, plaintiffs assert that subsection (2) denies them due process on numerous grounds. We address plaintiffs’ due process claims first.
1. Due Process
Subdivision (a), subsection (2), allows a tenant to withhold the “full amount” of his periodic rent until the landlord’s compliance with the ordinance is achieved. It provides further that “[i]n any action to recover possession based on nonpayment of rent, possession shall not be granted where the tenant has withheld rent in good faith under this Section.”
a. Reasonable Relationship to the Purpose of the Ordinance
Plaintiffs first contend that the “extreme ‘remedy’ ” of subsection (2) is not reasonably related to the purpose of the ordinance because it is available not only when a landlord charges excessive rents, but also when a landlord fails to register. As defendants observe, however, ensuring landlord registration is crucial to the purpose of the ordinance, because without registration the ordinance cannot be enforced.
Moreover, defendants note that all other enforcement remedies listed above except for subdivision (a), subsection (2), suffer the same serious weakness: to invoke them can cost substantial amounts of money, either to the tenant or to the Board. At the same time, the structure of the ordinance [701]*701makes the question of funding crucial. Section 6, subdivision (n),58 provides that funding for the Board’s expenses shall be from annual landlord registration fees,59 and not from the city’s general fund. Therefore, defendants observe, the Board is essentially dependent on landlords’ registration fees to (i) pay the staff it needs to gather information for its general rent adjustment hearings under section 11; (ii) pay examiners to handle individual rent adjustment hearings under section 12; and (iii) employ counsel to bring suits under section 15, subdivisions (c) and (d), against landlords who refuse to register or who charge rents beyond the maximum allowed. On the other hand, defendants argue, the tenant-initiated remedies, with the exception of subdivision (a), subsection (2), cannot be relied on to enforce the ordinance. Although subdivision (a), subsection (1), permits a tenant to seek Board authorization to withhold rent, if landlords fail to register, the Board may lack funds to hire hearing examiners and other staff to hold hearings on such petitions. And, whereas subdivision (a), subsection (3), permits a tenant to sue for injunctive relief, there is no certainty that many tenants will expend the time or money to pursue that course. Finally, subdivision (a), subsection (4), permits a tenant to sue for damages when the landlord receives more than the maximum rent allowed by the ordinance; and subdivision (b) allows a tenant to sue for damages when the landlord violates certain restrictions on evictions; but neither section gives any remedy for the landlord’s failure to register. Other provisions—section 11, subdivision f, subsection (l),60 and section 12, subdivision f, subsection (l),61 forbid a landlord who has failed to register—“after order of the Board”—from taking advantage of general and individual rent increases allowed by the Board. But if landlords fail to register in significant numbers, the Board might be unable to hire the staff needed to assist in issuing the “orders” required by these two subsections.
“(1) Has continued to fail to comply, after order of the Board, with any provisions of this Ordinance and/or orders or regulations issued thereunder by the Board . . . .”
[702]*702Defendants thus proclaim the importance of the section 15, subdivision (a), subsection (2), rent withholding provision: it suffers none of the “weaknesses” discussed above; it is claimed to be simple, direct, and self-enforcing. We conclude that defendants’ rent withholding provision is reasonably related to achieving the legitimate purposes of the ordinance.
b. Vagueness
Plaintiffs next complain that section 15, subdivision (a), subsection (2), is unconstitutionally vague and overbroad. We will uphold the subsection against this challenge if it (1) gives fair notice of the practice to be avoided, and (2) provides reasonably adequate standards to guide enforcement. (Connally v. General Const. Co. (1926) 269 U.S. 385, 391 [70 L.Ed. 322, 328, 46 S.Ct. 126]; see generally Note, The Void-for-Vagueness Doctrine in the Supreme Court (1960) 109 U.Pa.L.Rev. 67; Note, Due Process Requirements of Definiteness in Statutes (1948) 62 Harv.L.Rev. 77.)
(i) Fair Notice
Fair notice, as applied to the present inquiry, requires only that the subsection’s terms be described with a reasonable degree of certainty so that an ordinary landlord can understand what conduct is proscribed on his part, and under what conditions his rent-withholding tenant will be afforded a defense to an unlawful detainer action. (Cf. Burg v. Municipal Court (1983) 35 Cal.3d 257, 270-271 [198 Cal.Rptr. 145, 673 P.2d 732] and cases cited.)
Plaintiffs contend that the subsection is ambiguous “as to the most basic components of the tenant’s right to a remedy: who may take remedial action, in what amount and for how long”? We believe that the word “tenant” is clearly limited to a lessee, assignee or sublessee who has been charged excessive rent, or who lives in an unregistered apartment. Plaintiffs also claim the subsection is unclear as to who is to determine whether the landlord has violated the ordinance, and who is to determine when the landlord has achieved compliance. But we believe the answer is obvious: the trial court will determine these issues, if and when the landlord sues to evict for nonpayment of rent. Plaintiffs further claim that the subsection does not specify the amount of rent that may be withheld, but on its face the provision allows withholding “up to the full amount” of the tenant’s periodic rent. Although such full withholding may be harsh, plaintiffs cannot successfully contend that it is not rationally related to achieving compliance with the ordinance.
Finally, plaintiffs claim that the subsection “condemns the landlord to an indefinite sentence” because it does not specify when, if ever, the withheld [703]*703rent shall be paid. To the contrary, subsection (2), read in conjunction with its introductory provision (subd. (a)), clearly establishes that the withholding remedy is allowed only until the landlord complies with the ordinance by registering and abiding by the maximum rent schedule that applies to him.62 Nor do we accept plaintiffs’ contention that the word “register” provides inadequate notice to landlords. That word, as well as the above terms and provisions, is sufficiently certain to inform landlords of both the conduct needed to comply with the subsection’s requirements, and the circumstances that will afford his tenant a defense to an unlawful detainer action.
(ii) Standards for Enforcement
Plaintiffs also make a cryptic allegation that the subsection’s withholding provision and the qualified defense it confers are dangerously susceptible of arbitrary “enforcement” by those who have the power to invoke it—the tenants. Their concern, apparently, is with the fact that application of the subsection hinges ultimately on a tenant’s “good faith belief” that a landlord has failed to comply with the ordinance.
Contrary to plaintiffs’ suggestion, however, the question of the applicability of subsection (2) is not contingent on the arbitrary or personal predilections of the tenant. (E.g., Smith v. Goguen (1974) 415 U.S. 566, 573 [39 L.Ed.2d 605, 612, 94 S.Ct. 1242].) Although the “good faith belief” required to invoke the provision is not a precisely measurable standard, neither is it incapable of reasonably exact determination. The determination of whether a tenant had the requisite good faith belief at the time he withheld rent is not to be made by the tenant; it is instead a question for the trial court, to be decided only for the narrow purpose of establishing a defense to a landlord’s eviction suit. Thus viewed in proper context, the provision poses little threat of arbitrary application, and hence is not properly subject to facial invalidation on this ground.
c. Procedural Due Process and Confiscation
Plaintiffs finally claim that the ordinance provides them no “due process protection” before their rents are “confiscated” pursuant to subdivision (a), subsection (2). Viewing application of the withholding provision in the proper context, however, discloses the false assumptions underlying plain[704]*704tiffs’ concern. As noted, the applicability of the withholding provision and the qualified defense it confers comes into question only after the landlord has initiated a wrongful detainer action. The provision affords the landlord no less due process protection than he would have normally; its sole effect is to create a substantive defense to eviction for nonpayment of rent if the tenant’s withholding is found to have been made pursuant to a good faith belief that his landlord had not complied with the ordinance. Similarly, the provision produces no confiscatory result: it does not deprive the landlord of rent due, because, even if it is found that the tenant withheld in good faith, the landlord may sue and recover the full amount of back rent as soon as the court is persuaded that compliance with the ordinance has been achieved. On the other hand, if it is found that the tenant’s withholding was not in good faith, the landlord may recover possession in unlawful detainer and may also sue for full back rent in an amount consistent with the ordinance. We conclude that, on the face of the ordinance, the withholding and qualified defense provisions of subdivision (a), subsection (2), neither deprive landlords of due process, nor do they produce confiscatory results. (Cal. Const., art. I, § 7.) At most, the subsection creates a substantive defense to unlawful detainer actions as a means of ensuring compliance with the ordinance.
2. Preemption
Every California city possesses the general power to “make and enforce within its limits all local, police, sanitary, and other ordinances and regulations not in conflict with general laws.” (Cal. Const., art. XI, § 7.) In addition, charter cities have even greater authority: they have exclusive power to legislate over “municipal affairs.” (Cal. Const., art. XI, § 5, subd. (a).)63 Similar to the defendant city’s concession in Birkenfeld that “rent control is not a municipal affair as to which a charter provision would prevail over general state law” (17 Cal.3d at p. 141), defendants now do not claim that provision for rent withholding in section 15, subdivision (a), is a municipal affair that overrides general state law. Instead, defendants assert their power to implement the rent withholding provision based on the right of all cities to regulate matters not in conflict with general laws. Thus, assuming without deciding that the ordinance’s rent withholding provisions do not relate to a “municipal affair,” we turn to whether defendants’ regulation is in conflict with, and hence preempted by, state law. (Hiscocks & [705]*705Backes, Charter City Financing in California—A Growing “Statewide Concern”? (1982) 16 U.S.F. L.Rev. 603, 613-614.)
Plaintiffs first claim that general law directly conflicts with the rent withholding provisions of subdivision (a). Alternatively, they insist that rent withholding is preempted by implication in light of three statutes that are asserted to occupy the field of “when rent is due.” For both contentions, plaintiffs rely exclusively on Civil Code section 1947, which provides for the timing of the payment of rent if there is no usage or contract to the contrary;64 Code of Civil Procedure section 1161,65 which describes the circumstances under which a tenant is guilty of unlawful detainer; and Civil Code section 1942,66 which identifies circumstances under which a tenant may withhold rent and utilize those funds to repair deficiencies rendering the premises untenantable.
Defendants respond that these sections have nothing to do with local rent withholding provisions designed to enforce local rent control; that the withholding provisions of the ordinance do not regulate when rent is due, but instead establish a substantive defense to unlawful detainer; and that plaintiffs’ cited statutes cannot be interpreted to even address, much less fully occupy, that field. Furthermore, they claim Birkenfeld establishes that these provisions are not preempted by state law.
a. Direct Conflict
In Birkenfeld we responded to three preemption arguments. The plaintiffs in that case claimed preemption of (1) the field of “rent,” (2) the field of [706]*706defenses to eviction, and (3) the field of procedural requisites to a landlord filing an eviction action. We determined that the previous ordinance’s requirement of a certificate of eviction by the rent control board before a landlord was allowed to commence unlawful detainer proceedings was invalid because such a requirement would “nullify the intended summary nature of the remedy.” (17 Cal.3d 129, 151.) By contrast, however, we found that although there is “extensive state legislation governing many aspects of landlord-tenant relationships, some of which pertain specifically to the determination or payment of rent” (citing, inter alia, Civ. Code, § 1942 and Civ. Code, § 1947), “neither the quantity nor the content of these statutes establishes or implies any legislative intent to exclude municipal regulation of the amount of rent based on local conditions.” (Id. at pp. 141-142; see Galvan v. Superior Court (1969) 70 Cal.2d 851, 860-864 [76 Cal.Rptr. 642, 452 P.2d 930].)
More significant to the present question, we rejected the plaintiffs’ claims that the field of defenses to eviction suits is preempted by general law. The former Berkeley ordinance limited permissible bases for eviction to specific enumerated grounds, but omitted a landlord’s right to evict merely to terminate the tenancy. The ordinance thus prohibited eviction of a tenant “who [was] in good standing at the expiration of the tenancy unless the premises [were] to be withdrawn from the rental housing market or the landlord’s offer of a renewal lease [had] been refused.” (17 Cal.3d at p. 148.) Addressing the state law relevant to the issue, we observed that “Code of Civil Procedure section 1161, subdivision 1, makes the continuation of a tenant’s possession after expiration of the term a form of unlawful detainer for which the landlord may recover possession in summary proceedings under Code of Civil Procedure section 1164 et seq. However, these statutory provisions are not necessarily in conflict with the charter amendment’s provision forbidding landlords to recover possession upon expiration of a tenancy if the purpose of the statutes is sufficiently distinct from that of the charter amendment. (See Galvan v. Superior Court, supra, 70 Cal.2d 851, 859; People v. Mueller, supra, [1970] 8 Cal.App.3d 949, 954 [88 Cal.Rptr. 157].) The purpose of the unlawful detainer statutes is procedural. The statutes implement the landlord’s property rights by permitting him to recover possession once the consensual basis for the tenant’s occupancy is at an end. In contrast the charter amendment’s elimination of particular grounds for eviction is a limitation upon the landlord’s property rights under the police power, giving rise to a substantive ground of defense in unlawful detainer proceedings. The mere fact that a city’s exercise of the police power creates such a defense does not bring it into conflict with the state’s statutory scheme. Thus ... the statutory remedies for recovery of possession and of unpaid rent (see Code Civ. Proc., §§ 1159-1179a; Civ. Code, § 1951 et seq.) do not preclude a defense based on municipal rent control legislation enacted pur[707]*707suant to the police power imposing rent ceilings and limiting the grounds for eviction for the purpose of enforcing those rent ceilings.” {Id. at pp. 148-149 (italics added)), citing Inganamort v. Borough of Fort Lee (1973) 62 N.J. 521 [303 A.2d 298, 307] and Warren v. City of Philadelphia (1955) 382 Pa. 380 [115 A.2d 218, 221].)
We believe that the above-quoted language from Birkenfeld disposes of plaintiffs’ claim that the rent withholding provision of the ordinance directly conflicts with Code of Civil Procedure section 1161. It is true that the tenant’s good faith defense conferred under subdivision (a), subsection (2), effectively eliminates one ground for eviction, but as we observed in Birkenfeld, this exercise of the municipality’s police power does not bring the provision into conflict with state law, because the statutory remedy for recovery of possession does not preclude limitations on grounds for eviction for the purpose of enforcing a local rent control regulation.
Furthermore, we are not persuaded that the ordinance conflicts with Civil Code sections 1942 or 1947. Neither statute involves the field of defenses to eviction, or enforcement of local rent control ordinances. Section 1942 is this state’s “repair and deduct statute.” It specifically allows rent withholding, under certain circumstances, in order for a tenant to make needed repairs. Section 1947 merely establishes rules relating to the date at which rent is due, depending on the term of a tenant’s holding. We find nothing in either section that directly conflicts with the municipal legislation at issue here. We conclude, as did the Supreme Court of New Jersey in a similar context, that merely because defendants’ ordinance “imposes restraints which the State law does not, does not spell out a conflict between State and local law. On the contrary the absence of a statutory restraint is the very occasion for municipal initiative. The police power is vested in local government to the very end that the right of property may be restrained when it ought to be because of a sufficient local need.” {Inganamort, supra, 303 A.2d at p. 307.)
b. Preemption by Implication
We will be reluctant to infer legislative intent to preempt a field covered by municipal regulation when there is a significant local interest to be served that may differ from one locality to another. (Gluck v. County of Los Angeles (1979) 93 Cal.App.3d 121, 133 [155 Cal.Rptr. 435]; Comment, The California City versus Preemption by Implication (1966) 17 Hastings L.J. 603, 610.) Furthermore, the mere fact that all three of plaintiffs’ cited statutes concern “rent” does not assist them because “[a] field cannot properly consist of statutes unified by a single common noun.” (Galvan, supra, 70 Cal.2d 851, 862.) A potentially preemptive “field” of state regu[708]*708lation is “an area of legislation which includes the subject of the local legislation, and is sufficiently logically related so that a court, or a local legislative body, can detect a patterned approach to the subject.” {Ibid.)
In In re Hubbard (1964) 62 Cal.2d 119 [41 Cal.Rptr. 393, 396 P.2d 809], we articulated three tests to determine in what circumstances chartered cities might be deprived of their supposed exclusive power to legislate in regard to “municipal affairs” pursuant to article XI, section 5 of our Constitution. (Id. at p. 128.) Although we subsequently declined to follow Hubbard's approach to municipal affairs questions (Bishop v. City of San Jose (1969) 1 Cal.3d 56, 63, fn. 6 [81 Cal.Rptr. 465, 460 P.2d 137]), in Galvan, supra, 70 Cal.2d 851, we adopted Hubbard's three tests as standards by which to judge preemption of municipal exercise of police powers pursuant to article XI, section 7. The Hubbard factors, reincarnated as a preemption test in Galvan,
[709]*709Applying these alternative tests, we must conclude that there is no full and complete state coverage of the field of rent withholding so as to “clearly indicate” that the field “has become exclusively a matter of state concern.” Neither the quantity nor the content of plaintiffs’ cited statutes suggests the Legislature’s intent to occupy the field of rent withholding to the exclusion of municipally created defenses to unlawful detainer actions. Nor do the three statutes suggest that the field of rent withholding is clearly a subject of paramount state interest that cannot tolerate any local involvement. Indeed, we fail to discern how defendants’ withholding provisions would frustrate state statutory schemes that relate to unlawful detainer procedures, repair and deduct remedies, or that define the duration of rental periods.
Finally, existence of defendants’ provisions are likely to have very little effect on transient citizens, much less an effect that outweighs the local benefit to be derived from the withholding provisions. First, many transients will not be affected by the ordinance, because it does not apply to “hotels, motels, inns, tourist homes, and rooming or boarding houses” in which “transient guests” stay for 14 days or less. (§ 5, subd. (b).) Second, to the extent that transients might be affected, the withholding provision would likely have a positive effect, because it would help assure prospective newcomers that established maximum housing rents will be enforced.
We therefore conclude that section 15, subdivision (a), subsections (1) and (2), are not preempted by state law. The ordinance’s provision authorizing rent withholding and establishing a qualified defense to unlawful detainer actions regulates a field of great importance to the effective operation of defendants’ rent control scheme, and one which is distinct from any other state regulation. Even assuming that state regulations touch on rent withholding, we discern no legislative intent to preempt defendants’ regulation.
The judgment is affirmed. The 1982 amendment to section 14, purporting to create a presumption affecting the burden of proof, is invalid. This provision is clearly severable. (§ 16.) All other provisions of the ordinance are valid and enforceable. Each party shall bear its own costs.
Reynoso, J., Grodin, J., Cooperman, J.,
BIRD, C. J.
I agree with Part II of the majority opinion. I also agree with the substantive analysis of the antitrust issues in Part I. However, I write separately to raise a concern regarding the highly unusual manner in which the antitrust issues came before this court.
[710]*710No mention of antitrust law was made by the litigants in the trial court or in the Court of Appeal below. The argument that federal antitrust law might render defendants’ rent control ordinance invalid was first raised in this court, and then only after the decision had been made to grant a hearing. Moreover, that issue was raised by an amicus curiae rather than a party to the appeal.
A cautionary note should be sounded to dispel any belief that this court will routinely agree to address issues presented in this manner.
As the majority correctly note, the issue of whether a municipal regulation might be subject to antitrust scrutiny first arose in Community Communications Co. v. Boulder (1982) 455 U.S. 40 [70 L.Ed.2d 810, 102 S.Ct. 835], Boulder was decided on January 13, 1982, a month after plaintiffs’ closing brief had been filed in the Court of Appeal. Plaintiffs cannot, therefore, be faulted for failing to raise that issue in the trial court or in their opening and closing briefs in the Court of Appeal.
However, the Court of Appeal did not hear oral argument until July 5, 1983, a year and a half after the Boulder decision. During that entire period, neither plaintiffs nor amicus attempted to call the case to the lower court’s attention—despite that court’s willingness to permit additional briefing as evidenced by its acceptance as late as June 17, 1982, of a brief by amicus curiae for defendants. (See Cal. Rules of Court, rule 14(b).) The Court of Appeal was thus deprived of an opportunity to rule on that issue.
The Court of Appeal filed its now-vacated opinion on October 24, 1983. Defendants’ petition for hearing was filed in this court on December 7, 1983, nearly two full years after Boulder was decided. Plaintiffs’ answer to that petition, filed some two weeks later, made no mention of Boulder or of the possible application of federal antitrust law to this case. Hence, when this court granted the petition for hearing, it had not been apprised by either party that the case presented issues which, in the majority’s words, would force the court to “wander off the map and travel cross country without the benefit of trail or compass.” (Maj. opn., ante, at p. 663.) The antitrust issues were first brought to the court’s attention several weeks later when amicus curiae requested leave to file a brief in support of plaintiffs.
The majority assert that consideration of the antitrust issues is nevertheless proper under several well established principles. They correctly note that on appeal from a judgment granting or denying an injunction, a reviewing court will apply the law as it stands at the time its opinion is filed. (CalDak Co. v. Sav-On Drugs, Inc. (1953) 40 Cal.2d 492, 496-497 [254 P.2d 497].) They also recite the familiar rule which permits a party to raise on [711]*711appeal a new point of law decided while the appeal is pending. (Claremont Imp. Club v. Buckingham (1948) 89 Cal.App.2d 32, 33 [200 P.2d 47].)
However, they do not explain why the same rule should apply where, as here, the new issue is raised not by a party but by an amicus. Nor do they explain the failure of plaintiffs and amicus to request permission to file a supplemental brief in the Court of Appeal raising the new point of law. This court, overriding another Court of Appeal, has held under similar circumstances that the filing by a party of a supplemental brief provides “a satisfactory basis for the unusual practice of considering a point raised for the first time after the opening briefs have been filed.” (Meier v. Ross General Hospital (1968) 69 Cal.2d 420, 423-424, fn. 1 [71 Cal.Rptr. 903, 445 P.2d 519].)
Finally, the majority cite several decisions in which this court has held that a party may raise a new issue on appeal if it is strictly one of law, based on undisputed facts and involving important questions of public policy. (Maj. opn., ante, at pp. 654-655, fn. 3.) Again, they fail to explain why the same rule should apply to an amicus curiae. More importantly, they fail to address the ramifications of permitting new issues to be raised by nonparties after a hearing has been granted in this court.1
“' “[T]he rule is universally recognized that an appellate court will consider only those questions properly raised by the appealing parties. Amicus curiae must accept the issues made and propositions urged by the appealing parties, and any additional questions presented in a brief filed by an amicus curiae will not be considered [citations].” ’ ” (Younger v. State of California (1982) 137 Cal.App.3d 806, 813-814 [187 Cal.Rptr. 310]; see E. L. White, Inc. v. City of Huntington Beach (1978) 21 Cal.3d 497, 510-511 [146 [712]*712Cal.Rptr. 614, 579 P.2d 505]; Eggert v. Pacific States S. & L. Co. (1943) 57 Cal.App.2d 239, 251 [136 P.2d 822],)2
In Younger, the appellant attempted in his reply brief in the Court of Appeal to adopt as his own an issue first presented by an amicus curiae. The Court of Appeal refused to address the issue, reasoning that amicus had no standing to raise it and that the appellant had failed to show good reason for his failure to present the point in his opening brief. (Younger v. State of California, supra, 137 Cal.App.3d at pp. 812-814.)
The present case presents striking similarities. While plaintiffs cannot be faulted for failing to raise the antitrust issues in their opening brief in the Court of Appeal, their failure to raise them in a supplemental brief or in oral argument is unexcused. Nor do they explain their failure to raise the point in the answer to the petition for hearing, even though the legal grounds for doing so had by then existed for nearly two years.
On the basis of the arguments presented in the petition and the answer, this court voted to grant a hearing. Subsequently, amicus curiae requested leave to file its brief presenting the antitrust issues. Only then did plaintiffs jump on the bandwagon. By that time, of course, it was too late for the court to consider the possible bearing of the additional issues on its determination whether or not to grant a hearing.3
I do not know, of course, whether the vote on the petition for hearing in the present case might have been different had the court been apprised that [713]*713additional issues were lurking in the shadows. However, I submit that in many cases the decision to grant or deny hearing might be heavily influenced by the court’s awareness or lack of awareness of such issues—and rightly so.
This court grants only a small percentage of the petitions for hearing filed each year. Petitioners faced with that fact naturally make every attempt to present the issues posed in their appeal in the most favorable light. Troublesome or time consuming secondary issues which were argued in the courts below may be deemphasized or omitted entirely from the petition for hearing. The court is able in these instances to review the briefs filed in the Court of Appeal and the lower court’s opinion to identify such hidden issues and consider them in deciding whether a hearing is advisable.4
Where, as here, an issue that could have been raised in the Court of Appeal is not raised until after that court has filed its opinion and after a hearing has been granted, this court is hindered in two important ways from performing its responsibilities most effectively. First, the court is denied the opportunity to consider whether hearing should be denied in light of the additional issue. Second, assuming that a hearing would have been granted in any event, the court is deprived of the lower court’s views on the issue.
Accordingly, both parties and amici5 should bear a heavy burden in this court when they attempt, after a hearing has been granted, to raise an issue which they could have raised earlier. The burden should be especially great where the issue could have been raised before the decision of the Court of Appeal became final as to that court. In all but the rarest cases, this court should refuse to consider a new issue that has been raised in such a belated manner. Otherwise, amici control the issues this court considers and decides—a most curious method of appellate review.
Assigned by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
693 P.2d 261, 37 Cal. 3d 644, 209 Cal. Rptr. 682, 1984 Cal. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisher-v-city-of-berkeley-cal-1984.