Hobbs v. City of Pacific Grove

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 14, 2022
DocketH047705
StatusPublished

This text of Hobbs v. City of Pacific Grove (Hobbs v. City of Pacific Grove) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hobbs v. City of Pacific Grove, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 10/14/22 Modified and Cert. for Partial Pub. 11/14/22 (order attached)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

WILLIAM HOBBS et al., H047705 (Monterey County Plaintiffs and Appellants, Super. Ct. No. 18CV002411)

v.

CITY OF PACIFIC GROVE et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

This appeal by plaintiffs William and Susan Hobbs and Donald and Irma Shirkey asks us to hold that defendant City of Pacific Grove (the City)—by granting them one-year licenses to offer residential real properties for short-term vacation rentals— conferred a property right protected by the state and federal constitutions in the renewal of those licenses. The Hobbses have since sold their home, rendering their claims moot. In our independent judgment, we conclude the Shirkeys’ claims are devoid of constitutional merit. I. BACKGROUND1 A. The Regulatory Framework For the first time in 2010, with the enactment of Pacific Grove Ordinance No. 10- 0012, the City allowed “transient use of residential property for remuneration,” subject to licensing, taxes, and other regulation. Licenses were issued upon application for a period of one year, subject to earlier revocation for good cause. By January 2011, the City had licensed 85 active short-term rentals. In 2016, the City capped the overall number of short-term rental licenses citywide at 250 and further established a density cap of “15 [percent] per block.” (Ord. No. 16-007; Pacific Grove Mun. Code, former § 7.40.25.)3 In 2017, the City reaffirmed its 250-license citywide maximum, prohibited more than one license per parcel, and required a 55-foot buffer “zone of exclusion” between licensed properties. (Ord. No. 17-024; Mun. Code, § 7.40.040.) The 2017 ordinance included several provisions regarding renewal or revocation of short-term rental (SRT) licenses. “The City Manager or his/her designee may delay or deny issuance of an STR license for any reason.” (Ord. No. 17-024; Mun. Code, § 7.40.060(g).) “No STR license shall be automatically renewed.” (Ord. No. 17-024; Mun. Code, § 7.40.080.) “Any STR license issued pursuant to this Chapter may be withdrawn, suspended or revoked for any reason.” (Ord. No. 17-024; Mun. Code, § 7.40.090.) Each applicant for a license was required to affirm the following language: “I understand this license expires on March 31 each year, renewal of this license is not

1 We take the facts in parts I.A and I.B. from the parties’ separate statements of undisputed material facts, evidence admitted in conjunction with the motion for summary judgment, and admissions in the parties’ briefs. (See Thompson v. Ioane (2017) 11 Cal.App.5th 1180, 1186, fn. 4.) 2 Further references to “Ordinance” or “Ord.” are to Pacific Grove ordinances. 3 Further references to “Mun. Code” are to the Pacific Grove Municipal Code.

2 guaranteed, and the penalty for operation without a license is 100% forfeiture of rents received.” By early 2018, the City had in fact issued 289 short-term rental licenses, in excess of the 250-license maximum established in Ordinance 16-007 and, in certain areas, in excess of the 15 percent density limit. Accordingly, in areas where short-term rental licenses exceeded the 15 percent cap per block, the City resolved to select licenses to “sunset” after a grace period following the scheduled expiration of their existing term. (Ord. No. 18-005, § 2.) The City settled upon a random lottery as a “means to avoid substantive favoritism” in reducing the number of licenses “in a fair and equitable manner.” The City conducted the lottery in May 2018, selecting 51 licenses to sunset the following year. These licenses would remain active past their existing term through April 2019, to afford licensees time to cease accepting new bookings and prepare the property for alternative uses, such as rentals for longer than 30 days. On November 6, 2018, Pacific Grove voters approved Measure M, by which the City would prohibit and phase out, over an 18-month sunset period, all existing short- term rentals in residential districts, except in the City’s “Coastal Zone,” as defined by the California Coastal Act of 1976 (Pub. Resources Code, § 30103), which remained governed by Ordinance No. 18-005. (Measure M, approved by Pacific Grove voters (Monterey Voter Information Guide, Gen. Elec. (Nov. 6, 2018)) (Measure M).) Measure M did not restrict short-term rentals in nonresidential districts or otherwise modify “existing rules for bed and breakfast inns, motels, hotels, and other visitor lodging.” Measure M also provided that “residents may allow short-term occupancy of their homes for home sharing, house swaps, house sitting, pet sitting, work trade, and similar arrangements[,]” which the voters deemed “compatible with residential uses.” Of the 51 licenses that had been selected by lottery to sunset under Ordinance No. 18-005, 22 were in the Coastal Zone. 3 B. Plaintiffs’ Participation in Short-Term Rentals In 2013, Susan Hobbs inherited a single-family residence in Pacific Grove that her parents had purchased over 50 years ago. She and her husband, William Hobbs, made $50,000 in repairs and improvements to what was then “an unmaintained eyesore,” before making it available for rent. They obtained a short-term rental license in 2013, which they renewed annually until 2019. Donald and Irma Shirkey own a single-family home on 5th Street in Pacific Grove’s Coastal Zone. They purchased the property in 1999 as a second home for their children and grandchildren to use when they visit. When their family is not visiting, the Shirkeys offer the home as a vacation rental in order to cover costs. They often rent it as a single unit and the City only required one short-term rental license when the property was first licensed in 2010. In 2017, the City required them to obtain a second short-term rental license for the separate guest quarters above the garage. The license assigned to Donald and Irma Shirkey for their main property was chosen for nonrenewal; the license for the upstairs guest quarters in the Shirkey property was not. Measure M has the effect of permanently prohibiting the short-term rental of the Hobbs property. The Shirkey property, in the Coastal Zone, remains subject to Ordinance No. 18-005. C. Trial Court Proceedings Plaintiffs filed the operative first amended complaint for declaratory and injunctive relief in December 2018, alleging the City unconstitutionally deprived plaintiffs of “their right to allow guests to stay in their home.” In the first count, plaintiffs alleged that the City was required to obtain the California Coastal Commission’s approval before adopting Ordinance No. 18-005. In the second count, plaintiffs alleged that Ordinance No. 18-005 violates plaintiffs’ right to due process by arbitrarily limiting the number of homes that can be offered as short-term 4 rentals and by subjecting them to random selection for nonrenewal of licensure. Plaintiffs further allege that Measure M violates William and Susan Hobbs’s right to due process by prohibiting all homes outside of the Coastal Zone from being offered as short- term rentals. Plaintiffs moved for summary judgment or, in the alternative, summary adjudication of each count in the first amended complaint. The trial court issued an order granting summary adjudication as to count 1 and denying it as to count 2. As to count 1, the court declared that “Ordinance 18-005 constitutes development within the Coastal [Z]one, and the City needs to obtain approval by the California Coastal Commission . . .

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Bluebook (online)
Hobbs v. City of Pacific Grove, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hobbs-v-city-of-pacific-grove-calctapp-2022.