HPT IHG-2 Properties Trust v. City of Anaheim CA4/3

243 Cal. App. 4th 188, 196 Cal. Rptr. 3d 326, 2015 Cal. App. LEXIS 1145
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 20, 2015
DocketG049695
StatusUnpublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 243 Cal. App. 4th 188 (HPT IHG-2 Properties Trust v. City of Anaheim CA4/3) 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
HPT IHG-2 Properties Trust v. City of Anaheim CA4/3, 243 Cal. App. 4th 188, 196 Cal. Rptr. 3d 326, 2015 Cal. App. LEXIS 1145 (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

— In 1999 defendant City of Anaheim (with defendant City Council of the City of Anaheim, collectively defendants) issued a conditional use permit (CUP 4153) permitting development of two hotels (Project) by plaintiff IHG Management Maryland (IHG) on property (Property) owned by plaintiff HPT IHG-2 Properties Trust (HPT; plaintiffs). 1 At the time defendants issued CUP 4153, it had a plan to construct the Gene Autry Way Overpass (Overpass) on the south side of the Property. Construction would require taking a portion of the Property and eliminating a substantial number of plaintiffs’ required parking spaces. To build the Overpass according to its plan, defendants would also be required to acquire adjoining property, with a triangular remnant (Triangle) remaining after construction.

The approval of CUP 4153 set out the number of parking spaces required for the Project before and after construction of the Overpass. CUP 4153 was based, in part, on a parking study (Parking Study) approved by defendants that showed the Triangle built with a two-level parking structure (Parking Structure). The resolution approving CUP 4153 also set out other development requirements, including upgraded setbacks and landscape. According to plaintiffs, defendants agreed they would build the Parking Structure and comply with the same upgraded setbacks and landscape requirements.

After defendants built the Overpass, they enacted a second CUP (CUP 5573) that allowed construction of a surface parking lot instead of the Parking Structure and which permitted setbacks and landscaping that did not conform to the upgraded setbacks and landscape required for the Project.

Plaintiffs filed a petition for writ of mandate asking the court to set aside CUP 5573. The trial court found defendants were estopped to change the design approved in CUP 4153, granted the petition, and ordered CUP 5573 to be set aside.

Defendants raise several arguments why this was error. They assert plaintiffs had no vested right in the Triangle because CUP 4153 did not apply to *192 that property. Further, they contend, CUP 4153 did not and could not require defendants to build and transfer the Parking Structure to plaintiffs. They also maintain plaintiffs did not prove the elements of equitable estoppel.

Finding no error, we affirm the judgment.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

1. The Negotiations and Issuance of CUP 4153 and CUP 5573

The Property is located near Disneyland in the City of Anaheim in the resort specific plan area (Resort Area). In early 1999 Olson began the process of obtaining entitlements to construct the Project. Defendants’ planned Overpass was a substantial impediment to development of the Property. Although defendants were not ready to construct the Overpass, they wanted plaintiffs to proceed with the Project. One of plaintiffs’ internal e-mails noted defendants “want[] the [Pjroject, and they want it NOW!” The Project was expected to stimulate additional development in the Resort Area.

Plaintiffs were not willing to develop the Property without assurances the Project would be viable after the Overpass was constructed. When defendants ultimately took part of the Property for the Overpass, plaintiffs would lose a good deal of their parking, what turned out to be 142 of the 350-plus spaces required for the Project. Plaintiffs needed to insure they could meet defendants’ parking requirements for the Project after the Overpass was constructed. Thus, the parties had to plan for development of the Project both before and after the Overpass was built. Plaintiffs and defendants’ mayor, city council members, city manager, planning staff, and certain department heads negotiated throughout most of 1999 to reach an agreement as to the Project.

At some point, defendants proposed that plaintiffs could make up their deficit parking on the Triangle. In an internal e-mail plaintiffs noted defendants had advised that after they took plaintiffs’ land to construct the Overpass, if the Triangle did “not fully park the site, they will fund and/or construct a parking garage to be built on the adjacent site to handle the parking balance.”

A memo from the architects to various subcontractors on the Project stated defendants had agreed that when the Overpass was constructed, defendants would pay plaintiffs for the land it took from them and “construct a parking structure on an adjacent parcel to replace the surface parking spaces.”

The day after that memo, defendants’ city manager, Thomas J. Wood, sent a letter to plaintiffs (Wood Letter) to “clarify discussions that have transpired over the use of the future alignment of [the Overpass] . . . and to set[]forth *193 our understanding of how [defendants] and [plaintiffs] will work together to ensure the success of the [Project].” Wood stated that, assuming defendants could acquire the adjoining property, defendants would convey it to plaintiffs.

A few days later in an internal e-mail plaintiffs noted that “[i]f a parking garage is needed, it will be a city expense built on the adjacent property.” “We do not have to pay for a parking garage.”

In order to accommodate construction of the Overpass, and to meet defendants’ resort development standards (Resort Development Standards) for strict setbacks, upgraded dense landscaping, parking, and the like, the Project had to be redesigned several times to show the site both before construction of the Overpass (what defendants called the “interim condition”) and after construction of the Overpass (what defendants called the “ultimate condition”). Defendants required a site plan for both of these conditions. One of the design modifications required moving the location of one of the hotel buildings, and resulted in fewer rooms being built.

Plaintiffs submitted a conceptual ultimate site plan that included a parking structure on the Triangle. Defendants approved this plan.

Plaintiffs also submitted an ultimate site plan (Ultimate Site Plan) to show the parking spaces met defendants’ minimum dimensions and that the exact location of the Overpass was correctly shown on the plan. The Ultimate Site Plan demonstrated how it complied with the Resort Development Standards. It showed the location of buildings, setbacks, landscaping, and parking, including the Parking Structure on the Triangle after construction of the Overpass. Defendants approved the Ultimate Site Plan.

Plaintiffs’ Parking Study incorporated the Ultimate Site Plan. The Parking Study stated that, after the Overpass was built, there would be 300 “surface stalls” and 55 stalls in a “below-grade parking structure.” This was “intended to meet the needs of the two hotels when [the Overpass] is constructed.” The Parking Study included a site plan showing the Triangle. It contained a diagram with hash marks showing parking stalls and under which was the caption, “Parking Structure” (some capitalization omitted). In its report to the planning commission, defendants’ staff approved the Parking Study.

The resolution approving CUP 4153 (Resolution) was passed unanimously in December 1999. It approved both the interim and ultimate conditions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
243 Cal. App. 4th 188, 196 Cal. Rptr. 3d 326, 2015 Cal. App. LEXIS 1145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hpt-ihg-2-properties-trust-v-city-of-anaheim-ca43-calctapp-2015.