Keen v. City of Manhattan Beach

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 6, 2022
DocketB307538
StatusPublished

This text of Keen v. City of Manhattan Beach (Keen v. City of Manhattan Beach) 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
Keen v. City of Manhattan Beach, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 4/6/22 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION EIGHT

DARBY T. KEEN, as Trustee, B307538 etc., Los Angeles County Plaintiff and Respondent, Super. Ct. No. 19STCP02984

v.

CITY OF MANHATTAN BEACH et al.,

Defendants and Appellants.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, James C. Chalfant, Judge. Affirmed.

Richards, Watson & Gershon, Quinn M. Barrow, Ginetta L. Giovinco and Marvin E. Bonilla for Defendants and Appellants.

Angel Law, Frank P. Angel and Talia E. Nimmer for Plaintiff and Respondent.

____________________ This case is about getting a room near the beach. By law, public access to the beach is a California priority. The California Coastal Commission enforces this priority by reviewing amendments beach towns make in municipal laws affecting coastal areas. Amendments require approval. The legal question here is whether there was an amendment. In 1994, the City of Manhattan Beach enacted zoning ordinances, which the Coastal Commission then certified. Did these old ordinances permit rentals of a residential property for fewer than 30 days? The popularity of Airbnb and similar platforms has made the question acute. The trial court rightly ruled the City’s old ordinances did permit short-term rentals. This means the City’s recent laws against platforms like Airbnb indeed are amendments requiring Commission approval, which the City never got. We affirm. Our statutory references are to the Public Resources Code. I We begin with legal, factual, and procedural background. This section recaps the California Coastal Act, describes local battles over short-term rentals, and recounts the case’s posture. A The California Coastal Act of 1976 defined the Coastal Commission’s mission to protect the coast and to maximize public access to it. (§§ 30001.5, 30330.) We liberally construe the Act to achieve these ends. (Greenfield v. Mandalay Shores Community Assn. (2018) 21 Cal.App.5th 896, 898 (Greenfield).) The Commission works with local governments to ensure they take adequate account of state interests. (§ 30004, subds. (a) & (b); City of Dana Point v. California Coastal Com. (2013) 217 Cal.App.4th 170, 186.)

2 In this endeavor, the Act’s main tool is the local coastal program. (§ 30500 et seq.; City of Chula Vista v. Superior Court (1982) 133 Cal.App.3d 472, 489.) Each coastal government must develop one. (§ 30500, subd. (a).) Local coastal programs have two parts: the land use plan and the local implementing program. The latter consists of zoning ordinances, zoning maps, and other possible actions. (§§ 30512, subd. (a), 30513, subd. (a).) The Commission reviews the local coastal program. (§§ 30200, 30512, 30512.2, 30513.) If it conforms to the Act’s policies, the Commission certifies the program. (§§ 30512, subd. (a), 30513, subd. (b).) In accord with these provisions, the City submitted its local coastal program to the Commission years ago. The Commission certified the City’s land use plan in 1981 and its local implementing program in 1994. This local implementing program included zoning ordinances. Once the local program is approved, it can be amended, but the local government must submit amendments to the Commission for approval. Absent approval, amendments have no force. (§ 30514, subd. (a).) Throughout this case, the City has not disputed it would need Commission approval to enact a new prohibition on short- term rentals within the coastal zone. That would be an “amendment.” But the City has stoutly maintained there has been no amendment, because its old ordinances always prohibited short-term rentals. Keen disagrees, and that frames the issue in this case: whether the City amended its program when it clamped down on short-term rentals, or whether the prohibition was not an amendment because it merely continued the legal status quo.

3 B We now recount how the City banned short-term rentals. For quite some time, people rented residential units in Manhattan Beach on both long- and short-term bases. The City knew about the practice and occasionally got complaints about a rental property, including about one “party house” in 2005. Things changed leading up to 2015. Online platforms like Airbnb became popular, which increased short-term rentals. The City had not received a “tremendous” number of complaints, but it sought an active stance on the issue. After hearing from the public, the Council passed two ordinances “reiterating” the City’s supposedly existing ban on short-term rentals. The Council claimed its existing ordinances, including those enacted with the local coastal program, already prohibited short-term rentals implicitly. We call these the 2015 ordinances. When the City Council enacted the 2015 ordinances, it resolved to submit the one about the coastal zone for Commission certification. City staff met with Commission staff. The Commission staff, however, recommended the City allow at least some short- term rentals to facilitate visitor access to the coastal zone. Then, in 2016, the Commission wrote to all coastal cities, saying municipal regulation of short-term rentals would have to be in cooperation with the Commission. The Commission emphasized that “vacation rentals provide an important source of visitor accommodations in the coastal zone” and that blanket bans would rarely be appropriate. After the Commission made clear its support for some level of short-term renting, the City withdrew its 2015 request for

4 Commission approval. The City tells us its withdrawal was because the 2015 ordinance worked no change in the law and hence never required Commission certification. The City Council continued to grapple with how to regulate short-term rentals. In 2019, the Council adopted an ordinance creating an enforcement mechanism for its short-term rental ban. This required platforms like Airbnb to tell the City who was renting out what. The ordinance also prohibited platforms from collecting fees for booking transactions. We call this the 2019 ordinance. The 2019 ordinance had a pronounced effect: by June 2019, short-term rentals dropped, in round numbers, from 250 to 50. The ban was markedly, although not completely, effective. In July 2019, the City hired Host Compliance, a company specializing in helping cities enforce short-term rental regulation. Bewilderingly, the City tells us there is no evidence its ordinances reduced the number of short-term rentals in the City. The record contradicts this. C Darby Keen owns property in the City’s coastal zone. He rented it on a short-term basis. The City sent Keen a Notice of Violation on July 16, 2019. Keen petitioned for a writ of mandate to enjoin the City from enforcing the 2015 and 2019 ordinances. The trial court issued a 19-page single-spaced tentative decision: a model of careful analysis. The court noted what the City did not dispute: the City would have to obtain Commission approval if it were to enact a new prohibition on short-term rentals. The City’s position, however, was the prohibition was not new but rather was to be found in its old zoning laws that the

5 Commission had approved years before. The court disagreed, ruling the City had not identified any zoning provision to support its conclusion that rentals for fewer than 30 days were barred but longer rentals were permitted. The court concluded the City was wrong to say it had always banned short-term rentals. Rather, the court ruled the ban was new, it was an amendment, and it thus required Commission approval, which it did not have. The court therefore enjoined enforcement of the ban on short-term rentals pending Commission approval. The City appealed. II The City’s argument boils down to this: the trial court was wrong to think the City has always allowed short-term rentals.

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Related

City of Dana Point v. California Coastal Commission
217 Cal. App. 4th 170 (California Court of Appeal, 2013)
City of Chula Vista v. Superior Court
133 Cal. App. 3d 472 (California Court of Appeal, 1982)
Greenfield v. Mandalay Shores Cmty. Ass'n
230 Cal. Rptr. 3d 827 (California Court of Appeals, 5th District, 2018)
Berkeley Hills Watershed Coal. v. City of Berkeley
243 Cal. Rptr. 3d 236 (California Court of Appeals, 5th District, 2019)

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Bluebook (online)
Keen v. City of Manhattan Beach, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keen-v-city-of-manhattan-beach-calctapp-2022.