Kind and Compassionate v. City of Long Beach

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 4, 2016
DocketB258806
StatusPublished

This text of Kind and Compassionate v. City of Long Beach (Kind and Compassionate v. City of Long 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
Kind and Compassionate v. City of Long Beach, (Cal. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Filed 7/12/16 Certified for publication 8/4/16 (order attached)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION EIGHT

THE KIND AND COMPASSIONATE et B258806 al., (Los Angeles County Plaintiffs and Appellants, Super. Ct. No. BC 483024)

v.

CITY OF LONG BEACH et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court for the County of Los Angeles. John Shepard Wiley, Jr., Judge. Affirmed.

Matthew Pappas; Rallo Law Firm, Arthur J. Travieso and Amy L. Bingham for Plaintiffs and Appellants.

Charles Parkin, City Attorney, and Theodore B. Zinger, Deputy City Attorney, for Defendants and Respondents.

__________________________________________ SUMMARY This is an appeal from a judgment dismissing a complaint after the trial court sustained a demurrer. The court granted leave to amend, but plaintiffs never did. Plaintiffs are two medical cannabis “collectives/dispensaries” (The Kind and Compassionate, and Final Cut) and three medical cannabis patients, who are members of The Kind and Compassionate collective. Plaintiffs alleged 11 causes of action against the City of Long Beach (city) and/or three of its employees or officers (Eric Sund, Robert Shannon and Robert Foster), all arising from the city’s enforcement of municipal ordinances that first regulated and then entirely prohibited the operation of medical marijuana dispensaries within the city’s borders. The principal claim in the complaint is that defendants have discriminated against plaintiffs by enacting and enforcing these ordinances, which plaintiffs assert are facially discriminatory and have a disparate and adverse impact on persons with disabilities. Plaintiffs also assert various constitutional violations and tort claims. We affirm the trial court’s judgment dismissing the complaint. FACTS AND LEGAL BACKGROUND Before we turn to the facts alleged in the complaint, we briefly note several established principles applicable to medical marijuana dispensaries or collectives. First, federal law prohibits the possession, distribution and manufacture of marijuana, finding it to be “a drug with ‘no currently accepted medical use in treatment in the United States’ [citation], and there is no medical necessity exception to prosecution and conviction under the federal act [citation].” (City of Riverside v. Inland Empire Patients Health and Wellness Center, Inc. (2013) 56 Cal.4th 729, 738-739 (Riverside).) Second, California law also imposes sanctions on marijuana possession, cultivation, and related activities. In California, however, voters and the Legislature have adopted limited exceptions to those sanctions where marijuana is possessed, cultivated, distributed and transported for medical purposes. (Riverside, supra, 56 Cal.4th at p. 739.) These statutes are the Compassionate Use Act (CUA; Health & Saf. Code, § 11362.5), adopted by the voters in 1996, and the Medical Marijuana Program (MMP; § 11362.7 et

2 seq.), enacted in 2004. “Among other things, these statutes exempt the ‘collective[] or cooperative[] . . . cultiva[tion]’ of medical marijuana by qualified patients and their designated caregivers from prosecution or abatement under specified state criminal and nuisance laws that would otherwise prohibit those activities.” (Riverside, at p. 737.) Third, the CUA and the MMP “have no effect on the federal enforceability of the [Controlled Substances Act (21 U.S.C § 801 et seq.)] in California.” (Riverside, supra, 56 Cal.4th at p. 740.) The CUA and the MMP have a “narrow reach” (Riverside, at p. 745), providing only “a limited immunity from specified state marijuana laws” (id. at p. 748). Fourth, “the CUA and the MMP do not expressly or impliedly preempt [a city’s] zoning provisions declaring a medical marijuana dispensary . . . to be a prohibited use, and a public nuisance, anywhere within the city limits.” (Riverside, supra, 56 Cal.4th at p. 752; id. at p. 754, fn. 8 [“the CUA and the MMP, by their substantive terms, grant limited exemptions from certain state criminal and nuisance laws, but they do not expressly or impliedly restrict the authority of local jurisdictions to decide whether local land may be used to operate medical marijuana facilities”].) Fifth, the Ninth Circuit has held that “medical marijuana use is not protected by the ADA [(Americans with Disabilities Act (42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq.))],” because the ADA “defines ‘illegal drug use’ by reference to federal, rather than state, law, and federal law does not authorize the plaintiffs’ medical marijuana use.” (James v. City of Costa Mesa (9th Cir. 2012) 700 F.3d 394, 397.) With this background in mind, we turn to the complaint. 1. The Complaint The complaint stated the intention to seek class certification of a class of patients and a class of collectives. The patient class members suffer from physical or mental disabilities, serious illnesses or permanent injury that limits a major life activity; are, or were, members of medical marijuana patient collectives; and qualify for protection under federal and state laws applicable to persons with disabilities. Each member of the collective class is a nonprofit group consisting of member patients, or authorized

3 caregivers of patients, who associate together to form the members of the collective class “for the purpose of mitigating their respective disabilities/conditions.” The 43-page complaint includes numerous conclusions of fact and law that we do not, under principles of appellate review, assume to be true. The following summary includes the pertinent factual allegations. The complaint recited facts concerning voter approval of the CUA in 1996 and the MMP in 2003; the city’s passage on March 17, 2010 of an ordinance regulating medical marijuana patient collectives (Long Beach Mun. Code, former ch. 5.87) (hereafter chapter 5.87 or the March 2010 ordinance); comments by city officials stating their views on the ordinance and medical marijuana collectives; and the city’s implementation, “between March 17, 2010 and June 1, 2010,” of a permit lottery and permit fee schedule requiring large application and annual permit fees. Plaintiffs alleged that pharmacies, medical clinics, medical treatment programs, methadone clinics and organic nutritional providers are “comparable uses” to medical marijuana collectives. The complaint alleges these comparable uses are not subject to various restrictions (such as location or spacing requirements); that various fees charged to the collectives were substantially higher than fees paid by comparable uses; and that additional taxes imposed on collectives in December 2010 were not charged to comparable uses. The complaint described litigation initiated on August 30, 2010, that challenged the enforcement of chapter 5.87 on constitutional grounds. (This litigation culminated in an appellate decision, issued on October 4, 2011, holding that the permit provisions of chapter 5.87, including the fees and lottery system, were preempted by federal law, because those provisions authorized conduct that federal law forbids. The Supreme Court granted a petition for review, but later dismissed review as moot after the city repealed chapter 5.87 and replaced it with an ordinance imposing a complete ban on medical marijuana collectives within the city (chapter 5.89 or the February 2012 ban). (See Pack v. Superior Court (2011) 199 Cal.App.4th 1070, review granted Jan. 18, 2012, S197169, review dismissed Aug. 22, 2012.))

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Quelimane Co. v. Stewart Title Guaranty Co.
960 P.2d 513 (California Supreme Court, 1998)
Avco Community Developers, Inc. v. South Coast Regional Commission
553 P.2d 546 (California Supreme Court, 1976)
Blank v. Kirwan
703 P.2d 58 (California Supreme Court, 1985)
Donohue v. State of California
178 Cal. App. 3d 795 (California Court of Appeal, 1986)
City of Corona v. Naulls
166 Cal. App. 4th 418 (California Court of Appeal, 2008)
Venegas v. County of Los Angeles
87 P.3d 1 (California Supreme Court, 2004)
Hughes v. Pair
209 P.3d 963 (California Supreme Court, 2009)
Shirk v. Vista Unified School District
164 P.3d 630 (California Supreme Court, 2007)
Safe Life Caregivers v. City of Los Angeles
243 Cal. App. 4th 1029 (California Court of Appeal, 2016)
California Restaurant Management Systems v. City of San Diego
195 Cal. App. 4th 1581 (California Court of Appeal, 2011)
Conejo Wellness Center, Inc. v. City of Agoura Hills
214 Cal. App. 4th 1534 (California Court of Appeal, 2013)
James v. City of Costa Mesa
700 F.3d 394 (Ninth Circuit, 2012)
Assenberg v. Anacortes Housing Authority
268 F. App'x 643 (Ninth Circuit, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Kind and Compassionate v. City of Long Beach, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kind-and-compassionate-v-city-of-long-beach-calctapp-2016.