L & M Professional Consultants, Inc. v. Ferreira

146 Cal. App. 3d 1038, 194 Cal. Rptr. 695, 1983 Cal. App. LEXIS 2147
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 13, 1983
DocketCiv. 24836
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 146 Cal. App. 3d 1038 (L & M Professional Consultants, Inc. v. Ferreira) 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
L & M Professional Consultants, Inc. v. Ferreira, 146 Cal. App. 3d 1038, 194 Cal. Rptr. 695, 1983 Cal. App. LEXIS 2147 (Cal. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

Opinion

WIENER, J.

In September 1979 the Chula Vista City Council (Council)

adopted a resolution consenting to the private condemnation by L & M Professional Consultants, Inc. (L & M) of an appurtenant easement for sewer and storm drainage across property owned by Frank E. Ferreira (Ferreira) and Milgen Investment Company (Milgen). L & M then filed an eminent domain action to acquire the easement under the authority of Civil Code section 1001 and Code of Civil Procedure section 1245.325. 1 Ferreira and Milgen unsuccessfully petitioned the superior court to invalidate the *1045 Council’s resolution of consent and to declare Civil Code section 1001 unconstitutional. The court also found in favor of L & M in the eminent domain action and entered a judgment of condemnation for the easement. Ferreira and Milgen appeal both judgments.

Among their many arguments Ferreira and Milgen contend Civil Code section 1001 and section 1245.325 are unconstitutional both on their face and as applied. They also argue the Council denied them due process in the hearings it conducted before consenting to L & M’s proposed condemnation, and again challenge the validity of the Council’s resolution of consent. Finally, Ferreira and Milgen argue the lower court erroneously applied the legal rather than market rate of interest to their condemnation award. As we shall explain, we reject these arguments and affirm the judgments.

I

Factual and Procedural Background

We narrate the facts in some detail because of the substantial evidence review required by Ferreira’s and Milgen’s challenge to the validity of the Council’s resolution of consent. (See part III C, post.)

In 1978 L & M purchased 10.9 acres of essentially undeveloped hillside property in Chula Vista commonly known as Villa San Miguel for $1,115,000. The property slopes downward in a northerly and northeasterly direction. Ferreira owns or controls all the property on Villa San Miguel’s northern and eastern borders. Vehicular access to Villa San Miguel is from the southwest via Hilltop Drive. Stands of mature palm, pine and eucalyptus trees populate the property in the higher elevations near its southern border.

In late 1978 L & M began to prepare a tentative map for the construction of 18 expensive homes at Villa San Miguel. Chula Vista city planners set several guidelines for L & M’s project, including the preservation of the property’s mature trees and rural character and the avoidance of extensive grading. These guidelines, combined with the property’s topography, precluded gravity sewerage and drainage to Hilltop Drive. Consequently, L & M’s tentative map proposed locating a sewer easement across Ferreira property north of Villa San Miguel. Drainage was to be onsite.

In early 1979 the Chula Vista Planning Commission and the Council held separate public hearings on L & M’s tentative map. Ferreira and his attorney each spoke at both hearings in opposition to L & M’s project. They criticized the lack of offsite drainage for the project and described a history *1046 of flooding and drainage problems on Ferreira properties resulting from rain water flowing north off of Villa San Miguel. They also claimed L & M’s proposed sewer easement would interfere with existing underground utilities. The Council approved L & M’s tentative map after L & M agreed to provide offsite drainage and to relocate the sewer easement across a vacant lot northeast of Villa San Miguel. The lot is 0.89 acres in size and had a 1978-1979 assessed value of $10,600. Ferreira and Milgen own the lot through a partnership in which Ferreira acts as the managing partner.

Following the Council’s approval of the tentative map, L & M and Ferreira discussed locations for a sewer and storm drainage easement across Ferreira’s and Milgen’s property. L & M proposed three locations and Ferreira proposed one. After negotiations proved fruitless, L & M sought Council consent to its condemnation of an easement across Ferreira’s and Milgen’s property. The Council noticed a hearing on L & M’s proposed condemnation and then postponed the hearing for three weeks at Ferreira’s request.

The postponed hearing convened on August 14, 1979. The hearing transcript is lengthy and shows Ferreira and his attorney each participated extensively, as did Ferreira’s engineer. The Council heard testimony and received maps and diagrams describing three alternatives: a “red easement” location proposed by L & M, a “blue easement #1” location proposed by Ferreira and a “no-condemnation” proposal by Ferreira for development of Villa San Miguel with gravity sewerage and drainage to Hilltop Drive. Ferreira also presented his plans to develop a 27-unit apartment complex on his and Milgen’s property, and described the initial work (site planning and retaining wall) he had completed on that project. After the parties completed their comments, the Council closed the public hearing and deferred taking action for two weeks to allow its staff additional time to study Ferreira’s development plans and blue easement #1 proposal.

On August 28, 1979, the Council reconvened. Ferreira and his attorney again were present. Council staff presented an evaluation of the three alternatives discussed on August 14. The staff also commented on a “blue easement #2” location Ferreira proposed to them during the two-week continuance. After the staff’s comments, and without allowing further public testimony, the Council adopted the staff’s recommendation to approve L & M’s condemnation of a 10-foot wide sewer and storm drainage easement at Ferreira’s blue easement #1 location. One week later the Council unanimously adopted a corresponding resolution of consent. (§§ 1245.330, 1245.360.)

*1047 The Council rejected Ferreira’s no-condemnation proposal because it would have required importing 80,000 cubic yards of fill costing more than $500,000 and clustering the 18 homes near Hilltop Drive rather than spreading them out on large lots. The Council also rejected Ferreira’s blue easement #2 proposal because it would have violated a city ordinance requiring open space above easements, thus creating a serious service and maintenance problem for the city. As between the red easement and blue easement #1 proposals, the Council selected the latter alternative after Ferreira’s attorney testified on August 14 that it would “create the least damage” to development plans for Ferreira’s and Milgen’s property and would “not in any way interfere with the highest and best use of that property.” L & M estimated its condemnation and utility installation costs at the blue easement #1 location would be $106,000, approximately double its estimated costs at the red easement location.

In September 1979 L & M filed an action to condemn the easement approved by the Council and deposited the probable compensation for the easement. (§ 1255.010.) In October L & M obtained an order for possession of the easement as of mid-November. (§ 1255.410.) Ferreira and Milgen did not withdraw the deposited compensation (§ 1255.210) or seek a stay of the order for possession.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
146 Cal. App. 3d 1038, 194 Cal. Rptr. 695, 1983 Cal. App. LEXIS 2147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/l-m-professional-consultants-inc-v-ferreira-calctapp-1983.