Los Altos El Granada Investors v. City of Capitola

583 F.3d 674, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 22044, 2009 WL 3192038
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedOctober 7, 2009
Docket07-16888, 07-17074
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 583 F.3d 674 (Los Altos El Granada Investors v. City of Capitola) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Los Altos El Granada Investors v. City of Capitola, 583 F.3d 674, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 22044, 2009 WL 3192038 (9th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

BYBEE, Circuit Judge:

Despite clear language from the Supreme Court establishing that “a state court determination may not be substituted, against a party’s wishes, for his right to litigate his federal claims fully in the federal courts,” England v. La. State Bd. of Med. Exam’rs, 375 U.S. 411, 417, 84 S.Ct. 461, 11 L.Ed.2d 440 (1964), two California courts determined that this right to a federal forum was “irrelevant” and struck appellant’s clear reservation of its federal claims from its complaint. The district court then determined that the actions of the California courts should be given preclusive effect in federal court. Although we agree that we must give full faith and credit to the state court’s decision to strike the England reservation from the complaint, we conclude that doing so has no effect on the validity of appellant’s reservation of federal claims. We thus reverse the judgment of the district court.

I

The complicated procedural history of this case reveals the sisyphean task that the Supreme Court’s decision in Williamson County Regional Planning Commission v. Hamilton Bank of Johnson City, 473 U.S. 172, 105 S.Ct. 3108, 87 L.Ed.2d 126 (1985), has created for plaintiffs who seek to have their federal takings claims adjudicated in federal court. After a full complement of administrative appeals, three California Superior Court decisions, a California Court of Appeal decision, three federal district court decisions, and one prior federal appellate court decision, the plaintiff in this case assumed that it had properly exhausted its state law causes of action in state court and would be entitled to present its unadjudicated federal claims in federal court. Yet, the district court decided that in the process of exhausting its state law causes of action the plaintiff had created a bar to any subsequent assertion of federal claims in federal court.

*679 The protracted legal struggle that is the basis for this appeal began on March 9, 2000, when appellant Los Altos El Granada Investors (“Los Altos”), owner of a mobile home park, “Castle Mobile Estates,” located in the City of Capitola (“the City”), petitioned the City for license to increase rents on its mobile home pads from $200 to $500 per month. A 1970s-era mobile home rent control ordinance provides that mobile home rents can be increased in only two situations. First, an “automatic increase” occurs in the event of an increase in the Consumer Price Index, and in such a case rent can be increased by no more than 60 percent of the increase in the Consumer Price Index. Second, mobile home park owners may effect a “discretionary increase” in rent to pass through increased operating costs, capital expenses, and capital improvements. This process requires that park owners work with mobile home owners and an arbitrator to determine the amount of the increase.

Los Altos submitted evidence to the City indicating that the rent control ordinance was permitting mobile home owners to sell their homes at a significant premium, essentially transferring wealth from mobile home park owners to mobile home tenants. 1 Los Altos’s evidence suggested that the market price for a comparable mobile home pad not subject to rent control would be around $1200 per month, six times what Los Altos’s tenants were paying. The City apparently disagreed with the import of this evidence. After deliberating, the City granted Los Altos a discretionary rent increase of $5.84 per month.

Los Altos filed two suits in federal court that were eventually consolidated. See Hillsboro Props. v. City of Capitola, No. C 01-20543 JF (N.D.Cal.2001); Los Altos El Granada Investors v. City of Capitola, No. C 01-20667 JF (N.D.Cal.2001). Los Altos alleged both as-applied and facial challenges to the City’s rent control ordinance — its complaint asked for relief for violations of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments, and also requested a writ of administrative mandamus. The City moved to dismiss, arguing that the Supreme Court’s decision in Williamson required Los Altos to seek (and be denied) relief in state court first before bringing its claims in federal court. See 473 U.S. at 192-95, 105 S.Ct. 3108. The district court agreed and dismissed the action, holding that to the extent Los Altos was asserting facial claims it was barred by the statute of limitations, and to the extent it was asserting as-applied claims it needed to first contest those claims in state court. The district court dismissed Los Altos’s amended complaint on the same grounds, and we eventually affirmed those dismissals. See Los Altos El Granada Investors v. City of Capitola, 97 Fed.Appx. 698 (9th Cir.2004).

In an attempt to ripen its federal claims under Williamson, Los Altos filed a suit in *680 Santa Cruz Superior Court on July 3, 2002, seeking several types of relief. It sought a declaratory judgment that the Ordinance, as applied to Los Altos, had effected a taking of property under the California Constitution, resulted in a violation of Los Altos’s due process and equal protection rights under the California Constitution, and failed to provide Los Altos with a just and reasonable return under the California Constitution. Los Altos also asserted a cause of action for inverse condemnation and asked for a writ of administrative mandamus to overturn the City’s decision denying Los Altos’s full discretionary rent increase.

In its complaint, Los Altos asserted an England reservation: it “reserved] for independent adjudication in the federal courts ... all federal questions, including but not limited to any federal Fifth Amendment and Fourteenth Amendment claims for a taking of property, due process or equal protection, for adjudication before the United States District Court.” Los Altos expressly cited England.

On September 15, 2003, the Santa Cruz Superior Court sustained the City’s demurrer to Los Altos’s causes of action for declaratory relief and inverse condemnation, holding that to the extent that these causes of action asserted facial challenges to the ordinance they were barred by the statute of limitations and the “res judieata/collateral estoppel effect” of the first district court decision. The court also held that to the extent these causes of action asserted as-applied challenges, they were not ripe until Los Altos had completed the process of requesting a writ of administrative mandamus. 2 The Superior Court also granted the City’s motion to strike Los Altos’s England reservation from its complaint, holding that the reservation was “irrelevant and not proper in the context of this case.” The Superior Court failed to explain why the reservation was “irrelevant.”

Meanwhile, on August 20, 2003, Los Altos had filed a new action in the district court, re-alleging its federal claims. See Los Altos El Granada Investors v. City of Capitola, No. C03-3859 JF (N.D.Cal.2003).

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583 F.3d 674, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 22044, 2009 WL 3192038, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/los-altos-el-granada-investors-v-city-of-capitola-ca9-2009.