Main Street Taxpayer Assn. v. Town of Mammoth Lakes CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 15, 2021
DocketC091546
StatusUnpublished

This text of Main Street Taxpayer Assn. v. Town of Mammoth Lakes CA3 (Main Street Taxpayer Assn. v. Town of Mammoth Lakes CA3) 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
Main Street Taxpayer Assn. v. Town of Mammoth Lakes CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 11/15/21 Main Street Taxpayer Assn. v. Town of Mammoth Lakes CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Mono) ----

MAIN STREET TAXPAYER ASSOCIATION, C091546

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Super. Ct. No. CV190092 )

v.

TOWN OF MAMMOTH LAKES et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

In this case we address the limitations for filing challenges to a business improvement district created pursuant to the Property and Business Improvement District Law of 1994 (the District Law). (Sts. & Hy. Code, §§ 36600-36671.)1 The District Law “authorizes cities to establish property and business improvement districts (BID’s) in order to levy assessments on real property for certain

1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Streets and Highway Code.

1 purposes.” (Epstein v. Hollywood Entertainment Dist. II Bus. Improvement Dist. (2001) 87 Cal.App.4th 862, 865.) Among those purposes is “[m]arketing and economic development, including retail retention and recruitment.” (§ 36606, subd. (d).) A petition may be adopted in whole or as revised by the city council; following a hearing held in conformance with the notice and protest and hearing provisions of Government Code sections 53753 and 54954.6. (§§ 36623-36625.) The BID’s management plan may designate a private owner’s association to implement the plan. (§§ 36651, 36612.) If the plan is implemented by an owner’s association, the city retains control of the assessment proceeds through the terms of its contract with the owner’s association. (§ 36622.) A new district shall last no more than five years (§ 36622, subd. (h)) but can be renewed following the creation of a new management plan (§ 36630). “The validity of an assessment levied under this part shall not be contested in an action or proceeding unless the action or proceeding is commenced within 30 days after the resolution levying the assessment is adopted pursuant to Section 36625.” (§ 36633.) In 2013, respondent, Town of Mammoth Lakes, formed such a district, the Mammoth Lakes Business and Improvement District (the District). Plaintiffs and appellants, Main Street Taxpayers Association, filed a class action complaint against the Town of Mammoth Lakes, the District and various other individuals and organizations, asserting numerous causes of action related to the formation of the District in 2013 and its renewal in 2018. The trial court sustained respondents’ demurrers to the first amended complaint without leave to amend and dismissed the action as time-barred by section 36633’s statute of limitations. Appellant contends section 36633 does not bar its claims of corruption, unlawful behavior, and lack of jurisdiction, the continuous malfeasance it alleges has no limitation period, and trial courts have consistently ignored limitations periods as a bar to malfeasance claims. It also asserts the trial court had jurisdiction to rule on its claims and appellant had standing to raise them, it is entitled to a writ of mandate ordering the

2 District dissolved, and the District law must conform to the limitations on taxation in Propositions 26 and 218. We find the gravamen of appellant’s first 12 causes of action is an attack on the District’s formation in 2013 or its renewal in 2018. Since the action was commenced more than 30 days after these two events, we conclude the trial court was correct in dismissing the action as time-barred. In so doing, we reject appellant’s various attempts to find exceptions to section 36633. The gravamen of the thirteenth cause is the alleged invalidity of the transient occupancy tax from its 1986 inception, which is time-barred pursuant to the three-year limitation of Code of Civil Procedure section 338, subdivision (a). We shall affirm. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND On July 24, 2013, respondent Town of Mammoth Lakes adopted the resolution forming the District, with an initial term of September 1, 2013 to August 31, 2016.2 Assessments imposed are levied solely on the assessed tourism businesses, and the owner of the assessed business is solely responsible for payment of the assessment. If a business chose to collect the assessment from customers, it must identify the “MLTBID Assessment” in the bill. Prior to the District’s expiration, it was renewed for a five-year term from September 1, 2018 to August 31, 2023. The owner’s association administering the District is respondent Mammoth Lakes Tourism (ML Tourism). Respondent, John Urdi, is ML Tourism’s Executive Director. Appellant filed the action in this case on August 5, 2019. Following a meet and confer with respondents’ counsel, appellant filed the first amended complaint that is the subject of this appeal on September 16, 2019. Appellant summarized the central issues of their complaint thusly: “(1) the fraudulent creation of a Tourism Business Independent

2 Among the businesses sponsoring the petition was Mammoth Mountain Ski Area LLC., which was subsequently purchased by respondent Alterra Mountain Company, Inc.

3 District to cause new public fund money to be pilfered by the named Defendants for non- public purposes while these Defendants were holding financial conflicts of interest; and (2) the collection of transient occupant taxes by the Town of Mammoth Lakes without voter approval.” The named defendants were respondents Rusty Gregory, Chief Executive Officer of defendant and respondent Mammoth Mountain Ski Area, Alterra Mountain Company, Inc., John Urdi, Chief Executive Officer of defendant ML Tourism, Town of Mountain Lakes, Michael Raimondo, a town council member who voted for the resolution creating the District, the Mammoth Lakes Chamber of Commerce, and Terri Stehlk, who allegedly conspired with the Mammoth Lakes Chamber of Commerce to create ML Tourism for the purposes of using a transient occupancy taxes public funds for the nonpublic purpose expenses of ML Tourism and the Mammoth Lakes Chamber of Commerce. Appellant alleged Gregory “fraudulently used the protocol of a Tourism Business improvement District (TBID) to create new public fund money to be pilfered by named Defendants for non-public purposes while each identified Defendant was holding financial conflicts of interest” in violation of the Government Code section 1090, and that Urdi assisted him in the conspiracy. According to appellant, before July 24, 2013, Gregory and Urdi conspired to use the District Law to pay corporate expenses of the Mammoth Mountain Ski Area, the Mammoth Lakes Chamber of Commerce, and ML Tourism by funds collected through the District. The conspiracy was formed between 2010 and 2013, when Gregory represented to the local business community, a TBID plan to enhance marketing for the assessed businesses, when in fact it was no more than a scheme to increase the income of the Mammoth Lakes Ski Area by transferring the ski area’s airline subsidy and marketing costs to funds assessed through the District. According to appellant, marketing for the Town of Mammoth Lakes had been performed by city staff using transient occupancy tax funds enacted by “Measure A.” After ML Tourism was created in 2010 by Stehlik, Town of Mammoth, the Mammoth

4 Lakes Chamber of Commerce, and Mammoth Mountain Ski area, the town’s marketing department was fired and ML Tourism took over the marketing, funded with Measure A revenue. Appellant claimed the District was formed and the TBID assessment was imposed to avoid going to the voters for the approval of a tax. Appellant alleged that the conspiracy was discovered within one year of the complaint’s filing.

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Bluebook (online)
Main Street Taxpayer Assn. v. Town of Mammoth Lakes CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/main-street-taxpayer-assn-v-town-of-mammoth-lakes-ca3-calctapp-2021.