Marek v. Napa Community Redevelopment Agency

761 P.2d 701, 46 Cal. 3d 1070, 251 Cal. Rptr. 778, 1988 Cal. LEXIS 235
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 13, 1988
DocketS000820
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 761 P.2d 701 (Marek v. Napa Community Redevelopment Agency) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marek v. Napa Community Redevelopment Agency, 761 P.2d 701, 46 Cal. 3d 1070, 251 Cal. Rptr. 778, 1988 Cal. LEXIS 235 (Cal. 1988).

Opinion

*1073 Opinion

KAUFMAN, J.

receive tax increment revenues (see fn. 3, post) under California’s Community Redevelopment Law (Health & Safety Code, § 33000 et seq.), local redevelopment agencies must file with the county auditor an annual “statement of indebtedness.” (Health & Saf. Code, § 33675, subd. (b) (see fn. 8, post).) 1 The auditor is then required to pay tax increment revenues to the agency “in an amount not to exceed the amount shown on the agency’s statement of indebtedness.” (§ 33675, subd. (d).) If the auditor disputes the amount of indebtedness claimed in its statement, the auditor is authorized to institute a declaratory relief action to adjudicate the amount of indebtedness. (§ 33675, subd. (e).)

In the 1981-1982 and 1982-1983 statements of indebtedness submitted by the Napa Community Redevelopment Agency (Agency) to James Marek, the Auditor-Controller for the County of Napa (Auditor), the indebtedness claimed by the Agency consisted of the estimated cost of performing its executory obligations under a binding contract with a private redeveloper. The Auditor disputed the claimed indebtedness, refused to pay the Agency the accrued tax increment revenues and instituted the declaratory relief action at bench. We are called upon to decide whether the Agency’s claimed indebtedness constitutes indebtedness under the redevelopment law. As will appear, we conclude that the Agency’s estimated cost of performance under the contract does constitute indebtedness within the meaning of the redevelopment law and that the Auditor was required to pay the Agency the available tax increment revenues.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

A. History of the Redevelopment Plan

The Parkway Plaza Redevelopment Project (project) was originally part of an urban redevelopment plan adopted in 1969 by the Napa City Council 2 to convert the downtown area of Napa into a modern shopping district. The plan was to be financed in substantial part by tax increment financing as authorized by article XVI, section 16 and by section 33670 which was enacted by the Legislature to implement the constitutional provision. The text of section 33670 which repeats the constitutional language is set out in the margin. 3

*1074 Following the adoption of the redevelopment plan, the Agency in 1971 entered into a Disposition and Development Agreement (DDA) with the private redeveloper Nichandros Associates (Nichandros) for the development of the downtown shopping district. Difficulties developed between the Agency and Nichandros and their agreement was eventually terminated. Nichandros thereafter sued the Agency for damages and recorded a lis pendens on property within the redevelopment site. The Agency ultimately settled the suit by paying Nichandros nearly $400,000.

The dispute between the Agency and Nichandros delayed the project for some years. Nevertheless, the record indicates the Agency was able to accomplish considerable redevelopment in the project area during the years leading up to the present dispute. This included construction of department stores and other retail shops, street and traffic improvements, brick inlays, and the like. This work was apparently funded in part by some $10 million in grants from the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development. However, the Agency also received more than $3 million of tax increment revenues between 1971 and 1981 from Auditor Marek and his predecessor in office, Robert Benning.

B. Earlier Dispute Between the Parties

In 1977 the Agency and former auditor Benning had a dispute over payment of tax increment revenues. Benning instituted a declaratory relief action against the Agency alleging among other things that the Agency’s *1075 statement of indebtedness for fiscal year 1977-1978 was deficient. Thereafter Marek was elected and replaced Benning as plaintiff in that lawsuit. The matter was resolved in January 1979 when the parties negotiated a settlement in the form of a stipulated judgment entered by the superior court.

The stipulated judgment outlined a number of procedures relating to the submission and review of annual statements of indebtedness thereafter. Under these procedures, the Agency was to maintain accounting records reflecting the status of the “special fund” into which tax increment revenues are paid pursuant to section 33670, subdivision (b) (see fn. 3, ante). Additionally, subsequent statements of indebtedness were to show all funds of the Agency “on hand or otherwise available” and separately account for funds arising from tax increment revenues and from other sources. Further, the Agency was to identify the moneys committed to specific obligations or indebtedness and to provide the Auditor copies of contracts documenting the claimed indebtedness. In this regard the stipulated judgment provided: “To the extent [the] Agency has any monies . . . which are not specifically committed or allocated to a particular obligation or indebtedness of the Agency, the . . . Auditor shall consider such monies as being available for general expenditure purposes to pay, in whole or in part, any of the indebtedness shown on [the] Agency’s Statement of Indebtedness when [the] Auditor calculates the distribution of tax increment revenues pursuant to Health and Safety Code Section 33675(d).”

C. The Present Dispute

In February 1980, the Agency amended the original redevelopment plan and entered into a new DDA with another redeveloper called The Sequoia Partnership (Sequoia) for the redevelopment of a 10-acre site within the Parkway Plaza project. Under the Sequoia DDA, the Agency was obligated to acquire certain parcels of real property, to resell the property to the redeveloper and to provide for and bear the expense of utility relocations, street and traffic improvements, and the construction of parking facilities. 4 Sequoia agreed to purchase the land from the Agency, to construct a shopping center with a large department store and other retail shops, and to secure tenants for the shopping complex.

After execution of the Sequoia DDA in 1980, the Agency acquired two properties, one at a cost of some $ 150,000 (paid from a federal community development block grant) and the other for some $830,000 (paid from the previous year’s tax increments and out of funds the Agency borrowed from *1076 the City of Napa after the present dispute arose). In addition, the Agency incurred other expenses and was proceeding with negotiations and condemnation actions to acquire the two remaining parcels necessary to fulfill its preconveyance obligations under the Sequoia DDA.

In 1980, the Agency submitted to the Auditor a statement of indebtedness for fiscal year 1980-1981, 5

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Bluebook (online)
761 P.2d 701, 46 Cal. 3d 1070, 251 Cal. Rptr. 778, 1988 Cal. LEXIS 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marek-v-napa-community-redevelopment-agency-cal-1988.