Morrison Homes Corp. v. City of Pleasanton

58 Cal. App. 3d 724, 130 Cal. Rptr. 196, 1976 Cal. App. LEXIS 1581
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 27, 1976
DocketCiv. 36536
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 58 Cal. App. 3d 724 (Morrison Homes Corp. v. City of Pleasanton) 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
Morrison Homes Corp. v. City of Pleasanton, 58 Cal. App. 3d 724, 130 Cal. Rptr. 196, 1976 Cal. App. LEXIS 1581 (Cal. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

Opinion

RATTIGAN, J.

The City of Pleasanton (hereinafter “the City”) appeals from a judgment which (1) requires it to perform certain obligations assumed by it in a series of written contracts providing for the *729 annexation of lands to it, and (2) awards accrued and ongoing damages, to respondent Morrison Homes Corporation, for the City’s breach of the obligations.

Facts

The record supports the following recitals of fact: The City is a general law city. Respondent is a corporation engaged in a large-scale business of constructing and selling homes on lands owned, subdivided and developed by it. In and between 1963 and 1967, the parties entered into five successive written contracts 1 to which they refer, collectively, as “annexation agreements.” 2 In each of the four contracts which were “annexation agreements” as such (see fn. 2, ante), the parties agreed in pertinent part as follows:

The City would annex by ordinance, and respondent (designated in each contract as . “Owner”) would cooperate in the annexation of, separate lands which were “controlled by Owner” and specifically described. The City would zone the affected land, upon an “interim or holding zone” basis, in the respective annexation ordinance. Owner would pay to the City an agreed per-acre “annexation fee.”

The land annexed would be subject to all real property taxes levied by the City. Owner explicitly consented to the land being subject to taxation for the City’s bonded indebtedness. Owner would improve certain streets and construct designated off-tract and on-tract improvements tying into the City’s water supply, sewage disposal and storm drainage systems. The City “acknowledged” that its water supply was “adequate ... to serve *730 Owner’s proposed development and that such supply will be maintained.” 3

The provisions of the agreements which are the subject of this litigation pertained to the collection and disposition of sewage from the annexed land through the City’s existing sewage treatment plant and related facilities. These provisions were finally stated in the 1966 reservation agreement, which modified the preceding cohtracts and extended to the future in this respect. 4 We refer to them, using the parties’ nomenclature, as the City’s “sewer commitment.”

Commencing shortly after the first annexation agreement was executed in 1963, and pursuant to it and the subsequent annexation agreements (see fn. 2, ante), respondent’s various tracts were successively annexed to the City. The annexed lands were developed as agreed, and the City provided new sewer connections and services to homes built upon them by respondent. This activity went on until it was interrupted as a result of action by the San Francisco Bay Area Regional Water Quality Control Board (a state agency, hereinafter “Regional Board” or “Board”) as next described.

At all pertinent times the Porter-Cologne Water Quality Control Act (Wat. Code, div. 7, commencing with § 13000; see § 13020), and its predecessor statutes, vested the Regional Board with jurisdiction in matters which involved the quality of ground water in the area of the City. Prior to the execution and performance of the annexation agreements by the City and respondent, the Board had become *731 concerned with the detrimental effect of local sewage treatment in the area. By 1966, it had adopted a program designed to eliminate small treatment plants and to bring about the participation of local communities in regional sewage systems. The City’s treatment plant (the so-called “Sunol plant”) had meanwhile become obsolescent, overloaded, and the source of several waste-discharge and related problems with which the Board was specifically concerned. Motivated by these events, the City entered into a written contract with Valley Community Services District (“VCSD”) in 1967. VCSD was a nearby local governmental agency which had recently completed a new sewage treatment plant. Its sewage activities were also subject to the territorial water-quality jurisdiction of the Regional Board.

In its 1967 contract with the City, VCSD agreed to provide sewage treatment to certain areas of the City. The affected areas included the tracts annexed to the City pursuant to its annexation agreements with respondent. A principal purpose of the 1967 contract, from the City’s standpoint, was to reduce the volume of sewage being treated by it at the Sunol plant. Long-range objectives of the contract included the City’s “phase-out” of the Sunol plant and the parties’ agreement upon a comprehensive sewage-treatment plan for the entire area in which both were located.

The City’s arrangement with VCSD did not alleviate the Regional Board’s concern with water-pollution problems arising from waste discharge at the Sunol plant. In 1971, the Board adopted a cease and desist order which prohibited any new connections to the plant. The order interrupted the availability of sewer connections upon respondent’s tracts which had been annexed to the City.

Among several steps then taken by the City to relieve the situation, it commenced litigation against VCSD. It also spent approximately $46,000 in an attempt to improve the Sunol plant. The Regional Board thereupon amended its 1971 order to permit new sewer connections to the plant, but upon condition that violation of the Board’s waste-discharge standards did not recur there. The City provided some of these connections to homes built on respondent’s annexed tracts, but the Regional Board found continued violations at the Sunol plant. This resulted in a further cease and desist order, issued by the Board in 1973, which prohibited any additional sewer connections to the plant except upon conditions requiring compliance with specified waste-discharge standards of the Board.

*732 When the 1973 order was issued, the City again discontinued making new sewer connections available in respondent’s annexed tracts. At the time, respondent had been granted all but 463 of the 2,072 connections for which the City had “reserved” sewer “capacity” in the 1966 reservation agreement. (See fn. 4, ante.) Respondent then commenced the present action upon the annexation agreements.

The A ction, Trial and Judgment

In its “Complaint For Declaratory Relief And Damages,” respondent sought a judgment (1) declaring that the City’s “sewer commitment” was “a binding enforceable obligation of [the] City,” (2) requiring the City to perform it, and (3) awarding respondent damages for its breach. In its answer, the City pleaded material admissions and denials and various affirmative defenses. Immediately prior to trial, the City moved the trial court for an order bringing VCSD, the Regional Board, and various property owners into the action as.,parties. The court denied this motion and proceeded to trial.

After receiving evidence of the events described under “Facts,” supra,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 Cal. App. 3d 724, 130 Cal. Rptr. 196, 1976 Cal. App. LEXIS 1581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrison-homes-corp-v-city-of-pleasanton-calctapp-1976.