Muskan Food & Fuel, Inc. v. City of Fresno

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 27, 2021
DocketF079342
StatusPublished

This text of Muskan Food & Fuel, Inc. v. City of Fresno (Muskan Food & Fuel, Inc. v. City of Fresno) 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
Muskan Food & Fuel, Inc. v. City of Fresno, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 9/27/21

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

MUSKAN FOOD & FUEL, INC., F079342 Plaintiff and Appellant, (Super. Ct. No. 18CECG00634) v.

CITY OF FRESNO, OPINION Defendant and Respondent;

KULVIR SEKHON et al.,

Real Parties in Interest and Appellants.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Fresno County. Rosemary T. McGuire, Judge. Quall Cardot, John M. Cardot and Mary E. Krugh for Plaintiff and Appellant. Aleshire & Wynder, Anthony R. Taylor and Michael C. Huston; Douglas T. Sloan, City Attorney, for Defendant and Respondent. McCormick, Barstow, Sheppard, Wayte & Carruth, Jeffrey M. Reid and Christopher S. Hall for Real Parties in Interest and Appellants. -ooOoo- -ooOoo- Appellant Muskan Food & Fuel, Inc. (Muskan Food) filed a petition for writ of mandate to challenge the City of Fresno’s (City) approval of a conditional use permit for the development of a neighborhood shopping center across the street from Muskan Food’s gas station and convenience store. The proposed development includes a specialty grocery store with a license to sell beer, wine and distilled spirits for consumption off the premises. The area has a high concentration of businesses selling alcohol and Muskan Food contends City misapplied the municipal ordinance restricting permits for new establishments selling alcohol in such areas. The superior court denied the petition, concluding City did not misinterpret the ordinance and substantial evidence supported City’s decision to approve the conditional use permit. On appeal, Muskan Food challenged both of these determinations. Real parties in interest filed a cautionary cross-appeal to assure they could challenge the superior court’s conclusion that Muskan Food properly exhausted its administrative remedies. Real parties in interest and City contend the superior court properly decided the case on its merits and, alternatively, the denial of the writ petition should be upheld because Muskan Food did not exhaust its administrative remedies. We conclude Muskan Food did not exhaust the administrative appeal process set forth in City’s municipal code and this failure bars its lawsuit. We therefore affirm the judgment. FACTS Parties Muskan Food is a California corporation that owns real property located at the southeast corner of West Clinton Avenue and North Blythe Avenue in Fresno where it operates a convenience store and gas station as a Johnny Quik franchisee. Rajdeep Singh is the president and part owner of Muskan Food. Analyst Properties, LLC, a California limited liability company, owns a 1.69 acre lot at the southwest corner of West Clinton Avenue and North Blythe Avenue (Subject

2. Property), just across the street from Muskan Food’s location. Kulvir Sekhon and Diwan Sekhon each own a 50 percent membership interest in Analyst Properties, LLC. Kulvir Sekhon and Analyst Properties, LLC, are the real parties in interest (collectively, Real Parties). The Subject Property lies within the boundaries of respondent City. It is covered by the City’s General Plan, City’s West Area Community Plan, and the zoning ordinance contained in the Fresno Municipal Code (Municipal Code or FMC). The Proposed Development In 2015, Real Parties purchased the Subject Property based on advice from City staff that existing zoning and land use regulations would allow a gas station and convenience store to be built there. Also in 2015, Real Parties obtained rights to a license from the Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control (ABC) following a lottery conducted for such licenses. The ABC license is a “Type 21,” which authorizes the sale of beer, wine, and distilled spirits for consumption off the premises where it was sold. 1 On November 9, 2016, City received an application from Real Parties for a conditional use permit to construct an eight-vehicle gas station with canopy and commercial/retail buildings including a market selling alcohol. In February 2017, City’s Development and Resource Management Department (DARM) distributed a request for comments, conditions, environmental assessment, and entitlement application review for Real Parties’ proposed development. The project description in that request stated “[t]he owner proposes to construct two single story structures totaling 14,556 square feet, an 8 vehicle fuel dispensing component, 3 trash enclosures, and 61 parking stalls. Phase II of development will include the commercial retail with market selling alcohol with State

1 Business and Professions Code section 23958.4, subdivision (c)(5)(A) categorizes “Type 20 (off-sale beer and wine) and Type 21 (off-sale general)” as off-sale retail licenses. Muskan Food has a Type 20 license.

3. of California Alcoholic Beverage Type 21 alcohol license. The property is zoned CC/UGM (Commercial – Community/Urban Growth Management).” The request for comments generated a range of responses from various districts, departments, and divisions. For example, City’s police department requested conditions be included in the approval of the conditional use permit application. The requested conditions included the installation of a fully functional color digital video camera system, education of employees about the sale of alcoholic beverages, a prohibition of the sale of single containers of malt liquor, wine coolers and beer, and the posting of signs advising that consumption of alcohol, gambling and loitering were violations of municipal ordinances. In September 2017, the director of DARM issued a notice of intent to grant the conditional use permit application, stating that written appeals protesting the possible approval should be submitted prior to 5:00 p.m. on October 2, 2017. The president of Muskan Food sent an e-mail to Phillip Siegrist, Planner II, of DARM, asserting that the area had a high concentration of off-sale alcohol licenses and that adding another licensed business went against efforts to resolve the over-saturation issue. The e-mail listed eight Type 21 licensed businesses and two Type 20 licensed businesses within a one-mile radius of the Subject Property. Siegrist prepared a 13-page staff memorandum reviewing various aspects of the proposal and recommending an approval of the application, subject to specified conditions. The memorandum described the project as “the phased development of a neighborhood shopping center consisting of two 7,278 square-foot single story shell buildings (Building ‘A’ and Building ‘B’) totaling approximately 14,556 square feet” with eight fuel pumps and canopy. The project also included a proposal to use 2,836 square feet of one building “as a specialty grocery store/automobile service station” with a Type 21 license to sell alcohol. The memorandum addressed zoning by stating “the proposed neighborhood shopping center consisting of a combination specialty grocery

4. store/automobile service station and general retail/office space is consistent with the Community Commercial planned land use designation.” The memorandum stated specialty grocery stores are permitted in the Community Commercial zone district “ ‘by- right,’ ” but a request by such a store to sell alcoholic beverages requires “an approved conditional use permit in accordance with and subject to additional regulations for special uses in FMC [s]ection 15-2706. Furthermore, specialty grocery stores following prescribed design guidelines outlined in Policy and Procedure No. C-005 may qualify for an exception from the location restrictions for new establishments selling alcoholic beverages, and therefore are allowed to sell alcoholic beverages with an approved conditional use permit.” 2 The memorandum recommended the approval of the application for a conditional use permit and specified the conditions of approval.

2 FMC section 15-2706 addresses alcohol sales.

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Bluebook (online)
Muskan Food & Fuel, Inc. v. City of Fresno, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/muskan-food-fuel-inc-v-city-of-fresno-calctapp-2021.