Olympic and Ga. Partners, LLC v. County of L.A.

CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 28, 2025
DocketS280000
StatusPublished

This text of Olympic and Ga. Partners, LLC v. County of L.A. (Olympic and Ga. Partners, LLC v. County of L.A.) 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
Olympic and Ga. Partners, LLC v. County of L.A., (Cal. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF CALIFORNIA

OLYMPIC AND GEORGIA PARTNERS, LLC, Plaintiff and Appellant, v. COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES, Defendant and Appellant.

S280000

Second Appellate District, Division Eight B312862

Los Angeles County Superior Court BC707591

August 28, 2025

Justice Groban authored the opinion of the Court, in which Chief Justice Guerrero and Justices Corrigan and Jenkins concurred.

Justice Liu filed a concurring and dissenting opinion.

Justice Kruger filed a concurring and dissenting opinion, in which Justice Evans concurred. OLYMPIC AND GEORGIA PARTNERS, LLC v. COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES S280000

Opinion of the Court by Groban, J.

Hotels are typically assessed for property tax purposes by estimating the property owner’s future income stream and then discounting that amount to present value. This income capitalization method of valuation “is complicated by the circumstance that . . . assessors may not include the value of intangible assets and rights in the value of taxable property.” (Elk Hills Power, LLC v. Board of Equalization (2013) 57 Cal.4th 593, 601 (Elk Hills).) To ensure compliance with this rule, the assessor must deduct from its income stream analysis any revenue that is “ ‘ “derived in large part from enterprise activity . . . . [I]nstead, it is the earnings from the [taxable] property itself or from the beneficial use thereof which are to be considered.” ’ ” (Id. at p. 619, italics omitted.) In this case, property owner Olympic and Georgia Partners, LLC (Olympic), argues that the Los Angeles County Assessor (the County or the Assessor) violated these principles by declining to remove two sources of hotel revenue that derive from nontaxable intangible assets. The first category of revenue is a 14 percent nightly occupancy tax that the City of Los Angeles (the City) agreed to assign to the original hotel developer as an incentive to construct the hotel. The second category of revenue is a one-time “key money” payment that the hotel’s management company, Marriott International, Inc.

1 OLYMPIC AND GEORGIA PARTNERS, LLC v. COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES Opinion of the Court by Groban, J.

(Marriott), paid to Olympic in exchange for the right to manage the hotel and brand it as a Marriott-related property for a 50- year period. Citing our decision in Elk Hills, supra, 57 Cal.4th 593, Olympic argues that both forms of revenue should have been excluded from the County’s income stream analysis because they are attributable to intangible assets — contractual rights — that resulted from the enterprise activity of Olympic and its predecessor in interest. The County, however, contends that while the payments flow through intangible contractual rights, they nonetheless constitute earnings from the use of the property and were therefore properly included in the valuation. We agree with the County. Contrary to Olympic’s reading of the case, our decision in Elk Hills, supra, 57 Cal.4th 593, does not require the assessor to exclude all revenue that derives from any conceivable form of intangible asset that is capable of valuation. Elk Hills’s analysis focused on intangible assets that relate to the enterprise activity of the business, including “the goodwill of a business, customer base, and favorable franchise terms or operating contracts.” (Id. at p. 618.) In summarizing our holding, we emphasized that revenue “ ‘ “derived in large part from enterprise activity” ’ ” may not be considered when assessing the value of commercial property (id. at p. 619); instead, the assessor may only consider “ ‘ “earnings from the [taxable] property itself or from the beneficial use thereof” ’ ” (ibid.). The key inquiry in this case, then, is not merely whether the occupancy tax and key money payments derive from intangible assets, but rather whether those forms of revenue represent income that is primarily attributable to enterprise activity or whether they constitute “income of the real property or on account of its beneficial use.” (Olympic & Georgia

2 OLYMPIC AND GEORGIA PARTNERS, LLC v. COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES Opinion of the Court by Groban, J.

Partners, LLC v. County of Los Angeles (2023) 90 Cal.App.5th 100, 119 (dis. opn. of Grimes, J.) (Olympic).) Applying those principles here, we conclude that the Assessor was permitted to include the occupancy tax and key money payments when assessing the value of the hotel. Unlike the situation we addressed in Elk Hills, both payments derive from a type of intangible asset that effectively enable the property itself — as opposed to the business operating the property — to generate more revenue. Under the occupancy tax agreement, the hotel generates an additional 14 percent in revenue every time a customer rents out a room. This revenue source will continue regardless of who owns the hotel or how they run their business. With respect to the key money payment, the Assessor presented undisputed evidence that management companies routinely pay owners of hotels that have certain desirable physical features (such as location, size or overall quality) key money as a means of securing the right to manage the property and advertise the hotel under the management company’s brand. Thus, much like a commercial lease, key money is a form of revenue that owners of desirable hotels expect to receive in exchange for assigning a management company the right to make beneficial use of the property. Because both the occupancy tax and key money payments “represent[] income from the use of the taxable property itself” (Olympic, supra, 90 Cal.App.5th at p. 116 (dis. opn. of Grimes, J.)) the assessor was permitted to include those payments in determining the hotel’s assessed value. (See Elk Hills, supra, 57 Cal.4th at p. 619 [“ ‘ “earnings from the . . . property itself or from the beneficial use thereof . . . are to be considered [in assessing the value of the property]” ’ ”].)

3 OLYMPIC AND GEORGIA PARTNERS, LLC v. COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES Opinion of the Court by Groban, J.

The County raises a separate claim regarding the valuation of various “enterprise assets” that derive from its management agreement with Marriott, including the customer goodwill associated with the Marriott brand, the value of the hotel’s food and beverage operations and an assembled, stable workforce. Unlike the two revenue streams described above, the County does not dispute that these three enterprise assets are nontaxable and that their value must therefore be excluded from the assessment. The County argues, however, that the Assessor properly accounted for the value of those assets by deducting the management fees that Olympic pays to Marriott. Olympic disagrees, contending that the County produced insufficient evidence to support its claim that the management fees captured the entire value of the three enterprise assets. The trial court and Court of Appeal agreed with Olympic and remanded the matter to the County’s assessment appeals board (Board) for further proceedings regarding the valuation of these three assets. We affirm the lower courts’ findings on this issue. I. BACKGROUND A. The Occupancy Tax Agreement and the Key Money Payment The hotel at issue in this case was developed pursuant to a series of contracts between the City and the original developer, L.A. Arena Land Company (L.A. Arena). Those contracts include the hotel development agreement (the HDA), which is effectively the master development agreement, the “Occupancy Tax Agreement”1 and the “Room Block Agreement.” Under the

1 The parties’ contracts refer to the Occupancy Tax Agreement as the “Funding Agreement.”

4 OLYMPIC AND GEORGIA PARTNERS, LLC v. COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES Opinion of the Court by Groban, J.

Occupancy Tax Agreement, the City agreed to assign L.A.

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