Patz v. City of S.D.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 30, 2025
DocketE083543
StatusPublished

This text of Patz v. City of S.D. (Patz v. City of S.D.) 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
Patz v. City of S.D., (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 7/30/25

See dissenting opinion

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

DANIEL PATZ et al.,

Plaintiffs and Appellants, E083543

v. (Super.Ct.No. 37-2015-23413-CU- MC-CTL) CITY OF SAN DIEGO, OPINION Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from the Superior Court of San Diego County. Eddie C. Sturgeon,

Judge. Affirmed with directions.

Mara W. Elliott, City Attorney, M. Travis Phelps, Assistant City Attorney,

Meghan Ashley Wharton, Tyler L. Krentz and Chance C. Hawkins, Deputy City

Attorneys, for Defendant and Appellant.

Frank G. Wells Environmental Law Clinic, Heather Dadashi and Cara Horowitz

for California Coastkeeper Alliance and Los Angeles Waterkeeper as Amici Curiae on

behalf of Defendant and Appellant.

1 Colantuono, Highsmith & Whatley, Michael G. Colantuono and Vernetra L. Gavin

for Amici Association of California Water Agencies, California State Association of

Counties, and League of California Cities as Amici Curiae on behalf of Defendant and

Appellant.

Gibbs Law Group, Eric H. Gibbs, Andre M. Mura, Steven M. Tindall; Berding &

Weil, Daniel L. Rottinghaus, Howard J. Silldorf, Ann L. Rauch and Theresa M. Filicia,

Carlotta A. Kirby for Plaintiffs and Appellants.

Ross, Wolcott, Teinert & Prout, William C. O’Neill; Ciresi Conlin, Katie Crosby

Lehmann, Kyle W. Wislocky and Patrick A. Cochran for Mesa Water District as Amicus

Curiae on behalf of Plaintiffs and Appellants.

I. INTRODUCTION

In 1996, voters enacted Proposition 218, adding article XIII D to the California

Constitution. (Cal. Const., art. XIII D.) Under section 6, subdivision (b)(3) (§ 6(b)(3)) of

article XIII D,1 a governmental fee or charge imposed on a parcel of property or as an

incident of property ownership, “shall not exceed the proportional cost of the service

attributable to the parcel.” In any legal action challenging the validity of the fee or

charge, the government has the burden of showing it complies with the article.

(§ 6(b)(5).)

1 Undesignated article and section references are to article XIII D of the California Constitution. We refer to subdivisions of section 6 in shorthand, e.g., § 6(b)(3).

2 Plaintiffs Daniel Patz and Joan Mann Chesner are the representative members of

plaintiffs, a certified class of “ ‘[a]ll single-family residential [(SFR)] customers of the

City of San Diego [(herein, City)] who received water service after August 14, 2014.’ ”

In their operative complaint, plaintiffs claim City’s tiered water rates for SFR customers,

which increase with higher levels of consumption, violate section 6(b)(3) because they

exceed City’s proportionate cost of delivering water to SFR customers at the usage levels

in the higher tiers. City charges nonSFR customers uniform (nontiered) rates for their

water usage.

Following a bifurcated trial on City’s liability (Phase I), the trial court ruled City

failed to show that its tiered rates for SFR customers complied with section 6(b)(3). In

the later trial on damages (Phase II), the court awarded Class a refund of $79,541,880—

the amount all Class members (SFR customers) overpaid for water services from August

14, 2014 through March 31, 2022, increasing by $643,750 each per month thereafter,

“until the City imposes water rates consistent with” section 6(b)(3). Both City and Class

appeal from the judgment.

City claims the trial court applied incorrect standards of proof and disregarded

undisputed evidence that City’s tiered SFR rates comply with section 6(b)(3). City also

claims the trial court abused its discretion in certifying plaintiffs’ action as a class action.

In its appeal, Class claims the trial court erroneously awarded City an unpled and

unproven offset of $27,583,091, against what should have been a refund award of

$107,124,971, not $79,541,880. Class also claims it is entitled to attorney fees on appeal.

We affirm the judgment with directions.

3 II. FACTS AND PROCEDURE

A. City’s Water System, Customer Classes, and Water Rates

City owns and operates a water utility system, which, as of 2015, provided potable

water to a population of over 1.4 million, through approximately 280,000 residential,

commercial, industrial, and wholesale customer accounts. The water system is self-

supporting, and its revenues and expenditures are segregated from other City operations.

City obtains water from two primary sources: (1) local groundwater and reservoir

sources, and (2) the San Diego County Water Authority. These sources are comingled in

City’s reservoirs before being delivered to customers. In a normal year, City’s local

water supply meets 10 to 15 percent of City’s aggregate customer demand.

City designs, builds, and maintains its water system at a size sufficient to meet

“peak demand,” the highest level of demand that could be placed on the system at a given

time by all of City’s customers. For billing purposes, City divides its customers into five

“classes”: (1) Single-Family Residential (SFR); (2) Other Domestics or Multi-Family

Residential (MFR); (3) Commercial/Industrial; (4) Temporary Construction; and

(5) Irrigation.

City’s potable water charges have two parts: a fixed monthly charge and a

commodity charge. As City explains, “The monthly service charge is an amount based

on water meter size and is designed to recover fixed costs. Fixed costs do not vary with

the volume of water used by a customer, and include meter reading, customer billing, and

debt service. The commodity charge is an amount based on units of consumption

measured by the number of hundred cubic feet (HCF) of water consumed during the

4 billing cycle. Included in the commodity charge are the costs associated with water

purchases and system capacity, including components such as maintaining and operating

the reservoirs, pump stations, and transmission and distribution lines. The commodity

charge differs by customer class.”

For SFR customers, the commodity charge “contains a tier structure that charges a

different commodity charge for different tiers of water consumption.” That is, SFR

customers are charged higher rates for each HCF of water they consume, as their

consumption increases above specified HCF levels or tier “breakpoints.”

Effective January 1, 2014, SRF customers were charged the followed tiered rates:

Tier 1, zero to four HCF ($3.64); Tier 2, five to 12 HCF ($4.08); Tier 3, 13 to 18 HCF

($5.82); Tier 4, 19 HCF and over ($8.19). The Tier 4 rate is exactly 2.25 times the Tier 1

rate ($3.64 x 2.25=$8.19). The other customers classes were charged a uniform rate for

each HCF of water consumed: MFR ($4.34); Commercial & Industrial ($4.17);

Temporary Construction ($4.62); and Irrigation ($4.62).

Thus, in 2014, an SFR customer who used 19 HCF during a month was charged

$3.64 for the first 4 HCF, $4.08 for the next 8 HCF, $5.82 for the next 6 HCF, and $8.19

for the 19th HCF, for a total commodity charge of $90.31. In contrast, an irrigation

customer who used 19 HCF was charged $4.62 for each HCF, for a total commodity

charge of $87.78.2

2 Before 2014, City had “a single commodity rate for all nonSFR customer classes” and a “three-block increasing rate structure” for SFR customers.

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