Ross v. City of Berkeley

655 F. Supp. 820
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedJune 11, 1987
DocketC-85-7321 MHP
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 655 F. Supp. 820 (Ross v. City of Berkeley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ross v. City of Berkeley, 655 F. Supp. 820 (N.D. Cal. 1987).

Opinion

OPINION

PATEL, District Judge.

Plaintiffs, owner and lessors of commercial rental property, bring this action against the City of Berkeley (“the City”) and their current lessees (“the lessees”) on the basis, inter alia, of the alleged unconstitutionality of the City’s Telegraph Avenue Area Commercial Rent Mediation and Arbitration Ordinance and its preceding temporary enactments. Plaintiffs claim that the ordinance unconstitutionally deprives them of possession of their premises in violation of rights secured under the Contracts Clause, the Due Process Clause, and the Takings Clause of the United States Constitution, all in violation of the *823 Federal Civil Rights Act of 1871, 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The gravamen of plaintiffs’ complaint is that the ordinance, by failing to acknowledge as good cause for lease nonre-newal an owner’s desire to personally occupy his or her commercial property, unconstitutionally upsets the contractual agreement reached between lessor and lessee while depriving the owner of property without due process of law or just compensation.

The matter is currently before the court on plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment on these constitutional claims. For the reasons set forth below, plaintiffs’ motion is granted in part and denied in part.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

A. Statutory History

Only three cities in the United States have ever enacted commercial rent control ordinances: Albany, New York, for a brief period during 1948, New York City from 1945 to 1963, and Berkeley itself on three separate occasions beginning in 1978. Keating, The Elmwood Experiment: The Use of Commercial Rent Stablization to Preserve a Diverse Neighborhood Shopping District, 28 Wash.U.J.Urb. & Contemp.L. 107, 124-38 (1985). 1 Berkeley’s regulation of commercial rental practices began in 1978 with a ballot initiative establishing City-wide commerical rent control for one year. The initiative was followed in 1982 with an ordinance regulating commercial rental practices in the Elmwood district of the City, and in 1985 with an ordinance establishing similar controls for the Telegraph Avenue district.

The first of these regulations, a ballot initiative passed in November 1978 entitled “Renter Property Tax Relief,” required a partial rebate to residential and commercial renters of the property tax reductions received by the City’s landlords as a result of the passage of Proposition 13. Id. at 136; Berkeley, Cal., Mun. Code ch. 7, § 44. Eighty percent of each landlord’s tax savings were to be credited to renters in the form of rent reductions, and rent increases were controlled in an attempt to bar landlords from offsetting the costs of the rebate. Keating, supra at 137. The initiative created no enforcement mechanism and expired by its own terms on December 31, 1979. Id. While the provisions controlling residential rents were extended after the initiative’s expiration date, those controlling commercial rents were not. Id.

Berkeley’s next attempt to regulate commercial rental practices began in 1982 with the passage of an initiative establishing the Elmwood Commercial Rent Stablization and Eviction Protection Program, which presently governs commercial rents and evictions in the City’s Elmwood district. Berkeley, Cal., Mun. Code ch. 13, § 80. As Keating observes, “[sjeveral significant differences exist between the [the 1978-79 rent control initiative] and [the Elmwood ordinance]. First and foremost, [the temporary initiative] was not so much of a commercial rent control scheme as it was a limited form of property tax relief; its purpose was not to prevent the displacement of merchants.” Keating, supra at 137. Conversely, the Elmwood ordinance couples rent control with strict regulation of commercial eviction practices in an attempt to secure existing commercial tenants from displacement. 2 Accordingly, landlords may evict- commercial tenants or refuse to renew existing leases for only eight strictly enumerated reasons. Berkeley, Cal., Mun. Code ch. 13, § 80.090. 3 An owner’s desire *824 to recover personal possession for commercial use is not among the authorized grounds for eviction or lease nonrenewal. Id.

The process leading to the enactment of the third of the City’s commercial rent control ordinances began on December 11, 1984, when the mayor brought before the City Council an “Emergency Action Item” outlining a number of recent changes in the character of the Telegraph Avenue business district which the mayor believed might warrant an extension of the Elm-wood ordinance to the Telegraph business district. Defendants’ Exhibit 2. The may- or enumerated the following developments in the Telegraph commercial district as the basis for his concern:

Numerous businesses face a situation in which sharply increased lease costs threaten their ability to continue to serve the community. Several have already ceased to exist. Further, there has been a pattern developing in which a fairly broad range of retail uses in this district is being replaced with a much more narrow range of uses, principally food-related. Similarly, locally owned businesses seem to face displacement by chains, franchises and other forms of non-Berkeley ownership. The market rate for commercial space on Telegraph appears to be rising suddenly from one dollar or less per square foot to approximately three dollars per square foot. Id.

With the City Council’s authorization, the mayor subsequently appointed an ad hoc committee to investigate the various policy options available to the City to regulate rental practices in the Telegraph Avenue district. The mayor indicated that possible courses of action “could range from the development of an area plan to development of a commercial rent stabilization measure for this area.” Id.

On February 15, 1985, the ad hoc committee submitted its report to the City Council. While the committee was unable to reach any conclusion regarding the imposition of commercial rent control in the district, there was agreement that interim measures should be enacted while the City developed a comprehensive area plan to “preserve and enhance the character of the neighborhood.” Defendants’ Exhibit 3. The committee proposed that these interim provisions include “a six month moritorium on use changes, evictions, and rent increases above the [Consumer Price Index].” Id. The committee explicitly declined to characterize the interim recommendations as the initiation of rent control; they stated in their report to the City Council that the “recommendations are intended as part of an area planning process and not necessarily a rent control process.” Id.

On February 26, 1985, the City Council enacted Ordinance 5640-N.S., which implemented the interim recommendations of the ad hoc committee for a period of 90 days. The stated purpose of the ordinance was

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Bluebook (online)
655 F. Supp. 820, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ross-v-city-of-berkeley-cand-1987.