Ruegg & Ellsworth v. City of Berkeley

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 20, 2021
DocketA159218
StatusPublished

This text of Ruegg & Ellsworth v. City of Berkeley (Ruegg & Ellsworth v. City of Berkeley) 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
Ruegg & Ellsworth v. City of Berkeley, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 4/20/21 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

RUEGG & ELLSWORTH et al., Petitioners and Appellants, v. CITY OF BERKELEY et al., Defendants and Respondents, A159218

CONFEDERATED VILLAGES OF (Alameda County Super. Ct. LISJAN et al., No. RG18930003) Interveners and Respondents.

Ruegg & Ellsworth and Frank Spenger Company applied to the City of Berkeley (City) for approval of a mixed-use development pursuant to Government Code section 65913.4, which provides for streamlined, ministerial approval of affordable housing projects meeting specified requirements and conditions. The City denied the application for failure to meet several statutory requirements. Appellants now appeal the trial court’s denial of the petition for writ of mandate by which they sought to require the City to grant their application. For the reasons explained herein, we will reverse the judgment and remand with directions for the trial court to grant the writ petition.

1 BACKGROUND In 2015, appellants submitted an application for a mixed-use development at 1900 4th Street (Spenger’s parking lot) in Berkeley with 135 apartments over approximately 33,000 square feet of retail space and parking. The project site is the block bordered by Hearst Avenue on the north, University Avenue on the south, Fourth Street on the east, and the Union Pacific Railroad tracks (Third Street) on the west. The development site is part of a three-block area the Berkeley Landmarks Preservation Commission (Commission) designated a City of Berkeley Landmark in 2000, as the location of the West Berkeley Shellmound (CA-ALA-307) (Shellmound).1 The Shellmound is listed in the California Register of Historical Resources. As described in the City’s landmark application, the Shellmound “is believed to have been one of the first of its kind at the Bay’s edge, built ca 3,700 B.C.,” 1,000 years before the first pyramid.2 Shellmounds were “sacred burial sites for the average deceased mound-dweller,” slowly constructed over thousands of years from daily debris and artifacts left by the tribelet communities that lived on the site. “The importance of the shellmounds should not be underestimated.” Shellmounds contained “ritual burials exhibiting a variety of deliberate, traditional positioning and use of burial goods” and “[e]ven to this day, native descendants value these mounds as

The landmark area extends north to south from Hearst Avenue to 1

University Avenue and east to west from 4th Street to I-880. 2 A 2017 letter from a University of California Berkeley professor of Anthropology states that the Shellmound is the earliest known shellmound site in the region, first occupied about 4,900 years ago and used for the next 3,700 years, and sporadically revisited after that. It is #307 of “no less than four hundred and twenty-five shellmounds on or near the shoreline of the Bay” recorded by Archaeologist N.C. Nelson in 1907 and 1908.

2 sacred resting sites of their early ancestors.” In 1950, a University of California Berkeley archeologists removed “numerous artifacts and 95 human burials” from the Shellmound. Other findings from the Shellmound include a section of the floor of a “large, presumably ceremonial house,” firepits, burials revealing ceremonial red paint and “mortuary goods,” animal burials, food debris, and artifacts providing information about diet and means of food collection, shell beads, and stone and bone tools. The decision approving the West Berkeley Shellmound as a City landmark states that the Shellmound “is most highly significant to native descendants as a sacred burial ground,” its “cultural resource lies in its age, the fact that it is the oldest and one of the largest mounds established around the bay, that it represents ancient culture, that it was built by the earliest humans in the area,” that “it is recognized that this historical resource has yielded and is likely to yield information ‘important in prehistory or history,’ ” and that “the Shellmound plays an important role in the history of the changing shoreline and the change in attitude towards the use of natural resources.” The landmark designation does not include any above ground buildings or structures; it included “the site itself and all items found subsurface including artifacts from the earliest native habitation, such as but not limited to native tools, ornaments, and human burials.” Nothing remains of the Shellmound above ground. As described in a November 2016 Draft Environmental Impact Report (DEIR) prepared for the Berkeley Planning and Development Department (Department) in connection with appellants’ 2015 application, by the mid-20th century, “most of the Shellmound had been systematically demolished by development and related ground disturbance. Shellmound materials were scattered throughout the surrounding area as agricultural fertilizer and for road-building and paving.”

3 A 1950 survey reported that the “original dimensions and exact limits of the Shellmound could not be determined because most of it had been removed,” but it “seems to have covered an elliptical area, conservatively estimated at 350 x 600 feet, with its long axis paralleling Strawberry Creek.” The portion remaining in 1950 measured 45 by 100 feet. Its highest point was 15 feet above ground, but it had been higher, as “the peak had been cut down and leveled to serve as the base for a water tank,” and it extended three feet below ground. One of the questions in this case is whether the Shellmound was actually located on the project site. According to the historical reviews documented in the administrative record, a 1949 survey placed the Shellmound between Hearst and University and between Second and Fourth Streets. A report prepared for appellants in January 2017, by Geosphere Consultants, Inc., contains several historical maps of the area, including an 1856 United States Coast and Geodetic Survey map showing one shellmound to the east of the project site and one to the west of the site; the same is true on a 1957 United States Geological Survey map. Based on these and other maps, as well as exploratory borings, the report concluded the shellmounds were in “close proximity to” but did not “encroach onto the project site.” Graphics and video consultants for interveners Confederated Villages of Lisjan (CVL), using the 1856 and 1957 maps and a 2018 “OpenStreetMap,” created a series of maps that show the shellmound to the west of the project site “mostly within the block west of the Project site” but extending into the northwest corner of the project site. A map from a 1907 manuscript shows the Shellmound on much of the project site and extending to the east of Fourth Street.

4 As related in a 2002 “Cultural Resources Inventory” prepared for the City by Garcia and Associates (lead author Christopher Dore), in 1999 Allen Pastron of Archeo-Tec placed and evaluated borings within the northeastern quadrant of the Spenger’s parking lot, near the intersection of Fourth Street and Hearst Avenue, and found “no evidence to suggest that remnants of the West Berkeley Shellmound exist” in that area. Pastron conducted additional testing in 2000, and found two “culturally sensitive areas” containing “prehistoric deposits” of silt or silty clay “interspersed with flecks of charcoal, a relatively small quantity of fish and mammal bone, a few pieces of fire- affected rock, several possible stone artifacts and ubiquitous amounts of shell,” one in the northwestern quadrant of the parking lot at depths of five to nine feet, and the other in the east-central portion of the site at depths of six to nine feet.

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Ruegg & Ellsworth v. City of Berkeley, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruegg-ellsworth-v-city-of-berkeley-calctapp-2021.