Scrutton v. County of Sacramento

275 Cal. App. 2d 412, 79 Cal. Rptr. 872, 1969 Cal. App. LEXIS 1931
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 4, 1969
DocketCiv. 11856
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 275 Cal. App. 2d 412 (Scrutton v. County of Sacramento) 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
Scrutton v. County of Sacramento, 275 Cal. App. 2d 412, 79 Cal. Rptr. 872, 1969 Cal. App. LEXIS 1931 (Cal. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

FRIEDMAN, Acting P. J.

Mrs. Bessie Scrutton, the plaintiff, brought a declaratory relief action against the County of Sacramento and appeals from a summary judgment favoring the county.

Mrs. Scrutton owns a parcel of land in suburban Sacramento County. Its 350-foot north boundary fronts on Whitney Avenue, an east-west arterial boulevard. Its 650-foot eastern *415 edge borders a partially improved street called Foster Way. In May 1964 Mrs. Scrutton filed an application with the county planning commission seeking to have the property rezoned from agricultural to multiple family residential to permit its development for residential apartment units.

The planning commission recommended that the application be approved subject to conditions. Section 23(H) of the county’s basic zoning ordinance provides: “The Board of Supervisors may impose conditions to the zoning reclassification of property where it finds that said conditions must be imposed so as not to create problems inimical to the public health, safety and general welfare of the County of Sacramento.”

Among the requirements proposed by the planning commission were that Mrs. Scrutton dedicate a 10-foot- right of way for widening Whitney Avenue and improve it with pavement, sidewalk, curbs and gutters; that on the east edge of her property she dedicate a 27-foot strip to form the west half of Foster Way; that she join an assessment district which would improve the west half of Foster Way with paving, sidewalk, curbs and gutters.

The board of supervisors then held a hearing to consider the application. The board expressed agreement with the conditions recommended by the planning commission, except that it imposed the additional requirement that Mrs. Scrutton pave Foster Way at her own expense instead of financing the work through a neighborhood assessment district. Before adopting the rezoning ordinance sought by Mrs. Scrutton, the board of supervisors tendered a deed and contract for her signature. According to the board’s usual procedures, it would not formally adopt the rezoning ordinance until the applicant returned the executed deed and contract. Under the contract preferred Mrs. Scrutton, she would commit herself to comply with all the conditions imposed by the county, and any failure on her part would cause the property’s reversion to agricultural zoning.

Mrs. Scrutton had no objection to the county’s requirement for dedication and improvement of the Whitney Avenue frontage. Although she had originally been willing to go along with the demand for dedicating a 27-foot strip along Foster Way, she objected to the supervisors’ demand that she pave the latter at her own expense (amounting to about $13,000). She refused to sign the proposed contract, then filed this delcaratory relief action to test the validity of the super *416 visors’ demands for dedicating the Foster Way frontage and paving it at her own expense.

Mrs. Scrutton’s complaint alleges that Whitney Avenue on the north will provide the sole vehicular access to her planned apartment development; that she does not plan on access to and from Foster Way; that the property across the street on Foster Way is owned by a school district which has dedicated and paved a 27-foot longitudinal strip forming the eastern half of Foster Way; that her action in dedicating and paving a 27-foot strip as the western half of Foster Way will not benefit her own property or her proposed apartment development. Her complaint also pointed to two development-ripe parcels owned by others to the south of her property, which were without northward access to Whitney Avenue but would, if the county’s demands are met, be supplied with such access.

Although somewhat indirectly, Mrs. Scrutton’s complaint charges that the Foster Way improvement project is unreasonably aimed at accommodating public needs unconnected with her own apartment development. The county filed an answer denying her claim of lack of benefit from the Foster Way widening project. The county’s answer extolled the Foster Way project as a benefit to Mrs. Scrutton’s property, but was silent as to the project’s utility for public uses unrelated to her apartments. The county moved for a summary judgment, supporting its motion by affidavits averring that the Foster Way project would provide on-street parking for Mrs. Scrutton’s tenants and assist in fire protection. Like the county’s answer, its affidavits were reticent on the project’s utility for unrelated public services, conceding that “this benefit inures to all property generally, including the Plaintiff’s property.” The trial court granted the summary judgment motion. Its judgment upholds the validity of section 23(H) of the county ordinance and declares its validity as applied to the facts. Mrs. Scrutton’s appeal attacks both these conclusions.

Chapter 4 of title 7 of the Government Code (§§ 65800-65907) establishes standards for the adoption and administration of zoning regulations by counties and nonchartered cities. Among such standards is that of uniformity within land use zones. “All such regulations shall be uniform for each class or kind of building or use of land throughout each zone . . . .” (Gov. Code, § 65852.) Another provision of the state law recognizes that variances may be granted subject to individu *417 alized conditions. (Gov. Code, § 65906.) There is no statute specifically authorizing the imposition of conditions upon rezoning individual parcels.

“ Conditional zoning” is an appropriate phrase to describe a zoning change which permits use of a particular property subject to conditions not generally applicable to land similarly zoned. (1 Anderson, American Law of Zoning (1968) § 8.20, pp. 610-614.) Plaintiff contends that the conditional rezoning attempted here exceeds Sacramento County’s authority under state law and violates that law's uniformity demand.

County zoning regulations are a manifestation of the local police power conferred by article XI, section 11, of the state Constitution, not an exercise of authority delegated by statute. (People v. Johnson, 129 Cal.App.2d 1, 5-6 [277 P.2d 45] ; see Miller v. Board of Public Works, 195 Cal.477, 483 [234 P. 381, 38 A.L.R.. 1479] .) 1 In their intrinsic character and by express declaration the state laws on county and city zoning are designed as standardizing limitations over local zoning practices, not as specific grants of authority to legislate. 2 The state statutes ’ silence on conditional rezoning is not a denial of power to pursue that practice. The practice must find its own justification as an appropriate exercise of the local police power. 3

So-called “Euclidean” zoning divides the community into homogeneous land use zones. Individual parcels *418 may often be allowed a justified escape from this rigid grouping without detriment to zoning objectives. Rezoning an individual parcel is simply one of a variety of techniques for achieving flexibility in land use. (See 1 Anderson, op. cit.,

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Bluebook (online)
275 Cal. App. 2d 412, 79 Cal. Rptr. 872, 1969 Cal. App. LEXIS 1931, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scrutton-v-county-of-sacramento-calctapp-1969.