SummerHill Winchester LLC v. Campbell Union School Dist.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 20, 2018
DocketH043253
StatusPublished

This text of SummerHill Winchester LLC v. Campbell Union School Dist. (SummerHill Winchester LLC v. Campbell Union School Dist.) 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
SummerHill Winchester LLC v. Campbell Union School Dist., (Cal. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Filed 12/4/18; Certified for Publication 12/20/18 (order attached)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

SUMMERHILL WINCHESTER LLC, H043253 (Santa Clara County Plaintiff and Respondent, Super. Ct. No. CV245585)

v.

CAMPBELL UNION SCHOOL DISTRICT et al.,

Defendants and Appellants.

Appellants Campbell Union School District (CUSD) and Campbell Union School District Governing Board (the Board) appeal from the trial court’s invalidation of the Board’s 2012 resolution enacting a fee on new residential development under Education Code section 17620. CUSD and the Board contend that the trial court could not invalidate the Board’s resolution and order that respondent SummerHill Winchester, LLC’s fees be refunded because the Board properly relied on a fee study that used a reasonable methodology to calculate the fee. We conclude that the fee study did not contain the data required to properly calculate a development fee. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s judgment. I. Background Education Code section 17620 authorizes a school district “to levy a fee, charge, dedication, or other requirement against any [new residential] construction within the boundaries of the district, for the purpose of funding the construction or reconstruction of school facilities . . . .” (Ed. Code, § 17620, subd. (a)(1).) These fees are known as 1 “Level 1” fees. A school district “shall do all of the following: [¶] (1) Identify the purpose of the fee. [¶] (2) Identify the use to which the fee is to be put. If the use is financing public facilities, the facilities shall be identified. That identification may, but need not, be made by reference to a capital improvement plan as specified in Section 65403 or 66002, may be made in applicable general or specific plan requirements, or may be made in other public documents that identify the public facilities for which the fee is charged. [¶] (3) Determine how there is a reasonable relationship between the fee’s use and the type of development project on which the fee is imposed. [¶] (4) Determine how there is a reasonable relationship between the need for the public facility and the type of development project on which the fee is imposed.” (Gov. Code, § 66001, subd. (a).) In February 2012, Jack Schreder & Associates prepared a “Level 1 Developer Fee 2 Study” (the fee study) for CUSD. In 2012, CUSD had three middle schools and nine elementary schools. The fee study calculated that, using statewide “loading factors,” CUSD’s capacity was 7,373 students. CUSD’s enrollment already exceeded this calculated capacity by 155 students in 2009/2010. An additional 24 students were added the following school year (2010/2011), and another 132 additional students were added in

1 Level 2 and Level 3 fees, which are not at issue in this case, are authorized by Government Code sections 65995.5 and 65995.7, rather than Education Code section 17620. 2 Although the fee study was over 50 pages long, most of its length was consumed by boilerplate and some it was devoted to commercial development. The key portions for our purposes are quite brief.

2 2011/2012. Thus, at the time of the fee study, CUSD’s enrollment already exceeded the fee study’s calculated capacity by 311 students. The fee study also projected future enrollment growth, but these projections did not take into account any new residential construction. The fee study projected that 359 additional students would enroll in CUSD’s schools over the next five years after the 2011/2012 school year. The fee study devoted little attention to future new residential construction. There was just a single paragraph addressing how much new residential construction was expected within CUSD’s boundaries in the next five years. It stated: “The City of San Jose, City of Campbell and the County of Santa Clara Planning Departments were contacted regarding current and future residential development projects within the District’s boundaries. According to the planning departments, there are in excess of 133 residential units that could be constructed over the next five years. The proposed units were not included in the enrollment projection to augment the projection.” Schreder had actually obtained “quantified” information from only the City of Campbell. The County of Santa Clara provided no information, and the City of San Jose had no “quantifiable” 3 information to provide. The fee study projected that “it will cost the District an average of $22,039 to house each additional student in new facilities.” This figure was based on a projected $12.8 million cost to build a new 600-student elementary school and a projected $24.4 million cost to build a new 1,000-student middle school. However, CUSD and the Board conceded that they “do not contend that there is a need to build two new schools for

3 This information was contained in responses from CUSD and the Board to special interrogatories. CUSD and the Board do not and did not object to the trial court’s or our consideration of this evidence. Our record contains no document identified as the administrative record in this case.

3 4 1,600 students for an expected capacity increase by 2016-17 of 359 students.” Using statewide averages, the fee study calculated a “student yield factor” of .5 students per single-family residential unit. It used a real estate database to estimate an average residential unit size of 1,773 square feet. Using these figures, the fee study calculated a per square foot fee for new residential construction of $6.21. $22,039 (per student cost for the two new schools) multiplied by .5 (students per unit) and divided by 1773 (square feet per unit) equals $6.21. Since the statutory maximum for a Level 1 fee in 2012 was $3.20 per square foot, the fee study asserted that its calculations supported imposition of 5 the maximum fee. As CUSD had a fee sharing agreement with the high school district under which CUSD received 70 percent of any such fee, CUSD’s share was $2.24 per square foot. In March 2012, the Board, relying on the fee study, adopted a resolution imposing a fee of $2.24 per square foot on new residential construction and making numerous findings. The Board found that CUSD’s enrollment “presently exceeds capacity, is at capacity, or will exceed capacity.” It also found that new residential construction “will increase the need for” school facilities. The Board found: “Substantial residential development . . . is projected within the District’s boundaries and the enrollment produced thereby will exceed the capacity of the schools of the District. As a result, conditions of overcrowding, exist or will exist, within the District, which will impair the normal functioning of the District’s educational programs.” It further found that the fees proposed by the fee study were “for the purposes of providing adequate school facilities” and “will be used for construction and/or reconstruction of school facilities . . . .” The

4 This concession was made in a response by CUSD and the Board to a special interrogatory. CUSD and the Board did not object to this evidence in the trial court nor do they on appeal. 5 Government Code section 65995 sets the maximum amount that may be levied per square foot of residential construction. (Gov. Code, § 65995, subd. (b)(1).)

4 Board concluded that there was a “reasonable relationship” between the fees and “the need for school facilities created by the types of development projects on which the fees are imposed.” The Board declared that it had considered other possible revenue sources. SummerHill Winchester, LLC (SummerHill) owns a 110-unit residential development project in the City of Santa Clara that is within CUSD’s boundaries. In 2012 and 2013, SummerHill tendered to CUSD under protest development fees of $499,976.96.

II.

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Bluebook (online)
SummerHill Winchester LLC v. Campbell Union School Dist., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/summerhill-winchester-llc-v-campbell-union-school-dist-calctapp-2018.