Summit Media, LLC v. City of Los Angeles

240 Cal. App. 4th 171, 192 Cal. Rptr. 3d 662, 2015 Cal. App. LEXIS 783
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 8, 2015
DocketB255050
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 240 Cal. App. 4th 171 (Summit Media, LLC v. City of Los Angeles) 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
Summit Media, LLC v. City of Los Angeles, 240 Cal. App. 4th 171, 192 Cal. Rptr. 3d 662, 2015 Cal. App. LEXIS 783 (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Opinion

GRIMES, J.—

SUMMARY

This is the second appeal in a dispute among several outdoor advertising companies and the City of Los Angeles over certain billboards with digital displays. In the first appeal, we affirmed the trial court’s finding that a settlement agreement between two of the companies and the city, allowing the companies to digitize many of their existing billboards, was illegal and void, because a municipal ordinance expressly prohibited “ ‘alterations or enlargements’ ” of such signs. (Summit Media LLC v. City of Los Angeles (2012) 211 Cal.App.4th 921, 924 [150 Cal.Rptr.3d 574] (Summit Media I).) We also concluded, contrary to the trial court’s judgment, that it was necessary to revoke all digital conversion permits granted under the illegal settlement agreement. (Ibid.) We directed the trial court “to amend its order so that it invalidates all digital conversion permits issued by the city to real parties under the settlement agreement.” (Id. at pp. 941-942.)

The trial court, after hearings, promptly amended its order, declaring the digital conversion permits invalid. The trial court’s order also identified the signs at issue, and ordered the immediate discontinuation of digital use of the signs. In compliance with the trial court’s order (the April 2013 order), the parties turned off the digital displays, and the signs went dark.

Plaintiff Summit Media, LLC — the company that successfully challenged the illegal settlement agreement — then filed a motion seeking, among other things, an order that “[a]ll digital displays and sign structures” identified in the April 2013 order “shall be demolished and removed . . . .” Real parties in interest Clear Channel Outdoor, Inc., and Outfront Media Inc. (formerly CBS Outdoor, LLC), on the other hand, wished to resume the use of their sign structures to display static advertising, as they had before the illegal digital *175 conversion. Plaintiff also sought attorney fees under Code of Civil Procedure section 1021.5, the “private attorney general” attorney fee statute (section 1021.5), for the legal work that successfully voided the illegal agreement and rid the city of most digital billboards.

After extensive litigation, the trial court denied plaintiff’s motion to demolish the signs and denied the attorney fee motion. Plaintiff timely appealed.

We affirm the trial court’s orders.

FACTS

1. The Background

We will not repeat here the facts surrounding the initial disputes that led to our decision in Summit Media I. The interested reader may find the details in that decision. For our purposes here, this brief summary should suffice.

Plaintiff and real parties in interest are all engaged in the lucrative outdoor advertising business in the city, owning and maintaining numerous “off-site signs” — billboards in locations other than at a property owner’s business. In April 2002, the city established a permanent, general ban on new off-site signs (with exceptions that are irrelevant to this appeal), and a ban on “alterations or enlargements of legally existing off-site signs” (the 2002 sign ban). This sign ban, along with other ordinances calling for inspections and inspection fees for off-site signs, generated a maelstrom of lawsuits in state and federal courts filed by real parties in interest, plaintiff, and others.

Eventually, in September 2006, the city and real parties in interest entered into an agreement settling their disputes. The settlement agreement exempted real parties in interest from the 2002 sign ban, the inspection program, and numerous other zoning and building laws regulating off-site signs. The agreement required the city to issue new permits allowing real parties in interest to modernize a large number of their off-site signs, despite the ban on that kind of modification, and whether or not the signs violated present or prospective building and zoning ordinances. The settlement agreement also exempted real parties in interest from the usual procedures for obtaining permits. Real parties in interest immediately undertook significant modifications of their off-site signs, otherwise prohibited by the 2002 sign ban, including the conversion of existing static, wood and vinyl signs to digital displays. (We describe the scope of the modifications more fully post.)

In August 2008, plaintiff filed this lawsuit, challenging the settlement agreement as illegal and void. While that litigation was pending, the city *176 enacted an ordinance, effective in August 2009, explicitly banning off-site signs with digital displays. (The ordinance’s “whereas” clauses indicated that real parties in interest’s digital conversions were “causing unanticipated negative impacts including negative impacts on residential neighborhoods ....”)

As noted above, the trial court granted plaintiff’s motion for a writ of mandate, ordering the city to set aside and cease implementing the settlement agreement. Real parties in interest appealed, proffering numerous bases for error in voiding the settlement agreement. Plaintiff cross-appealed, contending the trial court should also have revoked the digital conversion permits the city issued in violation of the 2002 sign ban. Plaintiff argued: “The de minimis burden that might be shouldered by [real parties in interest] if they must apply for new permits under the same laws that apply to everyone, and/or remove the digital displays, is far outweighed by public policy requiring fair and consistent application of the zoning laws. No one asked the Superior Court or this Court to order that the digital displays be destroyed. This is not a matter of demolition of a structure or the loss of a property right. Rather, [real parties in interest] must go through the process that everyone else must use to obtain a sign permit.” Plaintiff concluded by asking this court to “enter judgment invalidating all digital conversion permits issued by the City to [real parties in interest] under the Settlement Agreement.”

We agreed with plaintiff, concluding the settlement agreement was illegal and void, and there was no legal basis for the trial court’s refusal to revoke digital conversion permits issued under an illegal agreement and in violation of unambiguous municipal ordinances. We ordered the trial court to amend its order to invalidate all digital conversion permits issued under the settlement agreement. (Summit Media I, supra, 211 Cal.App.4th at p. 942.)

2. Proceedings After the Remittitur in Summit Media I

Our remittitur issued on March 14, 2013, and the parties immediately began filing proposed orders and other papers in the trial court.

a. The April 2013 order

After hearings, the trial court amended its November 4, 2009 order granting the writ of mandate.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
240 Cal. App. 4th 171, 192 Cal. Rptr. 3d 662, 2015 Cal. App. LEXIS 783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/summit-media-llc-v-city-of-los-angeles-calctapp-2015.