Thomson v. Call

699 P.2d 316, 38 Cal. 3d 633, 214 Cal. Rptr. 139, 1985 Cal. LEXIS 278
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 23, 1985
DocketS.F. 24693
StatusPublished
Cited by124 cases

This text of 699 P.2d 316 (Thomson v. Call) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomson v. Call, 699 P.2d 316, 38 Cal. 3d 633, 214 Cal. Rptr. 139, 1985 Cal. LEXIS 278 (Cal. 1985).

Opinions

Opinion

KAUS, J.

The truism that a person cannot serve two masters simultaneously finds expression in California’s statutory doctrine that no public official shall be financially interested in any contract made by that person or by any body or board of which he or she is a member.1 Plaintiffs in this taxpayers’ suit challenge the validity of a transaction in which defendant Cebert Properties, Inc., purchased a parcel of land from defendants Hubert F. Call (Call) and Ruth L. Call, his wife, for $258,000 and then conveyed the parcel to the City of Albany (city)—while Call was a member of the Albany City Council.

The defendants named in the complaint included the city, the Calls, various council members who served with Call, Cebert Properties, Inc., and [638]*638three other corporations. After a nonjury trial, the court found (1) Call’s financial interest in the transaction violated Government Code section 1090;2 (2) the Calls were liable to the city for the $258,000 they received from the sale, plus interest; (3) the city was nevertheless to retain title to the land; and (4) relief was to be denied as to the other defendants. Judgment was entered accordingly.

The Calls appeal from the judgment insofar as it holds them liable to the city for the $258,000 plus interest. Plaintiffs appeal from it insofar as it denies relief as to the corporate defendants.3 These appeals present the question of what remedies are available once a section 1090 violation is found and the fully performed underlying contract is adjudged void.

Facts

The summit of Albany Hill commands a panoramic view of Albany and San Francisco Bay. In and before 1972, IGC owned 36 acres of land at the westerly base and on the adjacent slope of the hill. That slope and the summit were undeveloped in 1972. The land at the summit consisted of four contiguous parcels: a 1.1-acre parcel owned by the Calls; a 2-acre parcel which was the uppermost part of the 36 acres owned by IGC; a 2.2-acre parcel owned by a partnership (Albany Hill Associates); and a 2-acre parcel owned by Golden Gate Hill Development Co.

In 1972, all of these lands were within a hill control (HC) district established by the city’s zoning ordinance. IGC’s 36 acres were zoned R1HC (for single family dwellings) and the Calls’ parcel was zoned R3HC (for high-rise, high-density residential units). Under a city ordinance, no building permit for the erection of any structure on HC district land could be issued unless a use permit had first been obtained from the city council.

Planning to construct a 2,500-unit high-rise residential complex on its 36-acre parcel, IGC applied to the city council for a use permit in July 1972. This application included a request that the parcel be rezoned from R1HC to R3HC. IGC’s project proposal met with general approval at subsequent [639]*639public meetings. Members of the council repeatedly stated that any pending use permit should be subject to a condition requiring IGC to dedicate land on Albany Hill for use as parks and permanent open space.

In August 1972, the city council considered a parks and recreation commission proposal that a site for a municipal park be acquired at the summit of Albany Hill.4 The council voted to “go on record as generally concurring” with the park proposal. Councilman Call, though present at the meeting, did not participate in the discussion of the proposal and he abstained from the vote.

A series of offers, counteroffers, and negotiations between IGC and the city began in October 1972, when the city attorney and the city’s administrative officer proposed certain conditions to be included in the use permit. These included a requirement that IGC dedicate its two-acre summit parcel and a creekside parcel at the base of the hill to the city.

IGC rejected this condition on November 3, 1972, and proposed its so-called “$600,000 plan.” This plan required IGC to “allocate” $600,000 of its own money for the acquisition of land for Overlook Park; to spend that sum, or less, for the acquisition of such land by IGC through “private negotiation”; to convey any land so acquired to the city, for use as part of the park; and to pay to the city any unexpended balance of the $600,000 for use in “condemning by eminent domain” any land required for the park but not acquired from IGC pursuant to the $600,000 plan.5

On November 10, 1972, the city offered an alternative proposal, at the same time asking IGC to “reiterate” the $600,000 plan outlined in its letter [640]*640of November 3. In a letter dated November 12, 1972, IGC reiterated the $600,000 plan, offering to expend the $600,000 in acquiring additional property for the proposed Overlook Park, all at or above the 200-foot contour of the hill, and to donate its own 2-acre parcel at the summit. The only land at or above the 200-foot contour not already owned by IGC consisted of the contiguous parcels owned by the Calls, Albany Hill Associates, and Golden Gate Hill Development Co.

The city council acted on IGC’s application at a meeting on November 13, 1972. In the first of three successive votes, the council amended Albany’s zoning ordinance to rezone IGC’s thirty-six acres from R1HC to R3HC. Next, it voted to grant the use permit to IGC on specified conditions which included conveyance of IGC’s two-acre parcel to the city “for the sole purpose of being a permanent park and open space for the City.”6 The $600,000 plan—not listed as a condition of the use permit—was reached in the council’s third action, when a majority voted to accept IGC’s “offer” to allocate $600,000 “for the purpose of purchase of additional private property to encompass the proposed Overlook Park . . . .” Call was present at this meeting. He voted to rezone IGC’s property and to grant the use permit. He abstained from the vote that the city “accept the offer” of IGC relative to the $600,000 plan.

It should be noted that on several occasions Call asked the city attorney whether or not he could speak on certain issues or vote on certain issues pending before the council, and on such occasions he was advised not to speak or vote if real property in which he had a financial interest was involved in the pending issues. Call generally followed such advice when it was sought and given. In this instance, he was told by the city attorney that he could discuss and vote on IGC’s applications for rezoning and for the use permit.

Shortly thereafter, the city’s administrative officer made it clear to IGC that the first building permit would not be issued until land had been acquired under the $600,000 plan. IGC then obtained appraisals of the three summit parcels owned by the Calls, Albany Hill Associates, and Golden Gate Hill Development Co. Using the results of these appraisals, it extended offers to the respective owners. None was accepted.

IGC’s appraiser appraised the Calls’ 1.1-acre parcel at $63,800. Responding to the $63,800 offer for his property, Call wrote to IGC, describing [641]*641recent sales of “comparable zoned properties” in Albany. He stated: “While we have no interest in selling at this time, we would be agreeable to having the property go into a park for the City of Albany. From the comparables listed above, our property is clearly worth $360,000 .... In view of the above mentioned, your offer is unacceptable.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
699 P.2d 316, 38 Cal. 3d 633, 214 Cal. Rptr. 139, 1985 Cal. LEXIS 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomson-v-call-cal-1985.