Van Wagner Communication, Inc. v. City of Los Angeles

100 Cal. Rptr. 2d 922, 84 Cal. App. 4th 499
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 30, 2000
DocketB135654
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 100 Cal. Rptr. 2d 922 (Van Wagner Communication, Inc. 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
Van Wagner Communication, Inc. v. City of Los Angeles, 100 Cal. Rptr. 2d 922, 84 Cal. App. 4th 499 (Cal. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

Opinion

ORTEGA, J.

This appeal concerns the revocation of appellant’s permit to erect a billboard on a comer lot in West Los Angeles. The appeal presents a *502 question of law concerning the applicability of a city ordinance requiring a 600-foot space between off-site signs 1 of a particular size “that are located on the same side of the same street.” (L.A. Mun. Code, § 91.6218.4, subd. (4) (spacing ordinance).) 2 In this case, the proposed sign would be within 600 feet of an existing sign which is around the comer and on a different street. We conclude, as a matter of law, that because the two signs are located on different streets, the spacing ordinance does not apply to these particular signs. Accordingly, the trial court erred in upholding the administrative decision to revoke appellant’s permit. We reverse in part and affirm in part with directions.

Administrative Proceedings

On July 1, 1996, the City of Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety (Department) issued a permit authorizing appellant Van Wagner Communications, Inc., to erect the disputed off-site sign on the northeast end (at the intersection of Bentley Avenue and Little Santa Monica Boulevard) of a comer lot. Around the comer and diagonally across from the proposed sign, on the southwest end of the same lot, is an existing billboard that fronts Sepulveda Boulevard. The issue is whether Van Wagner’s permit was issued in violation of the 600-foot spacing ordinance for signs of a particular size “that are located on the same side of the same street.” (§ 91.6218.4, subd. (4).)

A. First Administrative Appeal

A shopping center tenant who objected to Van Wagner’s proposed sign, Koo Koo Roo, Inc., filed an administrative appeal challenging Van Wagner’s permit. After the Department considered and rejected Koo Koo Roo’s appeal, the matter went before the City of Los Angeles Board of Building and Safety Commissioners (Board). After a public hearing attended by many residents who also opposed Van Wagner’s permit, the Board concluded that the “number and proxim[ity] of the off-site signs are onerous and should not be allowed, and the permit therefore, was issued in error.” On the other hand, however, the Board stopped short of revoking the permit. The Board concluded, “Since both signs are technically viewed from different streets, *503 the argument has been made justifying the Department[’]s decision to issue the permit. Therefore, no abuse of discretion by the Department is found.”

B. Revocation of the Permit

Although not required by the Board to do so, the Department nevertheless decided to revoke Van Wagner’s permit. By letter dated October 22, 1996, the Department notified Van Wagner of its intent to revoke the permit under section 98.0601, subdivision (a)(2), which states: “The Department shall have the authority to revoke any permit . . . whenever such action was granted in error or in violation of other provisions of the Code and conditions are such that the action should not have been allowed.”

C. Vested Rights Determination by the Department

Upon receiving the notice of revocation, Van Wagner asked the Department to reconsider its decision and find that Van Wagner had acquired a vested right to the permit by virtue of having commenced construction in good faith reliance on the permit. Van Wagner submitted invoices allegedly representing expenditures of over 60 percent of the total construction costs. The Department ruled in Van Wagner’s favor, finding that Van Wagner had acquired a vested right to the permit.

D. Second Administrative Appeal

Koo Koo Roo then brought a second administrative appeal to the Board, challenging the Department’s right to reconsider a matter that had already been decided by the Board. Koo Koo Roo further protested the lack of a hearing on Van Wagner’s vested rights claim.

At the second Board hearing in this case, the mayor’s representative appeared to express the mayor’s “public[] objection] to the authorization of this sign.” The representative stated: “The neighborhoods have articulated to the Mayor their objection to this, and so has the council office, and the Mayor joins with them in concurring with that objection.”

Also appearing at the second Board hearing was Colin Kumabi, 3 the departmental employee who had worked on Van Wagner’s permit application. Kumabi, who had spoken at Koo Koo Roo’s first administrative appeal, explained that one of his prior statements was being taken out of context by the Board. Kumabi’s prior statement was (according to Robert Burke for *504 Koo Koo Roo) that if Kumabi had known about the existing sign on the site, he would not have issued the permit to Van Wagner for a second sign. At Koo Koo Roo’s second administrative appeal, Kumabi explained that his prior “statement was taken out of context.” Kumabi explained that his statement was strictly in response to a hypothetical question concerning two parallel signs that were primarily viewed from the same street. Kumabi stated that these two signs, however, are neither parallel nor primarily viewed from the same street. According to Kumabi, the Department staff recommendation was that the permit was not issued in error.

Richard Holguin, chief of the Department’s engineering bureau, concurred with Kumabi that the Department had properly issued the permit. According to Holguin, the Department’s long-standing policy was to interpret the 600-foot spacing ordinance as being inapplicable to signs that front two different streets of a comer lot. Holguin stated, “Because of our [Department’s] long-standing guidelines, the way that we enforce this section [(§ 91.6218.4, subd. (4))], you could end up with these comer sites that have these advertising signs on both streets and not consider them to be on the same street.” Hqlguin also stated that the Department knew of the existing sign on the lot when it issued the permit: “Yeah, we went out and we made the determination that, yeah, there’s another sign, but it’s not within 600 feet because it was on a different street.” Holguin further clarified: “What we did is that in this particular instance, each sign was treated separately. We made a determination that the existing sign serviced Sepulveda Boulevard. [¶] . . . [¶] . . . Then this new sign was going to service, if you will, Santa Monica Boulevard. It was a different street. The 600-feet spacing did not enter into it.”

Ron Cipriani, a Van Wagner employee who “sat on [the] study when they wrote the [spacing] ordinance in 1986,” told the Board that the city’s sign ordinances were written to permit a maximum of “four signs within 150 f[eet] of an intersection.” The 150-foot intersection spacing ordinance is a radius-based ordinance that allows, “[n]o more than four off-site signs [to] be located at the intersection of two or more streets when such signs are located within 150 feet of the intersection of two street frontages.” (§ 91.6218.2, subd.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 Cal. Rptr. 2d 922, 84 Cal. App. 4th 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-wagner-communication-inc-v-city-of-los-angeles-calctapp-2000.