A Malibu property owner can't rely on the so-called "Calvo exclusion" - which exempts single-family homes from Coastal Commission jurisdiction - because the property owner had previously agreed to submit to the commission's control, the Second District Court of Appeal has ruled.
"Appellant has taken inconsistent positions in this litigation, first waiving the right to further litigate the Calvo exclusion and agreeing to obey any Commission order regarding restoration of the property, and later asserting the Calvo exclusion and denying any obligation to obey Commission orders," the court wrote.
It is the second Calvo exclusion case handed down by California appellate courts in recent months. In December, the Second District Court of Appeal re-affirmed a ruling to overturned a $2 million takings judgment against the Coastal Commission as the result of a jurisdictional dispute based on the Calvo exclusion.
The case began in 1991, when the Coastal Commission sued property owner Amir Tahmassebi, charging that he had graded and filled his land and installed a culvert without seeking a permit from the commission, which has jurisdiction over coastal property. A year later, Tahmassebi and the Coastal Commission stipulated a judgment in which the Tahmassebi greed to obtain various permits, pay a fine of $15,000 and restore the property to its original state, if restoration was necessary, within 30 days of filing the restoration application.
In November of 1994, more than two years after the stipulated judgment, the Coastal Commission ordered Tahmassebi to restore the property. In January of 1998, the Commission went to court to enforce the motion for enforcement of the judgment. The Commission alleged that Tahmassebi had not restored the property - as the Commission's order required - but instead had filed a restoration application that called not for restoration but rather called for the retention of the illegal development project in place. The Commission also charged that Tahmassebi had engaged in "false promises" and delays but had never complied.
L.A. County Superior Court Judge Daniel A. Curry ruled in favor of the Coastal Commission, but Tahmassebi appealed. His main argument on appeal was that the Calvo exemption applied to his house. The Calvo exemption waives the requirement for a coastal development permit in the case of single-family homes which meet specified criteria dealing with location and water supply.
Los Angeles County had, indeed, issued a Calvo exemption to Tahmassebi. But the Coastal Commission argued that the county had later ordered the property owner to seek a coastal permit.
The Calvo exemption issue had been part of the case since the beginning - a fact that worked against Tahmassebi. The Second District ruled that Tahmassebi had waived his right to further litigate the Calvo exemption when he signed the stipulated judgment against him in 1992. Among other things, the Second District rejected Tahmassebi's claim that jurisdiction - that is, the Coastal Commission's jurisdiction over the property - cannot be conferred by the consent of the property owner. The Second District ruled that the Coastal Act gave Judge Curry clear subject matter jurisdiction over the issue, and furthermore argued that Tahmassebi's real beef was not with subject matter jurisdiction but with his allegation that the Coastal Commission exceeded that jurisdiction.
The case was originally filed in October but was ordered published in January by the Supreme Court.
The Case:
California Coastal Commission v. Tahmassebi, No. B122210, 99 Daily Journal 484 (issued October 2, 1998, ordered published January 13, 1999).
The Lawyers:
For Tahmassebi: Thomas N. Banks, (310) 451-8831
For California Coastal Commission: Daniel A. Olivas, Deputy Attorney General, (213) 346-2688.
In a case with potentially widespread significance, a sharply divided California Supreme Court has upheld the Santa Monica rent control law against an inverse condemnation claim.
In concluding that rent control cases are subject to a different level of judicial scrutiny than cases involving exactions and other economic aspects of land-use regulation, the Supreme Court has created the possibility that different types of inverse condemnation cases will be treated differently in court. Espec...
Ruling on wide-ranging issues in three separate cases filed by the same business, the Fourth District Court of Appeal has upheld a Newport Beach adult business ordinance as constitutional and concluded that the city did not violate the business's constitutional rights by denying some permits and revoking others.
As the court stated in its decision, the case is about "appropriate ways in which to distinguish a theater from a restaurant - something with which the general public seems to have ...
The First District Court of Appeal has overturned the Hayward City Council's decision to adopt a proposed ballot initiative reaffirming open-space designations within the city and subjecting future open-space zone changes to a vote. The court concluded that because the signature-gathering effort was legally flawed, the council did not have the right to adopt the initiative as a city ordinance.
The decision - a reversal of the trial judge's ruling - is a victory for Mervyn's, the retail chain, which ha...
Claims that Sacramento County violated the California Environmental Quality Act while approving a commercial development have been dismissed by the Third District Court of Appeal because the project opponent did not submit a written request for a hearing within 90 days of filing a lawsuit.
The attorney for opponent Forster-Gill, Inc., argued that a telephone call to the court clerk within the 90-day period was adequate, but the appellate court disagreed, ruling that the law "plainly contemplates a written request that can be, and is, filed with the court."
A state appellate court has upheld the California Coastal Commission's denial of a development permit for a small mixed-use project in Morro Bay.
The court rejected developer Dan Reddell's arguments that the commission violated his due process and equal protection rights, and that its decision was a regulatory taking of property. Instead, the Second District Court of Appeal ruled that substantial evidence supported the commission's finding that Reddell's project was inconsistent with Morro Bay's local coastal plan (LCP).
A state appellate court has thrown out an Inyo County general plan amendment that the county argued was nothing more than a clarification of a longstanding policy.
A unanimous three-judge panel of the Fourth District Court of Appeal, Division Two, concluded that the amendment was more than a mere clarification and that the county should have completed an environmental impact report before approving the amendment.
A City of West Hollywood moratorium on new multi-family housing development has been declared invalid by the Second District Court of Appeal. The court ruled that the city had not made required findings for the moratorium.
The Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has set back a plan to develop the country's largest solid waste landfill near Joshua Tree National Park. The court ruled that the environmental analysis for the project was inadequate and that the Bureau of Land Management undervalued land it would provide to the landfill developer.
A state appellate court has struck down a California Environmental Quality Act exemption for an air district rule permitting new power plants to offset emissions by paving roads. The court found that the Mojave Desert Air Quality Management District did not have adequate evidence to support its finding that the rule could not have a negative impact on the environment.
A developer is not entitled to reimbursement or damages from a consultant hired by a local government to complete an environmental impact report, the First District Court of Appeal has ruled. Even when the consultant fails to complete an EIR in a timely manner, the consultant owes no contractual duty to the developer that paid for the consultant, the court concluded.
In the first decision of its kind, a divided Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals panel has declared that the City of Goleta's mobile home rent control ordinance constitutes a regulatory taking.
The City of Claremont's moratorium on dispensaries of medical marijuana and a Superior Court injunction shuttering a dispensary have been upheld by the Second District Court of Appeal.