SANTA MARGARITA AREA RESIDENTS TOGETHER v. SAN LUIS OBISPO
COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS
COURT OF APPEAL OF CALIFORNIA, SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT,
DIVISION SIX
84 Cal. App. 4th 221; 2000 Cal. App. LEXIS 801;
100 Cal. Rptr. 2d 740; 2000 Cal. Daily Op. Service 8467; 2000 Daily Journal DAR 11269
October 18, 2000,
Filed
NOTICE:
[**1] THE LEXIS PAGINATION OF THIS DOCUMENT IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE PENDING
RELEASE OF THE FINAL PUBLISHED VERSION.
PRIOR HISTORY: _Superior Court of San Luis Obispo. County. Super. Ct. No. CV 980128.
Barry Hammer, Judge.
DISPOSITION: The judgment is affirmed. Costs on appeal are awarded to Santa Margarita
Limited.
COUNSEL: Environmental Defense Center and Alexander T. Henson for Plaintiffs and
Appellants.
McCutchen, Doyle, Brown & Enersen, Stephen L. Kostka, Margaret Bielak
for Real Party in Interest and Respondent; James B. Lindholm, Jr.,
County Counsel, and Timothy McNulty, Deputy County Counsel, for
Defendant and Respondent.
JUDGES: PERREN, J. We concur: GILBERT, P.J., COFFEE, J.
OPINION BY: PERREN
OPINION:
[*224] [***742]
Santa Margarita Area Residents Together, an association, Kenneth
Haggard and Otto Schmidt appeal the judgment denying their petition
for writ of mandate to set aside a development agreement between defendant
San Luis Obispo County (County) and real party in interest Santa Margarita
Limited. To develop its property, Santa Margarita Limited needs to
be certain that the law governing local development will not change
during the development process. Relying on the Development Agreement
Statute, n1 the landowner
and [**2] County agreed to
a development plan. Appellants contend that the agreement is invalid
under the statute because it covers the planning stage of a real estate
development before buildings or other structures have been designed
or approved. Appellants also contend that, under these circumstances,
the zoning "freeze" in the agreement unconstitutionally
contracts away the County's police power. We conclude that this agreement
which assigns rights and obligations to both government and developer
concerning the planning of a large real estate project complies with
the statute and does not contract away the County's police power.
We affirm.
n1 (Gov. Code, ' 65864
et seq.) All further statutory references are to the Government Code
unless otherwise stated.
[*225]
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The Santa Margarita Ranch (Ranch)
consists of approximately 13,800 acres of real property in San Luis
Obispo County. The owner of the Ranch, Santa Margarita Limited, has
long desired to develop the Ranch.
[**3] Santa Margarita
Area Advisory Council, a community organization, has opposed the development.
After Santa Margarita Limited sued the County to facilitate development
by increasing the number of legal parcels in the Ranch, Santa Margarita
Limited, the County, and [***743] representatives of the Santa Margarita Area Advisory Council agreed
to mediate their differences over long-range development of the Ranch.
The mediation achieved a consensus among most of the participants,
including representatives from the Santa Margarita Area Advisory Council.
A mediation report reflecting the consensus recommended approval of
a project which would include 550 housing units and non-residential
improvements in an 1,800 acre area, devote at least 8,400 acres to
permanent open space easements, and place a minimum of 3,600 acres
under 40-year Williamson Act contracts for preservation of agricultural
land. n2 The report also
recommended use of a development agreement to guarantee that the 550
residential units would be "subject to applicable laws and regulations."
Shortly after the mediation, the County began preparing a development
agreement with Santa Margarita Limited for the specific planning of
a project [**4] which would
include the improvements and other land uses specified in the mediation
report and which also designated a golf course, guest lodge, equestrian
center, bikeways, and parklands as non-residential improvements (Project).
At the same time, the County amended part of its general plan, the
Salinas River Area Plan, to describe the Project and establish certain
criteria for its ultimate implementation.
n2 The Williamson Act, section
51200 et seq., permits local governments to enter into contracts limiting
the use of land to agricultural purposes in return for preferential
tax treatment. ( Kelsey v. Colwell
(1973) 30 Cal. App. 3d 590, 592, 106 Cal. Rptr. 420).
After lengthy negotiations and a public hearing, the County enacted an
ordinance authorizing it to enter into the development agreement (Agreement).
The next day, the chairperson of the County's Board of Supervisors
signed the Agreement.
DISCUSSION
Santa Margarita Agreement
In general, the
Agreement freezes zoning [**5] on
the Project property in return for the developer's commitment to submit
a specific plan for construction in
[*226] compliance with County land use requirements.
Contingencies and further approvals remain, but the Agreement commits
the County and Santa Margarita Limited to the Project including its
public improvements and amenities.
Specifically, the Agreement
provides that Santa Margarita Limited will file a comprehensive application
for approval of the Project, including a specific plan, a vesting
tentative map, and an environmental impact report. The specific plan
must incorporate the standards set forth in the Salinas River Area
Plan. The application must state that Santa Margarita Limited will
commit itself to develop the Project in its entirety and to engage
in all necessary environmental review. The Agreement also provides
that Santa Margarita Limited will dedicate land for a public swimming
pool, sewer treatment plant, and cemetery expansion.
In return for these commitments,
the County agrees to process, review, and approve or disapprove the
specific plan, and to apply its current zoning and other land use
regulations to the plan without change for up to five years during
the [**6] review and approval
period. n3 The Agreement is entered into under the
authority of the Development Agreement Statute and satisfies its technical
requirements.
n3 The Agreement provides for a five-year term with a two-year
extension in the event of litigation concerning the Agreement. Although
this lawsuit may trigger the two-year extension, we will refer to
the Agreement as having a five-year term.
The Agreement does not give
Santa Margarita Limited a right to construct the Project or impose upon
it an obligation to do so. Rather, the Agreement contemplates a second
development agreement pertaining to the actual construction of the Project,
and requires that the County and Santa Margarita Limited "will
make a[***744]good faith effort to negotiate a Subsequent Development
Agreement that shall, if agreed upon, provide [Santa Margarita Limited]
with a vested right to the benefits and burdens of the Project."
It provides that the parties "ultimately seek to secure ... an
enforceable arrangement" allowing [**7]
construction, but neither party "obligates itself to benefit
or burden the Project Site with the above-described Project until such
time as a Final EIR is certified, the Specific Plan application is favorably
acted upon by the County, [and] the Subsequent Development Agreement
... becomes binding on the parties ...."
Development Agreement Statute
The Development
Agreement Statute permits a city or county to "enter into a development
agreement" with any property owner "for the development
of the property." ( ' 65865,
subd. (a).) In essence, the statute allows a
[*227] city or county
to freeze zoning and other land use regulation applicable to specified
property to guarantee that a developer will not be affected by changes
in the standards for government approval during the period of development.
( City of West Hollywood v. Beverly Towers, Inc. (1991)
52 Cal. 3d 1184, 1193, fn. 6, 278 Cal. Rptr. 375, 805 P.2d 329; Citizens
for Responsible Government v. City of Albany (1997) 56 Cal. App. 4th
1199, 1213.) In the words of the statute, "unless
otherwise provided by the development agreement, rules, regulations,
and official policies governing permitted [**8] uses of the land, governing density, and governing
design, improvement, and construction standards and specifications,
applicable to development of the property subject to a development
agreement, shall be those rules, regulations, and official policies
in force at the time of execution of the agreement." ( '
65866.)
The statute declares that "lack
of certainty in the approval of development projects can result in
a waste of resources, escalate the cost of housing and other development
to the consumer, and discourage investment in and commitment to comprehensive
planning which would make maximum efficient utilization of resources
at the least economic cost to the public." ( '
65864, subd. (a).) The statute reflects the Legislature's conclusion
that giving "assurance to the applicant for a development project
that upon approval of the project, the applicant may proceed with
the project in accordance with existing policies, rules and regulations,
and subject to conditions of approval, will strengthen the public
planning process, encourage private participation in comprehensive
planning, and reduce the economic costs of development." ( '
65864, subd. (b).)
Particulars of the statute
[**9] include requirements
that a development agreement may be approved only after a public hearing
( ' 65867) and must be consistent with the general
plan and any specific plan ( ' 65867.5),
a provision permitting annual review by the governmental entity and
termination for noncompliance ( '
65865.1), and a statement that the agreement is subject to
referendum ( ' 65867.5). The
statute also specifies certain provisions which may or must be included
in a development agreement. ( ' 65865.2.)
Santa Margarita Agreement Complies with Statute
In reviewing the
Agreement and ordinance approving the Agreement, we must consider
two standards of review. A development agreement is a legislative
act ( ' 65867.5) and the County's Board of Supervisors
has the discretion to determine what legislation is necessary and
appropriate. A reviewing court will not set aside a legislative act
unless it is arbitrary, [*228] capricious, or unlawful. ( California Assn. of Psychology Providers v. Rank (1990)
51 Cal. 3d 1, 11, 270 Cal. Rptr. 796, 793 P.2d 2; Corona-Norco Unified School Dist. v. City of Corona
(1993) 17 Cal. App. 4th 985, 992.) On the other hand, courts
independently [**10] decide
purely legal issues such as statutory interpretation. We review the
Agreement to determine if [***745]
it enlarges or impairs the terms of the authorizing
statute without deference to the County. ( California Assn. of Psychology Providers v. Rank, supra,
at p. 11.) Based on these standards, we conclude that the
Agreement complies with the Development Agreement Statute, and that
the County's exercise of its legislative power to enter into the Agreement
was not arbitrary or capricious.
Appellants contend that the
Agreement is invalid under the statute because the statute permits
a development agreement only after a project has been approved for
actual construction. Appellants claim that, without a fully-designed
and approved project, the Agreement is essentially a unilateral County
agreement to freeze zoning without obtaining any public benefits in
return.
Appellants interpret the statute
and the Agreement too narrowly. The statute is best served through
a liberal construction which encompasses agreements that substantially
comply with its specific terms and conditions and achieve its essential
objectives. ( National Parks & Conservation Assn. v. County of
Riverside (1996) 42 Cal. App. 4th 1505, 1522.) [**11] To interpret the statute and Agreement in any
other manner would unduly restrict the County from working with a
private landowner to plan and develop facilities which support public
needs.
Moreover, the statement of
legislative purpose in section 65864 encourages the creation of rights
and obligations early in a project in order to promote public and
private participation during planning, especially when the scope of
a project requires a lengthy process of obtaining regulatory approvals.
The statute recognizes that comprehensive planning is important in
controlling the economic and environmental costs of development. It
should be construed to allow development agreements as soon as the
government and developer are required to make significant financial
and personnel commitments to a project.
The Agreement conforms to this
construction of the statute. Because it focuses on the planning stage
of the Project, the Agreement meets, rather than evades, the purpose
of the statute. The Agreement maximizes the public's role in the final
development and control over the inclusion of
[*229] public facilities
and benefits in the project. It also permits the County to monitor
the planning of the Project [**12]
to effectively assure compliance with existing County land
use regulations.
Additionally, environmental
review is advanced by considering environmental issues at the earliest
feasible time. ( Fullerton Joint
Union High School Dist. v. State Bd. of Education (1982) 32 Cal. 3d
779, 797, 187 Cal. Rptr. 398, 654 P.2d 168.) The Agreement
makes environmental review an integral part of the planning process,
thus avoiding the sort of "post hoc rationalizations to support action
already taken" which might occur if environmental review were
deferred until later. (See Laurel
Heights Improvement Assn. v. Regents of University of California (1988)
47 Cal. 3d 376, 394, 253 Cal. Rptr. 426, 764 P.2d 278.)
Appellants contend
that the County does not approve an actual development project in
the Agreement. We disagree. The Agreement establishes the scope of
the Project and precise parameters for future construction as well
as a procedure to process Project approvals. It also provides for
a variety of improvements for public use which may not have been offered
by the developer without corresponding commitments by the County as
outlined in the Agreement. The Agreement [**13]
must be construed as an approval of the Project because it
commits the parties to a definite course of action aimed at assuring
construction of the Project provided certain contingencies are met.
While further agreement and
discretionary approvals are necessary, every approval or denial permitted
by the Agreement is [***746] designed to advance the project in accordance
with the standards for Ranch development adopted by the County in
the Salinas River Area Plan. As shown by the record, the County and
the participants in the mediation which preceded the Agreement intend
the Agreement to play a critical role in facilitating the completion
of a large-scale real estate development. There is nothing in the
Development Agreement Statute inconsistent with this type of development
agreement.
The Development Agreement Statute
was enacted after Avco Community
Developers, Inc. v. South Coast Regional Com. (1976) 17 Cal. 3d 785,
132 Cal. Rptr. 386, 553 P.2d 546. In Avco,
a new land use requirement was enacted after pre-building permit construction
work had been done on a project. The Supreme Court held that a developer
has no vested right to complete a project before building permits
[**14] are issued. In so ruling, the court stated
that any change in the rule that a developer has no vested rights
in existing zoning must come from the Legislature. ( Id.
at pp. 793, 796.)
The Legislature
accepted the Supreme Court's invitation and responded with a statute
permitting local governments to freeze zoning early in the [*230] development process
and before the issuance of building permits. Indeed, appellants concede
that development agreements are permitted before the issuance of building
permits, just not too much before. Appellants seek to limit the statute
to situations which roughly correspond to the facts in Avco.
The statute does not support
this position. The statute is limited to actual projects, but does
not require deferral of development agreements until construction
is ready to begin or require any particular stage of project approval
as a prerequisite. In fact, by permitting conditional development
agreements when property is subject to future annexation, section
65865, subdivision (b) expressly permits local government to freeze
zoning and other land use regulation before a project is finalized.
(See National Parks & Conservation
Assn. v. County of Riverside, supra, 42 Cal. App. 4th at pp. 1521-1522.)
[**15]
This specific provision supports
the general conclusion that the Development Agreement Statute permits
local government to make commitments to developers at the time the
developer makes a substantial investment in a project. Here, that
time had certainly arrived when the Agreement was executed.
Appellants cite no legal authority,
and we have found none, which limits the statute to development agreements
which create "vested rights" to complete construction of
a project according to completed plans. In fact, the scant authority
dealing with development agreements is to the contrary and focuses
on the broad purpose of the statute to provide assurances to developers
as soon as project commitments must be made. (See National
Parks & Conservation Assn. v. County of Riverside, supra, 42 Cal.
App. 4th at pp. 1521-1522; Citizens
for Responsible Government v. City of Albany, supra, 56 Cal. App.
4th at p. 1213.)
Moreover, the statute expressly
contemplates "discretionary approvals" after the execution
of a development agreement ( ' 65865.2)
and includes a provision concerning annual review and termination.
Under section 65865.1, a landowner is "required to [**16] demonstrate good faith compliance with the
terms of the agreement" at the time of each annual review. "If,
as a result of such periodic review, the local agency finds and determines,
on the basis of substantial evidence, that the applicant or successor
in interest thereto has not complied in good faith with terms or conditions
of the agreement, the local agency many terminate or modify the agreement."
(Ibid.) Contrary to claims by appellants,
these provisions are not so narrow as to restrict the scope of the
statute to situations [***747] where all planning and design work has been
completed and approved.
[*231] Appellants also contend that the Agreement
is invalid under the statute because it does not include all of the
provisions required by section 65865.2. Again, we disagree. Section
65865.2 states that a development agreement "shall specify the
duration of the agreement, the permitted uses of the property, the
density or intensity of use, the maximum height and size of proposed
buildings, and provisions for reservation or dedication of land for
public purposes." The Agreement substantially complies with the
requirements of this section. The Agreement specifies its duration,
the permitted [**17] uses
of the Ranch and the density or intensity of use, and provides for
reservation or dedication of land for public purposes.
The Agreement fails to mention
the maximum height and size of proposed buildings. But, as Santa Margarita
Limited points out, the Agreement is subject to the existing County
land use ordinances which limit the height and size of buildings in
two ways. First, they explicitly limit building height in general.
Second, they limit the total size of buildings by requiring setbacks
from lot lines. n4 (See San Luis Obispo County Land Use Ord.,
tit. 22, ch. 4, ' ' 100-124.)
The Salinas River Area Plan also sets a maximum building height for
the Ranch and, by specifying the total number of residential units,
the Agreement creates a frame of reference for building size. Moreover,
both the Agreement and the statute contemplate annual review with
final approval vested in the County. What remains static are the rules
under which the approval will be sought.
n4 We grant respondents' request and take judicial notice of
chapter 4 of County's Land Use Ordinance.
[**18]
Finally, the Agreement was
approved by an ordinance duly enacted by the County Board of Supervisors
and we defer to that body in matters pertaining to the merits, usefulness
and public advantages of the Agreement. One of the purposes of development
agreements is to obtain benefits for the public, and the record shows
that the County believed that an agreement was required as an incentive
to the developer to engage in the comprehensive planning desired by
the County, and also as an incentive to expand the public facilities
and benefits included in the Project.
The Agreement also represents
the resolution of a protracted dispute and balances the interests
of all concerned parties. Santa Margarita Limited sought a more comprehensive
agreement but, according to a planning commission staff report, the
County decided to "lock-in" the Salinas River Area Plan
standards while deferring construction approval. The record reveals
that the County's decision resulted from careful assessment of the
importance of the Ranch to the region.
[*232] The record also reveals that the Agreement
resulted from a mediation by parties interested in the future of the
Ranch. The mediation did not result in unanimity [**19]
but produced an agreement among most participants, including
representatives of the public. As such, the mediation and Agreement
reflect an inclusive and open governmental process. Surrender
of Police Power
As well as arguing
that the Agreement does too little to satisfy the statute, appellants
argue that it does too much to avoid constitutional infirmity. Appellants
contend that the freeze on Ranch zoning before a project that is ready
for construction constitutes the contracting away of the County's
zoning authority and, therefore, a surrender of the right to exercise
its police power in the future. We disagree. If anything, case law
concerning a municipality's "surrender" of its regulatory
authority supports the conclusion that the
[***748] Agreement, as well as the Development Agreement Statute, satisfy
all constitutional mandates concerning a city or county's exercise
of its regulatory authority.
It is established that a city
or county may not contract away its right to exercise police power
in the future ( Avco Community
Developers, Inc. v. South Coast Regional Com., supra, 17 Cal. 3d at
p. 800) and that the power to enact, modify, and amend
zoning and other land [**20] use regulations constitutes a part of a county's
police power. ( Alameda County
Land Use Assn. v. City of Hayward (1995) 38 Cal. App. 4th 1716, 1724.)
Therefore, the Development Agreement Statute must be construed in
a manner that does not permit the County to surrender its police power
in the name of planning efficiency. (See Conway
v. Pasadena Humane Society (1996) 45 Cal. App. 4th 163, 177.)
The Agreement in this case
presents no such constitutional infirmity. Land use regulation is
an established function of local government and the County has authority
to enter into contracts to carry out this function. ( '
23004, subd. (c); Carruth
v. City of Madera (1965) 233 Cal. App. 2d 688, 695, 43 Cal. Rptr.
855; see also Professional
Engineers v. Department of Transportation (1993) 13 Cal. App. 4th
585, 591-592.) A contract which "appears to have been
fair, just, and reasonable at the time of its execution, and prompted
by the necessities of the situation or in its nature advantageous
to the municipality at the time it was entered into, is neither void
nor voidable merely because some of its executory features may extend
beyond [**21] the terms of
office of the members" of the legislative body which entered
into the contract. ( Denio v. City of Huntington Beach (1943) 22 Cal. 2d
580, 590, 140 P.2d 392; Carruth,
supra, at p. 695.) [*233]
A governmental entity does
not contract away its police power unless the contract amounts to
the "surrender" or "abnegation" of a proper governmental
function. ( Morrison Homes Corp.
v. City of Pleasanton (1976) 58 Cal. App. 3d 724, 734, 130 Cal. Rptr.
196.)
The zoning freeze in the Agreement is not such a surrender or abnegation.
The Project must be developed in accordance with the County's general
plan ( ' 65867.5), and the
Agreement does not permit construction until the County has approved
detailed building plans. The Agreement retains the County's discretionary
authority in the future and, in any event, the zoning freeze is for
five years. It is not of unlimited duration.
The County concluded that the
zoning freeze in the Agreement advances the public interest by preserving
future options. This type of action by the County is more accurately
described as a legitimate exercise of governmental police power in
the public interest [**22] than
as a surrender of police power to a special interest. ( Morrison
Homes Corp. v. City of Pleasanton, supra, 58 Cal. App. 3d at p. 734;
see also Housing Authority v. City
of L. A. (1952) 38 Cal. 2d 853, 868, 243 P.2d 515.)
CONCLUSION
Seventy-five years ago, the
Supreme Court stated that the "police power, as such, is not
confined within the narrow circumspection of precedents, resting upon
past conditions which do not cover and control present-day conditions
obviously calling for revised regulations to promote the health, safety,
morals, or general welfare of the public. That is to say, as a commonwealth
develops politically, economically, and socially, the police power
likewise develops, within reason, to meet the changed and changing
conditions." ( Miller v. Board of Public Works (1925) 195 Cal. 477, 484, 234 P. 381.)
If anything, the court's statement in Miller
resonates more clearly today than when it was first made, and provides
a framework for the analysis of this case. Here, the Development Agreement
Statute and the constitutional mandate requiring the County to [***749] retain
its regulatory power intersect to permit the contemporary [**23]
approach to land use regulation reflected in the Agreement.
It is true that local government
may not surrender its regulatory power through ad hoc commitments.
It may, however, act in partnership with private enterprise as authorized
by the Development Agreement Statute and the Agreement. The Agreement
addresses recurring land use issues without limiting the County's
regulatory discretion. Through the Agreement, the County tailors the
exercise of its legislative power to the complex issues
[*234] involved in regulating a major real estate
project in the public interest. By requiring expeditious Project planning
and preserving future options, the Agreement enhances the County's
power to regulate land use to achieve its Salinas River Area Plan
and other land use goals.
The judgment is affirmed. Costs on appeal are awarded to Santa Margarita
Limited.
PERREN, J.
We concur:
GILBERT, P.J.
COFFEE, J.
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