A developer planned an extensive marina project on a 43-acre site near Humboldt Bay in the City of Eureka (City). This case concerns the jurisdiction of the California Coastal Commission (Commission) over phase 1 of the proposed mixed-use development project. The City, having issued nuisance abatement orders concerning the site, finally issued a coastal development permit (CDP) for phase 1. The CDP has been appealed to the Commission. Plaintiff Citizens for a Better Eureka (CBE) is challenging the Commission's appellate jurisdiction over the CDP.
Local government actions on CDP applications for certain types of developments, e.g., those within 100 feet of any wetland, are appealable to the Commission (§ 30603, subd. (a)), and the Commission has appellate jurisdiction to determine whether a CDP is consistent with the LCP and coastal
The development site consists of 11 parcels, four of which are known as the "Balloon Track" because locomotives were formerly brought there on a circular track shaped like a balloon. The Balloon Track was used as a railroad switching, maintenance, and freight yard from the 1880's to the 1980's. Some structural foundations and railroad tracks remain, but the site has been vacant since the late 1980's.
CUE VI, LLC (hereafter CUE [standing for "Clean Up Eureka"]), acquired the property in 2006, and proposes to develop it as a mixed-use retail, housing, and open space complex that includes 313,500 square feet of retail space, 104,000 square feet of office space, 72,000 square feet of multifamily residential housing, 70,000 square feet of light industrial space, 14,000 square feet of restaurant space, 12,500 square feet of museum space, 1,590 parking spaces, and an 11.89-acre wetland reserve. The development, called the "Marina Center" project, will proceed in phases, with phase 1 limited to site remediation and wetland restoration. The City approved a CDP for phase 1 in November 2009.
The city council resolution approving the CDP stated that soils at the site were contaminated with petroleum, lead, copper, and arsenic, that overgrown vegetation at the site was creating health and fire hazards, and the site was littered with rubbish. These conditions caused the City to issue 13 nuisance abatement orders for the property from 2000 to 2008, and "continue[d] to threaten to create a public nuisance" under various sections of the Eureka Municipal Code. The North Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board (RWQCB) approved a Supplemental Interim Remediation Action Plan (SIRAP) that responded to a cleanup and abatement order the RWQCB issued for the property in 2001. "The SIRAP includes a plan for general site clearing and debris removal, a focused soil remediation of areas with contaminated soil, a restoration of the wetlands area, and a grading of the overall site." "Exercising its power to declare and abate nuisances in keeping with section 30005," the CDP resolution ordered CUE to abate the nuisance at the site by implementing the SIRAP.
The resolution stated the CDP would not become effective until the period for appealing to the Commission had expired. On November 4, 2009, the City issued a notice of final action on the CDP to the Commission. The notice stated: "The action of the City of Eureka is appealable to the Coastal Commission pursuant to Public Resources Code, Section 306[0]3. . . . The Final Action is not effective until after the Coastal Commission's appeal period has expired and no appeal has been filed." The City wrote a letter to CUE dated November 12, 2009, that ordered CUE to abate the conditions identified in the CDP resolution as a nuisance by implementation of the SIRAP within 180 days. The letter advised that, if the abatement could not be completed in 180 days, CUE would need to provide a schedule with an estimated completion date for the City's approval.
Three appeals of the CDP, concerned primarily with phase 1's effects on wetlands at the site, were filed with the Commission. CBE members lodged objections to all the appeals with the Commission, arguing that any further review of the CDP would obstruct needed pollution remediation and nuisance abatement, and CBE's counsel in this case filed a letter on behalf of the Pacific Legal Foundation challenging the Commission's assertion of appellate jurisdiction over the CDP. In December 2009, the Commission found the appeals raised a substantial issue as to whether the CDP was consistent with the City's LCP.
CBE filed its petition for writ of administrative mandate (Code Civ. Proc., § 1094.5) in February 2010, arguing that the Commission could not exercise appellate jurisdiction over the CDP because of the section 30005, subdivision (b) directive that no provision of the Coastal Act may limit a city's power to abate nuisances. CBE maintained that "even if the Commission were ultimately to affirm the CDP, the Commission's appellate process would . . . necessarily and unavoidably conflict with the City's determination. . . ." "[T]he Commission's appellate review, which inevitably entails delay in cleanup, limits the City's power to abate present and ongoing threats to the public's health and welfare."
CBE's case was consolidated with a mandate petition against the Commission by CUE that raised the same argument. The Commission demurred to the petitions, and CBE and CUE moved for judgment on the pleadings. The court denied CBE's and CUE's motions for judgment, and sustained the Commission's demurrers without leave to amend. The court found that the phase 1 development "goes far beyond just nuisance abatement," and concluded that section 30005, subdivision (b) did not preclude the Commission from hearing the appeals of the CDP. The court also determined CUE had failed to exhaust administrative remedies before filing the action, a conclusion that CBE acknowledges applied equally to its petition. CUE has not pursued an appeal, but CBE has appealed from the judgment entered for the Commission.
"Where a party alleges that the Commission has acted beyond its statutory jurisdiction, it may challenge the agency's order or decision in an action for administrative mandamus under Code of Civil Procedure section 1094.5." (Security National Guaranty, Inc. v. California Coastal Com. (2008) 159 Cal.App.4th 402, 414 [71 Cal.Rptr.3d 522].) "When the determination of an administrative agency's jurisdiction involves a question of statutory interpretation, `the issue of whether the agency proceeded in excess of its jurisdiction is a question of law.'" (Ibid.) "[C]ourts do not defer to an agency's determination when deciding whether the agency's action lies within the scope of authority delegated to it by the Legislature." (Burke v. California Coastal Com. (2008) 168 Cal.App.4th 1098, 1106 [85 Cal.Rptr.3d 909].) A
In addressing application of the section 30005, subdivision (b) savings clause in this case, we are writing on a virtually clean slate. The provision appears to have been interpreted only twice in a different setting: in City of Monterey v. California Coastal Com. (1981) 120 Cal.App.3d 799 [174 Cal.Rptr. 798] (Monterey), and a 1978 opinion letter from the Attorney General to the Commission (Cal. Atty. Gen., Indexed Letter, No. IL 78-73 (May 18, 1978) (hereafter IL 78-73)).
The Monterey case involved a reconstruction project on property that was subject to a city nuisance abatement order. At issue in the trial court was whether the work could be done without a CDP under sections 30610, subdivision (d),
While the Commission's appeal was pending, the structures to be repaired were destroyed by a fire that "mooted the nuisance and repair issues." (Monterey, supra, 120 Cal.App.3d at p. 805.) However, in dicta, the Court of
In IL 78-73, the Commission's executive director asked the Attorney General to opine on whether a CDP was required prior to abatement of a nuisance declared by a local government, where the abatement would otherwise constitute a development under the Coastal Act. The opinion, citing section 30005, subdivision (b), concluded that neither a local government nor a person acting under order of a local government was required to obtain a CDP in that situation. In the case of a nuisance abatement, the Commission could not "impose conditions to protect coastal resources," because the power to do so "would improperly circumscribe the power of a local government to abate nuisances." (IL 78-73, supra, p. 3, fn. 3.) However, the opinion added that "[i]f the owner's activity exceeds the amount necessary to abate the nuisance, the owner of course must obtain a coastal permit for that additional work." (Id. at p. 4.)
These authorities point to an appropriate and workable rule that has been endorsed by Commission staff and which we adopt here: "[W]here a local government properly declares a nuisance and requires abatement measures that are narrowly targeted at abating the declared nuisance, those measures do not require a [CDP]."
As we have said, the trial court found that the development here "goes far beyond just nuisance abatement." This finding was supported by substantial evidence that the development involves wetland restoration, as well as site remediation.
For these reasons, we conclude that a CDP is required in this case.
CBE does not appear to dispute that the section 30005, subdivision (b) "nuisance exception" to the Coastal Act does not apply where a development goes beyond nuisance abatement. In briefing below, CBE "by and large agree[d] with the Commission that a local government could not declare a nuisance, and then order its `abatement' by the construction of a housing development." However, for CBE, the issue is not whether activities other than nuisance abatement are contemplated, but rather whether an abatement is "excessive or fraudulent." By framing the issue in those terms, CBE seeks to
CBE indeed does not dispute a CDP is required here. CBE reasons that because "[d]evelopment activities within the City's coastal zone are governed by the City's LCP, which is an integral part of the City's municipal code," and "the City is bound by its own code, under which nuisance abatement in the coastal zone must be effected by means consistent with the LCP," "the City could only act by issuing a coastal development permit." (See Eureka Mun. Code, § 156.096 [CDP generally required for development in the coastal zone].) But if, notwithstanding section 30005, subdivision (b), the City is bound by its municipal code to require a CDP for abatement of a nuisance in the coastal zone, then presumably the City must also adhere to other LCP provisions of its municipal code that provide for appeals of CDP's to the Commission. (Eureka Mun. Code, §§ 156.006 [defining "appealable development"], 156.108, subd. (C) [Commission hears appeals involving appealable developments], 156.108 [development cannot commence until any appeals to the Commission have been exhausted], 156.112 [City action is suspended if it is appealed to the Commission in accordance with the Commission's regulations].) And apart from the City's need to abide by its codes, we fail to see why, in a case where a CDP is necessary, all of the standards and procedures ordinarily involved in obtaining and issuing a CDP, including appeals to the Commission, would not apply.
CBE's argument in this regard is that section 30005, subdivision (b) requires that nuisance abatement decisions be made by the City, not the Commission. CBE contends "[t]he degree to which the remedy is perfectly tailored to the public injury is a matter between the City and the property owner, CUE. . . . Section 30005[, subdivision] (b) does not authorize a Commission-led `Monday morning quarterbacking' session to reevaluate that fit. After all, the central purpose of [s]ection 30005[, subdivision] (b) is to ensure that the Commission does not take action that limits or precludes what
The judgment denying the petition for writ of mandate is affirmed.
Margulies, J., and Banke, J., concurred.
Our case, unlike Pacific Lumber, does not involve "overlapping jurisdiction" because the Commission in effect exercises superseding jurisdiction in a CDP appeal. (See McAllister v. California Coastal Com. (2008) 169 Cal.App.4th 912, 921, fn. 4 [87 Cal.Rptr.3d 365] (McAllister) [Commission "assumed de novo jurisdiction over the permit application" when it accepted the CDP appeal]; Kaczorowski v. Mendocino County Bd. of Supervisors (2001) 88 Cal.App.4th 564, 569 [106 Cal.Rptr.2d 14] ["If the Commission determines that an appeal presents a `substantial issue,' the permit application is reviewed de novo; in effect, the Commission hears the application as if no local governmental unit was previously involved, deciding for itself whether the proposed project satisfies legal standards and requirements."].) The Commission thus has a veto power over the City that the agencies in Pacific Lumber did not possess against each other.