The voters of South Lake Tahoe, California, adopted an ordinance that forbade the city from issuing short-term rental permits for properties in residential zones unless the owner was a permanent resident of the city, and declared that all short-term rental permits would expire three years later. The trial court granted the city summary judgment on all claims raised by an association of property owners who rented short-term. 

In South Lake Tahoe Property Owners Group v. City of South Lake Tahoe, No. C093603 (June 20, 2023), the California Court of Appeal mostly agreed, holding that the owners’ vested rights and state law preemption claims did not survive. But the court disagreed with the trial court’s dismissal of a (dormant) Commerce Clause challenge to the residency component. As noted in this recent Fifth Circuit decision, local ordinances that discriminate between residents and non-residents are (or at least could be) too

Continue Reading Cal Ct App: Prohibition On Short-Term Rentals Might Have A Commerce Clause Problem

We’re not going to dwell all that much on the California Court of Appeal’s recent opinion in Discovery Builders, Inc. v. City of Oakland, No. A164315 (June 22, 2023), mostly because it seems entirely predictable.

The developer thought it had an agreement with the city to pay certain fees (dare we say “exactions”) the city required in order to approve and provide what the court calls “project oversight.” The contract “provided that the fees set forth in the agreement satisfied ‘all of the Developer’s obligations for fees due to the City for the Project.'” Slip op. at 1. You know where this is headed, don’t you?

That’s right, eleven years later while the project was still underway, the city adopted new ordinances imposing new impact fees. When the developer sought additional building permits … no permit without paying the additional exactions. The trial court thought the contract took care

Continue Reading Chump Alert! Developer’s Claim That City Can Be Held To Its Contract Limiting Exactions Goes About As Well As You’d Expect

One from the Louisiana Court of Appeal, 3000-3022 St. Claude Avenue, LLC v. City of New Orleans, No. 2022-CA-0813 (June 22, 2023) demonstrating that the standard of judicial review for zoning matters (rational basis) is pretty powerful.

The owner wanted to develop its New Orleans property, but first needed a zoning amendment from residential to commercial, followed by a conditional use permit for its proposed use. The city denied the request. After much procedural back-and-forth, including a trip to the court of appeal to resolve, the case was sent back to the city council to state the basis for the denial. The council held a public meeting at which it denied the rezoning, and declined to state more, including the reasons why.

So back to court the owner went. The trial court thought it had been clear enough: you were supposed to say why you denied the rezoning. Hearing

Continue Reading Nectow Is Meaningless Because It “relies on pre-Lochner administrative review jurisprudence”

In this very short (but apparently published) opinion, the U.S. Court of Appeals held that it was not right to dismiss a claim on the pleadings and that factual development is warranted, even where the complaint alleges that a municipal land use ordinance is arbitrary and capricious, and the city claims it has a rational basis for the ordinance.

And when we say “short,” we mean it. Here’s the entirety of the opinion:

Plaintiffs here appeal the Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal of their complaint alleging that the City of New Braunfels’s zoning regulation banning short-term rentals of residential properties in certain areas of the city is unconstitutional. The district court ordered dismissal by approving a few conclusory paragraphs in the magistrate judge’s recommendation. This court’s relevant case law, however, indicates that some factual development may often occur in these cases, and that summary judgment may often follow. See, e.g

Continue Reading CA5 Makes Short Work Argument That Asserting A Rational Basis For A Short-Term Rental Ban Is Enough To Secure Pleadings Dismissal Of Arbitrary And Capricious Challenge

Screenshot 2023-06-16 at 17-28-39 TJB SC Orders & Opinions 2023 June June 16 2023

In this order, the Texas Supreme Court declined to review a case we’ve been following, in which the court of appeals held that Grapevine’s total ban on short-term renting of property — banning even owners who had been doing so for a while — might be a taking. The court held that even though the owners did not possess a classic vested right to continue using their properties to rent on a short-term basis, they owned their properties and that was enough. Property ownership comes with the “fundamental” right to rent it out and there’s no need to show more, such as a vested right under state law. More details on the city’s ban and the court’s reasoning here.

The city sought discretionary review and somewhat unusually, the property owners agreed that this is an important issue worthy of the Supreme Court’s review.

But even with everyone

Continue Reading Texas Supreme Court: We Want To Resolve Whether Short-Term Renting Property A Natural Right, Just Not In This Case

Here’s the cert petition, filed last week, in a case we’ve posted about. See here (Ninth Circuit arguments) and here (en banc petition).

The Ninth Circuit affirmed dismissal of a takings claim because (it held) the claim isn’t ripe. The government hasn’t made up its mind, and just might allow the owners to make some use of their residentially-zoned land (even though the property is also subject to an overlay zone that expressly prohibits residential development). More background here

This is one of ours, so we’re not going to be saying too much more about it. The petition also lays out the situation.

Here are the Questions Presented:

Randy Ralston and Linda Mendiola (Ralstons) wish to build a retirement home on their residentially-zoned land in San Mateo County, California. However, their property sits entirely within an overlay zone, the Montecito Riparian Corridor (Corridor), which categorically bans residential

Continue Reading New Takings Ripeness Cert Petition (Ours): Knowing The Permissible Uses “to a reasonable degree of certainty” Is All You Need For A Claim To Be Ripe

Check out this now-under-consideration Petition for Review, which asks the California Supreme Court to take up a case involving Murderers Creek, in Pleasant Hill, California. (Now there’s a jarring juxtaposition for you.)

The case started off as a “routine inverse condemnation case.” Pet. at 2. When Murderers Creek flooded, it damaged the plaintiffs’ land. The County, the plaintiffs allege, didn’t maintain a 40-year old concrete spillway which is part of a drainage system the County required a private developer to install in the 1970s as a condition of subdivision. The County never actually took over the drainage system, but it did accept the dedication “for recording only.”

The plaintiffs said this should have been enough to establish a claim for inverse against the County: it has been a longstanding rule in California that drainage infrastructure that diverts surface waters onto private property triggers inverse liability even if privately

Continue Reading California Supreme Court Reviewing The Murderer’s Creek Inverse Case

Screenshot 2023-06-07 at 07-14-12 Google Maps

Here’s the latest from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit on takings ripeness, Haney v. Town of Mashpee, No. 22-1446 (June 6, 2023). 

The case centers on Gooseberry Island, Massachusetts, which is zoned by the Town of Mashpee as R-3. But under the Town’s zoning code, any residence must have at least 150 feet of frontage and a paved access roadway within 150 feet.

Which is problematic because Gooseberry Island is, well, an island — separated from the mainland by a 40 to 80 foot channel depending on the tides. There’s no bridge, although you can wade across the channel at low tide. No bridge means no roads, and no roads means no residential development.

So the owner sought variances from the frontage and roadway requirements in 2013. Denied. The road and frontage requirements are about emergency access. Next, the owner sought approvals to build a

Continue Reading CA1: Despite Two Variance Denials, Takings Case Not Ripe Because It Isn’t Futile To Try Again

Here’s the latest in a case we’ve been following, one of the multiple challenges to New York’s latest ratcheting up of rent control.

We think the Questions Presented spell out the issues pretty well:

New York has implemented the most sweeping and onerous rent control provisions the United States has ever seen in its Rent Stabilization Laws and accompanying regulations (“the RSL”). As recently amended, the RSL makes New York’s once “temporary” rent stabilization regime permanent for over one million apartments. Petitioners are owners of apartment buildings regulated by the RSL. The RSL expropriates a definitional feature of Petitioners’ real property—the right to exclude—by granting their tenants a perpetual right to renew their leases. The RSL closes off all viable exit options for Petitioners to change the use of their property and thus avoid RSL regulation. These provisions, when combined with the RSL’s ceiling on the rents that landlords

Continue Reading Another Cert Petition Challenging NY’s Draconian Rent Control As A Taking

When we last visited Sheetz v. El Dorado County, we finished with “stay tuned” because we suspected that the California Court of Appeal’s opinion concluding that the County’s traffic mitigation fee is immune from Nollan/Dolan nexus-and-rough-proportionality review because the legislature imposed the fee on everyone (and Sheetz was not subject to paying it because of an ad hoc agency decision) was not going to be the last word, either in the case or on the legislative exactions issue.

Well, now the predicted other shoe drop: the property owner has filed this cert petition, with this Question Presented:

George Sheetz applied to the County of El Dorado, California, for a permit to build a modest manufactured house on his property. Pursuant to legislation enacted by the County, and as the condition of obtaining the permit, Mr. Sheetz was required to pay a monetary exaction of $23,420 to help finance

Continue Reading New Cert Petition: The Supreme Court Should Resolve The Legislatively-vs-Administratively Imposed Exactions Issue