Save Mount Diablo v. Contra Costa County , 240 Cal. App. 4th 1368 ( 2015 )


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  • Filed 10/7/15
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    SAVE MOUNT DIABLO,
    Petitioner and Respondent,
    v.
    CONTRA COSTA COUNTY et al.,                        A142357
    Defendants;                                (Contra Costa County
    RONALD E. NUNN et al.,                             Super. Ct. No. CIV-MSN-13-0774)
    Real Parties in Interest and
    Appellants.
    Real parties in interest Ronald and Shirley Nunn bought a large tract of
    agricultural property in Contra Costa County. The tract was recorded as a single parcel,
    but it actually consisted of four separated parts of unequal size. These parts were formed
    years before the Nunns bought the property when a local agency acquired through
    eminent domain two narrow strips of land crossing the property and intersecting each
    other. A road was built on one strip, and a pipeline was buried under the other.
    After the Nunns abandoned an effort to subdivide the property under the parcel
    map provisions of the Subdivision Map Act,1 they asked the county to issue certificates
    of compliance to confirm that each of the four parts nonetheless satisfied the
    requirements of the Act. The county did so, and Save Mount Diablo (SMD) petitioned
    for a writ of mandate challenging the county’s decision. The trial court granted the
    petition, and we affirm. We hold that a “division” of property within the meaning of the
    1
    Government Code section 66410 et sequitur (the Act). All further statutory references
    are to the Government Code unless otherwise indicated.
    1
    Act does not occur simply because an eminent domain proceeding results in a physical
    separation of a property’s non-condemned portions. The owner of such a property is
    therefore not entitled to a certificate of compliance for each of the resulting separate
    parts.
    BACKGROUND
    In the mid-1990s, the Contra Costa Water District (District) oversaw the
    construction of a dam in the eastern part of Contra Costa County. The project required
    the District to acquire 20,000 acres of property from about 40 county landowners, and it
    included relocating 13 miles of road and installing 20 miles of water pipeline and 12
    miles of gas line. One of the properties affected by the project was a 586-acre tract of
    land now owned by the Nunns. Roughly rectangular in outline, the property is crossed by
    two narrow, intersecting strips of land that were acquired by the District through
    condemnation proceedings in 1997. One, running generally north and south, was
    acquired to relocate Vasco Road. The other, running east and west, intersects Vasco
    Road at a right angle and was acquired to accommodate an underground pipeline.2 The
    previous owners of the Nunns’ property were ultimately awarded $964,000 in
    compensation for the taking. A drawing of the property and strips taken, adapted from an
    exhibit submitted below, is appended to this decision.
    The Nunns purchased the property in 2006. The deed describes it as a single
    parcel, defined by metes and bounds, with District-owned land excluded.3 As a result of
    the exclusions, the property consists of four parts, separated from each other by the
    2
    The pipeline strip actually consists of two recorded parcels: one running from the
    property’s eastern boundary to the point at which it abuts the Vasco Road parcel and a
    second parcel running from the opposite side of the Vasco Road parcel to the property’s
    western boundary.
    3
    In addition to the narrow strips, several other pieces of land apparently lying within the
    boundary of the property are also excluded from the parcel, including other parcels of
    land conveyed for the purpose of road creation. These other exclusions are described
    only by metes and bounds or other abstract identifiers in the deed, and it is not clear from
    the record where within the property they are located. The parties have made no claims
    relating to these other exclusions.
    2
    narrow strips of District-owned land. The Nunns nevertheless have ready access between
    them. The land above the buried pipeline is covered in gravel and is freely passable, and
    Vasco Road, which is two lanes wide as it passes through the property, can be crossed on
    the surface and by way of underpasses. Presently, the property is at least partially planted
    with wine grapes and is subject to a Williamson Act4 contract restricting its use to
    agricultural purposes.
    Two years after buying the property, the Nunns applied to the county for a parcel
    map subdividing the property under the Act into four lots and one remainder parcel. As
    we discuss below in more detail, a landowner who wants to subdivide property normally
    is required to obtain local approval of a parcel or final map demonstrating that the
    division complies with applicable state and local laws governing land use and
    development. SMD, a nonprofit corporation, raised a number of objections to the Nunns’
    application based on concerns with the environmental impact of potential new
    development.
    Before completing the parcel map process, the Nunns abandoned their application.
    Instead, they asked the county to issue a certificate of compliance for each of the
    property’s four parts under another provision of the Act, section 66499.35, subdivision
    (a). Under this provision, a property owner need not file an approved map if the
    responsible agency concludes that “the real property complies with the provisions of [the
    Act] and of local ordinances enacted pursuant to [the Act].” (Ibid.) The Nunns argued
    that they were entitled to a certificate for each part because the District’s condemnation
    had the effect of subdividing the property for purposes of the Act.
    County planning staff denied the Nunns’ request for four certificates of
    compliance, concluding that the property’s separation as a result of the condemnation did
    not constitute a “subdivision” for purposes of the Act. The Nunns appealed, and the
    County Planning Commission reversed the staff’s decision. SMD then appealed to the
    County Board of Supervisors, which rejected the appeal and issued the four certificates.
    4
    Section 51200 et sequitur.
    3
    SMD filed a petition for writ of mandate against the county and Board of
    Supervisors, seeking an order requiring the county to set aside the certificates. The trial
    court granted the petition. It concluded that no legal authority supported the Nunns’
    theory that the condemnation effected a subdivision of the property within the meaning of
    the Act. In granting the petition, the court noted its concern that such an “automatic
    subdivision” would set a “wide-ranging precedent potentially applicable to many
    property owners in the area” whose properties had been separated in some manner by a
    public acquisition of property. The Nunns appealed.5
    DISCUSSION
    The Nunns first argue, as they argued below, that the county properly issued the
    four certificates of compliance under section 66499.35, subdivision (a) because the
    condemnation effected a subdivision of the property as a matter of law. Alternatively,
    they argue that the county was required to issue four conditional certificates of
    compliance under subdivision (b), even if the condemnation did not effect a subdivision
    under the Act.
    A local government’s decision to grant or deny a certificate of compliance is
    ordinarily reviewed for substantial evidence. But issues of law, such as those presented
    here, are reviewed de novo. (Abernathy Valley, Inc. v. County of Solano (2009)
    
    173 Cal. App. 4th 42
    , 46 (Abernathy Valley).)
    A. The Subdivision Map Act.
    The Act “grants to local governments the power to regulate the manner in which
    their communities grow. Although the Act itself contains few, if any, substantive growth
    5
    The Nunns’ notice of appeal was filed two days after the trial court’s ruling, prior to the
    entry of a judgment. “[A]n order granting or denying a petition for an extraordinary writ
    constitutes a final judgment for purposes of an appeal, even if the order is not
    accompanied by a separate formal judgment” when “ ‘ “no issue is left for future
    consideration except the fact of compliance or noncompliance” ’ ” with the order.
    (Public Defenders’ Organization v. County of Riverside (2003) 
    106 Cal. App. 4th 1403
    ,
    1409.) We treat the trial court’s order as appealable because it appears to have resolved
    all issues presented by the petition.
    4
    regulations, it requires every landowner who wishes to divide a single parcel of land into
    smaller parcels for individual sale—thereby increasing the density of settlement on the
    land—to obtain the approval of the local government before doing so. [Citations.] At the
    same time, the Act vests ‘[r]egulation and control of the design and improvement of
    subdivisions’ in city and county governing bodies, requiring them to adopt ordinances
    regulating the manner in which growth will occur. [Citation.] By requiring proposed
    new subdivisions to comply with these regulations as a condition of approval, local
    governments can ensure that new real estate development conforms with their
    communities’ general and specific plans and other regulations adopted to guide growth.
    [Citation.] Local governmental control over community growth made possible by the
    Act ‘encourage[s] and facilitate[s] orderly community development . . . and assure[s]
    proper improvements are made, so that the area does not become an undue burden on the
    taxpayer.’ ” (Witt Home Ranch, Inc. v. County of Sonoma (2008) 
    165 Cal. App. 4th 543
    ,
    551.) Transferring portions of land without complying with the Act is illegal and
    subjects the transferor to various penalties. (§§ 66499.30, subds. (a) & (b), 66499.31,
    66499.34.)
    The Act legitimizes property divisions under processes that are both forward and
    backward looking. In a process that is forward looking, the Act allows an owner who
    wants to subdivide property to apply for a final or parcel map effecting the subdivision.
    Under the Act, “ ‘[s]ubdivision’ means the division, by any subdivider, of any unit or
    units of improved or unimproved land, or any portion thereof, shown on the latest
    equalized county assessment roll as a unit or as contiguous units, for the purpose of sale,
    lease, or financing, whether immediate or future.”6 (§ 66424.) “Ordinarily, subdivision
    under the Act may be lawfully accomplished only by obtaining local approval and
    recordation of a tentative and final map pursuant to section 66426, when five or more
    parcels are involved, or a parcel map pursuant to section 66428 when four or fewer
    6
    Throughout this opinion, we frequently refer to “conveying” a portion of property for
    the sake of brevity and readability, but in doing so we understand that the statute’s
    language includes selling, leasing, or financing property.
    5
    parcels are involved.” (Gardner v. County of Sonoma (2003) 
    29 Cal. 4th 990
    , 997
    (Gardner); §§ 66426, 66428, 66457, 66463.) The final or parcel map must be approved
    by the responsible local agency, which can approve the map if it conforms with
    applicable state laws and local ordinances governing land use and development.
    (§§ 66473, 66473.5; see generally, Witt Home Ranch, Inc. v. County of Sonoma (2008)
    
    165 Cal. App. 4th 543
    , 551.) “A local agency will approve a tentative and final map or a
    parcel map only after extensive review of the proposed subdivision and consideration of
    such matters as the property’s suitability for development, the adequacy of roads, sewer,
    drainage, and other services, the preservation of agricultural lands and sensitive natural
    resources, and dedication issues.” (Gardner, at p. 997.) The recordation of a final or
    parcel map “constitute[s]” a certificate of compliance with the Act. (§ 66499.35,
    subd. (d).)
    In a different process, one that is backward looking, the Act allows an owner to
    legitimize a division of property that has already occurred by obtaining a certificate of
    compliance with the Act. Under this process, an owner or prospective purchaser of
    property that has already been divided, but for which no final or parcel map has been
    recorded, may obtain a certificate of compliance if “the division of the real property
    [creating the piece of property] complies with applicable provisions of [the Act] and of
    local ordinances enacted pursuant to [the Act].” (§ 66499.35, subd. (a).) Once a
    certificate of compliance has been issued, the property “may be sold, leased, or financed
    without further compliance with the . . . Act or any local ordinance enacted pursuant
    thereto.” (Id., subd. (f)(1)(E); 
    Gardner, supra
    , 29 Cal.4th at p. 998.) In other words, the
    certificate of compliance clarifies the legal status of property that is not reflected on a
    recorded final or parcel map, thereby facilitating transactions involving the property.
    6
    A certificate of compliance is properly issued under section 66499.35, subdivision
    (a) when a statutory exemption from the map requirements applies.7 These exemptions
    include those set forth in the Act’s grandfather clauses. (§§ 66412.6, subd. (a), 66499.30,
    subd. (d); see generally, 
    Gardner, supra
    , 29 Cal.4th at p. 1000.) Permitting certificates of
    compliance to be issued under these exemptions constitutes “an obvious effort to provide
    a fair and equitable scheme to settle the validity of divisions of land occurring in decades
    past under earlier provisions of law.” (Stell v. Jay Hales Development Co. (1992)
    
    11 Cal. App. 4th 1214
    , 1227, disapproved on another ground in Citizens for Covenant
    Compliance v. Anderson (1995) 
    12 Cal. 4th 345
    , 359, 366.) Another exemption, one we
    discuss in more detail below, applies to property transferred to or from a government
    agency as a result of a condemnation proceeding. (§ 66428, subd. (a)(2).)
    In yet another process that is backward looking, the Act allows an owner to
    legitimize a division of property that has already occurred, but for which no map has been
    recorded and to which no statutory exemption applies, by obtaining a conditional
    certificate of compliance. “If a local agency determines that the real property does not
    comply with [the Act’s mapping requirements] or of local ordinances enacted pursuant to
    this division, it shall issue a conditional certificate of compliance.” (§ 66499.35,
    subd. (b), italics in original.) This provision applies, for example, where a part of a larger
    landholding was conveyed by deed without complying with the Act’s map requirements,
    7
    This reading of section 66499.35 is consistent with section 66499.30, which states that a
    parcel for which a recorded map is required cannot be sold, leased, or financed in the
    absence of such a map. The issuance of a certificate of compliance authorizing the sale,
    lease, or financing of a parcel for which there is no recorded map would be consistent
    with the prohibition of section 66499.30 only if such a map were not required for the
    parcel—i.e., only if the division creating the parcel were exempt from the map
    requirement.
    7
    i.e., was conveyed illegally. (§ 66499.30, subds. (a) & (b).)8 Although the Act requires
    the issuance of a certificate of compliance for such property, it allows the local agency to
    impose “any conditions that would have been applicable to the division of the property at
    the time the applicant acquired his or her interest therein . . . .” (§ 66499.35, subd. (b).)
    The conditional certificate of compliance therefore serves as notice “that the fulfillment
    and implementation of these conditions shall be required prior to subsequent issuance of
    a permit or other grant of approval for development of the property.”9 (Ibid.)
    B. The Application of the Act to the Nunns’ Property.
    The Nunns purchased their property as a single parcel, and it is described as such
    in the deed and in the assessor’s rolls. Since the Nunns abandoned their effort to
    subdivide the property into four parts through the map process, the only issue before us is
    whether they are entitled to a regular or conditional certificate of compliance for each of
    the four parts of their property. We conclude that they are not because there has been no
    division of their property within the meaning of the Act.
    1.      The “De Facto Division” of the Nunns’ Property Was Not a Division
    Under the Act.
    The Nunns’ main argument is that the District’s condemnation effected a de facto
    division of the property into four “parcels.” Although we fully appreciate that the
    eminent domain proceeding resulted in the physical separation of the four parts of the
    8
    As we discuss in more detail below, although it is illegal for an owner to convey parts
    of a landholding in the absence of a recorded map (§ 66499.30, subds. (a) & (b)), such a
    conveyance is nonetheless effective to transfer title to the illegally conveyed portion. The
    grantee is not subject to criminal penalties and has the right, within one year of discovery,
    to void such a transfer (§ 66499.32, subd. (a)), but the local agency does not have a
    similar power. (Clemons v. City of Los Angeles (1950) 
    36 Cal. 2d 95
    , 105; Kalway v. City
    of Berkeley (2007) 
    151 Cal. App. 4th 827
    , 836.) Accordingly, as both a practical and legal
    matter, a division of property through an illegal conveyance, if not voided by the
    transferee, is effective to subdivide property.
    9
    These conditions can be significant and could require, for example, construction of
    infrastructure that would be required for approval of a final or parcel map. (See Curtin et
    al., California Subdivision Map Act and Development Process (Cont.Ed.Bar 2d ed. 2001)
    §§11.20-11.21 (rev. 2015).)
    8
    Nunns’ property, we disagree that this constituted a division within the meaning of the
    Act.
    There is no question that the Nunns’ property consists of four parts separated from
    each other by the strips of land owned by the District. The Nunns cannot pass from one
    part of their property to another without crossing someone else’s property. And, as the
    Nunns correctly point out, the District’s fee-simple ownership of its intersecting strips
    grants the District the ownership of all rights above and below the strips’ surface.
    But this practical reality does not mean that there was a division of the property
    within the meaning of the Act entitling the Nunns to a certificate of compliance for each
    of its four parts. The Nunns argue that the four parts qualify as separate parcels under the
    Act because they are separated. But neither the characterization nor the separation of the
    parts is determinative. Characterizing the parts of their property as parcels is of no legal
    consequence because no provision of the Act entitles real property to a certificate of
    compliance merely because it can be described as such. Section 66499.35 states that an
    owner of “real property” may request a determination by the local agency “whether the
    real property complies with the provisions of [the Act] and of local ordinances enacted
    pursuant to [the Act].” (Id., subd. (a).) If the agency finds that the property complies, it
    must record a certificate stating “that the division of the real property complies with
    applicable provisions of [the Act] and of local ordinances enacted pursuant to [the Act].”
    (Ibid, italics added.) In other words, regardless of whether a piece of property can be
    characterized as a parcel, it is entitled to a certificate of compliance only if it was the
    result of a prior division recognized by the Act.
    Further, a division within the meaning of the Act is not established just because
    parts of a property do not touch. Section 66424, for example, defines subdivision to
    mean “the division, by any subdivider, of any unit or units of improved or unimproved
    land, or any portion thereof, shown on the latest equalized county assessment roll as a
    unit or as contiguous units, for the purpose of sale, lease, or financing, whether
    immediate or future.” And it goes on to state “[p]roperty shall be considered as
    contiguous units, even if it is separated by roads, streets, utility easement, or railroad
    9
    rights-of-way.” (Ibid.) This language was applied by the Attorney General in
    61 Opinions California Attorney General 299, in considering the impact of an irrigation
    canal owned in fee simple by the federal government that divided land under common
    ownership.10 Observing that the term “contiguous” has “two ordinary meanings”—
    (a) physically in contact and (b) nearby—the Attorney General concluded that the latter
    better reflected the purposes of the Act. Accordingly, the opinion concluded that
    regardless of the federal government’s strip of land, the number of proposed parcels on
    the land on both sides of the canal had to be counted together to determine which
    mapping requirement (a parcel or tentative/final map) applied. Although the map issue
    considered in the opinion differs from the issues before us, the opinion is instructive
    because it assumed that no subdivision had occurred simply by virtue of the canal
    property’s transfer to the federal government, and it found that the physical separation of
    the property caused by the canal was not controlling. A leading commentator has
    observed that one of the “common mistakes” made under the Act is “[a]ssuming that
    roads, railroad tracks, and natural boundaries divide parcels.” (Merritt, Jr., Practicing
    Under the Subdivision Map Act: Eight Common Pitfalls (Cont.Ed.Bar 1988) Real
    Property L.Rptr., 165.)
    The Nunns insist that “[i]f the [four parts of their property] are indeed new,
    separate parcels of land . . . then they should also be treated as lawfully created parcels of
    land (i.e., created in compliance with the Subdivision Map Act).” (Italics in original.)
    But the argument conflates two separate concepts. There is no question that the four
    parts of their property were the lawful result of the eminent domain proceeding. But just
    because the property’s separation occurred lawfully does not mean that the separation
    constituted a division within the meaning of the Act.
    The Nunns also argue that it would be unfair to require them to proceed through
    the parcel map process because they did not separate the property into its four parts. But
    under the Act, what matters is not who caused property to be separated but whether a
    10
    Although not binding on this court, attorney general opinions are entitled to
    “ ‘considerable weight.’ ” (Ennabe v. Manosa (2014) 
    58 Cal. 4th 497
    , 716, fn. 14.)
    10
    division occurred within the meaning of the Act. We note that the Nunns knowingly
    purchased the property in its present configuration, the $964,000 paid to the former
    owner compensated the owner for any loss of value caused by the property’s separation,
    and the Nunns presumably paid a reduced price for the property because of the effects of
    the condemnation. (See People v. Thompson (1954) 
    43 Cal. 2d 13
    , 18 [landowner whose
    property is divided by highway entitled to receive value of land condemned plus
    reduction in value of remainder due to severance of portion condemned].) We find
    nothing unfair in requiring the Nunns to comply with the same procedures for subdivision
    as other landowners.
    2.       The Condemnation Exemption Is Inapplicable.
    The Nunns alternatively claim that they are entitled to certificates of compliance
    under the Act’s exemption for property conveyed through condemnation proceedings.
    (§ 66428, subd. (a)(2).) This provision exempts from map requirements “[l]and
    conveyed to or from a governmental agency [or] public entity . . . for rights-of-way,
    unless a showing is made in individual cases, upon substantial evidence, that public
    policy necessitates a parcel map.” The Nunns argue that the four parts of their property
    fall within this exemption because the condemnation proceeding from which they arose
    involved the conveyance of land to a governmental agency.
    This argument is refuted, however, by the plain language of the statute.
    Subdivision (a)(2) states that “[a] parcel map shall not be required for [¶] . . . [¶] [l]and
    conveyed to or from a governmental agency [or] public entity . . . for rights-of-way.”
    (Italics added.) The four parts of the Nunns’ property were neither conveyed to nor from
    a public entity. Rather, they were not conveyed at all and remained in private ownership.
    True enough, no parcel map was required for the strips conveyed to the District under this
    exemption because they were conveyed to a government agency. But the exemption says
    nothing about real estate not transferred to or from the government, even though its
    boundaries may have been affected by the property that was transferred. Condemnation
    proceedings frequently reshape the boundaries of the remaining property, but nothing in
    11
    the Act suggests that the Legislature intended to exempt all such property from the map
    requirements.
    Our conclusion that each of the four parts of the Nunns’ tract is not entitled to a
    certificate of compliance under the Act’s condemnation exemption is supported not only
    by the Act’s plain language, but also by sound policy. The Act is designed to promote
    local control over real estate development, and the subdivision of property is a primary
    means for such development. There is no reason to believe that property reshaped by
    condemnation proceedings necessarily satisfies state and local land-use laws. Property is
    condemned for all kinds of reasons, many of which are entirely unrelated to the interests
    protected by the Act. The four parts of the Nunns’ property were shaped by the routes
    chosen for relocating Vasco Road and for laying the pipelines. Although these routes
    likely made good sense for purposes of the road and pipeline, that does not mean the
    resulting four parts of the property automatically satisfy the objectives and purposes of
    the Act.
    The Nunns also argue that the condemnation exemption should apply to property
    reshaped by a condemnation proceeding because the government’s cost in those
    proceedings will be higher when those proceedings result in “illegal” parcels. We accept
    neither the premise nor conclusion of this argument. First, although property reshaped by
    condemnation proceedings may have a new boundary, the reshaped property is not
    illegal. Owners can sell their entire property with its new boundaries, or they can convey
    any part of it so long as they comply with the Act. (§ 66424.) Second, the government’s
    condemnation costs are unaffected because the government is already required to
    compensate landowners when it acquires property and leaves a remainder with a
    diminished value. (See People v. 
    Thompson, supra
    , 43 Cal.2d at p. 18.)
    Finally, the Nunns argue that the condemnation exemption should apply to their
    parcels because a condemnation transfer is recognized as a “sale” of property, and a
    subdivision is defined under section 66424 as a division of land for the purposes of sale.
    (See, e.g., People ex rel. Dept. Pub. Wks. v. County of Santa Clara (1969)
    
    275 Cal. App. 2d 372
    , 376 [recognizing condemnation as sale].) But even if we were to
    12
    assume that a condemnation is a sale resulting in a qualified subdivision under section
    66424, the only property entitled to the exemption would be the property “sold,” which is
    the property conveyed to the government agency. Section 66424 provides no basis for
    expanding the scope of the exemption in subdivision (a)(2).
    3.      There Was No Division by Conveyance of the Four Parts of the
    Nunns’ Property.
    The Nunns argue that the four parts of their property should be recognized as
    having been created by conveyance under the Act. Although we recognize that a division
    of property within the meaning of the Act can occur by conveyance, we disagree that this
    principle bears on the four parts of the Nunns’ property.
    As we previously mentioned (fn. 8, ante), while a division of property can occur
    through a conveyance of a piece of property for which no map has been recorded and to
    which no statutory exemption applies, such a conveyance is illegal. (§ 66499.30,
    subds. (a) & (b).) The grantee of such a property has the right to void the conveyance
    within one year of its discovery (§ 66499.32, subd. (a)), but the local agency has no
    similar power. (Clemons v. City of Los 
    Angeles. supra
    , 36 Cal.2d at p. 105; Kalway v.
    City of 
    Berkeley, supra
    , 151 Cal.App.4th at p. 836 [“That a transfer is not authorized by
    the Act, or that it violates the Act, does not in and of itself allow an agency to seek and
    obtain cancellation of the deed through court action”]; City of Tiburon v. Northwestern
    Pac. R.R. Co. (1970) 
    4 Cal. App. 3d 160
    , 180-181.) Rather, the local agency is limited to
    recording a notice of violation against the illegally conveyed property (§ 66499.36) and
    preventing further development if it “finds that development of such real property is
    contrary to the public health or the public safety.” (§ 66499.34.) Even though such a
    conveyance is illegal, it effectively transfers title, and the transfer is binding on the
    grantee’s successors in interest. (§ 66499.32, subd. (a).) Accordingly, as both a practical
    and legal matter, a conveyance of a part of a property in violation of the Act results in a
    division under the Act if not voided by the transferee.
    None of this helps the Nunns, however, because the four parts of their property
    were not conveyed illegally. The only parcels conveyed at all as a result of the
    13
    condemnation proceeding were those taken by the District. The remainder of the
    property was untouched. It stayed under common ownership and was listed in a single
    deed before and after the condemnation proceedings and when it was legally conveyed to
    the Nunns.11
    4.    Attorney General Opinions.
    The Nunns acknowledge that no California decision has ever held that parts of a
    property are entitled to certificates of compliance simply because the parts resulted from
    a condemnation proceeding, but they argue that opinions issued by attorneys general have
    recognized the principle. Our review of the opinions reveals that none is on point, and
    those that provide guidance support the conclusion that there has been no division within
    the meaning of the Act simply because an eminent domain proceeding has separated parts
    of the non-condemned property.
    In 58 Opinions California Attorney General 593 (1975), the Attorney General
    considered whether contiguous parcels held by the same landowner could be sold
    individually without recording a new parcel map after a portion of each parcel had been
    lost to condemnation. The opinion concluded that they could not. It reasoned that under
    section 66499.30, it is unlawful to sell any parcel of real property until a parcel or final
    map has been recorded. According to the opinion, the parcels no longer satisfied section
    66499.30 because the remaining parcels were no longer the same as those depicted in the
    map on file. (58 
    Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen., supra
    , at p. 594.) The opinion remarked that a new
    parcel map was required because “condemnation of a part of a parcel results in a
    ‘division’ of land.” (Id. at pp. 594-595.)
    But only so much can be read into that comment. First, as we have discussed, a
    condemnation does result in a division of the part of the property conveyed to the
    government entity. The Act exempts that division from the map requirement. Second,
    11
    The Nunns also point out that the Act does not preclude the sale of a portion of a tract
    of land to satisfy a tax deficiency, resulting in a new parcel. In that event, however, a
    statute, Revenue and Taxation Code section 3691, specifically authorizes such a sale.
    (See 64 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 814, 816-817 (1981).) The Nunns have cited no similar
    statute exempting their property from the Act.
    14
    whether a division within the meaning of the Act occurred with the non-condemned
    portions of the property was never an issue because the two parcels affected by the
    condemnation were already recorded as separate, contiguous parcels. Presumably, they
    had already been subdivided in compliance with the Act’s map requirements, and the
    comment was simply a recognition that an updated parcel map was needed because the
    condemnation changed the property’s boundaries. This, of course, indicates that the
    Nunns likewise need to obtain a parcel map.
    In 86 Opinions California Attorney General 70 (2003), the Attorney General
    considered a large parcel recorded sometime before 1965, when a portion of it was
    condemned for the development of a reservoir. The reservoir separated two parts of the
    property by 700 feet of water with no access road to connect them, and these parts of the
    property had been assigned different parcel numbers by the county assessor. At the time
    of the condemnation, the county’s ordinances did not regulate divisions of land creating
    fewer than five parcels. (Id. at pp. 70-71.) The opinion considered whether “the
    remaining two parcels of land were legally created as separate parcels for purposes of the
    Subdivision Map Act.” (Id. at p. 70.) The opinion found that the governing statute was
    section 66412.6, subdivision (a), one of the Act’s grandfather clauses, which states that
    “any parcel created prior to March 4, 1972, shall be conclusively presumed to have been
    lawfully created if the parcel resulted from a division of land in which fewer than five
    parcels were created and if at the time of the creation of the parcel, there was no local
    ordinance in effect which regulated divisions of land creating fewer than five parcels.”
    As the statute was subsequently explained in Fishback v. County of Ventura (2005)
    
    133 Cal. App. 4th 896
    , “March 4, 1972, is the effective date of legislation adding the
    requirement of a parcel map to the [Act] for divisions of land into four or fewer parcels.
    [Citations.] Section 66412.6, subdivision (a) simply clarifies that parcels legally created
    without a parcel map are legal even after the parcel map requirement was added to the
    [Act].” (Id. at p. 904.) The opinion reasoned that the separation effected by the
    condemnation proceedings was outside the Act’s map requirement because it occurred in
    1965, at a time when such a separation was unregulated by the Act or local ordinance.
    15
    (86 
    Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen., supra
    , at pp. 71-72, fn. 3.) Accordingly, the opinion reasoned
    that the owner was entitled to a certificate of compliance for each of the two remaining
    parcels. (Id. at p. 72, fn. 4.)
    In reaching its conclusion, the opinion expressly rejected an application of section
    66424, which defines subdivision, because “no ‘subdivision’ is being proposed by the
    owner. [Citation.] The ‘division’ in question took place in 1965 when the owner’s two
    new parcels of land were physically created by court order and the recording of a deed.”
    (86 
    Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen., supra
    , at p. 73.) In a relevant footnote, the opinion observed that,
    under the exemption of section 66428, subdivision (a)(2), current law does not require a
    parcel map for the conveyance of land for purposes of a right-of-way. (86
    Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. at p. 73, fn. 5.) “Of course,” the opinion stated, “new parcels that are
    created [by condemnation] but not conveyed to a governmental agency must comply with
    any applicable requirements of the Act,” citing the 1975 opinion discussed above. (Ibid.,
    italics added].)
    The Nunns quote the portion of the opinion declining to apply section 66424
    because “no [new] ‘subdivision’ is being proposed by the owner” (86 
    Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen., supra
    , at p. 73) to argue that certificates of compliance must be issued if no new
    subdivision is sought at the time of the request. But this argument misses the critical
    timing of when the property was separated. The separation occurred in 1965, before the
    enactment of the requirement of a parcel map for a subdivision of fewer than five units.
    Thus, the opinion has no bearing on the Nunns’ situation because the separation of their
    property into four parts occurred in 1997, well after the enactment in 1972 of the parcel-
    map requirement.
    16
    5.      The Four Parts of the Nunns’ Property Are Not Entitled to
    Conditional Certificates of Compliance.
    Finally, the Nunns argue that each of the four parts of their property is entitled, at
    a minimum, to a conditional certificate of compliance because section 66499.35,
    subdivision (b) states that the local agency “shall” issue such a certificate whenever a
    regular certificate of compliance is denied. In doing so, they misconstrue the
    applicability of this section.
    Subdivision (b) of section 66499.35 states that, “[i]f a local agency determines that
    the real property does not comply with the provisions of this division or of local
    ordinances enacted pursuant to this division, it shall issue a conditional certificate of
    compliance.” (Italics added.) In that event, the local agency “may, as a condition to
    granting a conditional certificate of compliance, impose any conditions that would have
    been applicable to the division of the property at the time the applicant acquired his or her
    interest therein.” (Ibid., italics added.) The conditional certificate of compliance thereby
    serves as notice “that the fulfillment and implementation of these conditions shall be
    required prior to subsequent issuance of a permit or other grant of approval for
    development of the property.” (Ibid.)
    This subdivision works in tandem with subdivision (a). As we have explained,
    subdivision (a) allows an owner to obtain a certificate of compliance for a piece of
    property that has already been divided, but for which no final or parcel map has been
    recorded, by establishing that the property complies with the Act by, for example, falling
    within an exemption to the map requirement. Subdivision (b), in turn, allows an owner to
    obtain a conditional certificate of compliance for a piece of property that has already been
    divided, but for which no map has been recorded and that does not comply with the Act.
    But these sections apply only where there has been a division of the property. As we
    have discussed, no such division occurred as a result of the eminent domain proceeding
    17
    affecting the Nunns’ property, except for the parcels acquired by the District. Section
    66499.35 therefore simply does not apply to the four parts of the Nunns’ property.12
    Giving meaning to section 66499.35’s use of the word division is consistent with
    the section’s legislative history. The section’s statutory predecessor was enacted in
    response to Keizer v. Adams (1970) 
    2 Cal. 3d 976
    , in which the Supreme Court considered
    the consequences of a conveyance of property in violation of the Act’s map requirement.
    (See Nishiyama v. Safeco Title Ins. Co. (1978) 85 Cal.App.Supp.3d 1, 6.) The Keizer
    court required the local agency to consider the plaintiffs’ application for a building permit
    “ ‘without regard’ to the Subdivision Map Act” because, according to the court, the Act
    “does not require the innocent purchaser to suffer for a violation by his grantor, of which
    he has neither knowledge nor means of discovery.” The court did, however, permit the
    enforcement of other local ordinances, as would apply to any lawfully created parcel.
    (Keizer, at pp. 980-981.) Two years later, the Legislature enacted former Business and
    Professions Code sections 11538.1, 11538.2, and 11538.3, the statutory predecessors to
    sections 66499.34, 66499.35, and 66499.36. (1972 Stats, ch. 706, §§ 2-4, pp. 1289-
    1290.) Former section 11583.3 allowed an owner of real property to request the issuance
    of a certificate of compliance certifying that the property complied with the Act. If the
    local agency concluded that the property did not comply, the agency was permitted to
    attach conditions to the certificate that would have been applicable at the time the owner
    acquired the property. (Former Bus. & Prof. Code, §§ 11538.1, 11538.3.) The present
    statute continues to embody Keizer’s pragmatic concern about legitimizing parcels,
    including those conveyed illegally but held by good-faith purchasers. A piece of property
    created through a means consistent with the Act is issued an ordinary certificate of
    compliance, while one that was created illegally is issued a conditional certificate.
    (§ 66499.35, subd. (f)(1)(E).) A purchaser of property subject to a conditional certificate
    of compliance is alerted to any legal constraints on the use of the property.
    12
    Although section 66499.35 might allow the grant of a single certificate of compliance
    for the whole of the Nunns’ property if there were a question whether it was created by a
    division, the Nunns have sought no such certificate.
    18
    Division Five of this court has already considered and rejected the argument that a
    conditional certificate of compliance must be issued for a piece of property simply
    because a regular certificate of compliance was requested and denied. (Abernathy 
    Valley, supra
    , 
    173 Cal. App. 4th 42
    .) In Abernathy Valley, a local agency denied the plaintiff’s
    request for a certificate of compliance under a grandfather clause for a lot shown on a
    1909 subdivision map. (Id. at pp. 45-46.) After the court found that the grandfather
    clause was inapplicable (id. at p. 53), it considered the plaintiff’s alternative argument
    that the county was at least required to issue a conditional certificate of compliance for
    the lot. The plaintiff argued, as the Nunns argue here, that the county had only two
    alternatives in responding to a request for a certificate of compliance under section
    66499.35: to grant it or to grant a conditional certificate. (Abernathy Valley, at p. 56.)
    The court rejected the argument. It held that the Act does not require an agency to
    grant either a regular or conditional certificate of compliance when a property owner
    seeks “a determination of whether real property may be subdivided as proposed” but does
    not seek “a determination of whether a particular subdivision lot (which the applicant
    does not propose to subdivide further) complies with the Act.” (Abernathy 
    Valley, supra
    ,
    173 Cal.App.4th at p. 57.) We agree. Stated in our parlance, a certificate of
    compliance—whether regular or conditional—is only proper to legitimize a division of
    property that has already occurred within the meaning of the Act.13
    The Abernathy Valley court reasoned that if a conditional certificate of compliance
    were required whenever property owners were denied their desire to subdivide property,
    the result would be to “effectively permit the subdivision of property without
    compliance” with the Act’s map requirements. (173 Cal.App.4th at p. 58; see
    § 66499.35, subds. (b), (f)(1)(E).) The court accordingly concluded that “a local agency
    may deny an application for a certificate of compliance that seeks a determination that a
    13
    Although the Act expressly authorizes the issuance of a single certificate of compliance
    for multiple parcels (§ 66499.35, subd. (f)(2)), such as multiple parcels acquired over
    time and eventually constituting a single landholding, it contains no similar authorization
    for the issuance of multiple certificates of compliance for a single parcel.
    19
    particular subdivision lot on the applicant’s property complies with the Act, where the
    effect of issuing a certificate would be to effectively subdivide the property without
    complying with the Act.” (Abernathy Valley, at p. 58.) We agree with Abernathy
    Valley’s reasoning and conclusion.
    We thus conclude that regular and conditional certificates of compliance are
    limited to legitimizing divisions of property that have already occurred, such as divisions
    covered by the Act’s grandfather clauses or divisions resulting from a property’s illegal
    conveyance.14 Because there was not a division of the four parts of the Nunns’ property
    within the meaning of the Act, the Nunns are entitled to neither a regular nor conditional
    certificate of compliance for each of those parts.
    DISPOSITION
    The trial court’s order granting the petition is affirmed. The trial court is directed,
    on remand, to enter an appropriate judgment, if no such judgment has yet been entered.
    SMD may recover its costs on appeal. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.278, (a)(1), (2).)
    _________________________
    Humes, P.J.
    We concur:
    _________________________
    Dondero, J.
    _________________________
    Banke, J.
    14
    These examples are not meant to be a definitive list of divisions within the meaning of
    the Act.
    20
    21
    Trial Court:                   Contra Costa County Superior Court
    Trial Judge:                   Honorable Laurel Brady
    Counsel for Appellant and Real McKenna Long & Aldridge LLP, Denis F. Shanagher,
    Party in Interest Ronald E.    Andrew S. Azarmi; Allen Matkins Leck Gamble
    Nunn:                          Mallory & Natsis LLP, David Blackwell; Nossaman
    LLP, Michael Patrick Durkee
    Counsel for Respondent and     Shute, Mihaly & Weinberger LLP, Winter King,
    Defendant Save Mount Diablo: Laura D. Beaton
    Counsel for Defendant Contra   Office of Contra Costa County Counsel, Stephen
    Costa County:                  Michael Siptroth
    22
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A142357

Citation Numbers: 240 Cal. App. 4th 1368, 15 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 11, 193 Cal. Rptr. 3d 611, 2015 Cal. App. LEXIS 883

Judges: Humes, Dondero, Banke

Filed Date: 10/7/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/3/2024