People v. Braum ( 2020 )


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  • Filed 4/22/20 Modified and Certified for Partial Pub. 5/22/20 (order attached)
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FIVE
    THE PEOPLE,                                         B289603, B289604
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                    (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. Nos.
    v.                                           BC467194, BC467495)
    DANIEL BRAUM et al., as
    Executors, etc., and as Trustees,
    etc.,
    Defendants and Appellants.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of the
    County of Los Angeles, John Shepard Wiley, Jr., Judge.
    Affirmed.
    Stuart M. Miller, for Defendants and Appellants.
    Michael N. Feuer, City Attorney of Los Angeles, Arturo A.
    Martinez, Assistant City Attorney, Meredith A. McKittrick and
    Andrew K. Wong, Deputy City Attorneys, for Defendant and
    Respondent.
    I.     INTRODUCTION
    Michael Braum (Braum)1 leased two commercial properties
    in the City of Los Angeles (City) to tenants for use as medical-
    marijuana dispensaries and then received notice that the
    dispensaries violated the City’s zoning code. The City2 filed two
    civil enforcement actions against Braum and the Trust, and the
    trial court entered judgments against them imposing civil fines in
    excess of $6 million.
    Defendants appeal from the judgments, arguing that: the
    judgments violated the double jeopardy clause because the City
    had previously obtained a criminal conviction against Braum
    based on the same offenses underlying the judgments; the $6
    million in civil fines violated the excessive fines clauses of the
    federal and state constitutions; neither the trial court nor the
    City had the authority to require Braum to evict the dispensaries;
    the City’s “maze” of medical-marijuana regulations were void for
    vagueness under the due process clause; and the trial court erred
    in holding Braum personally liable. We affirm.
    1     Michael Braum filed this appeal individually and in his
    capacity as the trustee of the Braum Family Living Trust (the
    Trust). He died while the appeal was pending; and we granted a
    motion brought by his sons, Daniel Braum and David Hekmat, to
    be substituted as parties on appeal in their respective capacities
    as the executors of his estate and successor trustees of the Trust.
    We will refer to the newly substituted parties as defendants.
    2     The City brought the actions on behalf and in the name of
    the People of the State of California.
    2
    II.   REGULATORY AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    A.    Overview of State and Local Regulation of Medical
    Marijuana3
    1.    Compassionate Use Act (CUA) (1996)
    In 1996, state voters approved the CUA (Proposition 215;
    Health & Safety Code § 11362.5), which immunized from
    prosecution physicians who recommended marijuana to patients
    for medical purposes. (420 
    Caregivers, supra
    , 219 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 1324.) The CUA also immunized from prosecution patients
    and their primary caregivers4 who cultivated and possessed
    marijuana that had been physician recommended or approved for
    patients. (Ibid.)
    2.    Medical-Marijuana Program Act (MPA) (2003)
    In 2003, the MPA was enacted to clarify the scope of the
    CUA and promote its uniform application. (420 
    Caregivers, supra
    , 219 Cal.App.4th at p. 1325.) It expanded the classes of
    persons to which immunity from prosecution applied. (Ibid.)
    3     The regulatory background is taken from the decisions in
    420 Caregivers, LLC v. City of Los Angeles (2012) 
    219 Cal. App. 4th 1316
    (420 Caregivers) and Safe Life Caregivers v.
    City of Los Angeles (2016) 
    243 Cal. App. 4th 1029
    (Safe Life).
    4      The CUA applied to prosecutions for violations of Health
    and Safety Code sections 11357 (possession) and 11358
    (cultivation). (Health & Safety Code § 11362.5, subdivision (d).)
    3
    Among other persons, the MPA immunized qualified caregivers
    and persons with identification cards5 who cooperatively
    cultivated marijuana for medical purposes. (Ibid.) Pursuant to a
    subsequent amendment, the MPA also authorized local
    governments to adopt ordinances to regulate the location,
    operation, and establishment of medical-marijuana cooperatives
    and to engage in criminal and civil enforcement of such
    ordinances. (Id. at p. 1326.)
    3.    The Interim Control Ordinance (ICO) (2007)
    In August 2007, the City passed the ICO (no. 179,027) in
    response to concerns about the proliferation of storefront medical-
    marijuana dispensaries within the City. (420 
    Caregivers, supra
    ,
    219 Cal.App.4th at p. 1326.) The ICO prohibited the
    establishment of medical-marijuana dispensaries within City
    limits for one year or until a permanent ordinance was enacted.
    (Ibid.) But the ICO exempted from its prohibition dispensaries
    established before September 14, 2007, as long as those
    dispensaries operated in accordance with state law and filed
    certain required documents with the City by November 13, 2007.6
    (Id. at p. 1327.) Following the City’s exercise of two six-month
    5      The MPA created a voluntary program for the issuance of
    identification cards to “‘qualified patients,’” i.e., those persons
    “‘entitled to the protections’” of the CUA. (420 
    Caregivers, supra
    ,
    219 Cal.App.4th at p. 1325.)
    6    Approximately 187 “‘dispensaries’” registered under the
    ICO on or before November 13, 2007. (420 
    Caregivers, supra
    , 219
    4
    optional extensions of the ICO’s interim one-year prohibition, and
    then the subsequent enactment of a second interim ordinance
    (no. 180,749), the ICO’s prohibition against the establishment of
    medical-marijuana dispensaries was to remain in force until
    March 15, 2010, or until a permanent ordinance was enacted.
    (Ibid.)
    4.    The Permanent Ordinance (2010)
    In January 2010, the City enacted the Permanent
    Ordinance (no. 181,069; L.A. Mun. Code, former § 45.19.6 et seq.)
    which regulated “‘medical[-]marijuana collectives’” and required
    them to submit to a new registration and approval process. (420
    
    Caregivers, supra
    , 219 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1328–1329; Safe 
    Life, supra
    , 243 Cal.App.4th at p. 1035.) The Permanent Ordinance
    permitted only 70 collectives to operate in the City, but also
    included a grandfather clause that allowed existing collectives
    that had properly registered under the ICO to remain in
    operation. (Safe 
    Life, supra
    , 243 Cal.App.4th at p. 1035.)
    Because there were “substantially more than 70 collectives in
    operation that could qualify under the grandfather clause . . . [the
    Permanent Ordinance] would likely have had the effect of
    prohibiting all collectives that had not previously registered
    under the [ICO].” (Id. at pp. 1035–1036.)
    Cal.App.4th at p. 1327.) Over 30 of those “‘dispensaries’”
    conducted business under names that included the terms
    ‘collective’ or ‘cooperative.’” (Ibid.) As used in this opinion, the
    terms dispensary, collective, or cooperative will refer to any
    entity engaged in the cultivation and distribution of medical
    marijuana.
    5
    5.    The Preliminary Injunction and
    the Urgency Measure (2011)
    In response to the Permanent Ordinance, certain medical-
    marijuana collectives filed suit seeking an injunction on the
    grounds that the ordinance denied equal protection to collectives
    that had not previously registered under the ICO. (Safe 
    Life, supra
    , 243 Cal.App.4th at p. 1036.) When a trial court issued the
    requested injunction, the City enacted an Urgency Measure (no.
    181,530) which modified the Permanent Ordinance to provide
    that all collectives that had been in operation prior to
    September 14, 2007, were eligible to register for a lottery from
    which 100 collectives would be chosen for inspection and
    registration. (Ibid.)
    The City appealed from the injunction against the
    Permanent Ordinance and, in July 2012, the Court of Appeal
    issued its opinion in 420 
    Caregivers, supra
    , 
    243 Cal. App. 4th 1036
    , reversing the injunction and upholding the Permanent
    Ordinance. (Safe 
    Life, supra
    , 243 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1338–1339.)
    Due to a grant of review, however, the decision in 420 Caregivers
    did not become final until November 2013. (Safe 
    Life, supra
    , 243
    Cal.App.4th at pp. 1036–1037.)
    6.    Proposition D (2013)
    The City then passed an ordinance (no. 182,443) calling for
    a special election for a public vote on Proposition D. (Safe 
    Life, supra
    , 243 Cal.App.4th at p. 1037.) In May 2013, City voters
    approved Proposition D which enacted a new ordinance (no.
    182,580) relating to the regulation of medical marijuana. (Ibid.)
    6
    Proposition D made it “‘unlawful to own, establish, operate, use,
    or permit the establishment or operation of a
    medical[-]marijuana business[7] . . .’ in the City. ([L.A.] Mun.
    Code, § 45.19.6.2, subd. A.)” (Ibid.) Proposition D also included
    an exception for medical-marijuana businesses that met general
    requirements, including that the business must have timely
    registered under both the ICO and the Permanent Ordinance.
    (Ibid.)
    B.    The Leases
    1.    The Emerald Dispensary Lease (July 2007)
    On June 21, 2005, the Trust took title to the real property
    located at 13321 Ventura Boulevard, Sherman Oaks. On
    June 22, 2007, “Braum Real Estate,” as lessor, leased that
    property to two individual lessees. The lease granted the lessees
    the right to use the premises for the purpose of “SALES OF
    MEDICAL CANNABIS.” Braum executed the lease as
    “LESSOR.” Emerald Triangle Collective, Inc. (Emerald) operated
    a “medical[-]marijuana dispensary” at the location. The monthly
    rent for the dispensary was $1,660.
    7        “Under Prop[osition] D, a ‘medical[-]marijuana business’ is
    defined as any ‘location where marijuana is cultivated, processed,
    distributed, and delivered, or given away to a qualified patient
    . . . or a primary caregiver.’” (Safe 
    Life, supra
    , 243 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 1037.)
    7
    2.    The Ventura Dispensary Lease (January 2009)
    On June 21, 2005, the Trust took title to the real property
    located at 11306 Ventura Boulevard in Studio City. On
    January 7, 2009, Braum Real Estate, as lessor, leased that
    property to a lessee, for the express purpose of operating
    “MEDICAL[-]MARIJUANA COLLECTIVES.” Braum executed
    the lease as “LESSOR” in his capacity as “OWNER.” A
    “medical[-]marijuana dispensary,” dba City Organic Remedies,
    conducted business at that location and was owned and operated
    by Ventura Herbal Center, Inc. (Ventura). The monthly rent for
    the dispensary was $3,000
    C.    Emerald and Ventura Actions
    1.    Cease and Desist Letters (2010–2011)
    On May 4, 2010, the City sent Braum a letter advising him,
    among other things, that “[t]he establishment at the above
    referenced address [the Emerald dispensary was] operating as a
    medical[-]marijuana provider and did not register with the City
    Clerk prior to November 13, 2007. Consequently, the
    establishment does not, and cannot, comply with the
    requirements of [the Los Angeles Municipal Code]. Under
    [s]ection 45.19.6.7, this establishment must therefore
    immediately cease its operations.” On March 7, 2011, the City
    sent Braum a second letter with substantially the same
    advisement and demand. And, on May 11, 2011, the City sent
    Braum a similar cease and desist letter regarding the Ventura
    dispensary.
    8
    2.    Civil Enforcement Complaints (2011)
    On August 10, 2011, the City filed two substantially similar
    civil enforcement complaints against Braum, individually and as
    trustee of the Trust.8 In addition to Braum, the first complaint
    named as defendants Emerald and four of its individual officers
    and/or directors (Emerald dispensary defendants). The second
    complaint against Braum also named as defendants Ventura and
    two of its individual officers and/or directors (Ventura dispensary
    defendants).
    As against Braum, each of the complaints alleged two
    causes of action for: (1) using a building without a required
    permit, in violation of Los Angeles Municipal Code section
    12.21 A.1(a) (zoning violation),9 and (2) maintaining a nuisance,
    namely, a building used for unlawful narcotics activity, in
    8     According to defendants, the two actions against Braum
    were among 41 such civil enforcement actions brought by the
    City against medical-marijuana dispensaries, their
    owners/operators, and landlords. Those actions were
    consolidated by the trial court.
    9     Los Angeles Municipal Code section 12.21 A.1(a) provides:
    “No building or structure shall be erected, reconstructed,
    structurally altered, enlarged, moved, or maintained, nor shall
    any building, structure, or land be used or designed to be used for
    any use other than is permitted in the zone in which such
    building, structure, or land is located and then only after
    applying for and securing all permits and licenses required by all
    laws and ordinances.”
    9
    violation of Health and Safety Code section 11570 et seq.
    (narcotics abatement).10
    Other than the respective start dates of the alleged
    statutory violations, the City alleged identical facts in support of
    the zoning violation cause of action in each complaint: “Since at
    least June 1, 2010, [or January 26, 2009,] [d]efendants . . . have
    been using and maintaining the building or structure at the
    [p]roperty for a medical[-]marijuana use, a use which is not
    permitted in that zone and are in violation of [Los Angeles
    Municipal Code] section 12.21 A.1(a). Violation of section
    12.21 A.1(a) constitutes a public nuisance under [Los Angeles
    Municipal Code] section 11.00 (l).[11] [¶] [] [D]efendant Braum
    10     Health and Safety Code section 11570 provides: “Every
    building or place used for the purpose of unlawfully selling,
    serving, storing, keeping, manufacturing, or giving away any
    controlled substance, precursor, or analog specified in this
    division, and every building or place wherein or upon which those
    acts take place, is a nuisance which shall be enjoined, abated,
    and prevented, and for which damages may be recovered,
    whether it is a public or private nuisance.”
    11     Los Angeles Municipal Code section 11.00 (l) provides, in
    pertinent part: “In addition to any other remedy or penalty
    provided by this Code, any violation of any provision of this Code
    is declared to be a public nuisance and may be abated by the City
    or by the City Attorney on behalf of the people of the State of
    California as a nuisance by means of a restraining order,
    injunction or any other order or judgment in law or equity issued
    by a court of competent jurisdiction. The City or the City
    Attorney, on behalf of the people of the State of California, may
    seek injunctive relief to enjoin violations of, or to compel
    10
    . . . knew that the use of the [p]roperty was in violation of the Los
    Angeles Municipal Code but nevertheless provide[d] substantial
    assistance to [the d]ispensary [d]efendants . . . and aided and
    abetted violations of [Los Angeles Municipal Code] section
    12.21 A.1 (a) by renting and/or leasing the [p]roperty to [the
    d]ispensary [d]efendants . . . for use as a medical[-]marijuana
    dispensary.”
    Other than the respective start dates for the alleged
    statutory violations, the City alleged identical facts in support of
    the narcotics abatement cause of action in each complaint. “The
    [p]roperty was, and is, being used, from an exact date unknown
    but at least since at least [sic] June 1, 2010, [or
    January 26, 2009,] for the purposes of unlawfully selling, serving,
    storing, keeping, manufacturing or giving away controlled
    substances and is a building or place wherein or upon which
    those acts take place. [¶] [Braum] knew or should have known of
    the nuisance activity at the [p]roperty and did nothing to abate it,
    allowing the unlawful activity to occur. [¶] . . . [¶] Since on or
    about June 1, 2010, [or January 26, 2009,] to the present, [Braum
    has] maintained the [p]roperty which is being used as a
    medical[-]marijuana dispensary and permitted the operation of a
    medical[-]marijuana dispensary at the [p]roperty in clear
    violation of Los Angeles Municipal Code section 12.21 A.1[](a)
    compliance with, the provisions of this Code or seek any other
    relief or remedy available at law or equity . . . . [¶] Violations of
    this Code are deemed continuing violations and each day that a
    violation continues is deemed to be a new and separate offense
    and subject to a maximum civil penalty of $2,500 for each and
    every offense.”
    11
    and permitted the unlawful selling, storing, distributing and
    giving away of a controlled substance, to wit, marijuana.”
    The prayers for relief against Braum were identical in each
    complaint. On the zoning violations, the City sought: to enjoin
    Braum from using or permitting medical-marijuana use of the
    properties; to assess a civil penalty in the amount of $2,500 per
    day pursuant to Los Angeles Municipal Code section 11.00 (l);
    and to enjoin Braum from violating section 12.21 A.1(a). On the
    narcotics abatement causes of action, the City sought, among
    other relief: a declaration that the properties constituted a public
    nuisance that must be permanently abated; a preliminary and
    permanent injunction and order of abatement; an order
    prohibiting Braum from permitting or sanctioning the operation
    of any type of “marijuana[-]related venture” on the properties; an
    order closing the properties for use for any purpose under the
    control of the trial court or, in the alternative, ordering Braum to
    pay the City the fair market rental value of the properties for one
    year; an order assessing Braum a $25,000 civil penalty; and an
    order requiring Braum to “file an unlawful detainer action to
    evict [the tenants of the properties] and diligently pursue the . . .
    action until [he had] retaken possession of the [properties].”
    3.    Preliminary Injunction: Emerald Dispensary (2012)
    On November 14, 2012, the trial court held a hearing on
    the City’s motion for preliminary injunction against, among
    others, Braum as owner of the property upon which the Emerald
    dispensary was located. Following the hearing, the court granted
    the motion and issued an injunction against Braum as to the
    12
    Emerald dispensary only.12 Braum was ordered: (1) not to
    “allow the use of the [p]roperty for a medical[-]marijuana”
    purpose; (2) not to “lease or otherwise allow anyone to use the
    [p]roperty for a medical[-]marijuana” purpose; and (3) not to
    allow “any signage on the [p]roperty to remain which advertises a
    medical[-]marijuana dispensary.”
    4.    Order to Show Cause: Emerald Dispensary (2013)
    On August 20, 2013, the City applied for an order to show
    cause (OSC) regarding contempt against Braum and others.
    According to the City, Braum had failed to comply with the
    preliminary injunction. On that same date, following a hearing
    on the application, the trial court issued an OSC, which required
    Braum to appear on September 25, 2013, and show cause why he
    should not be ordered to, among other things, evict the “current
    medical[-]marijuana dispensary” from his property. On March
    14, 2014, the parties entered into a settlement, in which Braum
    agreed to pay the City $10,000 in exchange for the OSC being
    taken off calendar. The court therefore did not issue an order
    requiring an eviction.
    5.    Criminal Complaint
    On November 12, 2013, the City filed a misdemeanor
    complaint against Braum and others, including Downtown
    12    The preliminary injunction concerning the Ventura
    property did not contain any provisions directed at Braum
    individually or in his capacity as trustee of the Trust.
    13
    Discount Center, Inc. and 1123 West 7th Street, LLC.13 The
    complaint charged Braum with six counts of violating Los
    Angeles Municipal Code section 45.19.6.2A14 and six counts of
    violating section 12.21 A.1(a). The crimes allegedly occurred on
    specific dates between and including August 23, 2013 and
    October 11, 2013.15 On January 7, 2014, Braum pleaded no
    contest to each count, the trial court placed him on a “formal
    diversion for a period of 12 months,”16 and ordered him to pay
    13    According to filings with the Secretary of State, Braum was
    the sole member and/or manager of 1123 West 7th Street, LLC
    from November 2008 through November 2016.
    14     As of May 2013, following the passage of Proposition D,
    section 45.19.6.2 provided: “SEC. 45.19.6.2. PROHIBITED
    ACTIVITIES. [¶] A. It is unlawful to own, establish, operate,
    use, or permit the establishment or operation of a medical[-
    ]marijuana business, or to participate as an employee, contractor,
    agent or volunteer, or in any other manner or capacity in any
    medical[-]marijuana business. [¶] B. The prohibition in
    Subsection A, above, includes renting, leasing, or otherwise
    permitting a medical[-]marijuana business to occupy or use a
    location . . . .”
    15    Defendants contend that “Count I was a generic accusation
    regarding medical marijuana dispensaries applicable to every
    possible location within the City as well as every possible activity
    and time.” Defendants then quote from a portion of that count.
    The entirety of the count, however, makes clear that the violation
    was alleged to have occurred on August 23, 2013.
    16   “[D]iversion is generally understood to mean ‘the
    suspension of criminal proceedings for a prescribed period of time
    14
    $500 and not to rent to a “marijuana business.” The court
    continued the matter to January 7, 2015, for “disposition and
    resetting.” We have no further record of the proceedings in the
    criminal matter.
    6.    City’s Summary Judgment Motion (2014)
    On or about March 10, 2014, the City filed its motion for
    summary judgment, or, in the alternative, summary
    adjudication, against, among others, Braum based on his and/or
    the Trust’s ownership of the two properties upon which the
    Emerald and Ventura dispensaries were located. The City
    argued that there was no triable issue of fact as to the zoning
    violation because Braum engaged in, permitted, or allowed or
    aided the sale or distribution of marijuana at the properties, and
    such activity was an unpermitted use in violation of Los Angeles
    Municipal Code, section 12.21 A.1(a). The City also argued that
    Braum assisted and participated in “the illegal marijuana use
    onsite” by “‘handing over the keys to the dispensaries,’”—i.e.,
    providing them a place of business—and cashing the lease
    checks. According to the City, Braum was “‘on actual and inquiry
    notice when leasing to a business having to do with marijuana.”
    Regarding the narcotics abatement claim, the City argued
    that there was no triable issue of fact as to whether Braum
    engaged in, permitted, allowed, or aided the sale or distribution
    of marijuana at the properties and such conduct constituted an
    unlawful use in violation of the narcotics abatement law. The
    with certain conditions.’” (People v. Craine (2019) 
    35 Cal. App. 5th 744
    , 751.)
    15
    City maintained that any purported lack of knowledge of the
    statutory nuisance was irrelevant to the imposition of liability
    under Health and Safety Code section 11570.
    The City supported its requests for summary adjudication
    against Braum with, among other evidence, documents showing
    the dispensaries’ occupation of the Sherman Oaks and Studio
    City properties, documents showing the Trust’s ownership of
    those properties, and declarations of police officers establishing
    sales of marijuana at the Emerald and Ventura dispensaries.
    Braum opposed the motion, arguing that as of May 2010,
    the medical-marijuana dispensaries were legal based on the
    City’s zoning administrator’s interpretation;17 the statutes relied
    upon by the City to show liability were ambiguous; the City failed
    to show that he aided and abetted the conduct of the
    dispensaries; the action was moot because both dispensaries had
    vacated the properties; the civil enforcement actions violated
    Braum’s double jeopardy rights because he had been criminally
    convicted for the same offense; and Braum was immune from
    liability under Health and Safety Code section 11362.775.
    Braum supported his opposition with his declaration that
    he believed the two leases were for businesses that filled
    prescriptions for medical marijuana and, as such, were
    considered pharmacies, i.e., permitted uses of his commercial
    17     On May 6, 2010, the City issued a zoning administrator’s
    interpretation concerning medical-marijuana collectives. The
    interpretation concluded that “[m]edical[-m]arijuana [c]ollectives
    are permitted in any zone, subject to all applicable provisions of
    State law, the Zoning Code and [the Permanent Ordinance n]o.
    181,069 [Los Angeles Municipal Code former section 45.19.6 et
    seq.].”
    16
    properties; lawyers he consulted advised him that he “was acting
    within the law” by leasing to the dispensaries; he allowed the
    dispensaries to use his properties in reliance on the City’s May
    2010 zoning administrator’s interpretation that medical
    marijuana was a permitted use; the Ventura dispensary closed in
    January 2013, and once the decision in 420 
    Caregivers, supra
    ,
    
    219 Cal. App. 4th 1316
    became final, he began taking steps to evict
    the Emerald dispensary which closed in September 2013.
    In its reply, the City argued that Braum’s understanding
    that the dispensaries were pharmacies, and therefore permitted
    uses, was unreasonable and irrelevant; the dispensaries violated
    the City’s zoning code because they were not expressly permitted
    uses; the law regarding permitted uses and marijuana
    dispensaries was not ambiguous or unclear; Braum’s reliance on
    the advice of counsel did not immunize him from the zoning and
    nuisance violations; the civil enforcement actions were not moot;
    double jeopardy did not apply because the criminal conviction
    upon which that defense was based involved a different property;
    and the undisputed evidence showed that Braum, as landlord,
    assisted and participated in the businesses of his dispensary
    tenants.
    7.    Hearing and Rulings on Motion (2015)
    On October 29, 2015, the trial court held a further
    hearing18 on the City’s motion for summary judgment. Following
    18    Following an initial hearing on May 29, 2014, the trial
    court denied the City’s motion for summary adjudication on the
    grounds that the City had failed to demonstrate that there were
    17
    argument, the trial court took the matter under submission and,
    on December 1, 2015, the court issued a written order granting
    the City’s motion against Braum in the two actions against him,
    as well as against others in the consolidated actions.
    8.    Hearing and Rulings on Remedies Phase (2018)
    On January 10, 2018, the City submitted “remedies briefs”
    for the Emerald and Ventura actions. According to the City,
    Braum was liable for the maximum penalty of $2,500 per day
    under Los Angeles Municipal Code section 11.00 (l) for the zoning
    violations at the Emerald property for the period from
    June 1, 2010, through at least November 14, 2012, for a total of
    897 days. And, for the zoning violations at the Ventura property,
    the City maintained that Braum was liable for the maximum
    civil penalty of $2,500 per day under section 11.00 (l) for the
    period from January 26, 2009, through at least February 4, 2013,
    for a total of 1,470 days. In addition, the City argued that Braum
    was liable for the maximum penalty of $25,000 for each property
    under Health and Safety Code section 11581, subdivision (b)(2)
    based on the nuisance violations established under section 11570.
    no triable issues of fact on the issues of entitlement to and
    amount of civil penalties, which the court concluded were
    essential elements of the City’s two claims. In March 2015,
    however, that ruling was vacated by the decision of People ex rel
    Feuer v. Superior Court (Cahuenga’s the Spot) (2015) 
    234 Cal. App. 4th 1360
    , 1364, which held that although civil penalties
    were available remedies, they were not elements of the City’s
    causes of action.
    18
    In support of its request for penalties, the City submitted,
    among others, documents filed with the Secretary of State
    regarding Braum’s membership in the limited liability company,
    1123 West 7th Street LLC. Among other declarations, the City
    submitted a declaration from a Deputy City Attorney describing
    the cease and desist letters sent to Braum regarding the Emerald
    and Ventura dispensaries. The City also submitted a declaration
    from a City paralegal who researched Braum’s real property
    holdings and concluded that Braum was the trustee of two trusts
    that together held title to 13 properties in Los Angeles County.
    The paralegal also concluded that Braum was an officer or
    managing member of various entities that owned two multi-unit
    apartment or condominium complexes and approximately 11
    other properties in Los Angeles County. In addition, the
    paralegal discovered that Braum was a manager of another LLC
    that owned nine properties. And, a City investigator determined
    that the Emerald dispensary was located an impermissible 35
    feet from a grade school.
    In opposition to the civil penalties claimed against him,
    Braum argued: He could not be held individually liable for the
    alleged zoning violations because only the owner of the property,
    i.e., the Trust, could be liable, and the summary judgment orders
    entered were only against Braum as an individual; there was no
    zoning ordinance in effect between September 2007 through
    August 2012 that prevented a landlord from renting to a medical-
    marijuana dispensary and therefore the penalties for the zoning
    violation at the Emerald and Ventura properties should only be
    imposed from August 2012 to the dates when the dispensaries
    stopped operating; because the settlements with the other
    defendants ranged from $1,500 to $150,000, the penalties
    19
    imposed in the two cases should not exceed $150,000; current
    law, Proposition 64, allowed for the sale of both medical and
    recreational marijuana.
    Braum supported his opposition with his declaration
    explaining that the Trust, as landlord, did not intend to violate
    any laws and was advised by former counsel that the
    dispensaries could lawfully occupy the properties; both
    dispensaries had ceased to operate, one in 2012 and the other in
    2013; and the trial court should demonstrate leniency and award
    penalties that were in line with the penalties imposed in other
    cases. Braum, however, did not submit any evidence showing his
    inability to pay the proposed penalties.
    In reply, the City argued that Braum was attempting to
    relitigate liability issues already decided against him on
    summary judgment; substantial penalties were warranted for the
    entire time periods specified; the penalties should reflect the
    egregious facts of Braum’s conduct in response to both the cease
    and desist letters and the civil enforcement actions against him;
    and a permanent injunction was warranted.
    On February 22, 2018, the trial court conducted the
    remedies phase hearing. Following argument, the court ruled in
    favor of the City and indicated that it would sign the City’s
    proposed judgments as submitted. The court rejected Braum’s
    argument that he should be assessed penalties that were similar
    to the penalties paid by a different landlord who had settled its
    case, noting that a penalty that was the result of a negotiated
    compromise involved an “entirely different situation” from the
    case at issue. The court stated that the penalties sought by the
    City were appropriate, and adopted the reasoning argued by the
    City. It also observed that a hefty penalty was appropriate
    20
    because of what it characterized as Braum’s “flagrant”
    disobedience of the law. In the court’s view, it was “quite obvious
    that there was a bet that the political current, the policy climate
    would change in the future. And if we just ride this thing out and
    defy it long enough we’ll end up, as that expression says, ‘better
    to ask for forgiveness than permission.’ [¶] Well, I don’t think
    that is a good way to run a city where citizens believe [they can
    do] what is profit maximizing although illegal and later [they
    can] ask for forgiveness.”
    9.    Judgments (2018)
    On February 22, 2018, the trial court entered substantially
    similar judgments against Braum in the Emerald and Ventura
    actions. The findings in support of each judgment provided that
    Braum had conducted and maintained a nuisance on the
    properties in violation of Los Angeles Municipal Code section
    12.21 A.1(a) and Health and Safety Code section 11570. The
    judgment and order of abatement provided that it was “binding
    on . . . Braum, individually and in his capacity as [t]rustee of [the
    Trust] . . . .” Based on the finding that each property maintained
    a public nuisance, the court ordered abatement. In addition to
    issuing injunctions against Braum preventing the use of the
    properties for any medical-marijuana related use, the judgments
    each imposed for the nuisance violation a $25,000 penalty
    pursuant to Health and Safety Code section 11581, subdivision
    (b)(2). The judgment in the Emerald action also imposed for the
    zoning violation a civil penalty of $2,242,500 pursuant to Los
    Angeles Municipal Code section 11.00 (l); and the judgment in
    the Ventura action imposed a penalty of $3,675,000 for the zoning
    21
    violation in that case. The judgments in both actions further
    imposed against Braum awards of investigative costs, attorney
    fees, and court costs that are not at issue in this appeal.
    III.   DISCUSSION
    A.    Double Jeopardy
    1.    Background
    As explained, after the two civil enforcement actions were
    filed, but while they were still pending, the City filed a criminal
    misdemeanor complaint against Braum, his limited liability
    company, a corporation, and two other individuals. The
    complaint charged six counts based on alleged violations of Los
    Angeles Municipal Code section 45.19.6.2.A and six counts based
    on alleged violations of section 12.21 A.1(a). The allegations of
    each count, however, were boilerplate in nature and did not
    provide any specific facts about the alleged offenses, other than
    the specific dates upon which they occurred.
    Defendants contend that the entry of the judgments in the
    two civil actions, after Braum had been convicted in the criminal
    proceeding, violated the federal and state double jeopardy
    clauses. According to defendants, the general allegations of
    misconduct asserted in the criminal complaint described conduct
    substantially similar to the conduct upon which liability was
    subsequently imposed in the two civil actions following summary
    judgment. They therefore conclude that the same offenses were
    at issue in both the criminal and civil actions.
    22
    2.    Legal Principles
    “The Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution
    provides that ‘[n]o person shall . . . be subject for the same offense
    to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb . . . .’ This guarantee is
    applicable to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment.
    [Citations.] Similarly, article I, section 15, of the California
    Constitution provides: ‘Persons may not twice be put in jeopardy
    for the same offense . . . .’” (People v. Saunders (1993) 
    5 Cal. 4th 580
    , 592–593.) “Although in some contexts article I, section 15, of
    the California Constitution may provide a level of protection
    higher than that afforded by its federal counterpart” (id. at
    p. 596), neither party suggests that, in this case, the California
    double jeopardy clause should be interpreted differently than the
    federal clause.
    The Double Jeopardy Clause “protects against a second
    prosecution for the same offense after conviction.” (People v.
    Sloan (2007) 
    42 Cal. 4th 110
    , 120–121, italics added.) The
    defendant bears the burden of demonstrating that double
    jeopardy applies. (People v. Newell (1923) 
    192 Cal. 659
    , 667;
    People v. Mason (1962) 
    200 Cal. App. 2d 282
    , 285.)19
    19    In certain “unique circumstances,” such as “when the
    prosecution’s charging decisions and the charges themselves
    necessitate,” the burden shifts to the prosecution “once defendant
    makes a nonfrivolous showing that an indictment or information
    charges him with an offense for which he was formerly placed in
    jeopardy;” for instance, “when a defendant is being retried on a
    conspiracy charge for which defendant maintains he has been
    convicted or acquitted.” (People v. Smith (2005) 
    132 Cal. App. 4th 1537
    , 1549, fn. omitted.) Defendant does not contend that the
    23
    “The [Double Jeopardy] Clause protects only against the
    imposition of multiple criminal punishments for the same
    offense, [citations], and then only when such occurs in successive
    proceedings . . . . [¶] Whether a particular punishment is
    criminal or civil is, at least initially, a matter of statutory
    construction” and depends on: (1) “whether the legislature
    ‘. . . indicated, either expressly or impliedly a preference for one
    label or the other’” and (2) “‘whether the statutory scheme was so
    punitive either in purpose or effect,’ [citation], as to ‘transform
    what was clearly intended as a civil remedy into a criminal
    penalty.’” (Hudson v. United States (1997) 
    522 U.S. 93
    , 99.)
    3.    Analysis
    Defendant contends in his opening brief that he “pled nolo
    contendere and was convicted on all charges.” But, as we discuss
    above, the record on appeal does not indicate whether defendant
    was sentenced on January 15, 2015, or whether, at the conclusion
    of a 12-month period of diversion, the charges were dismissed.
    (See, e.g., Penal Code, § 1001.7.) We will assume for purposes of
    this opinion that Braum could establish that jeopardy attached
    when he entered his no contest plea to the criminal complaint,
    even though he was not sentenced in that case. (But see Liang v.
    Superior Court (2002) 
    100 Cal. App. 4th 1047
    , 1055 [jeopardy did
    not attach when a defendant entered a plea of no contest as part
    of a conditional offer that required his codefendants to also plead
    circumstances of this case relieved him of the burden or
    otherwise warranted shifting it to the City.
    24
    guilty and court then vacated no contest plea, over the
    defendant’s objection, prior to sentencing].)
    We will further assume that defendants could demonstrate
    that the penalties imposed in the civil complaints at issue
    constituted criminal, rather than civil, penalties. Even giving
    defendants the benefit of these assumptions, we reject their
    double jeopardy claim because they still have not met their
    burden of demonstrating that the conduct at issue in the criminal
    complaint constituted the “same offense” as the conduct at issue
    in the civil complaints.
    According to the criminal complaint submitted by Braum in
    opposition to the summary judgment motion, the offenses in that
    action occurred on specific dates between August 23, 2013, and
    October 11, 2013. The complaint in the Emerald action alleged
    that the conduct forming the basis for the zoning- and nuisance-
    based claims against Braum began in June 2010; and the
    complaint in the Ventura action alleged that the conduct
    underling the zoning and nuisance claims asserted in that action
    began in January 2009. The City argued that Braum’s liability
    for the Emerald dispensary ended on November 14, 2012, and his
    liability for the Ventura dispensary ended on February 4, 2013.
    Thus, the only documents on this issue submitted by Braum in
    opposition to summary judgment, which were the criminal
    complaint and minute order, demonstrated that there was no
    overlap in the dates at issue in the criminal complaint and the
    civil complaints.
    Nor did Braum submit any evidence that the conduct at
    issue in the criminal complaint occurred at the same location as
    the conduct at issue in the civil complaints. Although all three
    complaints charged that the conduct occurred in Los Angeles, it
    25
    appears from the caption of the criminal complaint that the
    charged offenses involved a dispensary—Downtown Discount
    Center, Inc.—and a property—1123 West 7th Street—that are
    not mentioned in either the civil complaints or the evidence in
    support of the summary judgment motion.
    The allegations and evidence before the trial court were
    therefore insufficient to show that the criminal complaint was
    based on the same offenses as the civil actions. (See, e.g.,
    Blockburger v. United States (1932) 
    284 U.S. 299
    , 301 [two
    narcotics sales, “although made to the same person, were distinct
    and separate sales made at different times”]; People v. Cuevas
    (1996) 
    51 Cal. App. 4th 620
    , 624 [no bar to successive prosecutions
    where “offenses committed at different times and at different
    places”].)
    B.    Excessive Fines
    1.    Background
    Defendants contend the penalties imposed, which totaled
    $5,967,500, were unconstitutionally excessive under the Eighth
    Amendment because: the penalties were grossly disproportionate
    to the offenses; the trial court failed to properly consider the four
    factors mandated by United States v. Bajakajian (1998) 
    524 U.S. 321
    (Bajakajian); and the imposition of daily penalties is suspect
    and disfavored.
    26
    2.    Legal Principles
    “The Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution
    states: ‘Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines
    imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.’ (Italics
    added.) ‘[T]he Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment
    to the Federal Constitution . . . makes the Eighth Amendment’s
    prohibition against excessive fines and cruel and unusual
    punishments applicable to the States. [Citation.] The Due
    Process Clause of its own force also prohibits the States from
    imposing “grossly excessive” punishments . . . .’ [Citation.] [¶]
    The California Constitution contains similar protections.
    Article I, section 17, prohibits ‘cruel or unusual punishment’ and
    ‘excessive fines;’ article I, section 7, prohibits the taking of
    property ‘without due process of law.’” (People ex rel Lockyer v.
    R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. (2005) 
    37 Cal. 4th 707
    , 727–728 (R.J.
    Reynolds).)
    “The leading United States Supreme Court case on the
    Eighth Amendment’s prohibition of excessive fines is
    
    [Bajakajian, supra
    ,] 
    524 U.S. 321
    . . . , which involved a federal
    statute (31 U.S.C. § 5316(a)) requiring any person transporting
    more than $10,000 out of the United States to file a report with
    the United States Customs Service. Bajakajian attempted to
    take $357,144 out of the country without filing a report. The
    government claimed that the entire $357,144 was forfeited. [¶]
    The high court pointed out that ‘[t]he touchstone of the
    constitutional inquiry under the Excessive Fines Clause is the
    principle of proportionality.’ 
    (Bajakajian, supra
    , 524 U.S. at
    p. 334.) It then set out four considerations: (1) the defendant’s
    culpability; (2) the relationship between the harm and the
    27
    penalty; (3) the penalties imposed in similar statutes; and (4) the
    defendant’s ability to pay. (Id. at pp. 337–338; see City and
    County of San Francisco v. Sainez (2000) 
    77 Cal. App. 4th 1302
    ,
    1320–1322 . . . (Sainez).) After reviewing those considerations,
    the high court held that the forfeiture of Bajakajian’s currency
    constituted an ‘excessive fine’ barred by the Eighth Amendment.”
    (R.J. 
    Reynolds, supra
    , 37 Cal.4th at p. 728.)
    3.    Analysis
    “[O]ur review of the ruling on the constitutional question
    [under the Eighth Amendment’s excessive fines clause] is
    independent judgment, or de novo (Townsel v. San Diego
    Metropolitan Transit Development Bd. (1998) 
    65 Cal. App. 4th 940
    ,
    946 . . .), but with deference to underlying factual findings, which
    we review for substantial evidence, viewing the record in the
    light most favorable to the ruling (Ojavan Investors, Inc. v.
    California Coastal Com. (1997) 
    54 Cal. App. 4th 373
    , 395 . . . ;
    cf. People v. Dillon (1983) 
    34 Cal. 3d 441
    , 455–456, 477–478 . . .
    [cruel or unusual punishment]).” 
    (Sainez, supra
    , 77 Cal.App.4th
    at p. 1313.) Contrary to defendants’ assertion, when applied to
    the facts in this case, the four-part Bajakajian test shows that
    the imposition of the civil fines did not violate the excessive fines
    clause.
    a.    Braum’s Culpability
    During the remedies phase, the City produced evidence
    that Braum was notified prior to the filing of the two civil
    actions—in May 2010 and again in March and May 2011—that
    28
    the Emerald and Ventura dispensaries operating on his
    properties were not permitted under Los Angeles Municipal Code
    section 45.19.6.7 and that they must cease operations. Braum
    took no action in response to the notice and instead continued to
    lease the two properties to his dispensary tenants. The City then
    filed civil actions against Braum in August 2011 to compel
    compliance with its zoning code and the nuisance abatement law,
    but the dispensaries continued to operate under the Trust’s
    leases. Over a year after filing the actions against Braum, the
    City sought and obtained in November 2012 a preliminary
    injunction in the Emerald action which ordered him not to allow
    the Sherman Oaks property to be used as a marijuana
    dispensary. Notwithstanding the preliminary injunction, the
    Emerald dispensary continued to operate. As a result, in August
    2013, the City sought and obtained an OSC regarding contempt
    against Braum which he ultimately settled in March 2014.
    In addition, during the remedies phase, the City submitted
    evidence of a citizen complaint that the Emerald dispensary was
    also being used as a “grow.” According to the complainant, “there
    was a smell of marijuana being emitted” from the property, and
    the complainant observed “large grow lights and other such
    improvements.” But when the complainant raised the issue with
    Braum, he denied the existence of the grow or the smell of
    marijuana at his property. The City also submitted evidence that
    the Emerald dispensary was impermissibly operating within 35
    feet of an elementary school, notwithstanding the requirement in
    Los Angeles Municipal Code section 45.19.6.3 A.2(a) that
    marijuana dispensaries were not permitted within “a 1,000-foot
    radius of a school . . . .”
    29
    Based on the evidence presented to it, the trial court
    concluded that Braum’s disobedience of the City’s ordinances and
    the court’s orders was “flagrant.”20 That conclusion was amply
    supported by the record on the remedies hearing which clearly
    demonstrates Braum’s culpability for the continuing offenses on
    his two properties.
    b.    Relationship Between the Harm and
    the Penalty
    The City had a valid and strong interest in regulating uses
    within the City, including medical-marijuana uses, and in
    abating nuisances defined by state law to address the perceived
    harms underlying its zoning regulations and the statewide
    nuisance abatement law. 
    (Sainez, supra
    , 77 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 1315 [securing obedience to code requirements through
    penalties is a legitimate exercise of the police power].) By
    20    Defendants maintain that the trial court ignored the
    evidence of Braum’s “good faith,” including his testimony that he
    relied on the advice of counsel and had no intention of violating
    the medical-marijuana laws, which laws he characterized as
    ambiguous, at best. But the record reflects that the court was
    well aware of the long procedural history of the actions against
    Braum and his responses to them. It was therefore within the
    purview of the court, sitting as the trier of fact during the
    remedies phase, to determine the weight, if any, to be given to
    Braum’s evidence in opposition to the remedies sought against
    him by the City. There is nothing in the record to suggest that
    the court failed to engage in such a weighing process before
    deciding to give more weight to the ample evidence submitted by
    the City in support of those remedies.
    30
    consistently resisting the City’s enforcement efforts and instead
    allowing the unpermitted uses and nuisances to continue on his
    Trust’s properties, Braum increased the risk of the harm the City
    was endeavoring to enjoin and abate. Because, as the landlord, it
    was within his power to comply in a timely manner with the
    City’s enforcement efforts, and thereby mitigate the amount of
    the penalties imposed, his own conduct dictated that the amount
    of penalties necessary to achieve the City’s legitimate
    enforcement goals would be substantial. (See 
    Sainez, supra
    , 77
    Cal.App.4th at p. 1316 [defendants had it within their control
    first to prevent and then to stop the accumulation of penalties;
    thus, they “had their own intransigence to blame” for the amount
    of the penalties].)
    c.     Penalties Imposed in Similar Statutes
    As the City points out, there are no published cases
    showing the amounts of penalties imposed on landlords of
    medical-marijuana dispensaries. But the cases cited by the City
    are sufficiently analogous to show that the penalties imposed in
    this case are not dissimilar to those imposed under other
    regulatory statutes. (See, e.g., People v. Overstock.Com, Inc.
    (2017) 
    12 Cal. App. 5th 1064
    , 1087–1088 [trial court imposed a
    daily penalty of $2,000 for a total of $6,828,000 in civil penalties
    under Business and Professions Code sections 17206,
    subdivision (b) for unfair competition and 17536, subdivision (b)
    for false advertising] and cases cited therein at pp. 1089–1090.)
    31
    d.    Ability to Pay
    Defendants argue that the City did not produce any
    evidence of Braum’s ability to pay the amount of civil penalties
    sought. The City counters that it was Braum’s burden in the
    trial court to raise and demonstrate his inability to pay the
    penalties, citing, among other cases, People v. First Federal
    Credit Corp. (2002) 
    104 Cal. App. 4th 721
    , 729.)
    To the extent it was Braum’s burden to show an inability to
    pay the penalties, he failed to carry that burden because his
    opposition did not raise the issue, much less submit evidence
    concerning his financial status. But, even it was the City’s
    burden to make a prima facie showing of Braum’s ability to pay,
    its evidence in support of its remedies briefs, showing that
    Braum controlled a substantial amount of commercial and
    residential real estate in Los Angeles County, satisfied that
    burden. Based on the evidence submitted, the trial court could
    have reasonably inferred that Braum had the financial ability to
    pay the penalties.
    C.    Order to Evict
    Defendants claim that the trial court’s liability findings
    against Braum for the alleged zoning and statutory nuisance
    violations were all driven by his conduct in failing to file and
    diligently pursue unlawful detainer actions against the Emerald
    and Ventura dispensaries. According to defendants, because
    neither the City nor the court had authority to order Braum to
    evict his tenants, he could not be held liable for failing to so in
    32
    response to the filing of the civil actions, the entry of the
    preliminary injunction, or the issuance of the OSC.
    As an initial matter, Braum did not oppose the summary
    judgment motion on the grounds that neither the City nor the
    trial court had the authority to order him to file and diligently
    pursue an unlawful detainer action. His failure to raise the issue
    in the first instance with the trial court therefore forfeited the
    issue on appeal. (Keener v. Jeld-Wen, Inc. (2009) 
    46 Cal. 4th 247
    ,
    264–265.)
    Even assuming Braum had preserved the issue for appeal,
    defendants’ argument is based upon a faulty premise. The trial
    court’s liability findings against Braum were made on summary
    judgment and, contrary to Braum’s assertion, the allegations and
    evidence upon which the court’s liability determinations were
    made did not include any mention of his failure to file unlawful
    detainer actions in response to the City’s demands or court
    orders. Although the preliminary injunction and OSC issued
    against him were based, in part, on evidence that he had failed to
    take any action to prevent the unpermitted uses and nuisances
    on his Trust’s properties, none of that evidence was before the
    court at the summary judgment hearing.
    Instead, as explained, the City limited its evidentiary
    presentation to documentary evidence showing the dispensaries’
    occupation of the Sherman Oaks and Studio City properties and
    the Trust’s ownership of those two properties, as well as police
    officer declarations showing that marijuana was being dispensed
    there. Because the trial court’s rulings against Braum on the
    summary judgment motions were not based in any way on
    evidence that Braum failed to file and pursue unlawful detainer
    actions, his arguments and authorities concerning the court’s
    33
    authority to order him to file and pursue such actions are
    irrelevant.
    Moreover, even assuming the trial court’s liability findings
    were based, in part, on Braum’s failure to comply with the
    preliminary injunction against him, the injunction ordered him
    not to allow the Trust’s properties to be used for medical-
    marijuana purposes or to lease the properties for such purposes.
    The injunction did not require that Braum file unlawful detainer
    actions or pursue them diligently under court supervision. And,
    although the OSC ordered Braum to appear and explain why the
    court should not order him to file unlawful detainer actions, no
    such order was ever entered against Braum because the OSC was
    settled. As Braum was never ordered to file an unlawful detainer
    action, the trial court could not find Braum liable for failing to
    pursue such actions against the dispensaries. Finally, although
    the complaint sought, in its prayer for relief, an order requiring
    Braum to file unlawful detainer actions, the judgment did not
    include any such order.
    D.    Due Process: Vagueness
    1.    Background
    According to defendants, at the time Braum executed the
    leases for the Emerald and Ventura dispensaries—June 21, 2007,
    and January 7, 2009, respectively—the City’s medical-marijuana
    regulations were so complex, and their meaning so arcane, that
    “it was virtually impossible for any landlord to determine and
    prove whether a given dispensary was operating legally, and
    34
    Braum therefore had no clearly lawful path to follow.” We are
    unpersuaded by defendants’ argument.
    2.    Legal Principles
    “‘The vagueness doctrine bars enforcement of “‘a statute
    which either forbids or requires the doing of an act in terms so
    vague that men of common intelligence must necessarily guess at
    its meaning and differ as to its application.’”’” (People v. Navarro
    (2016) 
    244 Cal. App. 4th 1294
    , 1300.) We review vagueness
    challenges de novo. (Id. at p. 1301.)
    “‘The starting point of our analysis is “the strong
    presumption that legislative enactments ‘must be upheld unless
    their unconstitutionality clearly, positively, and unmistakably
    appears. [Citations.] A statute should be sufficiently certain so
    that a person may know what is prohibited thereby and what
    may be done without violating its provisions, but it cannot be
    held void for uncertainty if any reasonable and practical
    construction can be given to its language.’” [Citation.]’ (Williams
    v. Garcetti [(1993)] 5 Cal.4th [561,] 568.)” (People v. Mary H.
    (2016) 
    5 Cal. App. 5th 246
    , 260.)
    “The degree of vagueness that the Constitution tolerates—
    as well as the relative importance of fair notice and fair
    enforcement—depends in part on the nature of the enactment.
    Thus, economic regulation is subject to a less strict vagueness
    test because its subject matter is often more narrow, and because
    businesses, which face economic demands to plan behavior
    carefully, can be expected to consult relevant legislation in
    advance of action. Indeed, the regulated enterprise may have the
    ability to clarify the meaning of the regulation by its own inquiry,
    35
    or by resort to an administrative process. The Court has also
    expressed greater tolerance of enactments with civil rather than
    criminal penalties because the consequences of imprecision are
    qualitatively less severe.” (Village of Hoffman Est. v. Flipside,
    Hoffman Est. (1982) 
    455 U.S. 489
    , 498–499.)
    3.    Analysis
    We thus begin our analysis under the strong presumption
    that the City’s medical-marijuana regulations must be upheld
    unless defendants affirmatively demonstrate that those
    regulations are clearly unconstitutional.
    The zoning ordinances here were neither vague nor
    uncertain. The ICO, which became effective on
    September 14, 2007 (420 
    Caregivers, supra
    , 219 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 1326 and fn. 2), plainly prohibited the establishment or
    operation of medical-marijuana dispensaries within the City
    limits.21 Although the ICO also allowed an exception to this
    general prohibition, the requirements of that exception were
    21     “Sec. 2. PROHIBITION. Notwithstanding any provisions
    of the [Los Angeles Municipal Code] to the contrary, for a period
    of one year from the effective date of this ordinance or until a
    permanent ordinance is adopted, which establishes permanent
    citywide regulations regarding [m]edical[-m]arijuana
    [d]ispensaries, whichever occurs first: [¶] A. No person or entity
    shall establish a [m]edical[-m]arijuana [d]ispensary. [¶] B. No
    person or entity shall operate a [m]edical[-m]arijuana
    [d]ispensary.”
    36
    sufficiently definite to prevent arbitrary or discriminatory
    enforcement.22
    Although the City’s medical-marijuana regulations were
    modified and amended in the years following the enactment of
    the ICO, each such modification or amendment maintained in
    effect the ICO’s basic requirements concerning the exception to
    the City-wide prohibition on medical-marijuana dispensaries: to
    operate legally, dispensaries that were in business prior to
    September 14, 2007, were required to have registered with the
    City within 60 days of that effective date. Thus, landlords such
    as Braum were subject to the ICO’s general prohibition and
    exception requirements from its effective date throughout the
    duration of the Emerald and Ventura leases. The language of the
    ICO’s exception contained the reasonable degree of certainty
    required under due process to apprise a landlord such as Braum
    22     “The prohibitions specified in [s]ection 2 of this ordinance
    shall not apply to any [m]edical[-m]arijuana [d]ispensary
    established before the effective date of this ordinance and
    operated in accordance with State law, if the owner or operator of
    the [m]edical[-m]arijuana [d]ispensary complies with the
    following requirements: [¶] A. File the form, designated by . . .
    the City Clerk, and the following documentation with . . . the City
    Clerk within 60 days of the adoption of the [ICO]: [a City tax
    registration certificate; a state board of equalization seller’s
    permit; the property lease; business insurance; dispensary
    membership forms; and, if needed, a county health department
    permit] . . . . [¶] B. This exception only applies to a facility that
    otherwise meets all the requirements of the [Los Angeles
    Municipal Code] and is open for business on the effective date of
    this ordinance.”
    37
    of the practice to be avoided on the properties. It was therefore
    not void for vagueness.
    To the extent defendants complain that it was burdensome
    for landlords to research the ever changing marijuana
    regulations, “[t]he mere fact that the owner of premises within [a
    particular zone] is required to search the zoning ordinances to
    discover the scope of permitted uses, cannot alone render the
    ordinance vague and uncertain.” (Sechrist v. Municipal Court
    (1976) 
    64 Cal. App. 3d 737
    , 743.)
    E.    Individual Liability
    1.    Background
    The City named Braum as a defendant in each civil action,
    both in his individual capacity and as the trustee of the Trust.
    The City moved for summary judgment against Braum on the
    two causes of action asserted against him in each complaint, i.e.,
    it sought a determination that Braum had violated the zoning
    code and the Health and Safety Code, both as an individual and
    as the trustee on behalf of the Trust. In support of its motion, the
    City submitted documents showing that the Emerald and
    Ventura dispensaries were conducting business operations at the
    Sherman Oaks and Studio City properties, that Braum, as
    trustee of the Trust, owned both properties, and that each
    property was being used to sell or distribute marijuana.
    In opposition to the motion, Braum submitted the leases for
    both properties executed by him and argued the City had failed to
    show that the Trust, as landlord, aided and abetted the
    dispensaries in the operation of their businesses. But he did not
    38
    expressly argue that he was not individually liable for any of the
    violations.
    Following the hearing on the motion, the trial court issued
    an order granting the City’s motion for summary judgment as to
    Braum. The court’s order on the motion noted that Braum was a
    defendant in the first and second causes of action in the Emerald
    and Ventura complaints, but without expressly indicating that
    those claims were asserted against him both as an individual and
    as the trustee.
    During the subsequent remedies phase, Braum opposed the
    penalties sought by the City, arguing, among other things, that
    he could not be held personally liable for the civil penalties
    sought under either the zoning code or the Health and Safety
    Code. In its reply briefs, the City argued that Braum could be
    held personally liable and that the trial court had already made
    that determination.
    During oral argument at the remedies hearing, Braum
    argued that he was not personally liable for the civil penalties
    sought by the City, but the trial court rejected that argument,
    ruling that it was awarding all of the penalties the City requested
    “as to the individuals . . . .”
    In the subsequently entered judgments, the court ruled
    that the penalties would be “imposed against [d]efendant Michael
    Braum, individually[,] and as [t]rustee of the [Trust].”
    2.    Legal Principles
    “[S]ection 18000 of the Probate Code . . . provides that ‘a
    trustee is not personally liable on a contract properly entered into
    in the trustee’s fiduciary capacity in the course of administration
    39
    of the trust unless the trustee fails to reveal the trustee’s
    representative capacity or identify the trust in the contract.’
    Sections 18001 and 18002 go on to state that ‘[a] trustee is
    personally liable for obligations arising from ownership or control
    of trust property only if the trustee is personally at fault,’ and
    that ‘[a] trustee is personally liable for torts committed in the
    course of administration of the trust only if the trustee is
    personally at fault.’” (Galdjie v. Darwish (2003) 
    113 Cal. App. 4th 1331
    , 1343).
    A “trustee thus cannot be held personally liable under
    [Probate Code] section 18001 for any obligation arising from his
    ownership or control of trust property, nor can he be held
    personally liable under [Probate Code] section 18002 for any torts
    committed in the course of his administration of the trust, unless
    the party seeking to impose such personal liability on the trustee
    demonstrates that the trustee intentionally or negligently acted
    or failed to act in a manner that establishes personal fault.
    (§§ 18001, 18002; Cal. Law Revision Com. com., 54A West’s Ann.
    Prob. 
    Code, supra
    , foll. §§ 18001 & 18002, p. 237.) [¶] . . . A
    trustee who . . . acted in his representative capacity cannot be
    held personally liable under [Probate Code] section 18001 for an
    obligation . . . solely upon a showing that the obligation arose out
    of his ownership or control of the trust property. The imposition
    of such personal liability must also rest on a finding of personal
    fault supported by a sufficient showing that the trustee’s conduct
    was intentional or negligent. (§§ 18001, 18002; Cal. Law
    Revision Com. com., 54A West’s Ann. Prob. 
    Code, supra
    , foll.
    §§ 18001 & 18002, p. 237.)” (Haskett v. Villas at Desert Falls
    (2001) 
    90 Cal. App. 4th 864
    , 877–878 (Haskett).)
    40
    3.    Analysis
    The evidence in support of the City’s assertions of personal
    liability against Braum for the zoning and Health and Safety
    Code violations during the summary judgment proceedings was
    limited. We will therefore assume that it was insufficient to
    demonstrate that Braum was personally liable for the zoning
    code and Health and Safety Code violations.
    But the issue of Braum’s personal liability, as opposed to
    that of the Trust, for the penalties was revisited by the parties
    and the trial court during the penalty phase. At that point, the
    City had introduced further evidence showing that, prior to the
    filing of the civil actions, Braum had received notice of the
    illegality of the dispensaries and demands that they cease
    operation. The City’s evidence also showed that the sale and
    distribution of marijuana nevertheless continued at each
    property, causing the City to file the civil actions against the
    dispensaries and Braum. The illegal activity at each property,
    however, continued unabated. The City then obtained a
    preliminary injunction against Braum concerning the continued
    illegal activity by the Emerald dispensary at the Sherman Oaks
    property and, when the illegal activity persisted, the City
    obtained from the trial court an order to show cause. The City’s
    remedies evidence further showed that the Emerald dispensary
    was conducting business within 35 feet of an elementary school,
    an additional Municipal Code violation, and that at least one
    complaint had been made about a grow operation at that
    dispensary, the existence of which Braum denied.
    When the evidence introduced during the remedies phase is
    viewed together with the evidence submitted in support of the
    41
    summary judgment motion, it supported a reasonable inference
    that Braum was personally at fault for the zoning and Health
    and Safety Code violations, either because he intentionally
    allowed those uses to continue despite notice and demand that
    they cease, or because his conduct in response to the notices,
    demands, and civil actions rose to the level of negligent disregard
    of the ongoing violations. The trial court therefore did not err in
    finding Braum personally liable for the civil penalties and other
    relief imposed against him in each of the judgments.
    IV.   DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed. Plaintiff is awarded costs on
    appeal.
    KIM, J.
    We concur:
    BAKER, Acting P. J.
    MOOR, J.
    42
    Filed 5/22/20
    CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FIVE
    THE PEOPLE,                                  B289603, B289604
    Plaintiff and Respondent,             (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. Nos.
    v.                                    BC467194, BC467495)
    DANIEL BRAUM et al., as                      ORDER MODIFYING OPINION
    Executors, etc., and as Trustees,            AND CERTIFYING OPINION FOR
    etc.,                                        PARTIAL PUBLICATION
    Defendants and Appellants.
    THE COURT:
    Good cause appearing, the opinion in the above entitled
    matter, filed on April 22, 2020, is hereby modified as follows:
    1.       The caption shall be modified as reflected in the
    caption of this order.
    1
    2.    On page 2, second paragraph, second line, replace
    “clause” with “clauses of the federal and state
    constitutions”.
    3.    On page 2, footnote 1, delete the first word “Michael”.
    4.    On page 3, footnote 4, replace “subdivision (d).” with
    “subd. (d).”
    5.    On page 7, first full paragraph, second line, replace
    “Boulevard,” with “Boulevard in” and seventh line,
    replace “(Emerald)” with “(Emerald dispensary)”.
    6.    On page 8, first paragraph, seventh line, remove
    comma after “dispensary” and remove “dba City
    Organic Remedies,” and ninth line insert
    “dispensary” after “(Ventura”.
    7.    On page 9, first paragraph, fourth line, replace
    “Emerald” with “the Emerald dispensary” and sixth
    line, replace “Ventura” with “the Ventura
    dispensary”.
    8.    On page 13, footnote 12, second line, replace
    “property” with “dispensary”.
    9.    On page 15, last word of the full paragraph, insert
    single quotation mark before the final double
    quotation mark.
    10.   On page 16, first full paragraph, first line, replace
    “requests for summary adjudication” with “motion”.
    11.   On page 17, footnote 18, second line, replace
    “adjudication” with “judgment”.
    12.   On page 18, at the only full paragraph, fifth line,
    replace “Emerald” with “Sherman Oaks” and seventh
    line, replace “Ventura” with “Studio City”.
    2
    13.   On page 19, second paragraph, replace “violation at
    the Emerald and Ventura” with “violations at the
    Sherman Oaks and Studio City”.
    14.   On page 20, first line, insert “and” between “;” and
    “current”.
    15.   On page 24, second paragraph, sixth line, replace
    “Penal” with “Pen.”.
    16.   On page 25, second full paragraph, eighth line,
    replace “underling” with “underlying”.
    17.   On page 32, first paragraph, third and fourth lines,
    remove “in the trial court” and sixth line, remove
    close parenthesis after “729.”
    18.   On page 40, ninth line, replace “).” with “.)”
    19.   On page 40, in the full paragraph, in both the ninth
    line and 17th line, insert “[Prob. Code,] between “§§”
    and “18001”.
    20.   On page 41, first line, replace “assertions” with
    “assertion”.
    21.   On page 41, last two lines, and page 42, first line,
    replace, “When the evidence introduced during the
    remedies phase is viewed together with the evidence
    submitted in support of the summary judgment
    motion, it supported” with “Viewed together, the
    evidence introduced during the remedies phase and
    during the summary judgment proceedings
    supported”.
    The filed opinion was not certified for publication in the
    Official Reports. Upon application of respondent and a third-
    3
    party, and for good cause appearing, it is ordered that the opinion
    shall be partially published in the Official Reports.
    Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rule 8.1105(b), this
    opinion is certified for publication with the exception of the
    Discussion parts C and D. There is no change in the judgment.
    BAKER, Acting P. J.           MOOR, J.                 KIM, J.
    4