City of Fairfield v. Dayton CA1/4 ( 2020 )


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  • Filed 10/30/20 City of Fairfield v. Dayton CA1/4
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or
    ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FOUR
    CITY OF FAIRFIELD et al.,
    Plaintiffs, Cross-defendants and
    Respondents,                                                   A156976
    v.                                                                         (Solano County
    EDWARD R. DAYTON,                                                          Super. Ct. No. FCS048898)
    Defendant, Cross-complainant
    and Appellant.
    Cross-complainant Edward R. Dayton appeals the judgment entered in
    favor of cross-defendants City of Fairfield and the City of Fairfield Police
    Department (collectively the city), and individual cross-defendant City
    Building Official David Doyle on Dayton’s cross-complaint for damages
    arising out of the city’s abatement of a public nuisance on Dayton’s property. 1
    We conclude that the trial court properly sustained without leave to amend a
    demurrer to the majority of Dayton’s claims, including but not limited to,
    those claims based on alleged violations of the United States and California
    Constitutions. However, the complaint sufficiently alleges a claim for
    Although the cross-complaint also names former City Code
    1
    Enforcement Supervisor David James as an individual defendant, it does not
    appear that he appeared in the proceedings and he is not named in the
    judgment.
    1
    conversion under state law against the city. Accordingly, we reverse the
    judgment and remand for limited proceedings on Dayton’s conversion claim.
    Background
    According to the cross-complaint, in June 2016, James issued Dayton a
    preliminary order to abate a public nuisance on his residential property. In
    July 2016, James inspected the property under a warrant issued by a Solano
    County Superior Court judge. Following the inspection, the city held a
    nuisance abatement hearing, at which the hearing officer issued an order to
    abate the public nuisance. In August 2016, the abatement order was upheld
    following Dayton’s appeal to the city council.
    In September 2016, the city applied for and obtained an abatement
    warrant from the Solano County Superior Court authorizing the city to enter
    onto Dayton’s property and “abate any and all violations and hazards,
    including but not limited to storage on unimproved surfaces, an accumulation
    of trash and debris, an accumulation of solid waste, abandoned furniture, and
    encroachment onto city property.”
    Over the course of three days in September, James executed the
    abatement warrant at Dayton’s property, removing and disposing of Dayton’s
    items stored throughout the front, back and side yards of the property.
    In December 2016, the city obtained an inspection warrant based on
    James’s declaration that during the abatement in September he observed
    evidence of a rodent infestation at the property. In January 2017, after the
    inspection, Doyle issued a notice of restricted entry. The notice was appealed,
    resulting in a stay of enforcement.
    In May 2017, the city filed the present action against Dayton seeking
    an injunction enjoining him from maintaining his property as a public
    nuisance. Thereafter, Dayton filed a cross-complaint alleging 12 causes of
    2
    action for various violations of federal and state law arising out of the city’s
    seizure of his personal property during the abatement in September 2016 and
    the issuance of the notice of restricted entry in December 2016.
    The trial court sustained the city’s demurrer without leave to amend on
    the grounds that the cross-defendants are immune from liability for the
    alleged violations of federal law and that the cross-complaint fails to allege a
    cause of action under state law.
    Following trial on the city’s action, the trial court entered judgment in
    favor of the city and issued an injunction enjoining Dayton from maintaining
    a public nuisance on his property. Dayton timely filed a notice of appeal.
    Discussion
    On appeal, Dayton challenges only the court’s order sustaining the
    demurrer without leave to amend as to causes of action 1 through 8 and 10.2
    “The function of a demurrer is to test the sufficiency of the complaint by
    raising questions of law. [Citation.] Demurrers are treated as admitting the
    truthfulness of all properly pleaded factual allegations of the complaint, but
    not of its contentions, deductions or conclusions of law. [Citations.] In ruling
    on a demurrer, the court is entitled to consider matters which may be
    judicially noticed. [Citation.] [¶] A general demurrer should not be sustained
    without leave to amend if the complaint, liberally construed, states a cause of
    action on any theory.” (Lopez v. City of Oxnard (1989) 
    207 Cal. App. 3d 1
    , 6–7.)
    2 Dayton’s conclusory statement that “his right to privacy in his
    complaint [cause of action 9] was also violated by [Code Enforcement
    Supervisor] David James during the abatement by allowing private
    contractors to photograph appellant’s curtilage areas without appellant’s
    permission” is insufficient to challenge the court’s ruling on the ninth cause
    of action. The opening brief includes no arguments regarding the eleventh
    and twelfth causes of action.
    3
    1. Causes of Action 1 through 7
    The first seven causes of action allege that during the execution of the
    abatement warrant, the city’s contractor, while under James’s supervision
    and direction, unlawfully removed and permanently disposed of certain items
    of personal property that were stored within the curtilage of his property “not
    in public or private view and stored on an improved surface.” The cross-
    complaint alleges that James did not use “due care” in execution of the
    abatement warrant and that the removal of the identified personal property
    was not authorized by the warrant as these items were not stored in violation
    of the city’s nuisance statute.
    The cross-complaint appears to allege three theories of liability based
    on James’s failure to use “due care” in executing the warrant: a state law
    claim for conversion; a claim for violation of his federal civil rights (42 U.S.C.
    § 1983)3; and a claim for unlawful search and seizure and violation of the
    right to due process under sections 7 and 13 of Article 1 of the California
    Constitution.
    a. Conversion
    “ ‘ “ ‘The elements of a conversion claim are: (1) the plaintiff’s
    ownership or right to possession of the property; (2) the defendant’s
    conversion by a wrongful act or disposition of property rights; and
    (3) damages.’ ” ’ ” (Hodges v. County of Placer (2019) 
    41 Cal. App. 5th 537
    , 551.)
    The city may be held vicariously liable for injury proximately caused by
    James acting within the scope of his employment. (Gov. Code, § 815.2,
    subd. (a).)
    On appeal, the city argues, “[T]the warrants issued by Solano County
    Superior Court judges were all valid. The City abated nuisances under these
    3   All references to section 1983 are to title 42 of the United States Code.
    4
    lawful warrants. Dayton cannot establish that Respondents’ disposal of his
    junk and trash was wrongful.” While Dayton’s cross-complaint is undoubtedly
    confusing, reasonably understood, it faults James not merely for executing
    the warrant, but for failing to distinguish between items that were properly
    subject to abatement as a nuisance under the terms of the warrant and items
    that should have been left behind.4
    The cross-complaint alleges that specific items were wrongly removed
    because those items were not stored in a manner that violated the city’s
    public nuisance code, the removal of which therefore was not authorized by
    the abatement warrant. As relevant here, the city’s public nuisance statute
    declares the following to be a public nuisance: “[a]n accumulation of lumber,
    junk, garbage, trash, debris, salvage materials which are visible from public
    or private property or otherwise in violation of this code” (Fairfield Mun.
    Code, § 27.401, subd. (f)); “[a]bandoned, discarded or unused furniture,
    appliances, sinks, toilets, cabinets or other fixtures or equipment stored in a
    place visible from public or private property” (Fairfield Mun. Code, § 27.401,
    subd. (g)); and “[p]arking of a vehicle, trailer, camper, or storage of other
    personal property on private property on other than a surface of asphalt,
    concrete, inter locking paving stones, brick, flagstone or other similar all
    weather material which would prevent the accumulation of weeds and other
    conditions which constitute a hazard” (Fairfield Mun. Code, § 27.401,
    subd. (n)). The cross-complaint alleges that each of the listed items were “not
    in public or private view” and were “stored on an improved surface.”
    4Dayton confirmed in the trial court that the validity of the warrant “is
    not what is at issue here. The issue here is David James . . . not ‘exercising
    due care’ in his execution of the warrant.”
    5
    The city’s argument on appeal does not meaningfully address the
    conversion theory.5 In Ogborn v. City of Lancaster (2002) 
    101 Cal. App. 4th 448
    , 462, the court recognized a claim for conversion under similar facts. In
    that case, tenants sued the city and individual city officials for conversion
    after the city demolished their rental home and its contents as part of a
    nuisance abatement program. (Id. at p. 453.) The court held that the city
    employee who issued the abatement warrant was immune for liability under
    Government Code section 820.2, but that the employee who executed the
    warrant was not. (Id. at p. 461.) The court further rejected the city’s
    argument that it was immune under section 820.4 which provides, “A public
    employee is not liable for his act or omission exercising due care, in the
    execution or enforcement of any law.” The court explained that “a question of
    fact exists as to whether [the employee’s] reliance on the warrant constituted
    ‘due care’ with respect to the handling of the Ogborns’ personal property. The
    Ogborns presented evidence that [the employee] stymied their efforts to save
    their personal property, and a trier of fact could find he failed to exercise due
    care when he ordered the bulldozers to go ahead without giving the Ogborns
    a chance to retrieve their belongings.” (Id. at p. 462.)
    Here, Dayton’s complaint alleges a lack of due care sufficient to defeat
    the city’s demurrer. Accordingly, the trial court erred in sustaining the city’s
    5  The city’s failure to do so is curious because this is not the first
    litigation between the parties arising out of the abatement of a nuisance on
    Dayton’s property. In Dayton v. James (June 5, 2014, A134881), a
    nonpublished opinion, another division of this court upheld rulings
    sustaining a demurrer to most of the causes of action in a similar cross-
    complaint against the city and affirming summary judgment in favor of the
    city on a conversion cause of action. The court noted that the conversion
    cause of action was not dismissed on demurrer because of the allegation that
    items were removed “from an area not specifically covered by the abatement
    warrant.”
    6
    demurrer to the first through seventh causes of action insofar as they purport
    to allege a claim for conversion against the city. However, because these
    causes of action include no allegation regarding alleged misconduct by Doyle,
    the court properly sustained the demurrer to these claims as against him.
    b. Section 1983
    Section 1983 provides: “Every person who, under color of any statute,
    ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State . . . subjects, or causes to
    be subjected, any . . . person . . . to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or
    immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party
    injured in an action at law, suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for
    redress . . . .” To state a claim under section 1983, “ ‘ “a plaintiff must allege
    the violation of a right secured by the Constitution and laws of the United
    States, and must show that the alleged deprivation was committed by a
    person acting under color of state law.” ’ ” (Julian v. Mission Community
    Hospital (2017) 
    11 Cal. App. 5th 360
    , 384.)
    As set forth above, the complaint does not allege any specific
    wrongdoing by Doyle under these causes of action. While the cross-complaint
    alleges that James failed to exercise due care in executing the abatement
    warrant, the city “ ‘cannot be held vicariously liable under section 1983 for
    [its] subordinate officers’ unlawful acts.” (Julian v. Mission Community
    
    Hospital, supra
    , 11 Cal.App.5th at p. 384.) While a city can be sued directly
    under section 1983 where “ ‘ “ ‘the action that is alleged to be
    unconstitutional implements or executes a policy statement, ordinance,
    regulation, or decision officially adopted,’ ” ’ ” the complaint does not allege
    that the harm was caused by an official city act. (Ogborn v. City of 
    Lancaster, supra
    , 101 Cal.App.4th at pp. 463-464, citing Monell v. New York City Dept.
    of Social Services (1978) 
    436 U.S. 658
    , 690.) Dayton is correct that the city’s
    7
    resolution upholding the determination that the property constituted a
    nuisance is a “decision officially adopted.” As discussed above, these causes of
    action do not challenge the validity of that decision, only the manner in which
    it was executed. Accordingly, the trial court correctly determined that the
    first seven causes of action fail to allege a section 1983 claim against the
    city.6
    2. Cause of Action 8
    The eighth cause of action alleges that on January 19, 2017, Doyle
    issued a “Notice of Restricted Entry” and thereafter, on February 8, 2017,
    James posted the notice on Dayton’s property. Although the notice was
    stayed on February 16 after Dayton filed an appeal, Dayton allegedly was
    prevented from entering his home for eight days between February 8 and 16.
    The complaint alleges that the notice was issued in violation of Health and
    Safety Code section 17980, subdivisions (a) and (c)(1), and that the unlawful
    issuance of the notice amounted to an abuse of process and violation of his
    right to due process under the federal and state Constitutions. On appeal,
    Dayton clarifies that the eighth cause of action seeks to assert a section 1983
    claim against Doyle based on his unlawful interference with his “right to
    ‘Liberty’ as guaranteed by the 5th and 14th Amendments to the United States
    Constitution.”7
    Dayton’s conclusory statement in his opening brief that James’s
    6
    actions are also actionable under the California Constitution is insufficient to
    preserve the issue on appeal. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s finding
    that Dayton’s first through seventh causes of action fail to state a claim for
    violation of his rights under the California Constitution.
    Dayton offers no argument regarding any purported liability of the
    7
    city under section 1983. To the contrary, he acknowledges that “no
    administrative hearing nor any judicial hearing on the need to issue the
    8
    “Government officials enjoy qualified immunity from civil damages
    unless their conduct violates ‘clearly established statutory or constitutional
    rights of which a reasonable person would have known.’ ” (Mitchell v.
    Washington (9th Cir. 2016) 
    818 F.3d 436
    , 443.) “To be clearly established, a
    right must be sufficiently clear ‘that every “reasonable official [would have
    understood] that what he is doing violates that right.” ’ ” (Reichle v. Howards
    (2012) 
    566 U.S. 658
    , 664.)
    Here, the cross-complaint alleges that Doyle violated his right to
    “liberty” by issuing the notice in violation of requirements of the Health and
    Safety Code. As discussed below, the notice itself demonstrates compliance
    with the statutory requirements.8 Accordingly, Doyle is entitled to immunity
    because a reasonable official would not have understood that issuing the
    notice would violate Dayton’s rights.
    Subdivision (a) of Health and Safety Code section 17980 authorizes a
    city to abate a nuisance. Subdivision (c) authorizes the city to require
    vacating a building which it has determined to be a nuisance if it
    concurrently requires expeditious repair or abatement of the nuisance.9 Here,
    Restricted Entry Notice was held prior to the issuance of the notice (nor
    afterwards).”
    8 The city requested the trial court take judicial notice of the notice of
    restricted entry. Dayton did not oppose the request in the trial court and has
    not raised any argument regarding judicial notice on appeal.
    9 Health and Safety Code section 17980, subdivision (c) reads in
    relevant part: “(1) Whenever the enforcement agency has inspected or caused
    to be inspected a building and has determined that the building is a
    substandard building or a building described in Section 17920.10, the
    enforcement agency shall commence proceedings to abate the violation by
    repair, rehabilitation, vacation, or demolition of the building. The
    enforcement agency shall not require the vacating of a residential building
    unless it concurrently requires expeditious demolition or repair to comply
    with this part, the building standards published in the California Building
    9
    the notice states that entrance was being restricted because it had been
    determined that the house constituted a substandard building under Health
    and Safety Code section 17920.3, subdivision (a)(12) due to a rodent
    infestation. The notice indicates the city’s intent to summarily abate the
    infestation pursuant to section 27.901 of the city’s Municipal Code, which
    authorizes summary abatement if there exists a condition on the premises
    that poses an imminent threat to public health. Because the notice was
    issued in conformity with the governing statutes, Doyle is entitled to
    qualified immunity. Accordingly, the trial court properly found that the
    eighth cause of action fails to state a claim for relief under section 1983.10
    3. Cause of Action 10
    The tenth cause of action is largely incomprehensible. It alleges, “The
    [city’s] application for and execution of ‘Abatement Warrant 2275’ was
    unlawful and was therefore a violation of [Dayton’s] civil rights. [Fairfield
    Municipal Code] section 27.507(e) requires the hearing examiner to state the
    results of an inspection of . . . the property in the record and then give [the
    owner] the opportunity to rebut the facts and conclusions. This was not done
    as part of the ‘Inspection Warrant 2230’ and hearing conducted on 11 July
    2016 . . . . The hearing examiner relied upon the facts of the inspection in
    order to draw his conclusions [on] which of the ‘Preliminary Notice to Abate’
    violations were present, so as to issue an ‘Order to Abate Nuisance’ such
    nuisances. The facts and conditions used in the [housing enforcement]
    decision could not be lawfully used by him to make a determination as to the
    Standards Code, or other rules and regulations adopted pursuant to this
    part.”
    10 As with the prior causes of action, Dayton has waived his claims for
    violation of the California Constitution or other state law by failing to provide
    sufficient argument in his opening brief.
    10
    condition of [the] real property. This is a violation of due process under the
    United States Constitution Amendment 5 and 14. This is also actionable
    under the California Constitution Article 1 section 7.” On appeal, Dayton
    clarifies that his claim is that the abatement order was issued in violation of
    his right to due process because (1) the hearing officer relied on inadmissible
    evidence and (2) he was not given notice and an opportunity to be heard with
    respect to the items at issue in the first seven causes of action which he
    asserts were not stored in violation of the city’s nuisance statute.11
    To maintain an action under section 1983 based on a violation of
    procedural due process, Dayton must allege that: (1) his property interest at
    stake is a protected property right under the Fourteenth Amendment, (2) the
    deprivation of the interest contravened notions of due process, and (3) state
    or administrative processes and remedies to redress the alleged violation are
    inadequate. (Jefferson v. Jefferson County Pub. Sch. Sys. (6th Cir.2004) 
    360 F.3d 583
    , 588 [“Plaintiff may not seek relief under Section 1983 without first
    pleading and proving the inadequacy of state or administrative processes or
    remedies to redress her due process violations.”].) Dayton’s cross-complaint
    does not allege, and cannot be amended to allege, that the administrative
    processes and remedies to redress the alleged violation are inadequate. The
    hearing officer’s order was appealed to and affirmed by the city council.
    Dayton’s failure to further challenge that decision precludes his section 1983
    11 Neither the allegations of the cross-complaint nor Dayton’s argument
    on appeal suggest that Dayton was attempting to allege a section 1983 claim
    against Doyle. Accordingly, we consider the tenth cause of action as seeking
    relief against the city only.
    11
    claim. Accordingly, the trial court properly sustained without leave to amend
    the demurrer to the tenth cause of action.12
    Disposition
    The judgment is reversed insofar as it dismissed Dayton’s cross-claim
    for conversion against the city. On remand, limited proceedings should be
    permitted to resolve only Dayton’s claim that James failed to exercise due
    care in the execution of the abatement warrant.
    POLLAK, P. J.
    WE CONCUR:
    STREETER, J.
    BROWN, J.
    12 Therefore it is unnecessary to address whether other elements of a
    section 1983 claim could properly be alleged under the circumstances.
    12