DocketNumber: B283480
Judges: Hoffstadt
Filed Date: 8/23/2018
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
A city council passed an ordinance that (1) amended its neighborhood-based "specific plan" to create a new subzone for large commercial development, and (2) placed a half-built Super Target retail store into that new subzone. Two citizens groups attacked the city's ordinance, and the trial court ruled that the city violated *319the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) ( Pub. Resources Code, § 21000 et seq. )
This appeal presents two questions. First, when a public agency has previously approved an environmental impact report for a specific development and subsequently amends its specific plan to authorize that development, how is that subsequent amendment to be analyzed under CEQA-as an entirely new "project" (subject to CEQA's three-tiered approach), or instead as a project for which an environmental impact report has already been prepared under section 21166? Second, does the ordinance in this case constitute impermissible "spot zoning" because it places the Super Target store in an "island" of ostensibly less restrictive zoning?
We hold that the city's ordinance should be examined under section 21166, and conclude that the city complied with CEQA in proceeding by way of an addendum to the prior environmental impact report because substantial evidence supports the city's finding that the specific plan amendment would not have any reasonably foreseeable environmental consequences beyond the construction of the Super Target store. We also hold that the ordinance constituted "spot zoning," but that it was permissible because the city did not abuse its discretion in finding that its amendment to the specific plan was in the public interest and compatible with the general plans of which it was a part. Accordingly, we reverse the trial court.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
I. Facts
A. The Planned Target Superstore
After initially proposing a smaller store, Real Party in Interest Target Corporation (Target) eventually applied to Defendant City Council of the City of Los Angeles (the City or City Council) to build a Super Target retail store (the Superstore). Target sought to build a nearly 75-foot tall, three-story structure: the third (and top) floor would house the 163,862 square-foot Superstore; the second floor would be a parking lot; and the ground floor would be home to several smaller retail stores, a pedestrian plaza, and a transit kiosk.
The Superstore was to be located at the intersection of Sunset Boulevard and Western Avenue in Hollywood, California. That location is within two so-called "general plans" (the General Plan of the City of Los Angeles and the Hollywood Community Plan) and one "specific plan" (the Vermont/Western Transit Oriented District Specific Plan), the latter of which is also known as a Station Neighborhood Area Plan (or SNAP). At the time the Superstore was first proposed, the SNAP had five subzones (designated as Subareas A through E), and the Superstore was located in Subarea C.
B. Initial Analysis and Approvals
The City Council commissioned and prepared an environmental impact report for the Superstore.
Because the proposed Superstore exceeded the height and parking space limitations of Subarea C, among other requirements, the City Council granted eight *320variances (called "exceptions") from the SNAP pursuant to Los Angeles Municipal Code section 11.5.7.F.2. Taken together, these variances largely authorized the Superstore to be built as proposed.
The City Council also approved the environmental impact report. Target began construction of the Superstore.
C. Target I Litigation
Plaintiffs La Mirada Avenue Neighborhood Association of Hollywood (La Mirada) and Citizens Coalition Los Angeles (Citizens Coalition) (collectively, plaintiffs), both of which are "community association[s]" that "advocate for residential quality of life issues," filed separate petitions for a writ of mandate against the City (and naming Target as the real party in interest). As pertinent to this appeal, plaintiffs alleged that (1) the City's environmental impact report was deficient, thereby violating CEQA, and (2) the City Council's grant of variances were not supported by substantial evidence, thereby violating the Los Angeles Municipal Code.
The trial court partially denied and partially granted plaintiffs' writ petitions. The court ruled that the environmental impact report was sufficient, but that six of the eight variances were not supported by substantial evidence.
Target appealed, and La Mirada cross-appealed.
D. Amendment of the SNAP
While the appeals of the trial court's judgment were pending, the City Council enacted Los Angeles Ordinance No. 184,414 (the Ordinance or SNAP Amendment).
The Ordinance changed the law in two ways relevant to this appeal.
First, section 12 of the Ordinance created a new Subarea F within the SNAP. Subarea F, denominated as a "Large Scale Commercial Node." Commercial developments within Subarea F that were "[ (1) ] over 100,000 square feet" [ (2) ] on existing sites of over 3.5 acres in size [ (3) ] within a quarter-mile of a transit station, and [ (4) ] within a quarter-mile of freeway on and off ramps" could reach up to 75 feet in height and need only "substantially conform" with the SNAP's building facade requirements. But any such development would also be required to dedicate "at least 80%" of its ground-floor street frontage to retail uses, community facilities, and "other similar active uses"; include pedestrian throughways along that frontage; include a pedestrian plaza of at least 10 percent of the "floor area," which must feature a transit kiosk, seating for the public, and an Integrated Mobility Hub; and build out at least 20 percent of its parking for electric vehicles.
Second, the Ordinance designated one location within the SNAP's area as Subarea F-namely, the location where the Superstore was being built.
*321Although two other locations within the SNAP's boundaries were 3.5 acres in size and within a quarter-mile of transit stations and freeway access (three of the four eligibility requirements for Subarea F), the Ordinance did not rezone either of those locations into Subarea F and, the City acknowledged that the City Council would need to pass another Ordinance that redefined Subarea F to include the geographic location to be developed.
E. Dismissal of Appeal
In light of the Ordinance, a different Division of this Court dismissed the pending appeals as moot, but left the trial court's final judgment intact. ( La Mirada Avenue Neighborhood Assn. of Hollywood v. City of Los Angeles (2016)
F. Addendum to the Prior Environmental Impact Report
The City prepared an "Addendum to the Certified [Environmental Impact Report] for the Target at Sunset and Western Project" (the Addendum). The Addendum defined the "Revised Project" as (1) the amendment of the SNAP (as well as amendments of the Hollywood Community Plan and the Transportation Element of the City's General Plan), and (2) "all construction activities needed to complete the existing structure and the operation of" the Superstore.
The Addendum examined "whether the impacts of the Revised Project are the same, higher or lower than the Original Project" (which dealt solely with the construction of the Superstore). To provide the most up-to-date information, the City conducted updated analyses of air quality, greenhouse gases, noise, and traffic. The City then examined the full range of relevant environmental factors.
The City concluded that the Revised Project would "not require major revisions of the" previously certified environmental impact report because the SNAP Amendment did not involve any "new significant environmental effects or a substantial increase in the severity of previously identified significant effects." Because "none of [the] conditions ... requiring preparation of a subsequent [environmental impact report]" under section 21166 were "present," the City proceeded by way of Addendum.
The City Council approved the Addendum.
II. Procedural Background
Plaintiffs filed two further petitions for a writ of mandate. In the operative petitions, plaintiffs alleged that the City: (1) violated CEQA by relying on the Addendum rather than authoring a "subsequent, supplement, or new [environmental impact report] for the new project that included a proposed amendment of the SNAP"; and (2) committed impermissible "spot zoning" by making the less onerous zoning requirements embodied in Subarea F applicable only to the Superstore.
Following exhaustive briefing and oral argument, the trial court granted the writ petition on the ground that the City violated CEQA. Because, in the court's view, the Ordinance amended the SNAP, it was an "independent project" from the Superstore, making it inappropriate to rely on *322an addendum that evaluated the environmental impact of only the Superstore. Thus, the City was obligated to conduct a wholly independent CEQA analysis. Further, because the Ordinance's creation of Subarea F "allows and encourages the development of large scale retail projects," the court found that the Ordinance made it "reasonably foreseeable that multiple retail projects will apply for Subarea F Status" on the two other parcels that currently meet Subarea F's size and proximity-to-transit requirements. Thus, the court concluded, the City was obligated under CEQA to conduct an "initial study" to assess whether a fully separate environmental impact report should be prepared. The court declined to proceed under the CEQA provision that applies "[w]hen an environmental impact report has [already] been prepared for a project" (under section 21166) because, in its view, that provision does not apply when there is a "[s]ubstantial change[ ] ... with respect to the circumstances under which the project is being undertaken" (§ 21166, subd. (b)); as the court saw it, the Ordinance "changed" "the 'entitlements vehicle' for ... its approval" of the Superstore, and thus constituted a "changed circumstance."
The court declined to reach the spot zoning issue.
After the trial court entered judgment, the City and Target filed timely notices of appeal.
DISCUSSION
On appeal, the parties raise two issues: (1) Did the City's reliance on the Addendum violate CEQA, and (2) Did the City engage in impermissible "spot zoning"?
I. Is There a CEQA Violation?
Answering the CEQA question presented by this case is challenging because, in the words of the poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, the parties' arguments are "[s]hips that pass in the night." Plaintiffs argue that the Ordinance amended the SNAP to create a "free-floating" subzone that is attractive to large commercial development; that the Ordinance is therefore a "project" separate and distinct from the construction of the Target Superstore; and that the City is therefore required by CEQA to start from the beginning by conducting an "initial study" of the SNAP Amendment's effects and, if warranted, an entirely separate environmental impact report. The City and Target, on the other hand, argue that the Ordinance both created a new Subarea F and placed the Superstore into that subarea; that there is already a final environmental impact report for the Superstore; and that the City was required by CEQA only to examine whether, under section 21166, the SNAP Amendment will "require major revisions in the environmental impact report" and to prepare *323a supplemental report only if major revisions were necessary. As our summaries suggest, the parties' contrasting positions even disagree on what the Ordinance does.
Accordingly, we approach the CEQA question by asking three questions: (1) what does the Ordinance do?; (2) which provisions of CEQA apply to the Ordinance-the provisions governing "projects" for which there is no prior CEQA analysis or the provision (namely, section 21166) that applies when there has already been a prior CEQA analysis?; and (3) did the City Council comply with the applicable provision(s)?
A. What does the Ordinance do?
In evaluating the meaning of the Ordinance, like any other statute, we look first to the enactment's plain language. ( Amaral v. Cintas Corp. No. 2 (2008)
Target contends that the Ordinance applies solely to Target's Superstore. Target is right insofar as the City Council only placed the Superstore's parcel into Subarea F, but it is wrong insofar as the Ordinance also more generally spells out the requirements (in terms of parcel size, development size, and proximity-to-transit) that must be met before any parcel can be redesignated into in Subarea F. To the extent Target invites us to disregard the Ordinance's language enumerating these eligibility requirements, it is an invitation we must decline. ( Vasquez v. State of California (2008)
Plaintiffs raise three arguments. First, they assert that the Ordinance is a "free-floating" subzone that automatically puts all parcels meeting Subarea F's parcel size and proximity requirements into that Subarea. This assertion is incorrect because the Ordinance defines the Subarea's application by reference to an attached map (Ordinance, § 12.A), and the map only designates the Superstore's parcel. Second, plaintiffs assert that two maps prepared by Target while it was lobbying for the Ordinance showed three parcels in Subarea F. This assertion is true, but irrelevant because the City Council ultimately used a map that included only one parcel-the Superstore's-in Subarea F. (See Crespin v. Kizer (1990)
B. Under which provisions of CEQA should the Ordinance be analyzed?
1. Background
a. CEQA, generally
CEQA is designed " 'to "[e]nsure that the long-term protection of the environment shall be the guiding criterion in public decisions." ' " ( Friends of College of San Mateo Gardens v. San Mateo County Community College Dist. (2016)
b. How CEQA applies to projects for which there is no prior CEQA review
When a state or local public agency is planning an activity for which there has been no prior CEQA review, CEQA dictates a "three-step process." ( California Building Industry Assn. v. Bay Area Air Quality Management Dist. (2015)
In the first step, the agency is to conduct a preliminary review to assess whether the contemplated action (1) qualifies as a "project" falling within CEQA's ambit and, if it does, (2) whether the project nevertheless falls within one of CEQA's threshold exemptions. ( California Building Industry Assn. v. Bay Area Quality Management Dist. (2016)
In the second step, which is only reached for a nonexempt project, the agency is to conduct a more in-depth "initial study" to assess whether there is "substantial evidence supporting a fair argument [that] the project may have significant adverse effects" on the environment. ( Communities for a Better Environment v.South Coast Air Quality Management Dist. (2010)
In the third step, which is only reached if there is a fair argument that the project may have significant adverse environmental effects, the agency is to prepare a full-blown environmental impact report. (§§ 21080, subd. (d), 21082.2, subd. (d).)
The threshold question of "[w]hether a proposed activity is a project" is either a "question of law" or a "predominantly legal question"; either way, it is to be decided by the courts without any deference to the agency's determination. ( San Mateo Gardens , supra , 1 Cal.5th at p. 952,
c. How CEQA applies to projects for which there has been prior CEQA review
When a state or local public agency is considering a project for which there has already been prior CEQA review-whether that review has led to the preparation of an environmental impact report or instead to the issuance of a negative declaration (mitigated or not)-section 21166 provides that the agency is not to prepare a "subsequent or supplemental environmental impact report" or negative declaration unless: (1) "[s]ubstantial changes are proposed in the project which will require major revisions of the environmental impact report" or, if the prior review precipitated a negative declaration, the preparation of an environmental impact report; (2) "[s]ubstantial changes occur with respect to the circumstances under which the project is being undertaken which will require major revisions in the environmental impact report" or, if the prior review precipitated a negative declaration, the preparation of such an environmental impact report; or (3) "[n]ew information, which was not known and could not have been known at the time the environmental impact report was certified as complete," or the negative declaration was issued, "becomes available." (§ 21166 [applying when prior CEQA review prompted an environmental impact report]; San Mateo Gardens , supra , 1 Cal.5th at p. 949-950,
Because the question "whether an initial environmental document remains relevant despite changed plans or circumstances-like the question whether an initial environmental document requires major revisions due to changed plans or circumstances-is a predominantly factual question," our Supreme Court has held that "[i]t is ... a question for the agency to answer in the first instance, drawing on its particular expertise." ( San Mateo Gardens , supra , 1 Cal.5th at pp. 952-953,
2. Analysis
It is undisputed that the City prepared an environmental impact report regarding the Superstore. Because the activity at issue in this case is not a change to the Superstore itself but instead the Ordinance amending the SNAP (to create a new subzone and to place the Superstore in that subzone), the question arises: Is the amendment of the SNAP a project for which there has been prior CEQA review (which would make section 21166 applicable), or is it an entirely new project (which would call for the initiation of CEQA's three-step analysis)?
As our Supreme Court recently held, the answer to this question does not turn on "any abstract characterization of the project as 'new' or 'old.' " ( San Mateo Gardens , supra , 1 Cal.5th at p. 944,
A prior environmental document will in most cases remain relevant when the prior CEQA analysis and the current CEQA analysis pertain to related projects *327at the same level of generality-that is, when both deal with a "specific development" or both deal with a more generalized "program" (such as a general plan or a specific plan). ( San Mateo Gardens , supra , 1 Cal.5th at pp. 943-944,
But what if the related projects operate at different levels of generality? What if, as here, the prior CEQA analysis pertained to a specific development while the current project deals with a more generalized program? Or vice versa? Does this difference render section 21166 inapplicable?
We conclude that the answer is "no," and do so for three reasons. First, the primary consideration as to whether section 21166 applies is whether "the previous environmental document retains any relevance in light of the proposed changes...." ( San Mateo Gardens , supra , 1 Cal.5th at p. 944,
As discussed below, the dispute in this case centers on how the City should have examined the environmental impact arising from Subarea F's potential to encourage further large commercial developments. By definition, the environmental impact of the Superstore as a large commercial development placed in Subarea F is part of that analysis. As a result, the prior environmental impact report that studied the Superstore "retains ... relevance." ( San Mateo Gardens , supra , 1 Cal.5th at p. 944,
Plaintiffs suggest that it may be inappropriate to rely upon the previously prepared environmental impact report for the Superstore because, in their view, that report is defective. However, the accuracy of the information in the prior CEQA analysis does not affect its relevance under section 21166. ( Melom , supra , 183 Cal.App.4th at p. 49,
For these reasons, we will examine the propriety of the City's conduct under section 21166.
C. Did the City comply with section 21166?
1. What is the standard for further environmental review under section 21166?
a. When do changes or new information require major revisions to a prior CEQA analysis?
As explained above, section 21166 provides that, where an agency has engaged in a prior CEQA review that retains relevance to the project currently under consideration, the agency must file an addendum (either to a prior environmental impact report or prior negative declaration) unless (1) there have been "[s]ubstantial changes" in either the project or the circumstances "under which the project is being undertaken" "which will require major revisions" of the prior environmental impact report or negative declaration, or (2) there is "[n]ew information" that was "not known and could *329not have been known" at the time of the prior CEQA review. (§ 21166.) If these conditions exist, the agency must prepare a "subsequent or supplemental" report. (Ibid. )
CEQA itself provides no further guidance on what these standards mean, but the Guidelines interpreting CEQA do. Those Guidelines indicate that "major revisions" to a CEQA review document will be required, and that "new information" will warrant a new document, when the project currently under consideration "involve[s] ... new significant environmental effects or a substantial increase in the severity of previously identified significant effects" or the "new information" shows the same. (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 14. § 15162, subd. (a).) This inquiry into whether a prior CEQA review of a project is sufficient in scope vis-à-vis subsequent changes to that project is, in our view, functionally indistinguishable from the question whether a current CEQA review of a project is sufficient in scope vis-à-vis possible future actions flowing from that project. In both instances, the fundamental question is the same: Does the existing CEQA document encapsulate all of the environmentally significant impacts of the project? In the latter instance, further CEQA analysis is required only (1) if the "future expansion or other action ... is a reasonably foreseeable consequence of the initial project," and (2) if that "future expansion or action will be significant in that it will likely change the scope or nature of the initial project or its environmental effects." ( Laurel Heights Improvement Assn. v. Regents of University of California (1988)
b. When is a consequence reasonably foreseeable?
The inquiry into whether a consequence of a project is reasonably foreseeable (and thus requires further CEQA review) depends on how broadly CEQA construes the concept of reasonable foreseeability. Although that concept could be defined very broadly (because, as courts have noted in other contexts, on a "clear judicial day[,] ... a court can foresee forever" ( Thing v. La Chusa (1989)
On the one hand, construing reasonable foreseeability too narrowly means that a consequence may not be evaluated until it is "too late." This is problematic because the failure to consider a consequence (1) can violate CEQA's mandate that agencies consider the cumulative and total effect of a project rather than "chopping a large project into many little ones[,] each with a minimal potential impact on the environment" ( Bozung v. Local Agency Formation Com. (1975)
*330to support action already taken" [citation]' " ( Banning Ranch Conservancy v. City of Newport Beach (2012)
On the other hand, construing reasonable foreseeability too broadly means that a consequence may be evaluated "too early." This is problematic because " '[w]here future development is unspecified and uncertain, no purpose can be served by requiring an [agency] to engage in sheer speculation as to future environmental consequences.' " ( Laurel Heights , supra , 47 Cal.3d at p. 395,
i. When it is
In trying to balance these competing concerns and to fashion a definition that is "just right" for CEQA, courts have deemed a consequence of a project to be reasonably foreseeable only when that consequence is, as a practical matter, sufficiently certain to happen. (Accord, Laurel Heights , supra , 47 Cal.3d at p. 398,
First, a consequence is reasonably foreseeable when the agency has already committed itself to undertake the consequence. ( Cal. Code Regs., tit. 14, § 15165 [CEQA review required where the responsible "agency" "commits ... to" the consequence].)
Second, a consequence is reasonably foreseeable when the project under review presupposes the occurrence of that consequence-that is, when the consequence is a "necessary" and essential component of the project itself. ( Banning Ranch , supra , 211 Cal.App.4th at p. 1223,
Third, a consequence is reasonably foreseeable when it is itself under environmental review. ( City of Santee v. County of San Diego (1989)
Fourth, a consequence is reasonably foreseeable when the agency subjectively "intends" or "anticipates" the consequence, and the project under review is meant to be the "first step" toward that consequence. ( Bozung , supra , 13 Cal.3d at p. 274,
Lastly, a consequence is reasonably foreseeable if the project under review creates an incentive that is all but certain to result in the consequence. (See, e.g., City of Antioch v. City Council (1986)
If a consequence falls into any of these categories and is sufficiently certain to come to pass that it warrants evaluation under CEQA, it does not matter that the consequence might be subject to later CEQA review when its contours become more concrete. ( Bozung , supra , 13 Cal.3d at p. 282,
ii. When it is not
Conversely, a consequence is not reasonably foreseeable when it is entirely independent of the project under consideration. ( Banning Ranch , supra , 211 Cal.App.4th at p. 1223,
A consequence is not reasonably foreseeable simply because the project under consideration makes that consequence a possibility -even when the public agency is subjectively aware of that possibility (that is, even when it is "a gleam in [the] planner's eye"). ( Laurel Heights , supra , 47 Cal.3d at p. 398,
*333Towards Responsibility in Planning v. City Council (1988)
And, more to the point here, a consequence is not reasonably foreseeable merely because the project creates an incentive for that consequence to come to pass (unless, as noted above, that incentive makes the consequence all but certain). (See Aptos Council v. County of Santa Cruz (2017)
In these situations, CEQA does not exempt the consequence from environmental review; it merely postpones that review until the consequence is sufficiently certain. (See Lake County , supra , 70 Cal.App.3d at pp. 856-857,
2. Does substantial evidence support the City Council's finding that no further environmental review is warranted under section 21166?
Because we are applying section 21166, our task is not to assess for ourselves whether there is a fair argument that a particular consequence is reasonably foreseeable. (See Stanislaus Audubon Society , supra , 33 Cal.App.4th at pp. 152-159,
Substantial evidence is defined as "evidence"-that is, as the "facts, reasonable assumptions predicated upon facts, and expert opinion supported by facts"-presented in the record. (§ 21082.2, subd. (c); Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. City of Turlock (2006)
Substantial evidence supports the City Council's finding that the sole reasonably foreseeable consequence of creating Subarea F was the construction of the Superstore. The evidence in the administrative record indicates that the City Council has not committed itself to any modification of the currently existing commercial development on the two other parcels currently meeting Subarea F's size and proximity-to-transit requirements; that such modification is neither essential nor necessary to the creation of Subarea F; that no such modification is currently under review; that no such modification is either "intended" or "anticipated"; and that the creation of Subarea F does not create an incentive that makes modification of the existing commercial development all but certain (either on the two potential existing parcels or on other parcels that might be "cobbled together").
Christward Ministry , supra ,
The trial court held that section 21166 did not apply because the City Council's amendment of the SNAP altered the method by which the Superstore was approved (that is, by amending the SNAP rather than granting variances from it), and thus constituted a substantial change "with respect to the circumstances under which [the Superstore] is being undertaken," thereby falling into one of section 21166's exceptions. (§ 21166, subd. (b), italics added.) This analysis is incorrect because it ignores that the exception for *335changed circumstances by its terms only applies when that change "will require major revisions in the" agency's CEQA analysis (§ 21166, subd. (b)); a change in circumstances, by itself, is not enough. As explained above, major revisions are required only when the change creates reasonably foreseeable consequences that are not addressed by prior CEQA review; and here, there are no such consequences.
Plaintiffs make four arguments as to why the creation of Subarea F necessitates further CEQA review beyond an addendum.
First, Citizens Coalition asserts that the Addendum does not discuss the creation of Subarea F. This is factually incorrect, as the Addendum defines the "Revised Project" it assesses as including both the creation of Subarea F and the completion of the Superstore.
Second, plaintiffs argue that the City intended further Subarea F developments beyond Target, as proven by (1) the amended SNAP's use of the plural (rather than the singular) in setting forth the requirements of new Subarea F, and (2) language in a report by the Department of City Planning Commission, which states that "amending the SNAP to reclassify the [Superstore] in the new Subarea F ... recognizes that the nature of 'superstore' retail is changing" and that "there need to be new regulations in place" "for the SNAP to appropriately capture this new development typology and the jobs and economic development that come with it." The City's use of the plural versus the singular is part and parcel of setting forth new eligibility criteria and in no way calls into question the City's finding that development beyond the Superstore is not reasonably foreseeable. (Accord, Larsen v. San Francisco (1920)
Third, plaintiffs argue that the creation of Subarea F creates incentives for retailers to build large retail projects in either (i) the other two parcels within the SNAP meeting Subarea F's size and proximity-to-transit requirements, or (ii) in new parcels meeting those requirements that can be cobbled together from smaller parcels. Plaintiffs effectively rely on the precursor principle to Field of Dreams ' "if you build it, they will come"-namely, "if you zone it, they will build." We need not independently delve into whether Subarea F's requirements create a powerful incentive to build (given that those requirements also obligate retailers to build pedestrian-focused facilities and space for other retailers) because, as we explain in detail above, the City Council had substantial evidence upon which to conclude that any incentives created by Subarea F do not make development all but certain.
Lastly, plaintiffs ask us to abandon substantial evidence review in favor of independent review because ordinances (like the SNAP Amendment) are to be construed de novo. While courts independently interpret the meaning of statutes (of which ordinances are obviously a subspecies) ( Meyers v. Board of Administration etc. (2014)
II. Is There Impermissible Spot Zoning?
Plaintiffs argue in the alternative that the Ordinance constitutes impermissible spot zoning by putting the Superstore-but not other parcels-into the less restrictively zoned Subarea F.
"Spot zoning" occurs when a parcel of land is rezoned to give it fewer or greater rights than the parcels surrounding it. ( Foothill Communities , supra , 222 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1307, 1311-1312,
The creation of a "spot zone" is invalid only when it is not in the public interest-that is, when it is "arbitrary," "irrational," and "unreasonable." ( Foothill Communities , supra , 222 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1309, 1314,
Plaintiffs have not carried their burden of showing that the City Council engaged in impermissible spot zoning. At the outset, it is unclear whether Subarea F amounts to less restrictive zoning because it imposes many special requirements upon developments within its confines; it is somewhat of a mixed bag.
But even if we assume that Subarea F is on the whole less restrictive, and *337that the creation of Subarea F for just the Superstore consequently amounts to spot zoning, it is not impermissible. To begin, there is a "reasonable basis" for the City Council's "belief" that the creation of Subarea F "has substantial relation to the public health, safety, morals or general welfare." ( Wilkins , supra , 29 Cal.2d at p. 339,
Rather than attack the specific findings of the City's staff as to how the Ordinance is in the public interest and is compatible with the other applicable plans, plaintiffs make what amount to five other challenges.
First, they contend that the City never made a finding that the Ordinance was in the public interest. We reject this argument. The law requires a "reasonable basis" for such a finding ( Wilkins , supra , 29 Cal.2d at p. 339,
Second, plaintiffs assert that the Ordinance is not in the public interest because it was enacted to legitimize what the trial court previously held was an invalid project and to "allow[ ] Target to benefit from its arrogant ... construction of the Project during the pendency of litigation." However, the City Council's motive for enacting the Ordinance is irrelevant because "the validity of legislative acts must be measured by the terms of the legislation itself, and not by the motives of, or [the] influences upon, the legislators who enacted the measure." ( City and County of San Francisco v. Cooper (1975)
Third, plaintiffs argue that the City staff's findings regarding public benefit are "boilerplate" (and thus presumably entitled to no weight), that the Superstore complex confers no greater benefits than the original store Target originally proposed to build, and that the sole beneficiary of the Ordinance is Target. By these arguments, plaintiffs ask us to second-guess the City Council's assessment of what is in the public interest. We must decline this request because " 'the wisdom or good policy of a zoning ordinance is for a municipality to determine and the courts have nothing to do with it.' [Citations.]" ( Tandy v. City of Oakland (1962)
*338Fourth, plaintiffs suggest that the reasons that justify placing the Superstore in Subarea F would justify-if not compel-the development of other large-scale commercial projects, which taken as a whole is not in the public interest. This suggestion overlooks the fundamental rationale of the law underlying spot zoning. "The essence of spot zoning," like the essence of equal protection, "is irrational discrimination." ( Avenida San Juan , supra , 201 Cal.App.4th at p. 1268,
Lastly, plaintiffs intimate that the Ordinance is incompatible with the SNAP because it alters it. The plain import of this argument is that a SNAP may never be amended. That is clearly not the law. ( Gov. Code, §§ 65453, 65454 ; Foothill Communities , supra , 222 Cal.App.4th at p. 1310,
DISPOSITION
The judgment is reversed. Target and the City are entitled to their costs on appeal.
We concur:
ASHMANN-GERST, Acting P. J.
CHAVEZ, J.
All further statutory references are to the Public Resources Code unless otherwise indicated.
Plaintiffs also alleged that the City Council violated the laws on open meetings and denied them a fair hearing. Plaintiffs voluntarily dismissed the open meeting claim, and the trial court rejected the fair hearing claim.
The trial court also awarded attorney's fees pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 1021.5. We subsequently affirmed that award. (La Mirada Avenue Neighborhood Assn. of Hollywood v. City of Los Angeles (2018)
La Mirada suggests in a footnote that the Superstore does not meet all of Subarea F's proximity-to-transit requirements, but has forfeited this argument by raising it for the first time on appeal in a passing reference in a footnote.
Plaintiffs also alleged that the Ordinance and its approval of the Addendum violated the Los Angeles Municipal Code in a number of ways, but the trial court rejected these claims and plaintiffs have not cross-appealed.
Although the trial court did not reach the spot zoning issue, the parties have fully briefed the issue, and we address it in the interest of providing a final resolution to this long-pending matter.