Filed 10/25/16
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION ONE
STATE OF CALIFORNIA
SAN DIEGANS FOR OPEN D069561
GOVERNMENT,
Plaintiff and Appellant,
(Super. Ct. No. 37-2014-00039463-
v. CU-WM-NC)
CITY OF OCEANSIDE et al.,
Defendants and Respondents;
S.D. MALKIN PROPERTIES, INC.
Real Party in Interest and Respondent.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Jacqueline
M. Stern, Judge. Affirmed.
Briggs Law Corporation, Cory J. Briggs and Anthony N. Kim for Plaintiff and
Appellant.
John P. Mullen, City Attorney, for Defendants and Respondents.
Seltzer Caplan McMahon Vitek and G. Scott Williams for Real Party in Interest
and Respondent.
The record here demonstrates that in publishing its agenda with respect to its
consideration of an agreement under which a developer would be paid a subsidy in the
form of remission of $11 million for transient occupancy tax (TOT) collected from a
luxury hotel the developer agreed to build, as well as other concessions, the city council
of defendant and respondent City of Oceanside (the city)1 met the requirements of the
Brown Act (Gov. Code,2 § 54950.5 et seq.). Under the agreement, the city was initially
obligated to pay the developer 100 percent of TOT receipts generated by the hotel and,
thereafter, smaller percentages of TOT receipts from the hotel, until the city's $11 million
TOT obligation had been satisfied. When the agreement was presented to the city
council for approval, the council agenda stated that the council would consider: the
developer' s agreement to guarantee development of the subject property as "a full service
resort"; an agreement "to provide a mechanism to share Transient Occupancy Tax (TOT)
generated by the Project"; and a report, required by statute "documenting the amount of
subsidy provided to the developer, the proposed start and end date of the subsidy, the
public purpose of the subsidy." As we explain more fully below, the language of the
agenda, considered as a whole, gave the public and press more than a "clue" (see Moreno
v. City of King (2005) 127 Cal.App.4th 17, 27 (Moreno)) the city planned to provide the
project developer with a substantial and ongoing financial subsidy for the resort project.
1 Unless otherwise indicated, all references to the city also include defendants and
respondents Oversight Board of the City of Oceanside Successor Agency and City of
Oceanside Successor Agency
2 All further statutory references are to the Government Code, unless otherwise
indicated.
2
Accordingly, the trial court did not err in finding the agenda met the requirements of the
Brown Act.
We also find that the city's subsidy report study substantially complied with the
separate provisions of section 53083. Thus, we affirm the trial court's judgment in favor
of the city.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
A. City Council Adopts Resolution Approving Hotel Project
On July 22, 2014, the city's oversight board3 passed a resolution approving the
sale of certain city owned property to real party in interest and respondent S.D. Malkin
Properties, Inc. (Malkin). The sale to Malkin was set forth in a "Disposition Agreement
and Escrow Instructions" (Disposition Agreement). Under the terms of the Disposition
Agreement, upon the closing date of the sale to Malkin, "a duly executed and
acknowledged Agreement regarding Real Property (TOT) in the form of Exhibit 10.1.3"
would be delivered to the escrow holder.
The "Agreement Regarding Real Property (TOT)" (TOT Agreement) is an
agreement between the city and Malkin. For its part, Malkin agreed to develop, in two
phases, a 360 room luxury hotel on land owned by the successor to the city's former
3 The city's oversight board was created under the terms of legislation that dissolved
the city's redevelopment agency. (See Assem. Bill No. 1X 26 (2011-2012 1st Ex. Sess.).)
The oversight board oversees the city's redevelopment successor agency in winding down
the city's redevelopment program.
3
redevelopment agency;4 the city agreed to pay Malkin a total subsidy of $11,335,250,5
from TOT taxes generated by the hotel. Under the TOT Agreement, the hotel would be
developed in two phases, and, for the first four years after each phase was complete, 100
percent of TOT's generated by each phase would be paid to Malkin. As we indicated,
thereafter smaller percentages of TOT's generated by the hotel would be paid to Malkin.
The city council put the TOT Agreement, and items closely related to the hotel
development, on its agenda for its September 10, 2014 meeting. The agenda with respect
to these matters stated: "Adoption of a resolution to approve: 1. An Agreement
Regarding Real Property (Use Restrictions) between the City of Oceanside and SD
Malkin Properties Inc. to guarantee development and use of the property as a full service
resort consistent with the entitlements for the project; 2. An Agreement Regarding Real
Property to provide a mechanism to share Transit Occupancy Tax (TOT) generated by
the Project; 3. A Grant of Easement to permit construction of a subterranean parking
garage under Mission Avenue; and 4. A report required by AB 562 prepared by Paul
Marra of Keyser Marston and Associates documenting the amount of subsidy provided to
the developer, the proposed start and end date of the subsidy, the public purpose of the
subsidy, the amount of tax revenue and jobs generated by the project; and 5. A License
Agreement to permit construction staging for the project on a portion of Lot 26."
4 See footnote 3.
5 Under the agreement, the city's payment of the $11,335,250 obligations was
calculated so that its nominal payments in the future would be discounted to their value at
the time the agreement went into effect.
4
According to plaintiff and appellant San Diegans for Open Government (SDOG),
there was no serious opposition to the hotel project at the city council meeting. At the
meeting, the city council adopted a resolution approving the TOT Agreement and the
subsidy report.
B. Trial Court Proceedings
SDOG filed an amended complaint for declaratory and injunctive relief and a
petition for writ of mandate against the city on April 7, 2015. The complaint and petition
alleged violations of the Brown Act, the subsidy reporting provisions of section 53803,
and the California Constitution. The trial court heard the matter on the merits on October
23, 2015 and found in the city's favor. Thereafter, it entered judgment in favor of the
city, and SDOG filed a timely notice of appeal.
On appeal, SDOG again asserts the city violated the Brown Act and section
53803.
DISCUSSION
I
A. The Brown Act
With respect to the Brown Act, we begin by noting that where, as is the case here,
the facts are undisputed, we determine a local agency's compliance de novo. (Castaic
Lake Water Agency v. Newhall County Water Dist. (2015) 238 Cal.App.4th 1196, 1204
(Castaic).) Importantly, we also recognize that an agency fulfills its agenda obligations
under the Brown Act so long as it substantially complies with statutory requirements.
(Castaic, at p. 1205; § 54960.1, subd. (d)(1).) " ' " 'Substantial compliance . . . means
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actual compliance in respect to the substance essential to every reasonable objective of
the statute.' " ' " (Castaic, at p. 1205, quoting North Pacifica LLC v. California Coastal
Com. (2008) 166 Cal.App.4th 1416, 1431-1432.)
When the Legislature enacted the Brown Act, it declared that "the public
commissions, boards and councils and the other public agencies in this State exist to aid
in the conduct of the people's business. It is the intent of the law that their actions be
taken openly and that their deliberations be conducted openly. [¶] The people of this
State do not yield their sovereignty to the agencies which serve them. The people, in
delegating authority, do not give their public servants the right to decide what is good for
the people to know and what is not good for them to know. The people insist on
remaining informed so that they may retain control over the instruments they have
created." (§ 54950; see stats. 1953, ch. 1588, § 1.) In order to fully protect the people's
right to be informed, the Brown Act, by its terms, requires the agenda of a regular
meeting of a local agency, such as the city council, be posted 72 hours before the meeting
commences and contain "a brief general description of each item of business to be
transacted or discussed at the meeting, including items to be discussed in closed session.
A brief general description need not exceed 20 words." (§ 54954.2, subd. (a), italics
added.) Importantly, with exceptions not pertinent here, "[n]o action or discussion shall
be undertaken on any item not appearing on the posted agenda." (Id., subd. (b).)
Although there is not a great deal of direct authority with respect to what satisfies
the Brown Act's requirement of a "brief general description" of items to be considered by
a local agency, we can discern from the statute itself, cases discussing the statute as well
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as closely related statutes, and other authority, a general principle that agenda drafters
must give the public a fair chance to participate in matters of particular or general
concern by providing the public with more than mere clues from which they must then
guess or surmise the essential nature of the business to be considered by a local agency.
Thus, in Moreno, supra, 127 Cal.App.4th 17, although a city was considering taking
disciplinary action against its finance director, including possible termination, its agenda
item was inadequate because it merely stated that in closed session the city would
consider: " 'Per Government Code Section 54957: Public Employee (employment
contract).' " (Id. at p. 21.) In finding this failed to give notice to either the public, or the
finance director, that the council was considering disciplining or terminating him, the
court stated: "It was undisputed that at least a quarter of the meeting was actually
devoted to a discussion of [the finance director] and whether to terminate him . . . . The
agenda's description provided no clue that the dismissal of a public employee would be
discussed at the meeting." (Id. at pp. 26-27.) Importantly, the court went on to point out
how easily the city council could have met the requirements of the Brown Act: "[A]n
agenda that said simply 'Public Employee Dismissal' would have provided adequate
public notice of a closed session at which the Council would consider [the finance
director's] dismissal." (Moreno, at p. 27.)
Similarly, in applying analogous provisions of the Education Code, the court in
Carlson v. Paradise Unified Sch. Dist. (1971) 18 Cal.App.3d 196, 200 (Carlson) found
that an agenda which stated that a local board of education would consider a
"[c]ontinuation school site change" did not permit the board to decide to close an
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elementary school and move the continuation school to the site of the elementary school.
The court stated: "[I]t is imperative that the agenda of the board's business be made
public and in some detail so that the general public can ascertain the nature of such
business. It is a well-known fact that public meetings of local governing bodies are
sparsely attended by the public at large unless an issue vitally affecting their interests is
to be heard. To alert the general public to such issues, adequate notice is a requisite. In
the instant case, the school board's agenda contained as one item the language
'Continuation school site change.' This was entirely inadequate notice to a citizenry
which may have been concerned over a school closure. [¶] On this point alone, we think
the trial court was correct because the agenda item, though not deceitful, was entirely
misleading and inadequate to show the whole scope of the board's intended plans. It
would have taken relatively little effort to add to the agenda that this 'school site change'
also included the discontinuance of elementary education at [one school] and the transfer
of those students to [another school.]" (Ibid.)
The Attorney General reached a similar conclusion when asked to consider an
agenda of the State Board of Food and Agriculture, which was subject to related
provisions of the Bagley-Keen Open Meeting Act (§§ 11121-11121.8, 11123). An
agenda for the board stated that the board would consider "Tuolumne River San Joaquin
River Flood Control Problem"; however, in acting on that agenda item, the board adopted
a resolution opposing congressional designation of the Tuolumne River as a "Wild and
Scenic River." The Attorney General concluded that the agenda did not meet the
requirements of the statute because members of the public would have to guess as to
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whether they should attend the meeting of the board or seek additional information from
the board. (67 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 84 (1984).)
On the other hand, however, it is also clear that so long as notice of the essential
nature of the matter an agency will consider has been disclosed in the agency's agenda,
technical errors or immaterial omissions will not prevent an agency from acting. In
Castaic, supra, 238 Cal.App.4th at pages 1206-1207, a water agency published an agenda
which stated that its board of directors would conduct a conference with its legal counsel,
in closed session, and "discuss potential litigation." The agenda erroneously cited section
54956.9, subdivision (c), which defines "litigation" as including any adjudicatory
proceeding; the agenda should have cited section 54956.9, subdivision (d)(4), which, in
particular, permits closed sessions when an agency is "deciding whether to initiate
litigation." In finding that the agency's discussion of and decision to initiate litigation
was valid and that it had substantially complied with the Brown Act, the court stated:
"[Plaintiff's] argument is hypertechnical and elevates form over substance. The given
notice plainly advised the members of the public that on March 14, 2013, [the board]
would be meeting with legal counsel, in closed session, to discuss potential litigation in
two cases. The citation in the given notice to subdivision (c) instead of subdivision (d)(4)
of section 54956.9 could not possibly have misled or confused anyone." (Castaic, at
p. 1207.)
B. Analysis
Here, we have little difficulty concluding the city substantially complied with the
agenda requirements of the Brown Act. Its agenda for all the actions it would be
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considering relating to the hotel project, including the disputed TOT Agreement,
expressly gave the public notice that it would be considering a fairly substantial
development of publicly owned property as a luxury hotel; that the city would be sharing
TOT's generated by the project; and, importantly, by express reference to the subsidy
report, that the project, if approved, would involve a subsidy by the city. Admittedly, the
agenda would have been more informative had it set forth the amount of the subsidy, its
duration, and its source in TOT's generated by the project. However, to date, the
Legislature has not required such detail or precision in local agency agendas; rather, as
noted, the statute only requires a "brief general description," which the cases in turn have
determined only requires fair notice of the essential nature of what an agency will
consider. (See Carlson, supra, 18 Cal.App.3d at p. 200.) Here, the city met this
somewhat elastic standard by publishing an agenda that was not in any sense confusing,
misleading or unfairly opaque and that gave the public fair notice of the essential nature
of what the council would be considering. (Compare Moreno, supra, 127 Cal.App.4th at
p. 27 [inadequate notice of the substance] and Castaic, supra, 238 Cal.App.4th at
pp. 1206-1207 [sufficient notice, albeit technically inaccurate].)
II
On appeal, SDOG also argues the subsidy report considered by the city council
was inadequate. Like the trial court, we find the report substantially complies with the
requirements of section 53083.
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Section 530836, as enacted in 2013, requires that before approving any economic
6 Section 53083 provides:
"(a) On and after January 1, 2014, each local agency shall, before approving any
economic development subsidy within its jurisdiction, provide all of the following
information in written form available to the public, and through its Internet Web site, if
applicable:
"(1) The name and address of all corporations or any other business
entities, except for sole proprietorships, that are the beneficiary of the economic
development subsidy, if applicable.
"(2) The start and end dates and schedule, if applicable, for the economic
development subsidy.
"(3) A description of the economic development subsidy, including the
estimated total amount of the expenditure of public funds by, or of revenue lost to, the
local agency as a result of the economic development subsidy.
"(4) A statement of the public purposes for the economic development
subsidy.
"(5) Projected tax revenue to the local agency as a result of the economic
development subsidy.
"(6) Estimated number of jobs created by the economic development
subsidy, broken down by full-time, part-time, and temporary positions.
"(b) Before granting an economic development subsidy, each local agency shall
provide public notice and a hearing regarding the economic development subsidy. A
public hearing and notice under this subdivision is not required if a hearing and notice
regarding the economic development subsidy is otherwise required by law.
"(c) The information required to be provided in subdivision (a) shall remain
available to the public under existing state and federal law and be posted on the local
agency's Internet Web site, if applicable, for the entire term of the economic development
subsidy.
"(d) The local agency, within the term of the economic development subsidy but
not later than five years after the action granting an economic development subsidy, as
defined in paragraph (1) of subdivision (g), shall issue a report for each economic
development subsidy. The report shall contain the information described in subdivision
(a). The local agency shall make the report available to the public and through its
Internet Web site, if applicable. The report shall also contain the following information, if
applicable:
"(1) The name and address of all corporations or any other business
entities, except for sole proprietorships, that are the beneficiary of the economic
development subsidy, if applicable.
"(2) The start and end dates and schedule for the economic development
subsidy.
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development subsidy, a local agency must provide the public with detailed information
about the subsidy, including, the recipient, duration, amount and purpose of the subsidy;
tax revenues expected as a result of the subsidy; and the estimated number of jobs created
by the subsidy, broken down by "full-time, part-time, and temporary positions."
(§ 53083, subd. (a).) Although the statute does not itself permit substantial rather than
"(3) A description of the economic development subsidy, including the
estimated total amount of the expenditure of public funds by, or of revenue lost to, the
local agency as a result of the economic development subsidy.
"(4) The net tax revenue accruing to the local agency as a result of the
economic development subsidy.
"(5) The net number of jobs created by the economic development subsidy,
broken down by full-time, part-time, and temporary positions.
"(e)
"(1) The local agency, within the term of the economic development
subsidy but no later than five years after the action granting an economic development
subsidy, as defined in paragraph (1) of subdivision (g), shall hold a public hearing to
consider any written or oral comments on the information contained in the report
prepared pursuant to subdivision (d).
"(2) For an economic development subsidy, as defined in paragraph (1) of
subdivision (g), with a term of 10 years or more, the local agency shall hold a public
hearing at the conclusion of each economic development subsidy that shall contain the
information described in subdivision (d), in written form available to the public, and
through its Internet Web site, if applicable.
"(f) Each public hearing required by this section shall be consolidated with a local
agency's regularly scheduled hearing.
"(g) As used in this section, the following terms have the following meanings:
"(1) 'Economic development subsidy' means any expenditure of public
funds or loss of revenue to a local agency in the amount of one hundred thousand dollars
($100,000) or more, for the purpose of stimulating economic development within the
jurisdiction of a local agency, including, but not limited to, bonds, grants, loans, loan
guarantees, enterprise zone or empowerment zone incentives, fee waivers, land price
subsidies, matching funds, tax abatements, tax exemptions, and tax credits. 'Economic
development subsidy' shall not include expenditures of public funds by, or loss of
revenue to, the local agency for the purpose of providing housing affordable to persons
and families of low or moderate income, as defined in Section 50093 of the Health and
Safety Code.
"(2) 'Local agency' means a city, including a charter city, county, or city
and county."
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strict compliance with its requirements, substantial compliance is presumed to satisfy the
intent of the Legislature: " 'Unless the intent of a statute can only be served by
demanding strict compliance with its terms, substantial compliance is the governing
test.' " (North Pacifica LLC v. California Coastal Com., supra, 166 Cal.App.4th at
p. 1431.)
The city's subsidy report states that the hotel developer will receive an estimated
$13,688,267 in TOT subsidies. This amount was calculated by estimating the annual
TOT taxes generated by the hotel over a number of years and then discounting to present
value the amount estimated for each future year.7 Although the report itself does not
make it entirely clear the discount calculation was applied to each annual estimated
subsidy and that the present value of the total subsidy was the sum of each annual
subsidy, as discounted, the report, by giving the public a good faith and reasonable
estimate of the present value of the subsidy, substantially complied with the requirements
of the statute.
We also reject SDOG's contention the subsidy report failed to accurately set forth
the number of jobs attributable to the subsidy. SDOG's principle contention with respect
to the jobs estimate is its contention the report inaccurately estimated the jobs attributable
to the project, as opposed to jobs attributable to the subsidy. It is true, of course, that the
statute by its terms requires an estimate of jobs attributable to the subsidy; however,
where, as here, the agreement with a developer expressly requires the subsidy and is a
7 The report stated that the estimated total nominal amount of the subsidy—without
application of any discount—would be $25,628,00.
13
condition of the developer's obligation to construct and operate the project, a report of
jobs attributable to the project is a reasonable means of estimating the jobs attributable to
the subsidy.
The subsidy report estimated the number of permanent full-time jobs, the number
of permanent part-time jobs, and the number of temporary jobs. The report did not
present an estimate of full-time and part-time temporary jobs, as SDOG argues it should
have. As the city points out, the statute by its terms does not also require an estimate of
full-time and part-time temporary jobs.
Finally, we reject SDOG's contention the statute requires that a local agency's
estimate of jobs attributable to a subsidy calculate the number of jobs that might be lost
as result of the subsidy by virtue of the competition the project represents with adjacent
entrepreneurs. While, if possible, such a calculation might be helpful to the public in
evaluating a project, we cannot read into the statute such a requirement.
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DISPOSITION
The trial court's judgment is affirmed. Respondents city and Malkin to recover
their costs on appeal.
BENKE, J.
WE CONCUR:
McCONNELL, P. J.
AARON, J.
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