Filed 10/30/20
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
PINTO LAKE MHP LLC, H045757
(Santa Cruz County
Plaintiff and Appellant, Super. Ct. No. 17-CV-01424)
v.
COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ,
Defendant and Respondent.
A mobile home park owner sought judicial review of a county hearing officer’s
denial of its special rent adjustment application. The trial court sustained the county’s
demurrer for failure to join the mobile home park residents as parties, but allowed leave
to amend the combined complaint and mandamus petition to add the residents. The
owner elected to stand on its original pleading, and the trial court granted the county’s
motion to dismiss the case for failure to file an amended pleading.
We reject the park owner’s arguments that the trial court’s ruling on the demurrer
was error. The trial court engaged in the first of the two-part inquiry under Code of Civil
Procedure section 389 to determine whether a civil action should proceed in the absence
of persons who are deemed necessary but who cannot be made parties. The trial court
concluded that the residents are necessary parties under Code of Civil Procedure
section 389, subdivision (a), and we find no abuse of discretion in that ruling. But the
trial court did not reach the question under Code of Civil Procedure section 389,
subdivision (b) of whether the case should be dismissed due to the residents’ absence
(rendering them indispensable parties under the statute). That inquiry is triggered when a
person deemed necessary to the action cannot be joined as a party. The parties disagreed
in the trial court about whether the statute of limitations had run on joinder.
The trial court most likely would have addressed the limitations issue after the
park owner filed an amended complaint naming the residents as parties. But the owner’s
election to stand on its original pleading truncated the process. The trial court granted the
county’s unopposed motion to dismiss the case without actually deciding whether the
residents could be made parties or whether the lawsuit could continue without them. In
light of the procedural posture of the case and the discretionary and equitable nature of
the indispensable party inquiry, we will remand the matter to allow the trial court to
determine whether under subdivision (b) the matter should be dismissed or proceed in the
residents’ absence.
I. BACKGROUND
The County of Santa Cruz Mobilehome Rent Adjustment Ordinance (codified as
Chapter 13.32 of the County Code) provides for two types of mobile home park rent
adjustments. A park owner may make an annual general rent adjustment without notice
to the county, based on specified criteria. (Santa Cruz County Code, § 13.32.030.) An
owner who believes the annual rent adjustment does not provide for “a just and
reasonable return on the owner’s property” may petition for a special rent increase. (Id.,
§ 13.32.040(A).) Represented by counsel, Pinto Lake MHP LLC (Pinto Lake), the owner
of a 177-space mobile home park in Santa Cruz County, filed a special rent adjustment
petition seeking to increase rents by approximately 47 percent. Notice was provided to
the residents, whose names were appended to the petition as required by the ordinance
(id., § 13.32.060(B)(2)(b)), and the county Mobile and Manufactured Home Commission
appointed a hearing officer to adjudicate the matter. The residents hired their own
counsel who submitted written objections to the petition and engaged in extensive
discovery regarding the proposed rent increase. After settlement efforts were
unsuccessful, an administrative hearing was held in which both sides called expert
2
witnesses to address whether a rent increase was necessary to provide Pinto Lake with a
just and reasonable return on its investment as contemplated in the County Code. After
considering post-hearing briefs about a presumption in the ordinance regarding income
and expense projections, the hearing officer issued a written decision denying the
proposed increase.
Pursuant to Santa Cruz County Code section 13.32.60(B)(16) (providing for
judicial review of the hearing officer’s decision under Code of Civil Procedure
sections 1094.5 and 1094.6), Pinto Lake filed a petition for administrative mandamus and
complaint for declarative and injunctive relief naming the county and the hearing officer
as respondents. The hearing officer filed a notice of non-interest in the proceedings, and
the county demurred to the petition on grounds that Pinto Lake failed to join the mobile
home park residents as indispensable parties. The county argued that the residents are
necessary to the lawsuit under Code of Civil Procedure section 389, subdivision (a)
because they claimed an interest in the matter by participating in the administrative
proceeding, and disposing of the matter in their absence would impair their ability to
protect that interest. The county further argued that the owner was time-barred from
joining the residents as parties to the lawsuit, and the equitable factors listed in Code of
Civil Procedure, section 389 subdivision (b) favored a dismissal. The county prepared
the administrative record at Pinto Lake’s request, which it lodged with the trial court and
cited in its demurrer.
Citing Pinnacle Holdings, Inc. v. Simon (1995) 31 Cal.App.4th 1430 (Pinnacle
Holdings), Pinto Lake argued in opposition that the residents are “not only [] not
indispensable parties [], they are not even proper parties” to the trial court’s review of the
final administrative decision in which no relief was sought against the residents. Pinto
Lake argued that the residents were no more responsible for the outcome of the
administrative proceeding than are witnesses or amicus curiae. It also argued that the
3
statute of limitations did not bar amending the complaint to join the residents as parties in
the trial court.
At the hearing on the demurrer, the trial court adopted its tentative decision to
sustain the demurrer (with leave to amend) for failing to join the residents as parties,
citing Liang v. San Francisco Residential Rent Stabilization and Arbitration Bd. (2004)
124 Cal.App.4th 775 (Liang). With the parties’ agreement, the court set a hearing on the
demurrer to the anticipated first amended complaint.
Instead of amending its complaint/mandamus petition, Pinto Lake filed a notice of
election to stand on the original pleadings. The county moved for dismissal under Code
of Civil Procedure section 581, subdivision (f)(2) (authorizing dismissal where a plaintiff
fails to amend the complaint after a demurrer is sustained with leave to amend); Pinto
Lake did not oppose the motion. A judgment of dismissal was entered for failing to file
an amended pleading, giving rise to this appeal.
II. DISCUSSION
When a demurrer is sustained with leave to amend but the plaintiff elects not to
amend the complaint, the resulting judgment of dismissal will be affirmed if the
complaint is objectionable under any grounds raised by the demurrer. (Sutter v. Gamel
(1962) 210 Cal.App.2d 529, 533.) A trial court’s order or judgment is presumed correct,
and “ ‘[a]ll intendments and presumptions are indulged to support it on matters as to
which the record is silent.’ ” (Denham v. Superior Court (1970) 2 Cal.3d 557, 564.)
Rules governing demurrers to civil complaints apply to mandamus actions.
(Code Civ. Proc., § 1109.) Trial and appellate courts ruling on a demurrer “ ‘may
properly take judicial notice of … established facts from both the same case and other
cases.’ ” (McKell v. Washington Mutual, Inc. (2006) 142 Cal.App.4th 1457, 1491.) A
plaintiff may not avoid a demurrer by suppressing facts which prove the pleaded facts
false. (Ibid.; Alta-Dena Dairy v. County of San Diego (1969) 271 Cal.App.2d 66, 72
[judicially noticed facts will prevail over contrary pleaded allegations].) Thus, judicially
4
noticeable facts should be read into the complaint regardless of an express contrary
allegation. (McKell, at p. 1491.)1
Code of Civil Procedure section 389 governs joinder of parties in a civil action.
(Undesignated statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure; undesignated
subdivisions are in section 389.) Subdivision (a) defines persons who should be joined in
a lawsuit if possible, and are thus deemed necessary to the action. (County of San
Joaquin v. State Water Resources Control Bd. (1997) 54 Cal.App.4th 1144, 1149 (San
Joaquin).) A person subject to service of process whose joinder will not deprive the
court of subject matter jurisdiction “shall be joined as a party in the action if (1) in his
absence complete relief cannot be accorded among those already parties or (2) he claims
an interest relating to the subject of the action and is so situated that the disposition of the
action in his absence may (i) as a practical matter impair or impede his ability to protect
that interest or (ii) leave any of the persons already parties subject to a substantial risk of
incurring double, multiple, or otherwise inconsistent obligations by reason of his claimed
interest.” (§ 389, subd. (a).) The inquiry under clause (a)(2), applicable here, is “whether
the person is one whose rights must necessarily be affected by the judgment in the
proceeding.” (Save Our Bay, Inc. v. San Diego Unified Port Dist. (1996) 42 Cal.App.4th
686, 696, citing Sierra Club, Inc. v. California Coastal Com. (1979) 95 Cal.App.3d 495,
501.)
We reject Pinto Lake’s argument that the administrative record is beyond the
1
scope of review in a demurrer. (McKell v. Washington Mutual, Inc., supra,
142 Cal.App.4th at p. 1491; Alta-Dena Dairy v. County of San Diego, supra,
271 Cal.App.2d at p. 72.) In a meet and confer letter, Pinto Lake identified the
administrative record as an uncontested foundational fact capable of stipulation. While it
may be improper to consider the truth of factual matters asserted in the administrative
record (Glaski v. Bank of America (2013) 218 Cal.App.4th 1079, 1090), documents
which identify parties and reveal the nature of the administrative adjudication are not
asserted factual matters beyond the purview of the trial or reviewing court.
5
If a necessary person cannot be joined as a party, the trial court considers specific
factors to “determine whether in equity and good conscience the action should proceed
among the parties before it, or should be dismissed without prejudice, the absent person
being thus regarded as indispensable.” (§ 389, subd. (b).) Those factors are: “(1) to
what extent a judgment rendered in the person’s absence might be prejudicial to him or
those already parties; (2) the extent to which, by protective provisions in the judgment, by
the shaping of relief, or other measures, the prejudice can be lessened or avoided; (3)
whether a judgment rendered in the person’s absence will be adequate; (4) whether the
plaintiff or cross-complainant will have an adequate remedy if the action is dismissed for
nonjoinder.” (Ibid.) A necessary person cannot be made a party to the action when the
statute of limitations has expired. (Tracy Press, Inc. v. Superior Court (2008)
164 Cal.App.4th 1290, 1297; Kaczorowski v. Mendocino County Bd. of Supervisors
(2001) 88 Cal.App.4th 564, 567; Save Our Bay, Inc. v. San Diego Unified Port Dist.
(1996) 42 Cal.App.4th 686, 699; Beresford Neighborhood Assn. v. City of San Mateo
(1989) 207 Cal.App.3d 1180, 1190; Sierra Club v. California. Coastal Com., supra,
95 Cal.App.3d 495, 502–503.)
Section 389 calls upon the trial court to weigh practical realities and other
considerations in determining whether a person is necessary or indispensable.
(Dreamweaver Andalusians, LLC v. Prudential Ins. Co. of America (2015)
234 Cal.App.4th 1168, 1173.) We therefore review the trial court’s ruling for abuse of
discretion. (Ibid., TG Oceanside, L.P. v. City of Oceanside (2007) 156 Cal.App.4th 1355,
1366; Hayes v. California Dept. of Developmental Services (2006)
138 Cal.App.4th 1523, 1529.) “The abuse of discretion standard is not a unified
standard; the deference it calls for varies according to the aspect of a trial court’s ruling
under review. The trial court’s findings of fact are reviewed for substantial evidence, its
conclusions of law are reviewed de novo, and its application of the law to the facts is
6
reversible only if arbitrary and capricious.” (Haraguchi v. Superior Court (2008)
43 Cal.4th 706, 711–712, footnotes omitted.)2
We are not persuaded by Pinto Lake’s argument that we should apply a de novo
standard to the trial court’s determination that the residents are necessary persons under
subdivision (a) because the trial court’s inquiry required no fact finding and involved
only interpreting the relevant statute and applying “controlling legal authority.” Pinto
Lake has advanced no statutory interpretation argument and, as we will explain, we
disagree with its view of the controlling law.
A. THE TRIAL COURT’S RULING THAT THE RESIDENTS ARE NECESSARY PARTIES
UNDER CODE OF CIVIL PROCEDURE SECTION 389, SUBDIVISION (A) WAS NOT AN
ABUSE OF DISCRETION
The trial court granted leave to amend after it sustained the county’s demurrer for
failing to join the residents as parties. While the order on demurrer describes the
residents as indispensable parties, we understand the trial court as having decided only
whether the residents are necessary parties to the lawsuit under subdivision (a). The trial
court did not decide under subdivision (b) whether the statute of limitations was a bar to
the residents’ joinder, nor whether the case should proceed in the residents’ absence.
Instead, Pinto Lake was granted leave to join the residents as parties. (§ 389, subd. (a)
[“If [the necessary person] has not been so joined, the court shall order that he be made a
2
Our standard of review generally accords with that of the federal courts reviewing
joinder decisions under Rule 19 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, to which
section 389 was amended to conform. (San Joaquin, supra, 54 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1151–
1152; Aguliar v. County of Los Angeles (9th Cir. 1985) 751 F.2d 1089, 1092 [“While
Fed. R. Civ. P. 19 cases are generally reviewed under an abuse of discretion standard
[citation], to the extent that the determination of [the absent party’s] interest and its
impairment under Fed. R. Civ. P. 19(a)(2) involved an interpretation of California
collateral estoppel law, it is reviewed under a de novo standard.”]; Janney Montgomery
Scott, Inc. v. Shepard Niles, Inc. (3d Cir. 1993) 11 F.3d 399, 404 [Rule 19(a)
determinations premised on a conclusion of law are independently reviewed; subsidiary
findings of fact are reviewed for clear error].)
7
party”].) On the record before us, we find no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s
ruling, and we will uphold the order.
Under Code of Civil Procedure section 389, subdivision (a)(2), the residents
claimed an interest in the subject matter of the action by participating as a party in the
administrative hearing on Pinto Lake’s proposed rent increase. Contemplating full tenant
participation in the consideration of a special rent increase application, the governing
Santa Cruz County ordinance provides for a formal adversarial proceeding in which
mobile home park residents are designated as respondents. (Santa Cruz County Code,
§ 13.26.060(B) (8), (10), (15(o)).) It is clear from the administrative record, which is part
of the record on appeal (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.123), that the residents and their
association engaged legal counsel and participated in the special rent adjustment
proceeding. A county hearing officer conducted a formal hearing under the ordinance in
which the residents collectively participated as the responding party and specifically
challenged the presumptions and fair rate of return formula used by Pinto Lake to
calculate the proposed adjustment. The residents filed formal objections, engaged in
discovery and settlement discussions, and presented expert testimony.
The record supports the conclusion that judicial review of the administrative
decision in the residents’ absence would impede their ability to protect the interests they
successfully advanced in the administrative proceeding conducted by the hearing officer.
(Subd. (a)(2)(i).) The residents retained an expert who challenged the basis for the
owner’s proposed rent adjustment. Given that the county did not participate as a party in
the administrative proceeding, the county does not have an interest in stepping into the
residents’ shoes to defend the hearing officer’s decision.3 As a practical matter,
3
The county is nevertheless the proper respondent because it is the sole entity able
to carry out a judgment commanding that the hearing officer’s decision be set aside.
(§ 1094.5, subd. (f); State of California v. Superior Court (1974) 12 Cal.3d 237, 255
[sustaining demurrer against State of California and state commission employees because
none had authority to set aside the commission’s permit denial].)
8
proceeding without the residents would impede the ability to protect their interest in that
decision. Pinto Lake argues that the residents’ interests would not be impaired by a
disposition in their absence because it seeks only a remand for a new administrative
hearing, and the residents would have the opportunity to participate in that hearing. The
argument overlooks that Pinto Lake’s prayer for mandamus relief asks not merely for a
new hearing, but for a peremptory writ specifically directing the county to conduct the
new hearing “in compliance with the following requirements: [¶] … [¶] B. Set aside
[the county’s] decision rejecting the application, en toto, and order the granting of the
rent increase requested in its entirety [and] [¶] C. To proceed … with consideration of
expense projection at the 10% factor as is required and with the 100% inflation
adjustment.” But regardless of the scope of the remand requested in Pinto Lake’s prayer,
the residents’ interest in the finality of the hearing officer’s decision necessarily includes
an interest in preventing any remand.
Citing People ex rel. Lungren v. Community Redevelopment Agency (1997)
56 Cal.App.4th 868 (Lungren), and City of San Diego v. San Diego City Employees’
Retirement System (2010) 186 Cal.App.4th 69 (San Diego), Pinto Lake argues that the
residents’ interests will not be impaired if the lawsuit proceeds in their absence because
the county shares the same goal in the litigation. Those authorities do not demonstrate
that the trial court abused its discretion. In Lungren, the Attorney General challenged a
redevelopment agency’s authority to enter into a land deal with a Native American tribe.
(Lungren, at p. 877.) The tribe was not a necessary party to the lawsuit because its
interest in an enforceable contract was adequately represented by the redevelopment
agency’s defense of its own action. (Id. at p. 876.) Similarly, the issue in San Diego was
the legality of a decision by the employees’ retirement system to charge the city for the
unfunded costs of service credits. (San Diego, at p. 85.) The employees were not
necessary parties to the city’s lawsuit against the retirement system because their object
in the lawsuit would duplicate the retirement system’s defense of its decision. (Ibid.) In
9
contrast here, there is no similar relationship between the residents and the county. As
the neutral adjudicative body in the underlying administrative proceeding, the county’s
interest in a mandamus action under section 1094.5 does not necessarily align with that of
any party to the proceeding. In fact, the county articulates its interest as preserving the
governing ordinance for county residents (against the allegation in the first cause of
action for writ of mandate that the ordinance is preempted by state law). Unlike the
residents, the county does not have an interest in the particular outcome of the proposal
for a special rent increase.
Pinto Lake argues the residents are not necessary parties under Pinnacle Holdings,
which it characterizes as controlling legal authority. The court in Pinnacle Holdings
found mobile home park residents were not proper parties to a declaratory relief and
mandamus action involving a proposed rent increase. (Pinnacle Holdings, supra,
31 Cal.App.4th at p. 1432.) There the park owner petitioned a city mobile home rent
review board for a discretionary rent increase pursuant to city ordinance. (Id. at pp.
1432–1433.) Receiving only partial relief, the owner sought review in the superior court,
naming as defendants the city, the board, and four mobile home park residents who had
attended a public hearing to protest the rent increase. (Id. at p. 1433.) The protesting
residents were named as defendants and real parties in interest to the declaratory relief
cause of action, and the park owner moved to certify a class of more than 300 residents
with the four protesters as named representatives. (Id. at pp. 1432–1435.) Two of the
protesters demurred to the petition on grounds of misjoinder and failure to state a claim,
and joined by a third protester they opposed class certification and named representative
status. (Id. at p. 1433.) The superior court declined to certify the class, sustained the
demurrers, and dismissed the demurring protesters as parties. (Ibid.)
The park owner in Pinnacle Holdings argued on appeal that joining the protesters
as real parties in interest was permissible to eliminate any concern about the protesters’
due process rights. (Pinnacle Holdings, supra, 31 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1433, 1435.)
10
Rejecting that argument, the appellate court noted that the protesters were four tenants
who received notice of the owner’s rent increase application; they had a right under the
city’s ordinance (a copy of which accompanied the application) to appear at the hearing
and speak out against the proposed increase; the owner was not protecting those rights by
suing the protesters; and the protesters had the ability to protect their interest by seeking
injunctive relief under the city’s ordinance or intervening in the owner’s lawsuit if they so
desired. (Id. at pp. 1435–1436.) The court expressed the view that the protesters had
been sued simply because they appeared at the rent increase hearing, and that the trial
court may well have granted an anti-SLAPP motion had the protesters availed themselves
of that procedure. (Id. at p. 1437.)
Pinto Lake asserts that Pinnacle Holdings should control because, as in that case,
the case here involves a mobile home park owner’s rent increase application and a
resulting decision affecting the park residents; an administrative mandamus proceeding in
the trial court; and a request for relief (in the form of a writ directed to the county) neither
against nor sought from the residents. But shared facts alone do not translate to
controlling law. The issue presented in Pinnacle Holdings was whether, merely by
exercising their right at a public hearing to protest a proposed rent increase, tenants can
be haled into court to defend the local entity’s decision adverse to the property owner.
(Pinnacle Holdings, supra, 31 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1432, 1435.) The issue before us is
entirely different and arises under the specific provisions of the Santa Cruz County Code:
Whether mobile home park residents, who are formally designated and collectively
participate as a responding party in an administrative proceeding on a special rent
increase application, are necessary parties to the applicant owner’s lawsuit challenging
the administrative decision. The Pinnacle Holdings court’s rejection of the mobile home
park owner’s ploy to sue the protesting tenants does not inform whether the Pinto Lake
residents are necessary to this action challenging an administrative decision governed by
an entirely different local ordinance.
11
Pinto Lake points to the statement in Pinnacle Holdings that “ ‘ “a person should
not be compelled to defend himself in a lawsuit when no relief is sought against him.” ’ ”
(Pinnacle Holdings, supra, 31 Cal.App.4th at p. 1437.) That quote comes from a
homeowners association’s declaratory relief action (Duffy v. Superior Court (1992)
3 Cal.App.4th 425, 427) concerning the association’s standing to litigate the scope of its
CC&Rs by joining the homeowner against whom the regulations were to be enforced.
(Id. at pp. 429, 433.) The comment derived from a discussion of standing, not a
determination of necessary parties to mandamus review following a formal administrative
hearing.
Pinto Lake also points to language in Pinnacle Holdings suggesting, without
elaboration, that the protesting residents in that case were not “proper parties to the cause
of action for administrative mandamus under Code of Civil Procedure section 1094.5
since that action is directed to a final administrative order or decision.” (Pinnacle
Holdings, supra, 31 Cal.App.4th at p. 1436.) We reject Pinto Lake’s interpretation that
the prevailing party to a final administrative decision is not a proper party in an action
challenging that very decision. Indeed, that proposition is contrary to the well-
established rule that “[a] petition for writ of mandate must name the real party in
interest,” who “is ‘usually the other party to the lawsuit or proceeding being
challenged.’ ” (Sonoma County Nuclear Free Zone v. Superior Court (1987)
189 Cal.App.3d 167, 173.) We again observe that unlike the residents in Pinnacle
Holdings, here the residents are specifically designated by the local ordinance as
respondents in the administrative proceeding. (Santa Cruz County Code,
§ 13.32.060(B).)
We also reject Pinto Lake’s argument that the trial court misapplied the law by
relying on Liang, a case in which a landlord was deemed an indispensable party to a
mandamus action brought by a tenant. The tenant in Liang applied to a city rent control
board for a significant rent reduction based on habitability concerns. (Liang, supra,
12
124 Cal.App.4th at p. 776.) An administrative law judge denied relief, and after losing
her appeal to the rent control board, the tenant filed an untimely petition in the trial court
naming the board as the sole defendant. (Ibid.) The Liang court affirmed the trial’s court
dismissal of the petition both as untimely and for failing to join the landlord as an
indispensable party. (Id. at p. 777.) The Liang court incorrectly referred to a person
described by subdivision (a) as an “indispensable” party, and in reaching its decision it
did not cite to or consider the factors in subdivision (b). (Id. at p. 778.) It relied instead
on a test formulated by the California Supreme Court before section 389 was amended to
its present form to conform to Rule 19 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. (Liang, at
p. 778, citing Sierra Club, Inc. v. Cal. Coastal Com., supra, 95 Cal.App.3d at p. 501,
citing Bank of California v. Superior Court (1940) 16 Cal.2d 516, 522.) Even if the court
in Liang conflated the necessary party and indispensable party analyses, as Pinto Lake
argues, the trial court’s reference to the case in its order sustaining the demurrer does not
reveal a misapplication of the law amounting to an abuse of discretion.
B. REMAND IS NECESSARY TO PERMIT THE TRIAL COURT TO DECIDE UNDER CODE
OF CIVIL PROCEDURE SECTION 389, SUBDIVISION (B) WHETHER PINTO LAKE’S
LAWSUIT SHOULD PROCEED IN THE RESIDENTS’ ABSENCE
In light of Pinto Lake’s election to stand on the original complaint, we may affirm
its dismissal on any meritorious ground raised by the county’s demurrer. (Sutter v.
Gamel, supra, 210 Cal.App.2d at p. 533.) The county argued that the lawsuit should not
proceed without the residents who were necessary and indispensable, and whose joinder
was barred by the applicable statute of limitations. But the trial court never determined
whether the residents could be made parties and, if not, whether the matter should be
dismissed or proceed in their absence.4
4
Pinto Lake concedes in this court that the 90-day statute of limitations in section
1094.6 precludes making the residents parties to the lawsuit. We accept the concession
(Thompson v. Palmer Corp. (1956) 138 Cal.App.2d 387, 395 [“The filing of the original
complaint stop[s] the running of the statute of limitations only as to those who [are]
13
Subdivision (b) of section 389 gives the trial court discretion to “determine
whether in equity and good conscience” Pinto Lake’s action should proceed without the
residents. (§ 389, subd. (b); San Joaquin, supra, 54 Cal.App.4th at p. 1151.)
Subdivision (b) “leaves the judge ‘with substantial discretion in considering which
factors to weigh and how heavily to emphasize certain considerations in deciding whether
the action should go forward in the absence of someone needed for a complete
adjudication of the dispute.’ ” (San Joaquin, at p. 1154; Kaczorowski v. Mendocino
County Bd. of Supervisors, supra, 88 Cal.App.4th at p. 568 [“trial court has a large
measure of discretion in weighing factors of practical realities and other
considerations”].) The inquiry “ ‘calls for a pragmatic decision based on practical
considerations in the context of a particular litigation’ ” and is therefore appropriately
undertaken by the trial court in the first instance. (San Joaquin, at pp. 1152–1153; Sam v.
Beech Aircraft (9th Cir. 1980) 625 F.2d 273, 278 [declining to apply Rule 19(b) factors
sua sponte].) We will remand the matter for the trial court to consider the particular facts
and equities in the case and to exercise its discretion. We note that in reaching its
decision, no single factor under subdivision (b) is determinative or necessarily more
important than another. (San Joaquin, at p. 1149.)
III. DISPOSITION
The judgment is reversed. The matter is remanded to the trial court to exercise its
discretion under Code of Civil Procedure section 389, subdivision (b). Appellant shall be
bound by its concession in this court that the residents cannot be made a party to the trial
court action. The parties shall bear their own costs on appeal.
parties defendant at the time it was filed”]), and we decline Pinto Lake’s invitation to
direct the trial court on remand to identify the residents for service of process purposes or
grant leave to file an amended complaint.
14
____________________________________
Grover, J.
WE CONCUR:
____________________________
Greenwood, P. J.
____________________________
Danner, J.
H045757 - Pinto Lake MHP LLC v. County of Santa Cruz
Trial Court: Santa Cruz County Superior Court
Case No. 17CV01424
Trial Judge: Hon. John M. Gallagher
Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellant James Patrick Ballantine
Pinto Lake MPH, L.L.C. Ballantine Law
Counsel for Defendant/Respondent Jason Heath
County of Santa Cruz Dana McRae
County Counsels
Ryan M. Thompson
Assistant County Counsel
County of Santa Cruz
Counsel for Amicus Curiae Creighton A. Mendivil
Pinto Lake Mobile Home Park Senior Citizens Legal Services
Homeowners Association
H045757 - Pinto Lake MHP LLC v. County of Santa Cruz