Filed 1/7/22
CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION *
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION TWO
PROTECT OUR NEIGHBORHOODS,
Plaintiff and Appellant, E074233
v. (Super.Ct.No. RIC1704320)
CITY OF PALM SPRINGS et al.,
Defendants and Respondents.
PROTECT OUR NEIGHBORHOODS,
Plaintiff and Appellant, (Super.Ct.No. RIC1724363)
v. OPINION
CITY OF PALM SPRINGS et al.,
Defendants and Respondents;
SCOTT GAITAN et al.,
Real Parties in Interest and
Respondents.
* Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1105(b) and 8.1110, this
opinion is certified for publication with the exception of part VII.
1
APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. Chad W. Firetag, Judge.
Affirmed.
Law Offices of Babak Naficy and Babak Naficy for Plaintiff and Appellant.
Woodruff, Spradlin & Smart, James H. Eggart, Ricia R. Hager and Thomas P.
Kinzinger for Defendants and Respondents.
No appearance for Real Parties in Interest and Respondents.
Because the City of Palm Springs (City) is a vacation destination, there has long
been a market for short-term home rentals there. Since 2008, City ordinances have
expressly allowed the short-term rental of a single-family dwelling, subject to various
conditions designed to protect the interests of neighboring residents (as well as the City’s
own interest in collecting transient occupancy taxes, a/k/a hotel taxes).
In 2017, the City reenacted the previous ordinance, with amendments. Among
other things, it made a new finding that the ordinance was consistent with the City’s
Zoning Code.
Meanwhile, Protect Our Neighborhoods (Protect), a membership organization
opposed to short-term rentals, filed this action. Protect claimed, among other things, that
the 2017 version of the short-term rental ordinance (Ordinance) violated the City’s
Zoning Code. The trial court disagreed and upheld the Ordinance.
Protect appeals, contending:
2
(1) Short-term rentals violate the Zoning Code because they are commercial, not
residential.
(2) Short-term rentals violate the Zoning Code because they change the character
of, and adversely affect the uses permitted in, a single-family residential zone.
(3) The Ordinance is inconsistent, contradictory, and based on erroneous findings.
(4) If the Zoning Code permits short-term rentals at all, it does so only on
condition that the owner obtain a land use permit or a conditional use permit.
(5) If the Zoning Code permits short-term rentals at all, it does not allow owners
to rent out properties that they do not live in.
We will hold that the trial court correctly ruled in favor of the City and against
Protect. Hence, we will affirm.
I
STATEMENT OF FACTS
A. The “Zoning Code” Chapter of the Municipal Code.
Chapters 91 through 94 of the Municipal Code 1 are entitled “Zoning Code.”
Under the Zoning Code, the uses allowed without a permit in a single-family
residential (R-1) zone include (1) use as a “[p]ermanent single-family dwelling[]” and (2)
“uses customarily incident to the permitted uses when located on the same lot therewith.”
(Mun. Code, § 92.01.01.A.)
1 All citations to the “Municipal Code” or “Mun. Code” are to the Palm
Springs Municipal Code.
3
“Dwelling” is defined as “a building or portion thereof designed exclusively for
residential occupancy . . . , but not including hotels, boarding or lodging houses, or
mobilehomes or trailers, except when installed on a permanent foundation, or motorized
homes.” (Mun. Code, § 91.00.10.B.)
All uses not expressly permitted are prohibited. (Mun. Code, § 92.01.02.) In
addition, in an R-1 zone, “[c]ommercial uses” “shall not be permitted . . . by commission
determination . . . .” (Mun. Code, § 92.01.02.A.) “‘Commission’ means the planning
commission of the city of Palm Springs.” (Mun. Code, § 91.00.10.B.)
B. The “Vacation Rentals” Chapter of the Municipal Code.
1. The 2008 ordinance.
Title 5 of the Municipal Code is entitled “Business Regulations.” Chapter 5.25 is
entitled “Vacation Rentals.”
This chapter was first enacted in 2008, by Ordinance No. 1748 (“Original
Ordinance”). It included the following provisions, which are still in the Ordinance.
It applied to rentals for 28 days or less. (Mun. Code, former § 5.25.040; see now
Mun. Code, §§ 5.25.030, 5.25.040(d), (e).) 2
It required an owner of a vacation rental property to register the property with the
City annually and to obtain a vacation rental registration certificate. (Mun. Code,
2 As far as we can tell, there is no difference between a “short-term rental”
and a “vacation rental.” For purposes of this case, they are both defined as rentals of 28
days or less. We use both terms interchangeably.
4
§§ 5.25.040(a), 5.25.060(a).) To do so, the owner had to have liability insurance. (Mun.
Code, former § 5.25.060(c); see now Mun. Code, § 5.25.060(a)(10), 5.25.070(u).)
It limited occupancy based on the number of bedrooms. (Mun. Code, former
§ 5.25.070(b); see now Mun. Code, § 5.25.070(c), (d).) It required an owner to use
“reasonably prudent business practices” to ensure that renters and their guests did not
create unreasonable noise, disturbances, engage in disorderly conduct, or violate the law.
(Mun. Code, former § 5.25.070(d); see now Mun. Code, § 5.25.070(f).) The owner, the
owner’s agent, or the owner’s designated “local contact person” had to be available at all
times to respond to complaints. (Mun. Code, §§ 5.25.060(a)(3), 5.25.070(e).)
Finally, it required the owner to pay transient occupancy taxes. (Mun. Code,
§ 5.25.060(a)(7), former Mun. Code, § 5.25.070(l); see now Mun. Code, § 5.25.070(q).)
2. The April 2016 amendments.
In April 2016, the City enacted Ordinance No. 1891, which amended the Original
Ordinance by prohibiting short-term rentals of apartments. Short-term rentals are now
allowed of single-family residences and duplexes only. (Mun. Code, §§ 5.25.030,
5.25.075(a).) Although it was a temporary urgency measure, in July 2016, Ordinance
No. 1897 extended it, and in October 2016, Ordinance No. 1902 (October 2016
Ordinance) made it permanent.
3. The December 2016 amendments.
In December 2016, the City enacted Ordinance No. 1907 (December 2016
Ordinance), which would have amended Chapter 5.25 in respects not particularly relevant
5
here. The December 2016 Ordinance, by law (Elec. Code, § 9235; Mun. Code, § 803)
and by its terms, did not go into effect for 30 days. During this 30-day period, a valid
referendum petition was filed, which prevented the December 2016 Ordinance from
going into effect at the end of the 30 days. (Elec. Code, § 9237.) In February 2017,
rather than schedule a referendum election, the City rescinded the December 2016
Ordinance. Thus, the December 2016 Ordinance never took effect. 3
4. The current ordinance.
In March 2017, the City adopted Ordinance No. 1918 – the Ordinance at issue –
which restated and amended Chapter 5.25.
Among other changes, it barred the ownership of more than one vacation rental
(Mun. Code, § 5.25.040(b)), it limited vacation rentals to 36 per year (Mun. Code,
§ 5.25.070(b)), it revised the enforcement provisions (Mun. Code, § 5.25.090), and it
added new provisions for “Estate Homes” with five or more bedrooms (Mun. Code,
§§ 5.25.030, 5.25.070(d)) and for “Homesharing” (Mun. Code, §§ 5.25.030, 5.25.078).
It also made a couple of findings that mentioned zoning.
First, it added a finding that one of the purposes of the Vacation Rentals chapter is
to “ensure that vacation rentals . . . are ancillary and secondary uses of residential
property consistent with the provisions of the City’s Zoning Ordinance . . . .”
(Mun. Code, § 5.25.020(b).)
3 Protect seems to think that, as a result, there was no short-term rental
ordinance at all. We disagree. The October 2016 Ordinance remained in effect.
Ultimately, however, this point is not material to our resolution of the issues.
6
Second, it added a finding that: “The primary use of single-family and multi-
family dwelling units in the City of Palm Springs is the provision of permanent housing
for full time and part time residents of the City who live and/or work in the City.
Vacation Rentals . . . are not [a] use[] specifically recognized in the City’s Zoning
Ordinance, nor are these uses expressly identified as uses permitted in single-family or
multi-family zones. Vacation Rentals . . . are similar in character and use as hotels and
other commercial short term uses and can only be permitted in single-family or multi-
family zones if such uses are ancillary and secondary to the residential use of property.
This Ordinance confirms Vacation Rentals . . . as [an] ancillary and secondary use[] of
residential property in the City.” (Mun. Code, § 5.25.020(a).)
During a City Council meeting, the city attorney explained: “[O]ne of the
important features of this revised ordinance that you have in front of you is . . . that this
ordinance . . . recognizes that vacation rentals are an ancillary and secondary use of
residential property within the city. This is important because this resolves any kind of
ambiguity that may exist on that particular issue.”
The City’s director of planning has determined that, under the Zoning Code, the
short-term rental of residential property is a permitted use in a residential zone.
7
II
STATEMENT OF THE CASE
Protect, as the trial court found, “is comprised of individual homeowners from
various Palm Springs neighborhoods who find the short-term vacation rentals of single
family homes to be disruptive and inconvenient.”
Protect filed this action against the City in March 2017. In December 2017, it
filed a second action, naming as real parties in interest a number of individual owners
who had allegedly been issued vacation rental registration certificates. 4
The two cases were consolidated. Protect’s pleading in each case was styled as a
complaint combined with a mandate petition. Protect asserted causes of action for
violation of the City’s municipal code, violation of the California Environmental Quality
Act (CEQA), injunctive relief, and declaratory relief. 5
The matter was presented to the trial court on declarations, documentary evidence,
the administrative record, and matters subject to judicial notice, without any oral
testimony. In August 2019, the trial court heard argument. In October 2019, it issued its
final statement of decision.
4 These individuals are Scott and Beverly Gaitan, Jeffery Schneider, Nancy
Klemperer, Michael Enenbach, Thomas Coggia, Dennis Potvin, Cheney and William
Shapiro, and Joseph Ambrosavage.
5 Protect is not raising any CEQA issue in this appeal. It also is no longer
raising the argument it raised below that the Ordinance conflicts with the City’s general
plan.
8
It found in favor of the City and against Protect on all issues. As relevant here, it
found that:
(1) “[T]he City’s adoption of the . . . Ordinance[] reflect[s] its long-standing and
consistent interpretation of its Zoning Code that [short-term rentals] are not a prohibited
‘commercial’ use of residential property. That interpretation is entitled to deference, and
[Protect] has failed to establish that it is clearly erroneous [citation].”
(2) “[The] Ordinance . . . does not require [short-term rentals] to be ‘ancillary and
secondary’ to the residential use of a property; the Ordinance reaffirms the City’s
longstanding determination that [short-term rentals] are ancillary and secondary uses of
the properties [citation].”
It entered judgment accordingly.
III
STANDARD OF REVIEW
To the extent that this is a traditional mandate proceeding (Code Civ. Proc.,
§ 1085), “our review is limited to a determination of whether the agency’s decision was
arbitrary, capricious, entirely lacking in evidentiary support, unlawful, or procedurally
unfair. [Citation.] Independent review is required, however, where the issue involves
statutory or regulatory construction, such as whether the agency’s action was consistent
with applicable law. [Citation.]” (California School Bds. Assn. v. State Bd. of Education
(2010) 186 Cal.App.4th 1298, 1313-1314, fn. omitted.)
9
To the extent that this is a declaratory relief action (Code Civ. Proc., § 1060), we
review the judgment as we would any judgment after a bench trial, with one exception.
“In reviewing a judgment based upon a statement of decision following a bench trial, we
review questions of law de novo. [Citation.] We apply a substantial evidence standard of
review to the trial court’s findings of fact. [Citation.]” (Thompson v. Asimos (2016) 6
Cal.App.5th 970, 981.) The exception is that the trial court can deny declaratory relief
for discretionary reasons (Code Civ. Proc., § 1061); if it does so, we review that decision
for abuse of discretion. (D. Cummins Corp. v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.
(2016) 246 Cal.App.4th 1484, 1490.) However, that is not what the trial court did here.
In this case, Protect’s contentions overwhelmingly raise issues of law.
Accordingly, our review is largely independent.
IV
CONFLICT WITH THE ZONING CODE
Protect contends that the Ordinance conflicts with the Zoning Code.
A. Effect of a Conflict.
Even assuming there is a conflict, Protect never explains why that would
invalidate the Ordinance.
Throughout its brief, Protect refers to the Zoning Code as if it were some kind of
higher law, akin to a state constitution or a city charter, that invalidates any ordinary law
that is in conflict with it. Actually, both the Zoning Code and the Ordinance are coequal
parts of the Municipal Code.
10
The applicable rule is that “[w]hen two or more statutes concern the same subject
matter and are in irreconcilable conflict the doctrine of implied repeal provides that the
most recently enacted statute expresses the will of the Legislature, and thus to the extent
of the conflict impliedly repeals the earlier enactment.” (In re Thierry S. (1977) 19
Cal.3d 727, 744.) To put it simply, a past City Council cannot tie the hands of a future
City Council.
We recognize that “[r]epeals by implication are disfavored.” (Lopez v. Sony
Electronics, Inc. (2018) 5 Cal.5th 627, 637.) “‘Thus, “‘“we will find an implied repeal
‘only when there is no rational basis for harmonizing . . . two potentially conflicting
statutes [citation], and the statutes are “irreconcilable, clearly repugnant, and so
inconsistent that the two cannot have concurrent operation.”’”’”’ [Citation.]” (Ibid.)
Here, however, it is Protect’s position that the two statutes are, in fact, irreconcilable. If
they can be reconciled, then the Ordinance is valid. If, however, they cannot be
reconciled, then the Ordinance is still valid.
Protect’s only counter-argument 6 is that “the City Council’s findings in support of
the Ordinance do not evidence any intent to supersede . . . the Zoning Code. To the
6 Purportedly as a counter-argument, Protect argues that the Zoning Code
required the City to make certain findings before it could make short-term rentals a
permitted use in an R-1 zone by enacting the Ordinance. But this is not a true counter-
argument at all; it is just another argument that the Ordinance violates the Zoning Code.
And it fails for the same reason — if the Ordinance conflicts with the Zoning Code, the
Ordinance prevails.
We will discuss whether this asserted conflict actually exists in part IV.B, post.
11
contrary, the City Council’s findings show the Council intended to adopt Vacation Rental
regulations in a manner that was consistent with the Zoning Code.” However, if the two
statutes are, in fact, irreconcilable, that would be a sufficient demonstration of the intent
to repeal the inconsistent portions of the Zoning Code. It does appear that the City
Council was aware of a potential conflict with the Zoning Code and tried to head it off.
Assuming that attempt failed, however, surely it did not intend the Ordinance to be void.
To the contrary, that very attempt shows that it intended the Ordinance to be valid, in
spite of any potential conflict.
B. Existence of a Conflict.
Separately and alternatively, the Ordinance does not actually conflict with the
Zoning Code.
To recap slightly, in an R-1 zone, the Zoning Code permits any use “customarily
incident to” use as a “[p]ermanent single-family dwelling[].” (Mun. Code, § 92.01.01.A.)
“Dwelling” is defined as “a building or portion thereof designed exclusively for
residential occupancy . . . .” (Mun. Code, § 91.00.10.B.)
The Ordinance states: “This Ordinance confirms Vacation Rentals . . . as [an]
ancillary and secondary use[] of residential property in the City.” (Mun. Code,
§ 5.25.020(a).) 7
7 A use that is “ancillary and secondary” to another use, within the meaning
of the Ordinance, appears to be the same thing as a use that is “customarily incident to”
another use, within the meaning of the Zoning Code. We treat these terms as
interchangeable.
12
“In interpreting municipal ordinances, we exercise our independent judgment as
we would when construing a statute. [Citation.] Nonetheless, a city’s interpretation of its
own ordinance ‘“is entitled to great weight unless it is clearly erroneous or
unauthorized.”’ [Citation.]” (Berkeley Hills Watershed Coalition v. City of Berkeley
(2019) 31 Cal.App.5th 880, 896.) 8
1. Commercial use in a residential zone.
Protect’s core argument is that only residential uses are permitted in an R-1 zone,
and short-term rentals are commercial. The Zoning Code, however, permits not only use
as a “dwelling” (which is defined in terms of residential occupancy), but also uses
“customarily incident to” use as a “dwelling.” It does not prohibit any customarily
incident use merely because it is “commercial.” In other words, Protect is drawing a
false dichotomy between “residential” and “commercial.”
Protect asserts that “[c]ommercial activities are strictly prohibited in single-family
(R-1) zones . . . unless they are specifically enumerated in the [Zoning] Code,” citing
Municipal Code section 92.01.02.A. That is incorrect. That section merely provides that,
in an R-1 zone, “[c]ommercial uses” “shall not be permitted . . . by commission
8 The Zoning Code provides, “In any case where there may be conflicting or
ambiguous provisions within this Zoning Code, the director of planning and building . . .
shall determine the applicability of such provisions.” (Mun. Code, § 91.00.08.B.) As the
City notes, its director of planning has determined that the short-term rental of residential
property is a permitted use in a residential zone. However, we do not believe this
provision applies here, because the asserted conflict is not between two provisions
“within” the Zoning Code; rather, it is between the Vacation Rentals provisions (Chapter
5.25) and the Zoning Code (Chapters 91-94).
13
determination . . . .” (Mun. Code, § 92.01.02.A, italics added.) In other words, while the
planning commission has discretion to authorize some uses not otherwise permitted
(Mun. Code, § 92.01.01.B, 92.01.01.C, 92.01.01.D), it cannot exercise that discretion to
permit a commercial use. The cited section does not otherwise prohibit commercial uses.
Similarly, Protect cites our opinion in City of Corona v. Naulls (2008) 166
Cal.App.4th 418 for the proposition that a “commercial use not specifically enumerated
in the zoning code is not allowed unless the zoning code is amended to specifically
permit the use.” We find no statement to this effect in Naulls. Naulls did observe that
the zoning code there “contain[ed] language evidencing an intent by the City to prohibit
uses not expressly identified.” (Id. at p. 432.) The Zoning Code here similarly provides
that all uses that are not permitted are prohibited. However, Naulls did not say anything
about commercial uses in particular.
In the Ordinance itself, the City “confirm[ed]” that vacation rentals are an
“ancillary and secondary use[] of residential property . . . .” (Mun. Code, § 5.25.020(a).)
This interpretation was not clearly erroneous or unauthorized. In fact, even if we
reviewed it independently, we would agree.
Customarily, the owner of a single-family dwelling may live there; alternatively,
however, the owner may rent it out. Apparently, Protect would view this as
“commercial,” but the property is still being used as a single-family dwelling. The
Zoning Code does not appear to prohibit the long-term rental of a house in an R-1 zone,
whether annually or month-to-month. The City’s director of planning testified that it has
14
been the City’s practice to treat the occupancy of residential property by renters as a
permitted use. It follows that the short-term rental of a house also is not unduly
“commercial.”
Admittedly, a short-term rental is not use as a “single-family dwelling”; neither
the owner nor the renter is living there. (See Merriam-Webster Online Dict.
[“a shelter (such as a house) in
which people live”] [as of Jan 4, 2022].) Nevertheless, it is a use customarily incident to
use as a single-family dwelling. An owner customarily can rent out a house short-term as
well as long-term. Airbnb did not invent this practice; it just made it easier and more
common. As early as 1991, the City was already collecting transient occupancy taxes on
short-term rentals. And presumably, short-term rentals were going on even before they
were taxed.
Protect argues that there is no meaningful distinction between a short-term rental
and a short-term motel stay. But there is: A vacation rental, by the City’s definition, is a
rental of a single-family dwelling. The City could reasonably conclude that the short-
term rental of a single-family dwelling (particularly when it is subject to the restrictions
in the Ordinance) has different impacts than the short-term rental of 20 or 50 or 100
rooms in a motel.
Protect also cites the finding in the Ordinance itself that “Vacation Rentals . . . are
similar in character and use as hotels and other commercial short term uses and can only
be permitted in single-family or multi-family zones if such uses are ancillary and
15
secondary to the residential use of property.” (Mun. Code, § 5.25.020(a), italics added.)
It claims this is a concession that vacation rentals are commercial. As already discussed,
however, the finding was perfectly accurate and consistent with the Zoning Code:
Commercial uses are permitted in an R-1 zone, provided they are customarily incident to
use as a single-family dwelling.
The case law and other authority that Protect cites does not call for a different
conclusion.
Protect cites Ewing v. City of Carmel by the Sea (1991) 234 Cal.App.3d 1579.
There, Carmel prohibited all short-term rentals, finding them to be a commercial use
inconsistent with its R-1 zone. (Id. at pp. 1584, 1589.) The appellate court relied on the
fact that Carmel had designated short-term rentals as “commercial” in holding that the
ordinance would not apply to house-sitting or house-swapping. (Id. at p. 1595.) We
cannot tell from Ewing, however, how similar Carmel’s zoning laws were to the City’s.
Did they permit uses “customarily incident” to use as a dwelling in an R-1 zone? Did
they define “commercial”?
Even more important, the rule of deference to a city’s interpretation of its own
ordinance means that two cities could interpret identical language in two different ways,
and we would have to accept both interpretations, if they were reasonable. Apparently in
Protect’s view, the fact that Carmel prohibited short-term rentals in 1989 means that now
all California cities must prohibit short-term rentals, as “commercial.” Not so.
16
Protect also cites Harrington, Vacation Rentals: Commercial Activity Butting
Heads with CC&Rs (2015) 51 Cal. Western Law Rev. 187 for the proposition that
vacation rentals are a “business activity.” (Id. at p. 201.) The thrust of that article,
however, is that conditions, covenants, and restrictions (CC&Rs) that prohibit the
operation of a “business” should be interpreted as prohibiting short-term rentals. It
conceded that the case law on the subject was generally either undeveloped or contrary to
its thesis. (Id. at pp. 208-215.) Moreover, it recognized that “CC&R provisions that
prohibit commercial use and or business activity . . . are distinct from zoning ordinances
regulating single-family use.” (Id. at p. 216.) Finally, it acknowledged that in zoning
cases, unlike CC&R cases, “results are highly localized and specific to the local and
jurisdictional parameters of single-family use.” (Id. at p. 219.) In any event, as we have
already observed, the residential-commercial distinction is a false dichotomy here.
Finally, Protect cites Biagini v. Hyde (1970) 3 Cal.App.3d 877. Biagini involved a
restrictive covenant that lots could be used only “for residential purposes.” (Id. at
p. 879.) It stated: “‘[A]lthough no California authority is found, courts of some other
jurisdictions have held ‘that an incidental use of a dwelling for business or professional
purposes does not necessarily constitute a violation of a covenant restricting the use of
the dwelling to residential purposes, but that the question of violation in such a case
depends upon the extent or manner in which the incidental use in question is conducted.’
[Citation.] . . . These foreign cases have developed no precise test of incidental use, but
such factors have been considered as to whether the use is casual or infrequent, results in
17
no appreciable damage to other owners in the area, creates no inconvenience or
annoyance to neighboring residents, and is in substantial harmony with the purposes of
the parties in establishing the restriction. [Citations.] A review of these cases shows,
however, no high degree of predictability of result; the concept of ‘incidental use’ . . . has
not proved to be a reliable guide to the construction of recorded restrictions.” (Id. at
pp. 879-880.)
Protect quotes only the list of “factors [that] have been considered”; it then argues
that under these factors, short-term rentals are not an incidental use: They are not
infrequent, they do damage other owners in the area, and they do inconvenience
neighbors. Protect omits to mention the Biagini court’s conclusion that these factors do
not produce predictable results and that there is no “reliable guide.” More important,
however, the City is not bound by Biagini. It is free to use “incident” (or “incidental”) in
its own ordinances in a way such that the factors listed in Biagini are not controlling.
2. Other asserted inconsistencies.
Protect also argues that the Ordinance is inconsistent with the Zoning Code in two
other respects.
First, it argues that, before the City could enact a new permitted use, the Zoning
Code required it “to make a finding that short-term rental is ‘similar to those listed above
and not more obnoxious or detrimental to the public health, safety and welfare or to other
uses permitted in the zone.’”
18
Not so. The Zoning Code provides that “[t]he commission may . . . permit any
other uses which it may determine to be similar to those listed above and not more
obnoxious or detrimental to other uses permitted in the zone or to the public health, safety
and welfare . . . .” (Mun. Code, § 92.01.01(B), emphasis added.) Thus, this provision
applies only to the planning commission. It places no similar restriction on the City
Council’s power to add a permitted use (and for the reasons discussed in part IV.A, ante,
it could not).
Second, Protect argues that “[a]ccording to the City’[s] zoning code, the use of a
dwelling ‘may not change the character of nor adversely affect the uses permitted in that
zone of which it is a part”; it cites Municipal Code section 5.22.010. It goes on to argue
that short-term rentals change the character of R-1 zones and adversely affect the uses
permitted in R-1 zones.
The premise of this argument, however, is simply false. Section 5.22.010 is not
part of the Zoning Code. It is in the title entitled “Business Regulations,” in the chapter
entitled, “Home Occupations.” It provides, “This chapter is intended to provide for those
home occupation uses customarily conducted entirely within a residential dwelling and
carried on by a maximum of two occupants. The use must be clearly incidental to the
residential use of the dwelling and may not change the character thereof nor adversely
affect the uses permitted in that zone of which it is a part.” (Italics added.) Home
occupation uses, and any restrictions on them, are irrelevant here. Even if short-term
19
rentals do adversely affect owners of nearby single-family residences and their use of
their own property, allowing them was a legislative judgment that was up to the City.
V
THE FINDINGS IN THE ORDINANCE
Protect attacks two of the findings in the Ordinance, as “internally inconsistent and
incoherent”, and as “‘arbitrary, capricious or [without] reasonable or rational basis.’
[Citation.]”
The Ordinance found that:
(1) One of the purposes of the Ordinance is to “ensure that vacation rentals . . . are
ancillary and secondary uses of residential property . . . .” (Mun. Code, § 5.25.020(b).)
(2) “This Ordinance confirms Vacation Rentals . . . as [an] ancillary and
secondary use[] of residential property in the City.” (Mun. Code, § 5.25.020(a).)
Protect claims these findings are inconsistent. In Protect’s view, the first finding
means that vacation rentals are not an ancillary and secondary use only because they are
regulated by the Ordinance; however, the second finding means that vacation rentals are
always an ancillary and secondary use.
Its interpretation of the first finding is incorrect. The Ordinance “ensure[s]” that
short-term rentals are ancillary and secondary uses precisely by “confirm[ing]” that they
are. In other words, it clarifies the application of the Zoning Code by declaring that
short-term rentals are a customarily incidental use. It does then proceed to subject them
to particularized regulations; however, these regulations do not affect the status of short-
20
term rentals as a customarily incidental use. What difference does it make to the use
whether the owner has a registration certificate, has a local contact person, etc.?
Protect also argues that these findings are erroneous. It cites no authority for the
proposition that this would invalidate a city’s Ordinance (as opposed to an agency’s
action). “It is not the judiciary’s function . . . to reweigh the ‘legislative facts’ underlying
a legislative enactment. [Citation.]” (American Bank & Trust Co. v. Community
Hospital (1984) 36 Cal.3d 359, 372.) “‘[A] legislative choice is not subject to courtroom
factfinding and may be based on rational speculation unsupported by evidence or
empirical data.’ [Citation.]” (People v. Bloomfield (2017) 13 Cal.App.5th 647, 658.)
First, Protect asserts that these findings have no “factual basis,” because short-
term rentals are not, in fact, ancillary and secondary uses of residential property. In part
IV.B, ante, however, we held that they are — or, at a minimum, the City could
reasonably find that they are.
Next, Protect asserts that the finding that the Ordinance will “ensure” that vacation
rentals are ancillary and secondary uses of residential property is erroneous, because an
owner can acquire a piece of property and use it exclusively as a short-term rental,
without ever living there. However, a property can be residential even if it is vacant. 9
The Zoning Code defines “dwelling” in terms of whether the building is “designed
exclusively for residential occupancy” (Mun. Code, § 91.00.10.B.), not whether anyone
9 Under Protect’s view, a vacant single-family residence would not be a
residence at all and thus would be prohibited in an R-1 zone.
21
actually resides there. It then limits the uses of such a property to either (1) use as a
single-family residence, or (2) uses customarily incident thereto. As we have held, short-
term rental is such a use.
In a related argument, Protect contends that the real parties do not live in the
properties that they rent out, and therefore they should not have been issued a vacation
rental registration certificate. However, as just discussed, the Ordinance does not require
that an owner live in a short-term rental property, and it does not have to.
VI
NEED FOR A DISCRETIONARY PERMIT
As a fallback argument, Protect contends that under the Zoning Code, a short-term
rental in a single-family residential zone requires a discretionary permit.
The Zoning Code lists three uses that can be permitted in an R-1 zone if and only
if the planning commission issues a land use permit. (Mun. Code, § 92.01.01.C; see also
id., § 94.02.01.) These are a large day care, a model home, and a “[t]emporary on-site
sales trailer in conjunction with the sale of subdivision lots . . . .” (Mun. Code,
§ 92.01.01.C.)
Similarly, the Zoning Code lists a number of uses that can be permitted in an R-1
zone if and only if the planning commission issues a conditional use permit. (Mun. Code,
§ 92.01.01.D; see also id., § 94.02.00.) These include accessory apartments, churches,
schools, and golf courses. (Mun. Code, § 92.01.01.D.)
22
Protect argues that “vacation rentals have greater impacts” than these uses. The
Zoning Code, however, does not say that other uses that are like the listed uses require a
permit, nor that other uses that have similar impacts require a permit. To the contrary, it
specifically says that “uses customarily incident to” use as a single-family dwelling are
allowed without a permit. (Mun. Code, § 92.01.01.A.)
Protect does not argue that there is no rational basis for distinguishing a short-term
rental from a large day care or a school. And wisely so. Under the highly deferential test
that would apply to such a distinction (Gerawan Farming, Inc. v. Agricultural Labor
Relations Bd. (2017) 3 Cal.5th 1118, 1140; Hernandez v. City of Hanford (2007) 41
Cal.4th 279, 299), any such argument would be frivolous.
We must decline to rewrite the Zoning Code.
VII
THE TRIAL COURT’S EVIDENTIARY RULING
In a footnote, Protect contends that the trial court erroneously sustained real
parties’ objection to a declaration that Protect submitted.
“Footnotes are not the appropriate vehicle for stating contentions on appeal.
[Citation.] . . . The rules require points on appeal to be stated under a separate heading
summarizing the point. [Citation.]” (Sabi v. Sterling (2010) 183 Cal.App.4th 916, 947.)
We therefore deem this contention forfeited. (See Pasternack v. McCullough (2021) 65
Cal.App.5th 1050, 1058, fn. 6.)
23
If only out of an excess of caution, we also note that the asserted error was
harmless. The declaration asserted that real parties had failed to respond to discovery
requests that were relevant to whether they used their properties primarily for residential
or investment purposes. In light of our holding that real parties were not required to live
at their properties (see part V, ante), any such failure to respond to discovery is irrelevant.
VIII
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed. The City is awarded costs on appeal against Protect.
CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION
RAMIREZ
P. J.
We concur:
MILLER
J.
SLOUGH
J.
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