Litigation Victories
RW&G Achieves Victory
in La Conchita
Landslide Litigation
RW&G represented the County of Ventura
in two lawsuits arising out of a massive landslide. On January
10, 2005, after two weeks of heavy rains, a landslide suddenly struck
the town of La Conchita, which is located in an unincorporated area of
Ventura County abutting Highway 101. In approximately thirty seconds,
more than one hundred million pounds of debris moved into the town at
speeds of up to 20 miles per hour. The landslide caused ten deaths, buried
several people alive, and damaged or destroyed more than a dozen residences.
The town of La Conchita is located in a geologic hazard
area and nestles at the base of a large hill that has been subject to
repeated landslides. The hill is owned by a private entity. In 2000, the
County constructed a retaining wall at the base of the hill after it cleared
the roadway of debris from a landslide in 1995. After the 2005 landslide,
more than one hundred plaintiffs filed two separate lawsuits against the
County and the adjacent landowner. Plaintiffs alleged that the County
was liable for damages based on theories of dangerous condition of public
property, nuisance, wrongful death, and inverse condemnation. Plaintiffs
asserted two theories against the County: (1) that the wall destabilized
the hillside; and (2) that the wall diverted debris towards certain plaintiffs.
On September 26, 2007, the Court granted summary adjudication
in favor of the County based on design immunity, finding substantial evidence
that the County reasonably approved the design of the wall. As a result
of this ruling, the Court dismissed all of the personal injury claims
against the County.
On June 9, 2008, trial began on the remaining cause of
action for inverse condemnation, with the Court to decide the issue of
the County’s liability. At the same time, plaintiffs tried the liability
of the adjacent property owner to the jury. More than one hundred witnesses
were named, including dozens of expert witnesses, and the trial exhibits
consisted of more than one hundred thousands pages of documents.
At the start of trial, plaintiffs demanded $35,000,000
from the County to settle the lawsuit. The County offered to dismiss the
lawsuit in exchange for a waiver of costs. On July 10, 2008, while plaintiffs
were still presenting their case-in-chief, plaintiffs dismissed their
inverse condemnation claim against the County in exchange for a waiver
of costs. Plaintiffs reserved the right to appeal the Court’s ruling
on the County’s motion for summary adjudication.
The combination of the Court’s ruling on
the summary adjudication motion,and the plaintiffs’ unusual decision
to dismiss the County in the middle of presenting their case was a significant
victory for the County. After more than two years, the County paid no
money to any plaintiff. RWG successfully defended the County against all
claims filed against it.
RWG’s litigation team included Robert
C. Ceccon, as lead trial counsel, Michael
F. Yoshiba, as second chair, Saskia
T. Asamura, Kirsten Bowman,
and Paralegal Manager Kerry Liberty.
For more information, please contact Robert
C. Ceccon at rceccon@rwglaw.com or Michael
Yoshiba at myoshiba@rwglaw.com.
See: Ventura County Star at www.venturacountystar.com.
***
County of Ventura Prevails
in Landslide Litigation
On September 26, 2007, the Ventura County Superior Court granted the
motion for summary adjudication of the County of Ventura in Alvis
v. La Conchita Ranch, Case No. CIV238700 (and 22 related and consolidated
actions). The lawsuit arose out of a catastrophic landslide that occurred
on January 10, 2005, which resulted in personal injury and property damage,
including 10 deaths.
Thirty-seven plaintiffs sued the County of Ventura (“County”)
seeking tens of millions of dollars in damages. Plaintiffs alleged that
the landslide was partially caused by a retaining wall which had been
built by the County at the base of the hillside adjacent to the landslide
area. The wall was built to remove debris from the roadway from a prior
landslide in La Conchita in 1995.
Richards, Watson & Gershon represented the County.
The County moved for summary adjudication based on the design defect immunity
established by Government Code section 830.6 to challenge plaintiffs’
claims for wrongful death and personal injury, including dangerous condition
of public property and nuisance.
The County submitted evidence showing that the County Board of Supervisors
approved the design of the wall, and that substantial evidence established
that the approval was reasonable. The County submitted declarations from
its employees offering opinions concerning the design of the wall, and
the approval process. Plaintiffs argued that the County should not have
approved the design of the wall, and they submitted the declaration of
an expert geotechnical engineer questioning its design.
The Court agreed with the County, and ruled that the declarations offered
by the County were substantial evidence, and that the contrary declaration
offered by plaintiffs’ expert was vague. The Court dismissed all
of the wrongful death and personal injury claims because the Court found
that the County established as a matter of law that it was entitled to
statutory design immunity.
For more information, please contact Robert
C. Ceccon at rceccon@rwglaw.com or Michael
Yoshiba at myoshiba@rwglaw.com.
.
***
Wireless Providers Barred From
Recovering Damages From Municipalities
The U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has held that wireless service
providers who are denied use permits by municipalities may not recover
compensatory damages from those municipalities under the federal Telecommunications
Act. In James A. Kay v. City of Rancho Palos Verdes, decided on September
21, 2007, the Ninth Circuit concluded that when Congress amended the Telecommunications
Act in 1996 by imposing narrow limitations on zoning authority over wireless
facilities, including antennas, Congress did not intend for wireless providers
to recover damages if local authorities violated those limits and denied
a permit. Two years ago, in the case City of Rancho Palos Verdes v. Abrams,
the U.S. Supreme Court held that wireless providers may not recover attorney’s
fees or civil rights damages against municipalities who violate the Telecommunications
Act. Taken together, the Kay and Abrams decisions mean that local officials
may exercise their discretion in reviewing wireless provider applications
without fear of civil rights damages or damages under the Telecommunications
Act.
Richards, Watson & Gershon represented the City of Rancho Palos Verdes
in both cases. James A. Kay, Jr., et al. v. City of Rancho Palos Verdes,
et al., 2007 DAR 14783 (9th Cir., September 21, 2007).
For more information, please contact T.
Peter Pierce at tpierce@rwglaw.com.
***
RW&G SUCCESSFULLY DEFENDS
MISSION SPRINGS WATER DISTRICT WATER WELL ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT REPORT
California Appellate Court Rules EIR Does Comply with CEQA
In an important case involving the adequacy of the environmental impact
report (“EIR”) for a new well proposed by the Mission Springs
Water District, the California Court of Appeal, Fourth District, Division
Two, upheld the EIR and affirmed the right of the District to approve
the well despite its adverse impacts on biological resources upon a finding
that the need to provide water to those within its service area outweighed
those adverse impacts. Counsel for the District, Rochelle
Browne, successfully rebutted the claims of the Sierra Club
that the EIR was defective because it identified the direct impact of
the well on biological resources, particularly the mesquite hummock habitat,
as less than significant even though it acknowledged that the impact was
cumulatively significant. The opinion held that the EIR properly concluded
that the impact on the mesquite hummocks was a cumulative impact and further
that mislabeling an impact as cumulative rather than direct will not render
an EIR inadequate or misleading so long as the impact is fully disclosed
and that finding an impact to be cumulative rather than direct does not
relieve an agency of its obligation to require all feasible mitigation.
The opinion also contains an unusually detailed analysis of the EIR which
provides a useful guide for evaluating the adequacy of an EIR. Sierra
Club, et al. v. Mission Springs Water District, Fourth Civil No. E039194.
A copy of the opinion is available by request to Rochelle Browne
at rbrowne@rwglaw.com.
***
The United States Supreme Court ruled in favor of the City of Rancho
Palos Verdes in City of Rancho Palos Verdes v. Mark J. Abrams
(Docket No. 03-1601). Eight justices joined in the Opinion of
the Court, authored by Justice Scalia, holding that the limitations on
local zoning set forth in the Communications Act of 1934, as amended by
the Telecommunications Act of 1996, may not be enforced through an action
under 42 U.S.C. section 1983 (and accordingly, attorney's fees are not
available under 42 U.S.C. section 1988). Justice Breyer also wrote a separate
concurring opinion. Justice Stevens concurred in the judgment. For more
information, please contact Peter Pierce at tpierce@rwglaw.com.
***
Rochelle
Browne and Ginetta
L. Giovinco were successful in representing the City
of Upland in a CEQA challenge to Upland's approval of a conditional use
permit for a recreational vehicle and boat storage facility on the tip
of a closed landfill. Based on the city's brief, the court rejected all
of petitioner's arguments that the EIR improperly failed to address all
the impacts of the closed landfill.
***
Amy
Greyson and Inder
Khalsa drafted the Ninth Circuit amicus brief on behalf
of 62 California cities in San Jose Christian College v. City
of Morgan Hill, 360 F.3d 1024 (9th Cir. 2004). The Ninth
Circuit affirmed summary judgment for Morgan Hill against all claims that
denial of a rezoning application violated the free exercise clause of
the First Amendment and the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons
Act of 2000 ("RLUIPA").
***
Mitchell
E. Abbott
and Patrick
K. Bobko, after more than three years of litigation,
successfully represented the City of Beverly Hills in upholding the constitutionality
of the Beverly Hills Adult Entertainment Ordinance against a legal challenge
brought by an adult cabaret.
***
Rochelle Browne
succesfully represented the City of Carson and the Carson Mobilehome
Park Rent Review Board against a federal legal challenge by Carson Harbor
Village Mobilehome Park. The case, Carson Harbor Village Ltd. v. City
of Carson, et al., arose from the City of Carson's handling of applications
for rent increases made by Carson Harbor, a 420-space, 70-acre mobile
home park located within the City. The rent increases requested by Carson
Harbor were partially denied by the City of Carson's Mobilehome Park Rent
Review Board, resulting in the filing by Carson Harbor of a federal district
court complaint claiming a violation of the Fifth Amendment's Taking Clause.
The claim was dismissed by the district court in June 2002. The Ninth
Circuit Court of Appeals' published decision affirms the federal district
court's dismissal of the takings claim.
"The published decision (2004 DAR 91) agrees with the City's position
that Carson Harbor had no federal takings claim because Carson failed
to utilize the available state court remedies," said Ms. Browne. "Carson
Harbor argued that it need not use state court remedies because recent
California Supreme Court decisions demonstrate that there is no adequate
compensation remedy in the California courts for takings in rent control
cases. The Ninth Circuit rejected that argument." A copy of the opinion
is available by request to rbrowne@rwglaw.com.
Lisa Bond successfully
represented the City of Carson in a significant federal court environmental
law case regarding alleged pollution from storm water runoff and involving
claims under CERCLA, RCRA, the federal Clean Water Act and various common
law theories. The case, Carson Harbor Village Ltd. v. Unocal Corporation,
et al., concerned a property owner"s attempt to impose pollution-related
costs in excess of $2.7 million on the city and other defendants, and
to force the city to acquire the contaminated property at issue. United
States District Judge Margaret Morrow granted summary judgment for Carson
and denied the plaintiff"s motion for summary judgment.
Ms. Bond litigated the Carson Harbor Village case on behalf of Carson
over a seven year period. The action was closely-watched by public entities
and property owners due to the plaintiff"s assertion that Carson was liable
for the costs of cleaning up property allegedly contaminated by pollution
in storm water runoff. Having previously granted summary judgment in Carson"s
favor on five other environmental claims, the district court ruled that
the city was not liable under CERCLA either.
"The case is an important environmental ruling to cities for at least
two reasons," Ms. Bond explained. "First, it will have far-reaching impact
by restricting public entities" potential liability as 'arrangers" or
'operators" under CERCLA. Second, if public entities comply with the provisions
of NPDES permits, pollution-related claims against them that allege violations
of the Clean Water Act or common law nuisance and trespass are barred."
The victory in the Carson Harbor Village case is the latest in a series
of major litigation successes obtained by RW&G on behalf of Carson
during the firm's 35 year representation of the city. A copy of the opinion
is available by request to lbond @rwglaw.com.
Rochelle Browne
and David M. Snow
successfully represented the City of Temecula in an important challenge
to the County of Riverside's approval of a large specific plan without
properly analyzing or mitigating the projects traffic impacts. Temecula
asserted that the county had failed to properly address traffic impacts
and cumulative impacts, and had also failed to impose feasible mitigation
measures. The court agreed and ordered the county to prepare a supplemental
environmental impact report before again considering whether to approve
the project. This significant victory furthers Temecula's ongoing battle
to force developments outside of its boundaries to mitigate their own
traffic impacts, rather than relying on its circulation system to meet
the regional transportation demands.
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