The First Appellate District of the California Court of Appeal held that local rent control laws can apply to individual rooms rented in a single-family home.
Jonathan Owens owns a single-family home in Oakland. He rents out three of the
The CHW California Public Law Report, published by Colantuono, Highsmith & Whatley, focuses on legal issues affecting local governments in California. It covers topics such as compliance with the Brown Act governing public meetings, development impact fees and related legislation, opioid settlement implications for municipalities, teleconferencing exceptions during emergencies, and other municipal law matters. The blog provides updates on statutory changes, court decisions, and practical guidance for city councils, county boards, and public agencies navigating California public law and governance.
The American Civil Liberties Union has sued the City of Pomona for improperly training its police officers on the new legal standard for justifiable use of deadly force enacted by 2019’s Assembly Bill 392. AB 392, which was sponsored…
In Pimentel v. City of Los Angeles, the Ninth Circuit found the Eighth Amendment’s Excessive Fines Clause applies to Los Angeles’ parking fines. Following Timbs v. Indiana, a recent SCOTUS decision that applied the excessive fine clause against…
Ben Franklin famously said: “When the well is dry, we know the worth of water.” Today’s Supreme Court decision in Wilde v. Dunsmuir is an important win for public utilities and local governments promising stability in local finance. [Disclosure:…
The California Supreme Court handed a major victory to former Governor Jerry Brown and California’s governments in a pension reform case today. [Disclosure: I wrote an amicus curiae brief for the League of California Cities in the case.]
This…
CHW’s quarterly newsletter on public law topics is out. You can see it here.
This issue has articles on:
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The Court of Appeal recently affirmed, in North Murrieta Community, LLC v. City of Murrieta, that developers can be held to pay additional impact fees, despite holding a vesting tentative tract map, if a subsequent development agreement allowed for…
California’s Constitution, like most, requires government to pay just compensation when it takes or damages private property. This has led to the development of two bodies of law — eminent domain (when government sues to acquire property or an…