top of page

Rent Control Decision Nullified

  • Oct 1, 2005
  • 1 min read

A controversial decision that cast doubt on many mobile home rent control ordinances in California has been thrown out.

Last year, a divided Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals panel ruled the City of Cotati’s mobile home rent control law was unconstitutional because it potentially permitted mobile home owners to capture a premium — based on the value of the reduced rent — when they sold their homes. The court characterized this as a transfer of equity that caused the ordinance to fail the “substantially advances” test for determining whether a regulation intended serve a legitimate state interest amounts to a taking (see , October 2004; , September 2004). The court based its decision on three Ninth Circuit rent control decisions from Hawaii.

However, the U.S. Supreme Court in June overturned one of those cases, specifically ruling “the substantially advances formula is not a valid takings test.” That decision came in , 125 S. Ct. 2074 (see , July 2005).

After the decision, the Ninth Circuit withdrew its earlier decision and upheld Cotati’s mobile home rent control ordinance.

The case is , No. 03-15066, 2005 DJDAR 8511.

Recent Posts

See All
Welcome to the new CP&DR website!

We are happy to announce CP&DR’s website has been successfully moved to a new host! If you are a current subscriber we have set up your profile on this new website, and have credited you with full

 
 
A Cheeky Plan To Win CEQA Attorney's Fees Fails

A Berkeley citizen group lost its challenge to People's Park in the legislature and the California Supreme Court. But that didn't stop the group from claiming enough of a victory to seek $1 million in

 
 
bottom of page