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The Climate Litigation Database

Casa Mira Homeowners Association v. California Coastal Commission

About this case

Filing year
2019
Status
Petition and complaint filed.
Docket number
19-CIV-O4677
Court/admin entity
United StatesState CourtsCalifornia Superior Court (Cal. Super. Ct.)
Case category
Adaptation (US)Actions seeking adaptation measures (US)Constitutional Claims (US)Fifth Amendment (US)Constitutional Claims (US)Fourteenth Amendment (US)
Principal law
United StatesFifth Amendment—TakingsUnited StatesFourteenth Amendment—Due ProcessUnited StatesFourteenth Amendment—Equal Protection
At issue
Challenge to the California Coastal Commission's approval of only a portion of a seawall intended to protect the California Coastal Trail, a sewer line, 10 townhomes, and three apartments.
Topics
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Documents

Filing Date
Document
Type
Topics 
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Search results
12/13/2019
Petition and complaint filed.
A homeowners association and its members challenged the California Coastal Commission's "effective denial" of an application for a permit to build a seawall along a coastal bluff in Half Moon Bay. The petitioners contended that the Commission's "nonsensical indict" approved only a portion of the seawall that would protect three apartments that existed prior to the 1977 effective date of the California Coastal Act. The petitioners claims included that the Commission's decision exceeded its authority under and violated the Coastal Act, violated the petitioners' equal protection and due process rights under the U.S. and California Constitutions, and constituted a taking without just compensation. The petitioners alleged that the Commission had never adopted a policy of "managed retreat." To the extent the Commission relied on 2015 Sea Level Rise Policy Guidance that interpreted the term "existing structures" in the Coastal Act to mean structures in existence on January 1, 1977, the petitioners brought an as-applied challenge to the guidance as exceeding the Commission's authority.
Petition

Summary

Challenge to the California Coastal Commission's approval of only a portion of a seawall intended to protect the California Coastal Trail, a sewer line, 10 townhomes, and three apartments.

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Group
Topics
Policy instrument
Risk
Impacted group
Just transition
Economic sector
Adaptation/resilience
Finance