eviction control v. rent control - is it possible to evict from a single family house in san...
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8/9/2019 Eviction Control v. Rent Control - Is It Possible to Evict From a Single Family House in San Francisco?
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1/23/15, 9:ost & Found: Eviction Control v. Rent Control - Is It Possible To Evict From a Single Family House In San Francisco?
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Eviction Control v. Rent Control - Is ItPossible To EvictFrom a Single Family House In San Francisco?
A common wisdom holds that, while certain housing units are exempt from the Rent Control
in San Francisco, they are still subject to the EvictionControl. That is, even if you can raise
rentin those units above the limitsdictated by the Rent Board, you still can't evict a person
but for the defined "just cause" reasons. Such is the statement in Topic No. 19, issued by the
San Francisco Rent Board.
Yet a close analysis of applicable sections of the SF Administrative Code indicates that an
exception to the rule doesexist, albeit a very narrow one. Despite what is said in the Topic
No. 19, the prohibition is not absolute.
True, limitations on the rent increase are curtailed by the Costa-Hawkings Act, exempting
certain units from the Rent Control coverage. For instance, single family residences are
exempt. CC 1954.52(a)(3). Yet in the same statute we find that "[n]othing in this section
shall be construed to affect the authority of a public entity that may otherwise exist to
regulate or monitor the basis for eviction." CC 1954.52(c).
This compels us to look, how local authorities regulate the basis for eviction. Should we be
in Los Angeles, the answer is clear and easily found: single-family residencies are exempt.
But in San Francisco, the answer is scattered among several sections, and a lot of stars have
to line up to have a unit exempt, even if it is a single-family residence.
We should start from the Section 37.9, which defines "just causes" of eviction. It begins with
a preamble: "Notwithstanding Section 37.3, this Section shall apply as of August 24, 1980, to
all landlords and tenants of rental units as defined in Section 37.2(r)." Remember to check
about the 37.3, but let's start from the definition of the "rental unit" in Section 37.2(r). I
have put here the important parts for our analysis:
(r) Rental Units. Allresidential dwelling units in the City and County of San
Francisco together with the land and appurtenant buildings thereto, and all
housing services, privileges, furnishings and facilities supplied in connection
with the use or occupancy thereof, including garage and parking facilities.
...
The term "rental units" shall not include:
...
(5) Rental units located in a structure for which a certificate of occupancy was
first issued after the effective date of this ordinance; (A) except as provided
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for certain categories of units and dwellings by Section 37.3(d)and Section
37.9A(b) of this Chapter;
...
(7) Dwellings or units otherwise subject to this Chapter 37, to the extent such
dwelling or units are partially or wholly exempted from rent increase
limitationsby the Costa-Hawkins Residential Housing Act (California Civil Code
Sections 1954.50, et seq.) and/or San Francisco Administrative Code Section
37.3(d).
In my opinion, it meant to say that, depending on how your unit fits the definition of
37.3(d), it either is exempt from the "rental unit" definition under 37.2(r)(7), or not exempt(literally, excepted from the exemption) under 37.2(r)(5). I say "in my opinion," because this
is not crystal-clear: remember that the 37.9 preamble starts with a qualifier
"notwithstanding Section 37.3 ..." If I am wrong, we can stop right here, but if I am right,
let's look at 37.3(d).
Section 37.3(d)provides:
(d) Costa-Hawkins Rental Housing Act (Civil Code Sections 1954.50, et seq.).
Consistent with the Costa-Hawkins Rental Housing Act (Civil Code Sections
1954.50, et seq.) and regardlessof whether otherwise provided under Chapter
37:
(1) Property Owner Rights to Establish Initial and All Subsequent Rental Rates
for Separately Alienable Parcels.
(A) An owner of residential real property may establish the initial and all
subsequent rental rates for a dwelling or a unit which is alienable separate from
the title to any other dwelling unitor is a subdivided interestin a subdivision
as specified in subdivision (b), (d), or (f) of Section 11004.5 of the California
Business and Professions Code. The owner's right to establish subsequent
rental rates under this paragraph shall not applyto a dwelling or unit where the
preceding tenancy has been terminated by the owner by notice pursuant to
California Civil Code Section 1946 or has been terminated upon a change in the
terms of the tenancy noticed pursuant to California Civil Code Section 827: in
such instances, the rent increase limitation provisions of Chapter 37 shall
continue to apply for the duration of the new tenancy in that dwelling or unit.
(B) Where the initial or subsequent rental rates of a Subsection 37.3(d)(1)(A)
dwelling or unit were controlled by the provisions of Chapter 37 on January 1,
1995, the following shall apply:
(i) A tenancy that was in effect on December 31, 1995 remains subject to
the rent control provisions of this Chapter 37, and the owner may not
otherwise establish the subsequent rental rates for that tenancy.
(ii) On or after January 1, 1999 an owner may establish the initial and all
subsequent rental rates for any tenancy created on or after January 1,
1996.
In a short and over-simplified summary, it reads like this: (i) find out if it is a single-family
residence, then (ii) see if CC 1946 or 827 was invoked, and if "yes" on the first and "no" on
the second step, then it won't be a "rental unit" (Sec. 37.2(r)(7)), otherwise it will be (Sec.
37.2(r)(5)).
Note, that our local ordinance mentions CC 1946. Costa-Hawkings in a similar limitation
refers to CC 1946.1[CC 1954.52(a)(3)(B)(i)]. All these statutes (CC 1946, 1946.1, and 827)deal with a month-to-month tenancy or a tenancy for an unspecified period of time. The
common part is that a termination or a change of terms in such tenancies requires a notice.
See also, CC 791.
On the other hand, a tenancy for afixed period of time, say a year, requires no noticeand
terminates by itself. See, CC 1933(1); CC 793; CEB Landlord-Tenant Litigation, Sec. 4.11.
Putting it together, if the physical unit itself complies with the requirement for exemption,
the test is then to check if the landlord also complied with the procedural part, i.e. did not
treat the unit under any of the statutes requiring notice for termination. The only scenario
http://law.onecle.com/california/civil/793.htmlhttp://law.onecle.com/california/civil/1933.htmlhttp://law.onecle.com/california/civil/791.htmlhttp://www.leginfo.ca.gov/cgi-bin/displaycode?section=civ&group=00001-01000&file=818-827http://codes.lp.findlaw.com/cacode/CIV/5/d3/4/5/2/s1946.1http://codes.lp.findlaw.com/cacode/CIV/5/d3/4/5/2/s1946http://codes.lp.findlaw.com/cacode/CIV/5/d3/4/5/2.7/s1954.52http://www.sfrb.org/index.aspx?page=1252 -
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