BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    �



                                                                  SB 1472
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          Date of Hearing:   July 3, 2012

                           ASSEMBLY COMMITTEE ON JUDICIARY
                                  Mike Feuer, Chair
             SB 1472 (Pavley, Corbett, and DeSaulnier) - As Amended: June 
                                      28, 2012
           
                                  PROPOSED CONSENT
           
          SENATE VOTE  :  36-0
           
          SUBJECT  :   Real Property: Blight 

           KEY ISSUES  :

          1)Should the sunset on the existing law that requires owners to 
            maintain vacant foreclosed property be eliminated, thus making 
            the provision permanent?

          2)Should local enforcement agencies be given additional tools so 
            that they can more effectively take action against blighted 
            properties? 

           FISCAL EFFECT  :  As currently in print this bill is keyed 
          non-fiscal. 

                                      SYNOPSIS

          This noncontroversial measure is one of a package of bills 
          sponsored by the Attorney General's Office that seeks to address 
          the many adverse consequences of the mortgage foreclosure 
          crisis.  Specifically, this bill addresses the problem of 
          blight, which is made worse by a large number of often vacant 
          and run-down properties that have been foreclosed upon or are in 
          danger of foreclosure.  In 2008, the Legislature enacted and the 
          Governor signed SB 1137.  Among several provisions addressing 
          foreclosure-related problems, that bill required legal owners of 
          foreclosed properties to maintain the property and authorized 
          local governments to impose stiff penalties for failure to do 
          so.  That provision is set to expire as of January 1, 2013.  
          This bill would remove that sunset and thus make the provision 
          permanent.  In addition, this bill makes several changes in the 
          way that local enforcement agencies take corrective action 
          against blighted properties and substandard buildings.  For 
          example, in order to facilitate the return of the property to 








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          the residential market, this bill would give new owners who are 
          actively working to improve the property a 60-day grace period 
          before any enforcement action is taken against existing 
          violations.  The bill would also require an entity that releases 
          a lien on a blighted property to notify the enforcement agency, 
          so as to better facilitate commencement of an enforcement 
          action.  Finally, the bill would provide that when a blighted 
          property is placed in receivership - generally the last step an 
          enforcement agency might take against a recalcitrant owner - the 
          receiver or the enforcement agency may obtain a court order 
          requiring the legal owner to pay any unrecovered costs of the 
          receivership.  In sum, this bill would enact several changes 
          that would permit local authorities to more easily and 
          efficiently use their existing powers to address the problem of 
          foreclosure-related blight.
           
           SUMMARY  :  Removes the sunset on a statute that permits local 
          governments to fine property owners for failure to maintain 
          certain property and makes other changes relating to the ability 
          of a local enforcement agency to abate nuisances and correct 
          substandard building violations.  Specifically,  this bill  : 

          1)Removes the sunset on and thereby makes permanent a statute 
            that requires a legal owner to maintain vacant residential 
            property purchased or acquired at foreclose. 

          2)Provides that if a person has purchased, and is in the process 
            of abating a violation at, a residential property that has 
            been foreclosed upon on or after January 1, 2008, then a local 
            enforcement agency shall not commence any action or proceeding 
            until at least sixty days after the person takes title to the 
            property, unless a shorter period of time is deemed necessary 
            by the enforcement agency to prevent or remedy an immediate 
            threat to the health and safety of the, public, neighboring 
            community, or occupants of the structure. 

          3)Requires an entity, that releases a lien securing a deed of 
            trust or mortgage on a property for which a notice of pendency 
            of action has been recorded by an enforcement agency, to 
            notify the enforcement agency within 30 days of releasing the 
            lien. 

          4)Provides that where a receiver has been appointed to take 
            possession of a substandard building, a court may, upon the 
            request of either the receiver or an enforcement agency, order 








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            the owner of the property to pay all unrecovered costs 
            associated with the receivership. 

           EXISTING LAW  : 

          1)Requires, until January 1, 2013, a legal owner to maintain 
            vacant residential property purchased at a foreclosure sale or 
            acquired by that owner through foreclosure under a mortgage or 
            deed of trust.  Authorizes a local governmental entity to 
            impose civil fines and penalties for failure to maintain that 
            property of up to $1000 per day for a violation.  (Civil Code 
            Section 2929.3(a)(1).)

          2)Requires the governmental entity to provide a period of not 
            less than 30 days for the legal owner to remedy a violation of 
            the above provision before imposing a civil fine or penalty 
            and to allow for a hearing and an opportunity to contest any 
            fine, as specified.  However a governmental entity may provide 
            less than 30 days' notice, as specified, if a specific 
            condition of the property threatens public health or safety.  
            (Civil Code Section 2929.3(a)(2) and (c).) 

          3)Defines "failure to maintain," for purposes of the above, to 
            mean failure to care for the exterior of the property, 
            including, but not limited to, permitting excessive foliage 
            growth that diminishes the value of the surrounding 
            properties, failing to take action to prevent trespassers or 
            squatters from remaining on the property, or failing to take 
            action to prevent mosquito larvae from growing in standing 
            water or other conditions that create a public nuisance.  
            (Civil Code Section 2929.3(b).)

          4)Specifies that fines and penalties collected pursuant to the 
            above shall be directed to local nuisance abatement programs; 
            that a governmental entity may not impose fines under both the 
            above provisions and a local ordinance; that the above 
            provisions do not preempt any local ordinance; and that any 
            rights and remedies provided by the above provisions are 
            cumulative and in addition to any other rights and remedies 
            provided by law.  (Civil Code Section 2929.3(d)-(h).) 

          5)Provides that if any building is constructed or maintained in 
            violation of any provision of law or regulation, as specified, 
            or if a nuisance exists in any building or upon the lot on 
            which it is situated, an enforcement agency shall, after 30 








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            days' notice to abate the nuisance or violation, institute any 
            appropriate action or proceeding to prevent, restrain, 
            correct, or abate the violation or nuisance.  Provides that 
            the enforcement agency shall commence proceedings to abate the 
            violation by repair, rehabilitation, vacation, or demolition 
            of the building, as specified.  (Health & Safety Code Section 
            17980(a)-(b).) 

          6)Provides that if an owner fails to comply within a reasonable 
            time with the terms of an order or notice to abate a nuisance 
            or violation, the enforcement agency may seek and a court may 
            order fines and penalties as specified, including the 
            appointment of a receiver to take possession of the property 
            in order to correct the conditions that give rise to the 
            nuisance or violation.  Specifies the power and duties that 
            shall be granted to the receiver, including but not limited 
            to, the power to make contracts and employ contractors as 
            necessary to correct the condition cited in the violation; the 
            power to collect rents and income from the substandard 
            building; the power to borrow funds to pay for necessary 
            repairs and, with the approval of the court, to secure a lien 
            on the property to secure that debt.  (Health & Safety Code 
            Section 17980.7.) 

           COMMENTS :  This bill is part of a package of foreclosure-related 
          bills that is sponsored by the California Attorney General's 
          Office and known collectively as the California Homeowner Bill 
          of Rights.  One consequence of the foreclosure crisis, according 
          to the author and sponsor, is that foreclosed properties often 
          remain empty, fall into disrepair, and become a source of blight 
          in many California communities.  This bill, therefore, seeks to 
          give local jurisdictions more tools to fight blight.  It does so 
          first by removing the sunset on an existing law that requires 
          the legal owner of vacant foreclosed property to maintain that 
          property or potentially face a fine of up to $1000 per day per 
          violation.  In addition, this bill seeks to facilitate the 
          existing authority of local enforcement agencies to take various 
          actions against owners of substandard buildings.

           Removal of Sunset on SB 1137 Provision Requiring Owners to 
          Maintain Property :  In 2008 the Legislature enacted and the 
          Governor signed SB 1137 (Chapter 69, Stats. of 2008) in an 
          effort to address an array of problems created by the 
          foreclosure crisis.  Although most of the bill's provisions 
          sought to reduce the number of foreclosures (e.g. requiring 








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          lenders and servicers to take certain steps before filing a 
          notice of default), one provision of the bill required the legal 
          owners of vacant foreclosed residential properties to maintain 
          their property and it authorized local governmental entities to 
          fine owners who failed to maintain their property up to $1000 
          per day per violation.  The law defined "failure to maintain" to 
          include failure to care for the exterior of the property, 
          including failure to clear excessive foliage; failure to take 
          action to prevent trespassers and squatters from remaining on 
          the property; or failure to take action to prevent mosquito 
          larvae from growing in standing water; or failure to take action 
          to prevent any other conditions that create a public nuisance.  
          Existing law requires the governmental entity to give the legal 
          owner at least 30 days to remedy the violation prior to imposing 
          the fine, and the owner is also entitled to a hearing and an 
          opportunity to contest the fine.  Currently these provisions are 
          due to sunset on January 1, 2013.  By removing this sunset date, 
          this bill will permit local jurisdictions to continue using this 
          remedy.  

           Code Enforcement and Receivership Provisions  :  In addition to 
          extending the sunset on SB 1137's "failure to maintain" 
          provisions, this bill would make three modest but important 
          changes to the manner by which local code enforcement agencies 
          address the problem of foreclosure-related blight.   

          First, this bill would give the new owner of a previously cited 
          property additional time to correct substandard building 
          conditions on blighted property.  Existing law permits a local 
          enforcement agency to inspect buildings and issue notices to 
          owners whose buildings create a public nuisance or violate 
          certain state or local building codes.  If after 30 days' notice 
          the owner fails to abate the nuisance or correct the violation - 
          or after a shorter period if the conditions create an immediate 
          public threat - the enforcement agency must institute an 
          appropriate action or proceeding to prevent, restrain, correct, 
          or abate the violation or nuisance.  This bill would amend this 
          law by providing that where the owner has purchased a recently 
          foreclosed property and is in the process of abating the 
          nuisance or correcting the violation, then the enforcement 
          agency shall not commence an enforcement action until at least 
          60 days after the person takes title to the property unless the 
          severity of the conditions warrant a shorter period.  The aim of 
          this provision is to encourage the transfer of blighted 
          residential property into the hands of persons who will fix-up 








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          the property and make it habitable.  According to the sponsor, 
          persons who might otherwise purchase and rehabilitate 
          residential property are reluctant to do so if the property has 
          been cited for a violation that must be corrected within 30 
          days.  This would give an owner who genuinely seeks to either 
          occupy the building or restore it to the residential market a 
          reasonable amount of time to do so. 

          Second, this bill would require a lienholder who releases a lien 
          on any property on which the enforcement agency has recorded a 
          lis pendens to notify the enforcement agency within 30 days of 
          releasing the lien.  According to the sponsor, when an 
          enforcement agency must make a determination as to the 
          appropriate enforcement action, if any, to take against a 
          substandard property, it is often helpful for it to know whether 
          or not any liens have been recorded against the property and if 
          and when the lien is released.  This would create an efficient 
          means for the enforcement agency to know when a lien has been 
          released. 

          Third, this bill would allow for the recovery of certain costs 
          associated with a health and safety receivership.  Such 
          receiverships are typically used as a last resort.  But where a 
          property owner refuses to take any action, even after receiving 
          notice and given adequate time to correct a violation, the 
          enforcement agency may seek, and the court may appoint, a 
          receiver to take possession of the property.  Existing law sets 
          forth the conditions for establishing the receivership and lists 
          certain powers that a court may grant to the receiver.  The 
          receiver's primary function in taking possession of the property 
          is to do whatever is necessary to correct the conditions that 
          gave rise to the receivership.  For example, the receiver 
          typically hires contractors to make needed repairs.  In order to 
          pay these contractors, the receiver might be empowered to 
          collect rents on the property or to obtain loans that are 
          secured by a lien upon the property.  This bill does not change 
          any of the statutory requirements for establishing a 
          receivership or affect the receiver's statutory powers; it 
          would, however, once a receivership has been established, permit 
          either the receiver or the enforcement agency to seek a court 
          order requiring the owner of the property to pay any 
          "unrecovered costs" of the receivership (i.e. presumably those 
          costs not covered by the loans, rents, or other revenue 
          sources).  This would ensure that costs associated with 
          rehabilitating the property are borne by the responsible party: 








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          the recalcitrant owner who refuses to correct conditions even 
          after being placed on notice.  Arguably, existing receivership 
          statutes, which grant courts considerable discretion, would 
          permit such a requirement in the initial court order creating 
          the receivership.  This bill, however, would expressly state 
          that the receiver or the enforcement agency could request such 
          an order if one is not initially provided.  The bill specifies 
          that the court "may" grant such an order; discretion will 
          ultimately remain, consistent with existing law, with the court. 


           ARGUMENTS IN SUPPORT  :  According to the sponsor, the California 
          Attorney General's Office, one of the many legacies of the 
          mortgage crisis is that "communities throughout California are 
          being inundated with foreclosed homes, which often remain empty 
          and fall into disrepair."  The resulting blight, the sponsor 
          contends, creates a nuisance for neighboring residents and 
          further diminishes home values.  Furthermore vacant properties 
          create health and safety risks by, among other things, creating 
          fire hazards, attracting criminal activity, and leaving standing 
          water that breeds mosquitos.  Local governments and taxpayers, 
          the sponsor notes, are ultimately "saddled with the expense of 
          dealing" with these problems.  The sponsor believes that SB 1472 
          will "provide local jurisdictions with additional tools to fight 
          blight." 

           REGISTERED SUPPORT / OPPOSITION  :   

           Support 
           
          California Attorney General's Office (sponsor)
          California Nurses Association 

           Opposition 
           
          None on file
           

          Analysis Prepared by  :    Kevin G. Baker / JUD. / (916) 319-2334