Lost: U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear the case

The Cherk family has owned a three-acre vacant lot in the county for 60 years. When the Cherks needed to supplement their modest retirement income, they looked to sell their primary asset (other than their Mill Valley home, where they have lived since 1959). They asked permission from the county to split the lot into two parcels, so they could sell them separately.

But a Marin County ordinance requires property owners who divide small lots to pay a fee to the county for the purpose of creating affordable housing. In the Cherks’ case, the county conditioned the permit on a payment of $40,000. Marin County’s is one of many “affordable housing” policies across the nation that require property owners to fund government solutions to the housing crisis with extraordinary permit fees and conditions.

Such fees are unfair and unconstitutional. The Supreme Court has said—in Nollan v. California Coastal Commission, a 1987 Supreme Court case argued by PLF—that government may demand permit fees only in order to offset public problems caused by new development, such as increased traffic or utilities. The Cherks didn’t create the problem of affordable housing in Marin County; it was created by state and local policies that put limits on new construction. Furthermore, the Cherks’ plan would create more housing, not less.

The Cherks tried to work with county officials for over a decade and ultimately paid the fee under protest. They had to mortgage their home to come up with the money. To add insult to injury, the county has waived the affordable housing fee for some permit applicants while refusing the Cherks’ requests for a waiver. Both the federal and state constitutions forbid such unequal treatment.

PLF filed a lawsuit on behalf of the Cherks in Marin County Superior Court on the grounds that the fee was an unconstitutional condition on the building permit, in violation of the Fifth Amendment’s prohibition on uncompensated takings, and that the selective granting of waivers violated the Cherks’ constitutional right of Equal Protection.

What’s At Stake?

  • Permit fees must have a clear connection to the proposed development. It’s neither fair nor constitutional to single out individual property owners to pay to solve social problems whose costs should be borne by the whole community.
  • California’s housing shortage is created by government policies that prohibit housing from being built. The right solution is to make it easier to build, not harder. Property owners and developers who are trying to create more housing shouldn't be penalized for their efforts.

Case Timeline

June 12, 2019
Petition for Writ of Certiorari
Supreme Court of the United States
June 25, 2018
June 05, 2018
October 03, 2017
August 15, 2016