California Legal Brief

AI-Generated Practitioner Briefs of California Appellate Opinions

preemption

4 opinions tagged “preemption”

Colonial Manor, Inc. v. Reyes 4/23/26 L.A./AD

The Rule of Colonial Manor, Inc. v. Vilma Reyes is that a surviving spouse who occupied a rent-controlled unit as a lawful occupant with the landlord's knowledge becomes an at-will tenant by implied agreement upon the original tenant's death and remains protected by local rent control ordinances, under circumstances where the spouse lived in the unit for at least one year before marriage, the landlord was aware of the occupancy, and no sublease agreement existed between the spouses.

Fix the City, Inc. v. City of Los Angeles et al. 2/27/26 CA2/1

The Rule of Fix the City, Inc. v. City of Los Angeles is that a charter city may enact an ordinance establishing a local housing and/or homelessness emergency that confers mayoral powers to address conditions within the city's territory, under circumstances where the ordinance defines different types of emergencies and powers than those provided in the California Emergency Services Act and does not conflict with CESA's coordination and mutual aid framework.

Apartment Assn. of Los Angeles etc. v. City of Los Angeles 5/14/26 CA2/7

The Rule of Apartment Association of Los Angeles County, Inc. v. City of Los Angeles is that a municipal ordinance creating a monetary threshold that must be satisfied before a cause of action for unlawful detainer accrues is a permissible substantive regulation of the grounds for eviction rather than an impermissible procedural limitation on the unlawful detainer statutes, under circumstances where the ordinance does not extend the unlawful detainer timeline, does not prohibit landlords from proceeding under the state statutory timeline, and does not require landlords to take affirmative action before commencing unlawful detainer proceedings.

Colonial Manor, Inc. v. Reyes 5/19/26 L.A./AD

The Rule of Colonial Manor, Inc. v. Vilma Reyes is that a landlord cannot enforce an unlawful detainer for rent that exceeds local rent control ceilings, even against a surviving spouse who becomes an implied tenant after the original tenant's death, under circumstances where the spouse was a long-term lawful occupant known to the landlord and Costa-Hawkins does not preempt local rent control protections for implied tenancies.