Court Opinion

ID: 5117909
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-10-13 00:02:13.690923+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:22:04.800795
License: Public Domain

Filed 10/12/21
                              CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

                 IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                               SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

 CHEVRON U.S.A., INC., et al.,                    H045791
                                                 (Monterey County
            Plaintiffs and Respondents,           Super. Ct. No. 16CV003978)

            v.

 COUNTY OF MONTEREY,

            Defendant;

 PROTECT MONTEREY COUNTY et al.,

            Interveners and Appellants.

        Appellant Protect Monterey County (PMC) appeals from the trial court’s judgment
striking down a County ordinance banning “land uses in support of” new oil and gas
wells and “land uses in support of” wastewater injection in unincorporated areas of
Monterey County. These ordinances were enacted as part of Measure Z, an initiative
sponsored by PMC and passed by Monterey County voters. The trial court upheld, in
part, a challenge to Measure Z by plaintiffs, numerous oil companies and other mineral
                                      1
rights holders in Monterey County. PMC contends that the trial court erroneously

        1
          Six separate actions were consolidated below. One was brought by Aera Energy
LLC (Aera). A second action was brought by Chevron U.S.A. Inc. and a group of other
entities, which we will refer to collectively as Chevron. A third action was brought by
California Resources Corporation (CRC). The fourth action was brought by National
Association of Royalty Owners-California, Inc. and various individuals and entities,
which we will refer to collectively as NARO. A fifth action was brought by Eagle
Petroleum, LLC (Eagle). The sixth action was brought by Trio Petroleum LLC and
concluded that these two components of Measure Z were preempted by state and federal
laws and that they constituted a facial taking of the property of some plaintiffs. PMC
also contends that the trial court made prejudicially erroneous evidentiary rulings.
       We find that the trial court correctly concluded that these two components of
                                                                      2
Measure Z are preempted by Public Resources Code section 3106. Section 3106
explicitly provides that it is the State of California’s oil and gas supervisor who has the
authority to decide whether to permit an oil and gas drilling operation to drill a new well
or to utilize wastewater injection in its operations. These operational aspects of oil
drilling operations are committed by section 3106 to the State’s discretion and therefore
local regulation of these aspects would conflict with section 3106. Our narrow holding
does not in any respect call into question the well-recognized authority of local entities to
regulate the location of oil drilling operations, a matter not addressed by section 3106 or
Measure Z.
       Because we uphold the trial court’s decision on the grounds of state law
preemption, we need not consider whether Measure Z is also preempted by federal law or
constituted a facial taking of plaintiffs’ property. We also need not address PMC’s
challenge to the trial court’s evidentiary rulings as those rulings play no role in the
resolution of the state law preemption issue, which is an entirely legal issue. We affirm
the trial court’s judgment.
I.     MEASURE Z
       Measure Z was a citizens’ initiative on the November 2016 Monterey County
ballot entitled: “Protect Our Water: Ban Fracking and Limit Risky Oil Operations
Initiative.” It proposed to amend Monterey County’s general plan to add three new land

two other corporations, which we will refer to collectively as Trio. The six actions were
consolidated by the trial court for the Phase 1 trial.
       2
         All further statutory references are to the Public Resources Code unless
otherwise indicated.

                                              2
use policies. LU-1.21, which is not at issue in this appeal, would prohibit “Land
Uses . . . in support of well stimulation treatments” throughout the County’s
                      3
unincorporated areas. LU-1.22 would prohibit “Land Uses . . . in support of oil and gas
wastewater injection or oil and gas wastewater impoundment” throughout the County’s
unincorporated areas. LU-1.23 would prohibit “Land Uses in Support of Drilling New
Oil and Gas Wells” anywhere in the County’s unincorporated area. Measure Z also
would amend Monterey County’s local coastal program and its Ford Ord Master Plan to
add identical prohibitions.
       Measure Z contained a section setting forth “exemptions” for “any person or entity
exercising a vested right obtained pursuant to State law” and provided for “a reasonable
amortization period” for phasing out uses that were inconsistent with Measure Z’s
provisions. Measure Z also stated that its provisions would not be applied to the extent
“that they would violate the constitution or laws of the United States or the State of
California.” Measure Z authorized the Board of Supervisors to grant an exception to a
property owner if the application of Measure Z would result in an unconstitutional taking.
       Measure Z identified its purpose as “protect[ing] Monterey County’s water,
agricultural lands, air quality, scenic vistas, and quality of life” by “prohibit[ing] and
phas[ing] out land uses in support of oil and gas wastewater . . . disposal using injection
wells or disposal ponds in the County’s unincorporated area” and “prohibit[ing] drilling
new oil and gas wells in the County’s unincorporated area.” Measure Z asserted that

       3
          Chevron conceded at the outset of the Phase 1 trial that it was not using well
stimulation techniques or hydraulic fracturing at the San Ardo Field, where Chevron’s
Monterey County drilling operations were located. However, Chevron argued that “the
possibility that Chevron might in the future use well stimulation or may need to or may
decide to, that’s enough for standing.” NARO also conceded that “nobody’s using
hydrofracturing at the moment and probably—maybe never again in the County of
Monterey.” The trial court ultimately rejected plaintiffs’ challenges to LU-1.21 based on
its finding that they lacked standing to challenge that aspect of Measure Z. That ruling is
not at issue in this appeal.

                                               3
these policies would “promote[] and protect[] the health, safety, welfare, and quality of
life of County residents . . . .” Measure Z was passed by the voters in November 2016.
II.    PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
       Beginning in December 2016, plaintiffs filed multiple mandate petitions and
complaints for declaratory and injunctive relief and for inverse condemnation against
                                             4
defendant County of Monterey (the County). Plaintiffs alleged that Measure Z was
preempted by state and federal law and would result in an unconstitutional taking of their
property. The court stayed the effective date of Measure Z after the County and plaintiffs
                                                       5
stipulated to a stay. PMC intervened in the actions.
       After a multi-day trial that consisted entirely of argument by counsel based on
voluminous declarations and exhibits, the court issued an extensive statement of decision.
The court found that plaintiffs lacked standing to challenge LU-1.21 because no plaintiff
was using or proposing to use any well stimulation treatments in Monterey County. The
court found that LU-1.21 was severable from LU-1.22 and LU-1.23.
       The court proceeded to plaintiffs’ challenge to LU-1.22, which barred wastewater
injection and impoundment. The court credited plaintiffs’ arguments that this aspect of
Measure Z was preempted by state law. The court rejected PMC’s claim that Measure Z
was simply a “land use” prohibition. The court characterized this argument as “clearly a
pretextual attempt to do indirectly what it cannot do directly.” The court focused on the
lack of any “meaningful distinction between wastewater injection and impoundment on
the one hand, and surface equipment and activities in support of wastewater injection and

       4
          The court consolidated the six cases filed by plaintiffs for purposes of the
“Phase 1” trial, which was to resolve the facial challenges to Measure Z, including
preemption and takings. The County has not appeared in this appeal.
        5
          The Center for Biological Diversity (the Center) also sought to intervene. The
trial court denied the Center’s motion, but granted PMC’s motion to intervene. The court
also permitted PMC’s spokesperson, Dr. Laura Solorio, to intervene. We will refer to
PMC and Solorio collectively as PMC.

                                             4
impoundment on the other.” The court eschewed the distinction between surface and
subsurface activities and instead concluded that the key issue was whether Measure Z
“regulates the conduct of oil and gas operations or their permitted location.” The court
viewed LU-1.22 as “regulat[ing] a specific production technique . . . .” The court found
it significant that “Measure Z is a ban on specific production techniques not a total ban on
oil operations.” Because, in the trial court’s view, state law “fully occupies the area of
the manner of oil and gas production,” and LU-1.22 “seeks to regulate the manner of oil
and gas production,” the court found that LU-1.22 was preempted. The court also found
that LU-1.22 conflicted with section 3106. In addition, the court found that LU-1.22
conflicted with the state’s authority under the federal Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA)
because the State, not local authorities, was authorized to make the findings that Measure
Z purported to make regarding whether underground wastewater injection would
endanger drinking water sources. Thus, the SDWA also preempted LU-1.22.
       The court proceeded to LU-1.23. It found that the ban on new wells conflicted
with the SDWA because LU-1.23 necessarily banned wastewater injection. It also found
that the new well ban was preempted because it would prevent plaintiffs from
maintaining the “steam chest” that was “necessary to their profitable operation” and from
drilling new wells for wastewater disposal purposes as permitted by section 3106.
       The court then addressed the facial takings claim. The court found that the
exemption procedure provided for in Measure Z violated due process so plaintiffs were
not required to exhaust administrative remedies. The court found that LU-1.22 and
LU-1.23 would cause a facial taking as to those plaintiffs who had no active wells, but no
remedy was necessary because those two provisions were preempted. As to those
plaintiffs who had active wells, the court found no facial taking.

                                              5
       The court entered judgment and issued a writ of mandate directing the County to
invalidate LU-1.22 and LU-1.23. PMC timely filed a notice of appeal from the
            6
judgment.
III.   DISCUSSION
       A.       State Law Preemption
       PMC contends that the trial court erred in finding that LU-1.22 and LU-1.23 are
                                                    7
preempted. Plaintiffs maintain that Measure Z is preempted under state law because it
conflicts with section 3106.
        “Under article XI, section 7 of the California Constitution, ‘[a] county or city may
make and enforce within its limits all local, police, sanitary, and other ordinances and
regulations not in conflict with general laws.’ [¶] ‘If otherwise valid local legislation
conflicts with state law, it is preempted by such law and is void.’ [Citations.] [¶] ‘A
conflict exists if the local legislation “ ‘duplicates, contradicts, or enters an area fully
occupied by general law, either expressly or by legislative implication.’ ” ’ [Citations.]
[¶] Local legislation is ‘duplicative’ of general law when it is coextensive therewith.
[Citation.] [¶] Similarly, local legislation is ‘contradictory’ to general law when it is
inimical thereto. [Citation.] [¶] Finally, local legislation enters an area that is ‘fully
occupied’ by general law when the Legislature has expressly manifested its intent to
‘fully occupy’ the area [citation], or when it has impliedly done so in light of one of the
following indicia of intent: ‘(1) the subject matter has been so fully and completely
covered by general law as to clearly indicate that it has become exclusively a matter of
state concern; (2) the subject matter has been partially covered by general law couched in

       6
         Some of the other parties also filed notices of appeal, but all of them
subsequently dismissed their appeals.
       7
         We refer to these two policies as Measure Z in our analysis for ease of reference,
even though Measure Z also encompasses LU-1.21, which is not at issue in this appeal
and which the trial court did not find preempted. Our references to Measure Z should not
be misunderstood to include LU-1.21.

                                                6
such terms as to indicate clearly that a paramount state concern will not tolerate further or
additional local action; or (3) the subject matter has been partially covered by general
law, and the subject is of such a nature that the adverse effect of a local ordinance on the
transient citizens of the state outweighs the possible benefit to the’ locality [citations].”
(Sherwin-Williams Co. v. City of Los Angeles (1993) 4 Cal.4th 893, 897-898, fn. omitted,
italics added.) “The party claiming that general state law preempts a local ordinance has
the burden of demonstrating preemption.” (Big Creek Lumber Co. v. County of Santa
Cruz (2006) 38 Cal.4th 1139, 1149 (Big Creek).) “Whether state law preempts a local
ordinance is a question of law that is subject to de novo review.” (Roble Vista Associates
v. Bacon (2002) 97 Cal.App.4th 335, 339.)
       The trial court found that Measure Z is preempted by state law because, among
other things, Measure Z conflicts with section 3106, which not only permits and
encourages the drilling of new wells and the use of wastewater injection but explicitly
                                                        8
vests in the State the authority to permit this conduct. Since Measure Z prohibits all
wastewater injection and bans new well drilling, the trial court found that section 3106
preempts Measure Z.
       PMC argues that Measure Z is not preempted by state law because “California oil
and gas statutes and regulations expressly acknowledge and affirm local authority,
precluding a finding that the state has completely occupied the field,” and “state law
addresses only specific, technical aspects of oil and gas production, leaving local
governments free to exercise their traditional authority over land use, health, and safety to
protect communities from harm.”
       Plaintiffs’ position, on the other hand, is that section 3106 “mandate[s] that oil and
gas producers be allowed to undertake wastewater injection projects properly approved

       8
        As we determine that Measure Z conflicts with section 3106, we need not
consider plaintiffs’ claim that the State has preempted the field of oil and gas regulation.

                                               7
by the Oil and Gas Supervisor and also be allowed to undertake oil and gas well drilling
projects properly approved by the Oil and Gas Supervisor.”
       We begin with the text of section 3106:
                                                   9
       “(a) The [State Oil and Gas] supervisor[ ] shall so supervise the drilling, operation,
maintenance, and abandonment of wells and the operation, maintenance, and removal or
abandonment of tanks and facilities attendant to oil and gas production, including
pipelines not subject to regulation pursuant to Chapter 5.5 (commencing with
[s]ection 51010) of Part 1 of Division 1 of Title 5 of the Government Code that are within
an oil and gas field, so as to prevent, as far as possible, damage to life, health, property,
and natural resources; damage to underground oil and gas deposits from infiltrating water
and other causes; loss of oil, gas, or reservoir energy, and damage to underground and
surface waters suitable for irrigation or domestic purposes by the infiltration of, or the
addition of, detrimental substances. [¶] (b) The supervisor shall also supervise the
drilling, operation, maintenance, and abandonment of wells so as to permit the owners or
operators of the wells to utilize all methods and practices known to the oil industry for the
purpose of increasing the ultimate recovery of underground hydrocarbons and which, in
the opinion of the supervisor, are suitable for this purpose in each proposed case. To
further the elimination of waste by increasing the recovery of underground hydrocarbons,
it is hereby declared as a policy of this state that the grant in an oil and gas lease or
contract to a lessee or operator of the right or power, in substance, to explore for and
remove all hydrocarbons from any lands in the state, in the absence of an express
provision to the contrary contained in the lease or contract, is deemed to allow the lessee
or contractor, or the lessee’s or contractor’s successors or assigns, to do what a prudent
operator using reasonable diligence would do, having in mind the best interests of the
lessor, lessee, and the state in producing and removing hydrocarbons, including, but not

       9
           Section 3004 provides: “ ‘Supervisor’ means the State Oil and Gas Supervisor.”

                                               8
limited to, the injection of air, gas, water, or other fluids into the productive strata, the
application of pressure heat or other means for the reduction of viscosity of the
hydrocarbons, the supplying of additional motive force, or the creating of enlarged or
new channels for the underground movement of hydrocarbons into production wells,
when these methods or processes employed have been approved by the supervisor, except
that nothing contained in this section imposes a legal duty upon the lessee or contractor,
or the lessee’s or contractor’s successors or assigns, to conduct these operations.
[¶] (c) The supervisor may require an operator to implement a monitoring program,
designed to detect releases to the soil and water, including both groundwater and surface
water, for aboveground oil production tanks and facilities. [¶] (d) To best meet oil and
gas needs in this state, the supervisor shall administer this division so as to encourage the
wise development of oil and gas resources.” (§ 3106.)
       We agree with plaintiffs that the text of section 3106 supports the trial court’s
preemption finding. Section 3106 identifies the State’s policy as “encourag[ing] the wise
development of oil and gas resources,” and expressly provides that the State will
supervise the drilling of oil wells “so as to permit” the use of “all” practices that will
increase the recovery of oil and gas. (§ 3106, italics added.) In doing so, section 3106
plainly lodges the authority to permit “all methods and practices” firmly in the State’s
hands. Section 3106 makes no mention whatsoever of any reservation to local entities of
any power to limit the State’s authority to permit well operators to engage in these
“methods and practices.”
       The legislative history of section 3106 is consistent with our understanding of the
statute’s text. Section 3106 was originally enacted in 1939 when the Public Resources
Code was first created. (Stats. 1939, ch. 93, § 3106.) At that time, section 3106
provided: “The supervisor shall so supervise the drilling, operation, maintenance, and
abandonment of wells as to prevent, as far as possible, damage to underground oil and
gas deposits from infiltrating water and other causes, loss of oil and gas, and damage to

                                                9
underground and surface waters suitable for irrigation or domestic purposes by the
infiltration of, or the addition of, detrimental substances, by reason of the drilling,
operation, maintenance, or abandonment of wells.” (Stats. 1939, ch. 93, § 3106, p. 1112.)
We see no indication in this original version of section 3106 of any preemption of local
authority.
       However, the language of subdivision (b) of section 3106, which is the critical one
                                         10
for our purposes, was added in 1961.          (Stats. 1961, ch. 2074, § 1.) It read essentially as
it reads today. Subdivision (a) was amended in 1970 to require the supervisor to
“prevent, as far as possible, damage to life, health, property, and natural resources . . . ”
(Stats. 1970, ch. 799, § 1, italics added.) While the 1970 amendment acknowledged the
potential for negative local impacts from oil drilling operations, section 3106 continued
to lodge the power to supervise these operations in the hands of the State.
       In 1972, the text that is now subdivision (d) was added. (Stats. 1972, ch. 898, § 7.)
The legislative history identifies the purpose of this amendment as “strengthen[ing] the
role” of the California Department of Conservation’s Division of Oil, Gas, and
                                    11
Geothermal Resources (DOGGR), the State entity supervising oil drilling and
operations, “in dealing with environmental problems.” (Resources Agency’s Enrolled
Bill Rep. on Sen. Bill No. 1022 (1972 Reg. Sess.) August 11, 1972.) There have been no
                                                        12
subsequent material amendments to section 3106.

       10
           A 1957 amendment added “or reservoir energy” after “loss of oil, gas”. (Stats.
1957, ch. 405, § 7.) It made no other change.
        11
           DOGGR became the Division of Geologic Energy Management (CalGEM) on
January 1, 2020. (§ 3002.) We continue to refer to it as DOGGR in this opinion as the
trial court and the parties have done.
        12
           The 1989 amendment added additional methods to the second paragraph, and
added a third paragraph, before the final sentence, giving the supervisor authority to
impose a monitoring program. (Stats. 1989, ch. 1383, § 2.) The 1994 amendment
granted the supervisor authority over tanks, pipelines, and other facilities. (Stats. 1994,
ch. 523, §3.)

                                                  10
       PMC argues that, despite the language of section 3106 lodging the authority to
supervise and permit oil and gas operational “methods and practices” throughout the
State, the State’s statutes and regulations have “explicitly recognized and preserved local
authority.” Yet none of the statutes identified by PMC as preserving local authority
reflect that the authority vested in the State by section 3106 to decide whether to permit
                                                                                       13
oil and gas operational “methods and practices” is to be shared with local entities.
       PMC first points to section 3012, which provides: “The provisions of this division
apply to any land or well situated within the boundaries of an incorporated city in which
the drilling of oil wells is now or may hereafter be prohibited, until all wells therein have
been abandoned as provided in this chapter.” (§ 3012.) We note that section 3012
predates the enactment of subdivision (b) of section 3106. (Stats. 1939, ch. 93, § 3012,
p. 1110.) What is important to observe about section 3012 is that while it recognizes that
a city may ban oil operations entirely, at the same time it mandates that the State continue
to exercise authority over any existing oil wells. It therefore provides no support for
PMC’s argument that the State has ceded to local entities any of the State’s authority over
oil drilling operational methods and practices.
       PMC also directs our attention to section 3690, which provides: “This chapter
[(chapter 3.5)] shall not be deemed a preemption by the state of any existing right of
cities and counties to enact and enforce laws and regulations regulating the conduct and
location of oil production activities, including, but not limited to, zoning, fire prevention,

       13
         Division 3 of the Public Resources Code contains a large number of statutes
regulating oil and gas. Chapter 1, article 3 regulates well stimulation treatments.
(§§ 3150-3161.) Article 4 regulates the operation of oil and gas wells. (§§ 3200-3238.)
Section 3203 authorizes the supervisor to approve the drilling of a well. Article 4.4
regulates oil and gas production facilities. (§§ 3270-3270.6.) Article 6 establishes an
administrative appeal process for challenging orders by the supervisor. (§§ 3350-3359.)
Chapter 3 regulates the spacing of wells. (§§ 3600-3609.) Chapter 3.5 deals with “unit
operations.”

                                              11
public safety, nuisance, appearance, noise, fencing, hours of operation, abandonment, and
inspection.” Although this language on its face might seem to provide some support for
PMC’s argument, its limitation to chapter 3.5 reflects otherwise. Chapter 3.5 concerns
“unit operations,” and consists of sections 3630 through 3690, which obviously does not
include section 3106. Thus, section 3690’s provision that chapter 3.5 does not preempt
local regulations provides no support for the proposition that section 3106 does not
preempt local regulation of oil drilling operational methods and practices.
        PMC argues that the Legislature’s 2013 enactment of Senate Bill No. 4
demonstrates that section 3106 does not preempt local authority over oil and gas drilling
operational methods and practices. Senate Bill No. 4 addressed only “hydraulic
fracturing and other well stimulation treatments,” which are not at issue in this appeal.
(Stats. 2013, ch. 313, § 1.) PMC identifies two provisions of Senate Bill No. 4 that, in
PMC’s view, preserved local authority. Section 3160, subdivision (n) provides: “This
article [(article 3, sections 3150 through 3161, which concern well stimulation)] does not
relieve the division or any other agency from complying with any other provision of
existing laws, regulations, and orders.” Section 3161, subdivision (b)(1)(C) concerns
environmental review of an oil well operator’s use of well stimulation pending the
adoption of state regulations addressing well stimulation. Section 3161 provides that the
environmental review of such use is to be done by DOGGR, but this subdivision provides
that “[t]his paragraph does not prohibit a local lead agency from conducting its own
EIR.”
        PMC claims that section 3160, subdivision (n) requires compliance with local
regulations, thereby implying that local entities retain the power to regulate oil drilling
operational methods and practices. The narrow scope of section 3160, subdivision (n)
belies this claim. That subdivision applies only to well stimulation and concerns the
obligations of DOGGR and other agencies. Nothing in that subdivision implicates the
provisions of section 3106, subdivision (b) that we find preempt Measure Z. Similarly,

                                             12
section 3161, subdivision (b)(1)(C) is also limited to well stimulation and does not
explicitly or implicitly grant local entities the power to regulate anything other than well
stimulation, which is not at issue in this appeal. Clearly, the Legislature may choose to
carve out some oil drilling operational methods and practices for the exercise of shared
regulatory power between local entities and the State. At most, these statutes may show
that the Legislature carved out well stimulation methods and practices as an area of
shared regulatory authority.
       PMC also suggests that there is no preemption because provisions in plaintiffs’
leases require them to comply with local laws. The leases themselves are not state laws
and cannot conflict with state laws. We see nothing in these standard lease provisions,
requiring the operators to comply with all laws and regulations, to suggest that the State
was ceding all or part of its authority under section 3106, subdivision (b) to local entities.
       PMC and the amici make much of a line of authority affirming that local
regulation of oil and gas drilling is within the police power of local entities, and they
argue that this line of authority rebuts any preemption claim.
       California courts have long viewed local zoning regulation of oil and gas drilling
to be within a local entity’s police power. Nearly a century ago, the California Supreme
Court reversed the dismissal of an action by an oil company against a city because the
local regulation had targeted one oil company’s land but not that of its competitors, but
the court acknowledged that local regulation of “the business of operating oil wells” was
properly within the local entity’s police power. “A municipality is not permitted, under
the guise of regulating business and segregating it to a particular district, to grant a
monopoly to business establishments and enterprises already situated in unrestricted
districts. [Citation.] The City of Huntington Beach has the unquestioned right to regulate
the business of operating oil wells within its city limits, and to prohibit their operation
within delineated areas and districts, if reason appears for so doing.” (Pacific Palisades
Asso. v. City of Huntington Beach (1925) 196 Cal. 211, 216-217.)

                                              13
       In Beverly Oil Co. v. City of Los Angeles (1953) 40 Cal.2d 552, an oil company
challenged a city’s ordinance banning new oil wells and prohibiting redrilling of existing
wells to new depths. The California Supreme Court rejected the challenge. “It must be
deemed to be well settled that the enactment of an ordinance which limits the owner’s
property interest in oil bearing lands located within the city is not of itself an
unreasonable means of accomplishing a legitimate objective within the police power of
the city.” (Id. at p. 558, italics added.)
       In Higgins v. City of Santa Monica (1964) 62 Cal.2d 24, the California Supreme
Court considered whether a 1939 City of Santa Monica initiative prohibiting oil drilling
could properly be applied to tidelands that the State had explicitly granted power over to
the city. (Id. at pp. 26-28.) The Higgins court rejected the argument that state laws had
preempted the field with respect to oil drilling on tidelands. It found that state laws
limited to tidelands had expressly vested discretion in the city to decide whether there
should be oil drilling on the tidelands. (Id. at p. 32.)
       Hermosa Beach Stop Oil Coalition v. City of Hermosa Beach (2001) 86
Cal.App.4th 534 involved, among other things, whether a citizens’ initiative banning oil
drilling in the city was a valid exercise of the city’s police power. (Id. at pp. 543-545,
548.) The court held: “Enactment of a city ordinance prohibiting exploration for and
production of oil, unless arbitrary, is a valid exercise of the municipal police power.”
(Id. at p. 555.)
       The mere fact that some local regulation of oil and gas drilling is within a local
entity’s police power does not resolve the question of whether a particular local
regulation is preempted by a particular state law. If a local regulation conflicts with a
state law, the local regulation exceeds the local entity’s power. (Cal. Const. art. XI, § 7
[“A county or city may make and enforce within its limits all local, police, sanitary, and
other ordinances and regulations not in conflict with general laws”].) With the exception
of Higgins, none of these cases even considered whether an otherwise valid local

                                              14
regulation was preempted by state law. Pacific Palisades predated the enactment of the
Public Resources Code, and Beverly Oil predated the addition of the language that now
appears in section 3106, subdivision (b). While Hermosa Beach came after the language
that became subdivision (b) was added to section 3106, the Court of Appeal did not
consider whether the local regulation was preempted. “[I]t is axiomatic that cases are not
authority for propositions not considered.” (People v. Alvarez (2002) 27 Cal.4th 1161,
1176.) Higgins considered a preemption argument, but that argument was limited to
specific state laws concerning tidelands over which the State, in that case, had expressly
granted the local entity full authority. We find no support for PMC’s argument in this
line of authority.
       PMC contends that Measure Z’s provisions are not preempted because “the state’s
oil and gas rules narrowly address only the manner in which operations are carried out,
not whether or where oil and gas resources should be developed.” PMC asserts that
“state law’s exclusive focus on the technical manner in which oil and gas production
occurs leaves ample room for the exercise of local police power and land use authority.”
PMC argues that Measure Z controls only “where and whether” oil drilling occurs, which
it contends are outside the purview of the State’s laws.
       PMC’s myopic view of Measure Z’s provisions cannot be reconciled with the
actual import of those provisions. The trial court found that Measure Z “regulates the
conduct of oil and gas operations” and “specific production technique[s]” rather than the
use of land. We agree. Measure Z did not identify any locations where oil drilling may
or may not occur. Instead, it permitted continued operation of existing wells but barred
new wells and wastewater injection even if the new wells and wastewater injection would
be on the same land as the existing operation. These provisions did not regulate “where
and whether” oil drilling would occur on land in the unincorporated areas of the County

                                            15
                                                                     14
but rather what and how any oil drilling operations could proceed.        Operations could
proceed only if they involved no new wells and no wastewater injection, which are
operational methods and practices.
       An accurate characterization of Measure Z’s provisions is at the crux of the
dispute between PMC and plaintiffs. While Measure Z does not regulate many of the
technical aspects of oil drilling operations addressed by the voluminous state statutes and
regulations, it does ban activities that section 3106 not only promotes and encourages, but
also explicitly places the authority to permit in the hands of the State. Consequently,
Measure Z conflicts with section 3106. The fact that Measure Z repeatedly uses the
words “use of land” and “land use” does not obliterate the inescapable fact that Measure
Z would ban specific oil and gas drilling operational methods and practices that section
3106 places solely under the authority of the State.
                                                                            15
       PMC insists that Measure Z does not conflict with section 3106.           It cites City of
Dublin v. County of Alameda (1993) 14 Cal.App.4th 264 for the proposition that a state
law that “permits but does not require” a particular practice does not preempt a local

       14
           We decline to resolve the parties’ dispute over whether Measure Z regulates
“subsurface” activity as the resolution of that specific dispute is unnecessary to our
analysis. We also see no need to rely on the 1976 Attorney General’s opinion that the
parties both rely on as we review this legal issue de novo. Nevertheless, we note that the
1976 Attorney General’s opinion is consistent with our view. It found that “certain
phases of oil and gas activities are of statewide rather than local concern and that any
local regulation in conflict with those phases would therefore be ineffective; in our view,
the state has so fully occupied these certain phases that there is no room left for local
regulation.” (59 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 461, 477.) Having different regulations in different
locations would be particularly problematic where oil and gas deposits extended under
the boundaries of multiple local jurisdictions. (Ibid.) The Attorney General concluded
that this preemption of local control extended to anything that the supervisor had
approved. (Id. at p. 478.)
        15
           The parties argue at length over whether Measure Z is entitled to a presumption
against preemption. We see no need to address these competing arguments as any
presumption was amply rebutted in this case. Preemption is established as a matter of
law.

                                            16
entity from banning that practice. (Id. at p. 278.) In Dublin, a County initiative banned
incineration and promoted recycling. A state law permitted incineration. The Court of
Appeal found no preemption because “several sections of the [state] Act demonstrate that
the decision to permit or disallow incineration is a matter for the discretion of each city or
county.” (Ibid.) The same cannot be said here. Although PMC argues otherwise, it has
failed to identify any provision of state law that, contrary to section 3106, reflects that the
Legislature intended to reserve all or part of the authority to make decisions about
whether an oil drilling operation should be permitted to drill new wells or utilize
wastewater injection for the discretion of local entities. Instead, section 3106 explicitly
encouraged all methods that would increase oil production, including wastewater
injection, and, crucially, placed the decision-making power in the State.
         PMC also relies on People ex rel. Deukmejian v. County of Mendocino (1984) 36
Cal.3d 476 (Mendocino). In that case, the California Supreme Court found that a local
ordinance was not preempted because the state laws required compliance with local
regulations and lodged “wide discretion” in local authorities, a situation which is not
present here. (Id. at pp. 486-487.) The Mendocino case also did not involve a conflict
between local and state law, but instead a question of field preemption. (Id. at pp. 486-
488.)
         PMC contends that conflict preemption does not apply here because section 3106
does not “demand” what Measure Z “forbids.” It argues that Measure Z “does not
require the Supervisor to permit any specific practice.” PMC misreads the authorities it
cites.
         In T-Mobile West LLC v. City and County of San Francisco (2019) 6 Cal.5th 1107,
the California Supreme Court observed: “ ‘The “contradictory and inimical” form of
preemption does not apply unless the ordinance directly requires what the state statute
forbids or prohibits what the state enactment demands.’ [Citations.] ‘[N]o inimical
conflict will be found where it is reasonably possible to comply with both the state and

                                              17
local laws.’ ” (Id. at p. 1121.) In T-Mobile, unlike here, the state statutes made no
mention of the subject matter addressed by the local ordinance so there was no conflict.
Here, section 3106 specifically addresses the drilling of wells and the injection of
wastewater, encourages both practices, and, critically, explicitly places the authority to
permit these methods and practices in the hands of the State. It is not possible for the
authority to permit these methods and practices to rest in the State’s hands if the local
ordinance forbids these methods and practices. As the two laws conflict with respect to
who controls the use of these methods and practices, the local ordinance must yield to the
supreme state law.
       PMC’s reliance on Big Creek is also misplaced. The state law in Big Creek
contained an express preemption clause that was limited to “ ‘the conduct of timber
operations,’ ” while at the same time “general forestry law . . . expressly recognize[d]
local zoning authority.” (Big Creek, supra, 38 Cal.4th at pp. 1151, 1157, italics added.)
The local zoning ordinance limited timber operations to certain zoning districts. (Id. at
p. 1157.) The California Supreme Court, noting that state law expressly favored
permitting local entities “ ‘ “the maximum degree of control over local zoning
matters,” ’ ” held that the local zoning ordinance was not expressly preempted because it
did not involve the “conduct” of timber operations. (Id. at pp. 1151-1157.) The court
proceeded to consider whether the local zoning ordinance was impliedly preempted and
decided that it was not. (Id. at p. 1157.)
       PMC relies on the following passage: “[A] local ordinance is not impliedly
preempted by conflict with state law unless it ‘mandate[s] what state law expressly
forbids, [or] forbid[s] what state law expressly mandates.’ [Citation.] That is because,
when a local ordinance ‘does not prohibit what the statute commands or command what it
prohibits,’ the ordinance is not ‘inimical to’ the statute. [Citation.] Here, County’s
ordinances are not impliedly preempted by conflict with state forestry law because it is
reasonably possible for a timber operator to comply with both. [¶] The zone district

                                             18
ordinance does not mandate what general forestry law forbids or forbid[] what general
forestry law mandates. While the forestry laws generally encourage ‘maximum sustained
production of high-quality timber products . . . while giving consideration to’ competing
values (§ 4513), they do not require that every harvestable tree be cut. Accordingly,
County’s zoning ordinance does not conflict with state law simply because it may have
the effect of placing some trees, at least temporarily, off limits to logging. Nor does it
appear the Board has adopted for Santa Cruz, or any other county, rules that
comprehensively address appropriate geographical locations within the county for timber
harvesting.” (Big Creek, supra, 38 Cal.4th at p. 1161, fn. omitted.)
       Big Creek is not inconsistent with our analysis. Section 3106, unlike the state
forestry laws in Big Creek, explicitly places the authority to permit new wells and
wastewater injection in the hands of the State, while Measure Z bans those methods and
practices. Measure Z is not a local zoning ordinance that simply regulates the location of
oil drilling operations. Instead, it bans particular methods and practices. Thus, Measure
Z forbids the State from permitting certain methods and practices, while section 3106
encourages those methods and practices and mandates that the State be the entity
deciding whether to permit those methods and practices. The conflict here, unlike the
situation in Big Creek, is not limited to a general State policy encouraging oil drilling and
a local ordinance restricting where drilling may take place.
       The fact that state law leaves room for some local regulation of oil drilling, such as
zoning regulations identifying where oil drilling will be permitted in a locality, does not
mean that the County has the authority to ban all new wells and all wastewater injection
                   16
under Measure Z.        “[W]hen a statute or statutory scheme seeks to promote a certain
activity and, at the same time, permits more stringent local regulation of that activity,

       16
         Nothing in this opinion should be construed to cast any doubt on the validity of
local regulations requiring permits for oil drilling operations or restricting oil drilling
operations to particular zoning districts. This case involves no such regulations.

                                              19
local regulation cannot be used to completely ban the activity or otherwise frustrate the
statute’s purpose.” (Great Western Shows, Inc. v. County of Los Angeles (2002) 27
Cal.4th 853, 868.) Here, section 3106’s provisions placing the authority to permit certain
oil and gas drilling operational methods and practices in the hands of the State would be
entirely frustrated by Measure Z’s ban on some of these methods and practices. We
conclude that Measure Z is preempted by state law. It follows that we need not consider
PMC’s challenges to the trial court’s rulings that Measure Z is invalid on federal
                                  17
preemption and takings grounds.
       B.     Evidentiary Issues
       PMC contends that the trial court denied it “a fair trial” because the court admitted
irrelevant evidence proffered by plaintiffs and denied PMC and the County the
opportunity to “contest Plaintiffs’ evidence through discovery and cross-examination.”
       At the outset of the case, the court expressed the view that “discovery on the
validity and preemption issues” was not “necessary” because these were “questions of
law.” PMC expressly agreed. When the court decided to have a Phase 1 trial that would
“be limited to challenges to the validity of the ordinance on its face,” which included the
preemption and takings issues, the court envisioned little need for discovery or evidence.
Plaintiffs sought to provide “some information about our operations.” They argued that
evidence was essential to show that Measure Z would take “all the economically viable
use” of the property. The County and PMC disagreed. Their position was that such
information would be beyond the scope of a facial challenge. The court suggested that
there was a middle ground that could be addressed by means of a stipulated set of facts,
since it needed “a basic understanding of what . . . the permits that are issued allow.”
At the same time, the court took the position that “I don’t need testimony at this phase.”

       17
          Because we do not reach these issues, we deny Chevron’s April 2019 request for
judicial notice, as it concerns only the federal preemption issue.

                                             20
       Plaintiffs filed many declarations and requests for judicial notice in support of
                                                    18
their Phase 1 arguments along with many exhibits.        The County filed a declaration and a
request for judicial notice in support of its Phase 1 opposition argument. PMC filed a
request for judicial notice of 13 items in support of its Phase 1 opposition argument.
                                                                        19
       PMC also filed written objections to plaintiffs’ declarations.         PMC complained
generally that, due to the lack of discovery, it had been deprived of the opportunity to
challenge the information in the declarations. PMC also made voluminous specific
objections based on lack of foundation, relevancy, improper legal opinion, speculation,
the secondary evidence rule, “inadmissible opinion,” and “improper opinion.” The
County joined in those objections and made some of its own. Plaintiffs challenged these
objections. They also objected to some of the evidence offered by the County and PMC.
       The Phase 1 trial was limited to standing, preemption, facial takings, due process
procedural and vagueness challenges (to the procedures for resolving takings claims), a
                                                                     20
single-subject challenge, and general plan consistency challenges.           At the
commencement of the trial in November 2017, the court noted that it had “read
voluminous materials about 2 feet thick” that included not only opening statements but
also “deeds to property and mineral rights; declarations from geologists and petroleum
engineers; materials from the Environmental Protection Agency, [DOGGR], and the state

       18
          Aera filed three declarations in support of its Phase 1 arguments. CRC filed five
declarations and numerous exhibits in support of its Phase 1 arguments. CRC also made
a request for judicial notice. NARO filed two declarations along with their
accompanying exhibits. Chevron submitted six declarations and their accompanying
exhibits. Chevron also submitted a glossary of terms. Eagle submitted two declarations
with exhibits. Plaintiffs also submitted a joint request for judicial notice of 80 exhibits.
       19
          Plaintiffs also filed supplemental declarations and additional judicial notice
requests. PMC and the County also objected to plaintiffs’ supplemental declarations and
supplemental requests for judicial notice.
       20
          The court rejected the single-subject rule challenge and the general plan
consistency challenges, and those rulings are not challenged on appeal.

                                             21
Water Resources Control Board; declarations from former officials with [DOGGR];
ballot measure materials and photos of campaign materials and news clips, which is not
to say that all of the above are admissible.” The court noted that much of this material
was related to standing. The court “reassure[d]” PMC “that you’re not waiving your
objections by failing to repeat them here in the court. We don’t need to take the time to
do that.” The court made specific rulings on the evidentiary objections in its statement of
decision, sustaining some and overruling others. The court pointed out that much of
plaintiffs’ evidence was needed only because PMC had ultimately contested standing.
       As PMC concedes, “[p]reemption presents a pure question of law.” Indeed, PMC
asks us to disregard the evidence to which it objects and decide the issues as a matter of
law. None of the evidence to which PMC objects has any relevance to the state law
preemption issue that we find dispositive in this case. Consequently, PMC’s claims that
the trial court erred in admitting irrelevant evidence and denying discovery and cross-
examination could not provide a basis for reversal because PMC could not have been
prejudiced by any of the evidentiary or discovery rulings that it challenges. It follows
that we need not devote any analysis to these contentions as we have disregarded this
evidence and decided this case as a matter of law.
IV.    DISPOSITION
       The judgment is affirmed.

                                            22
                                _______________________________
                                ELIA, J.

WE CONCUR:

_____________________________
GREENWOOD, P.J.

_____________________________
BAMATTRE-MANOUKIAN, J.

Chevron v. County of Monterey
H045791
Trial Court:                              Monterey County Superior Court
                                          Superior Court No.: 16CV003978

Trial Judge:                              Honorable Thomas W. Wills

Counsel for Plaintiffs and Respondents:   Jeffrey David Dintzer
CHEVRON U.S.A., INC. et al.               Alston & Bird

                                          Theodore Joseph Boutrous
                                          Gibson Dunn & Crutcher

                                          Todd Welden Smith
                                          Ragghianti Freitas

Counsel for Plaintiff and Respondent:     Andrew A. Bassak
AERA ENERGY LLC                           Hanson Bridgett

Counsel for Plaintiff and Respondent:     Matthew Thomas Kline
CALIFORNIA RESOURCES                      Heather A. Welles
CORPORATION                               O’Melveny & Myers

                                          Barton Hurst Thompson

Counsel for Plaintiff and Respondent:     Donald Charles Oldaker
EAGLE PETROLEUM, LLC                      Clifford and Brown

Counsel for Plaintiff and Respondent:     Jason Stuart Retterer
TRIO PETROLEUM, LLC                       JRG Attorneys at Law

Counsel for Plaintiff and Respondent:     Edward Shield Renwick
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF                   Hanna and Morton
ROYALTY OWNERS-CALIFORNIA,
INC.                                      Jacqueline M. Zischke
Counsel for Interveners and Appellants:    Michael Geibelson
PROTECT MONTEREY COUNTY et al.,            Bernice Conn
                                           Lucas A. Messenger
                                           Robins Kaplan

                                           Deborah A. Sivas
                                           Alicia E. Thesing
                                           Mills Legal Clinic at Stanford Law School

                                           Hollin N. Kretzmann
                                           Center for Biological Diversity

                                           Catherine Engberg
                                           Kevin Patrick Bundy
                                           Aaron M. Stanton
                                           Shute, Mihaly & Weinberger

Counsel for Amicus Curiae:                 Katherine S. Hoff
COMMUNITIES FOR A BETTER                   Shana D.G. Lazerow
ENVIRONMENT

Counsel for Amicus Curiae:                 Paulina Nicole Torres
CENTER ON RACE, POVERTY & THE
ENVIRONMENT; COMMITTEE FOR A
BETTER ARVIN

Counsel for Amicus Curiae:                 Sean Bernard Hecht
LEAGUE OF CALIFORNIA CITIES;               UCLA School of Law
CALIFORNIA STATE ASSOCIATION
OF COUNTIES                                Benjamin Avi Harris
                                           Chambers of Judge Stephen V. Wilson

                                      25