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HomeHealth and Safety CodeDiv. 24Pt. 1Ch. 4Art. 7§ 33399 Redevelopment Plan Property Rights

§ 33399 Redevelopment Plan Property Rights

Health and Safety Code·California
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§ 33399 Redevelopment Plan Property Rights

Key Takeaways

  • •If a city or government has a plan to buy someone's property but doesn't start the process within 3 years, the owner can offer to sell it to them.
  • •If the government doesn't buy the property or start the process within 18 months of the offer, the owner can sue for any problems caused by the plan.
  • •The owner has 1.5 years after the 18-month period to sue.
  • •The government can decide not to buy the property at any time, but if they do, they have to follow special rules.

Example

Imagine the city has a plan to buy your house to build a park, but they don't do anything for 3 years. You offer to sell it to them, but they ignore you for 18 months. Now, you can sue them if their plan made it hard for you to sell or use your house.

The law lets you ask the city to buy your house if they've been delaying. If they don't act, you can take them to court for any trouble their plan caused you.

AI-generated — May contain errors. Not legal advice. Always verify source.

Official Source
View on CA.gov

§ 33399 Redevelopment Plan Property Rights

(a)  If a public entity has adopted a redevelopment plan but has not commenced an eminent domain proceeding to acquire any particular parcel of property subject to eminent domain thereunder within three years after the date of adoption of the plan, the owner or owners of the entire fee at any time thereafter may offer in writing to sell the property to the agency for its fair market value. If the agency does not, within 18 months from the date of receipt of the original offer, acquire or institute eminent domain proceedings to acquire the property, the property owner or owners may file an action against the agency in inverse condemnation to recover damages from the agency for any interference with the possession and use of the real property resulting from the plan, provided that this section shall not be construed as establishing or creating a presumption to any right to damages or relief solely by reason of the failure of the agency to acquire the property within the time set forth in this section. (b)  No claim need be presented against a public entity under Part 3 (commencing with Section 900) of Division 3.6 of Title 1 of the Government Code as a prerequisite to commencement or maintenance of an action under subdivision (a), but any such action shall be commenced within one year and six months after the expiration of the 18 months period. (c)  A public entity may commence an eminent domain proceeding or designate the property to be exempt from eminent domain under the plan at any time before the property owner commences an action under this section. If the public entity commences an eminent domain proceeding or designates the property to be exempt from acquisition by eminent domain before the property owner commences an action under this section, the property owner may not thereafter bring an action under this section. (d)  After a property owner has commenced an action under this section, the public entity may declare the property to be exempt from acquisition by eminent domain and abandon the taking of the property only under the same circumstances and subject to the same conditions and consequences as abandonment of an eminent domain proceeding. (e)  Commencement of an action under this section does not affect any authority a public entity may have to commence an eminent domain proceeding, take possession of the property pursuant to Article 3 (commencing with Section 1255.410) of Chapter 6 of Title 7 of the Code of Civil Procedure, or abandon the eminent domain proceeding. (f)  In lieu of bringing an action under subdivision (a) or if the limitations period provided in subdivision (b) has run, the property owner may obtain a writ of mandate to compel the public entity, within such time as the court deems appropriate, to declare the property acquisition exempt or to commence an eminent domain proceeding to acquire the property. (g)  A declaration that property is exempt from acquisition by eminent domain shall be by resolution and shall be recordable. It shall exempt the property from eminent domain under the redevelopment plan, and the redevelopment agency shall have no power of eminent domain as to the property unless the redevelopment plan is thereafter amended to expressly make the property subject to acquisition by eminent domain. (h)  With respect to redevelopment projects for which a final redevelopment plan has been adopted prior to January 1, 1977, the three-year period provided for in subdivision (a) shall begin as of January 1, 1977. (Added by Stats. 1976, Ch. 1336.)

Last verified: January 23, 2026

Key Terms

acquisitionadoptionpossessiondamagespropertyclaimofferredevelopment

Related Statutes

  • § 33392 Early Property Acquisition Rules
  • § 33373 Redevelopment Plan Recording Requirements
  • § 33320.2 Noncontiguous Redevelopment Area Rules
  • § 33328.5 Redevelopment Tax Roll Notification
  • § 33331.4 Public Housing Replacement Rules

References

  • Official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
  • California Legislature. Health and Safety Code. Section 33399.
View Official Source