The produced file shows the recorded HSC §17985 pending-enforcement title cloud, but no recorded final-disposition release — and the phrase “final disposition” appears zero times across all 631 produced pages.
When a city decides a building might be unsafe, it can record a public notice against the property so anyone checking the title sees an enforcement case is open — a flag that sits on the property’s record. The same state law HSC §17985 that lets the city put that flag on also says the city is supposed to record a matching “all clear” notice once the case is finally resolved, so the owner has proof the flag came off. In this property’s complete file the city closed the request on, the recorded flag is there M122 EX.10 — but there is no recorded “all clear” instrument, and the exact words the law uses for it, “final disposition,” do not appear anywhere in all 631 pages. M001–M631 The city does point to a way out: pay every fee, wait until the case has been closed for 30 days, and email a separate office to get liens released. But that is a billing-and-closing process, not the recorded document the law describes, and it never names the recorded flag at all — the only thing tied to that flag is a $150 fee just to “remove” it. M117 This card does not say the city broke the law — the case is still open, so the “all clear” notice is not due yet. The gap only became visible after the owner’s representative obtained the full records production and read it page by page, including a note added on the city’s side in May 2026 describing the fee-and-closure process. M040
Bottom line: the city’s own records show the public enforcement flag was recorded against the property, but show no recorded document — and not even the legal phrase for one — that would let the owner prove how that flag ever comes back off. M001–M631 HSC §17985The recorded instrument EX.10 M122 — captioned “NOTICE OF PENDING ENFORCEMENT PROCEEDING OR ACTION” and citing HSC §17980 and HSC §17985 on its face, with the executed copy signed by Peter Lemos, Code and Housing Enforcement Chief — put a pending enforcement proceeding into the real-property record. HSC §17985 provides the release side: after final resolution, the enforcement agency records a notice of final disposition in the same recorder’s office. The City’s own contact letter ties a charge to that recorded notice — “$150 to remove the Notice of Pending Enforcement Proceeding or Action” M117 — but a removal fee is not a recorded release instrument. Across all 631 pages of the May 2026 production the phrase “final disposition” appears zero times. M001–M631 The produced file shows the front-end recorded title cloud and an administrative fee path, and no recorded final-disposition instrument for this case.
This card stays narrow: a release-documentation gap, not a present statutory violation — the case is still open M001, so no final-disposition notice is yet due. When a city decides a building might be unsafe, it can record a public notice against the property. The same state law HSC §17985 that lets the city put that flag on also says the city is supposed to record a matching “all clear” notice once the case is finally resolved. In the complete file the City produced and certified as complete, the recorded flag is there EX.10 M122, but there is no recorded “all clear” instrument — and the exact words the law uses for it, “final disposition,” do not appear anywhere in all 631 pages. M001–M631 The city does point to a way out: pay every fee, wait until the case has been closed for 30 days, and contact a separate office to get liens released. M040 But that is a billing-and-closing process, not the recorded document the law describes.
The header reads “NOTICE OF PENDING ENFORCEMENT PROCEEDING OR ACTION (California Health and Safety Code 17980 and 17985).” A blank “***SAMPLE***” template (Willie Harris) precedes the executed copy for this case (Peter Lemos, Case 23-009185) on the same page. The recorded version of this instrument is Doc 202305081060. The instrument thus names both the recording authority and the release authority in its own header.
HSC §17985 provides for the enforcement agency, after final resolution, to record a notice of final disposition in the same county recorder’s office. The same statute that authorizes the front-end title cloud specifies the corresponding release instrument. The produced file shows no such recorded final-disposition notice for Case 23-009185.
The recorded pending-enforcement notice has its own removal charge: “$150 to remove the Notice of Pending Enforcement Proceeding or Action.” That is a fee to take the notice down, not an instrument that records its removal. A fee schedule entry does not substitute for the recorded final-disposition instrument HSC §17985 contemplates.
A separate recorded instrument, the Declaration of Sub-Standard Building, “will be cleared when permits are finalized and fees, including a $150.00 Termination fee, are paid.” That sentence addresses the Declaration, not the pending-enforcement notice. The two instruments are distinct; clearing the Declaration does not record removal of Doc 202305081060.
The 05/01/2026 activity-log entry (Catherine Baumback) states “Termination cannot be requested until all fees are paid and the case has been closed for 30 days” and advises “contacting Bonds & Assessments to get the lien releases of the resolution numbers.” That is a fee/closure process and a special-assessment lien-release channel — not the recorded county instrument HSC §17985 calls for, and it does not name Doc 202305081060. The lien-release path addresses assessment liens; it is separate from recording a final-disposition instrument that removes the pending-enforcement cloud from the real-property record.
None of these charges or paths is the recorded final-disposition instrument, names the official responsible for recording it, or shows a case-specific step to record removal of the pending-enforcement title cloud from the real-property record. The phrase “final disposition” appears nowhere in the 631 produced pages. The production is the City’s own certified-complete record; its silence on the release instrument is the gap this card identifies.
The same statute the City used to put the proceeding into the real-property record — HSC §17985 — also provides for a recorded final-disposition notice after final resolution. The produced file shows the front-end recorded title cloud EX.10 M122, two separate removal-fee references M117 M123, and a 05/01/2026 activity note describing a fee/closure termination process and a special-assessment lien-release channel. M040 It shows no recorded final-disposition notice; the phrase “final disposition” appears nowhere in the 631 pages. M001–M631 The City’s own records show the public enforcement flag was recorded against the property, but show no recorded document — and not even the legal phrase for one — that would let the owner verify how that flag is removed from the real-property record. HSC §17985 Card 47
The case is still open M001, so no recorded final-disposition notice is yet due, and this card does not claim a present statutory violation. The surviving point is documentation: the production shows the recorded cloud and an administrative termination process, but no recorded final-disposition instrument or recorded release that would let an owner verify how the HSC §17985 title cloud itself comes off the real-property record once the case finally resolves.