Los Gatos Weekly Times

City sues property owner over his home

- By Maggie Angst mangst@bayareanew­sgroup.com

In an unusual move, the city of San Jose is suing an Oaklandbas­ed tax attorney, arguing that his derelict home in San Jose's Rose Garden area has become a public nuisance that endangers the health and safety of those around it.

The lawsuit — filed this month in Santa Clara County Superior Court — claims that Dragutin J. Sbragia-zoricic has failed to abate the blight and code violations at a vacant, dilapidate­d home he owns at 205 Wabash Ave. in San Jose. It further alleges that he has neglected to pay more than $22,000 in fines and fees levied against him by the city.

San Jose is asking a judge to order Sbragia-zoricic to clean up his property, which sorely stands out from the neatly kept homes around it, and to provide the city with the thousands of dollars it is owed.

Sbragia-zoricic — a longtime licensed tax attorney located in Oakland — has owned the home since 2009, according to the lawsuit. But neighbors in the quiet, single-family neighborho­od said the home has been vacant that whole time.

The property is situated on the edge of San Jose's historic Rose Garden and Burbank neighborho­ods. It's located a block away from Abraham Lincoln High School, half a mile away from the beloved Municipal Rose Garden and about a mile from the popular Westfield Valley Fair mall.

According to the lawsuit, San Jose code enforcemen­t officers initially declared the home vacant and neglected in June 2015 and have issued more than a dozen

administra­tive citations to Sbragia-zoricic over the span of more than six years.

“The substandar­d conditions at the property substantia­lly endanger the health and safety of homes adjacent to, or nearby, the property as well as the general public,” the lawsuit states.

City spokespers­on Demetria Machado said the city rarely takes such legal action against property owners. In most cases, code enforcemen­t officers aim to remedy code violations through voluntary compliance and by using other enforcemen­t tools like warning notices and citations.

“The city's goal is compliance and remediatio­n of the code issues, and sometimes a lawsuit is necessary to obtain the compliance,” Machado wrote in an email, adding that the complaint will pave the way for the city to take further action like pursuing receiversh­ip if needed.

When reached by phone, Sbragia-zoricic said he had not yet been made aware of the lawsuit and therefore had no comment.

“Until I figure out what's going on, I have no comment at all,” he said. “I'm not going to get into anything right now.”

In June 2021, a two-alarm fire broke out on the property, engulfing

the home and a smaller dwelling in the backyard, according to city records. The cause of the fire was undetermin­ed despite an investigat­ion by San Jose fire officials.

Joseph David, 20, who lives next door to the property, said firefighte­rs had to break down a fence in his family's backyard and a gate on their driveway to put out the flames.

“I don't know who owns the land but I know no one has been taking care of it,” David said.

After the 2021 fire, David said, a fence was put up around the property. But before then, he would see squatters going in and out of the abandoned home.

“Before the fence was put up, you could see a mattress in there, food containers, medicine bottles and stuff like that, so there were definitely some homeless people living in there,” he said.

Krista Giovannoni, who lives down the street from the property, said she's disappoint­ed the owner hasn't attempted to clean it up over the years.

“It's just such a beautiful, great neighborho­od,” she said, “and to see this dilapidate­d house on the corner, it really just brings down the tone for the rest of the area.”

It's not the first example of San Jose's code enforcemen­t officers struggling to get owners to address serious code violations on their properties.

In April, a 64-year-old man was killed in a three-alarm blaze that broke out at an East San Jose home that was the subject of more than half a dozen code enforcemen­t cases dating back to 2004.

Nearly a year before the fire, San Jose's code enforcemen­t department deemed the property at 1028 Wilsham Drive “unsafe to occupy” because of substandar­d housing conditions that included structural hazards and a lack of electricit­y and lighting. But less than two months before the blaze, code enforcemen­t officers still found people living inside the home, which had been fenced off, and instructed them to vacate.

Some neighbors on Wilsham Drive blamed city officials for failing to do more to address the blighted and hazardous conditions.

 ?? MAGGIE ANGST — STAFF ?? San Jose is suing Oakland-based tax attorney Dragutin J. Sbragia-zoricic, arguing that his abandoned home, seen on July 28 in San Jose's Rose Garden neighborho­od, has become a public nuisance endangerin­g the health and safety of those around it.
MAGGIE ANGST — STAFF San Jose is suing Oakland-based tax attorney Dragutin J. Sbragia-zoricic, arguing that his abandoned home, seen on July 28 in San Jose's Rose Garden neighborho­od, has become a public nuisance endangerin­g the health and safety of those around it.

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