Filed 7/8/15
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
(Sacramento)
----
CITY OF AZUSA et al., C075814
Plaintiffs and Appellants, (Super. Ct. No. 34-2013-
80001540-CU-WM-GDS)
v.
MICHAEL COHEN, as Director, etc.,
Defendant and Respondent.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Sacramento County, Allen H.
Sumner, Judge. Affirmed.
Burke, Williams & Sorensen, J. Leah Castella and Matthew D. Visick, for
Plaintiffs and Appellants.
Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Douglas J. Woods, Senior Assistant Attorney
General, Marc A. LeForestier, Supervising Deputy Attorney General, S. Michele Inan,
Deputy Attorney General, for Defendant and Appellant.
1
This case arises, as have many, from what we have previously characterized as the
“Great Dissolution” of California redevelopment agencies. (City of Pasadena v. Cohen
(2014) 228 Cal.App.4th 1461, 1462-1463 (Pasadena).)
The City of Azusa, its municipal utility (Azusa Light and Water, hereafter Utility)
and the successor agency to its redevelopment agency (hereafter collectively City except
as noted), timely appeal from a judgment denying their amended mandamus petition
(Code Civ. Proc, § 1085). The petition sought to compel the director of the Department
of Finance (Department) to recognize as enforceable certain obligations between the City
and the Utility. These consisted of loans from the Utility to the City’s former
redevelopment agency (RDA). The City asserts the invalidation of these loans in effect
harms the Utility’s ratepayers and therefore is unlawful for various reasons. The trial
court rejected the City’s view, and the City timely appeals from the ensuing judgment.
We agree with the trial court that once Utility money was loaned to the RDA, it
ceased to be “ratepayer money.” Because the City’s legal claims hinge on a contrary
view--whether or not explicitly acknowledged in its briefing--each of the City’s claims
fail.
BACKGROUND
1. Redevelopment Agencies Generally
The Community Redevelopment Law was adopted to address post-World War II
urban blight, by allowing the formation of redevelopment agencies to make municipal
improvements via “tax increment” funding, which reallocated tax revenues; however,
over time concerns grew that abuses were occurring. (See California Redevelopment
Assn. v. Matosantos (2011) 53 Cal.4th 231, 245-248 (Matosantos); City of Emeryville v.
Cohen (2015) 233 Cal.App.4th 293, 297-298 (Emeryville).)
Amid a fiscal crisis in 2011, the Legislature adopted the dissolution law via
statutes “that barred any new redevelopment agency obligations, and established
procedures for the windup and dissolution of the obligations of the nearly 400
2
redevelopment agencies then existing.” (Pasadena, supra, 228 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1462-
1463; see Matosantos, supra, 53 Cal.4th at p. 241.) Our Supreme Court invalidated a
portion of the law, but upheld provisions requiring windup and dissolution of
redevelopment agencies, as provided by the Health and Safety Code.1 (Matosantos,
supra, 53 Cal.4th at pp. 274-276.)
The dissolution law provides that successor agencies shall “[e]xpeditiously wind
down” the redevelopment agency under “direction of the oversight board.” (§ 34177,
subd. (h).) Oversight boards consist of appointed members (§ 34179, subd. (a)), and have
a fiduciary duty towards “holders of enforceable obligations and the taxing entities that
benefit from distributions of property tax” (§ 34179, subd. (i)), including the duty to
review actions by successor agencies, such as “[e]stablishment of the Recognized
Obligation Payment Schedule.” (§ 34180, subd. (g).) The recognized obligation
payment schedule (ROPS) sets forth remaining “enforceable obligations” as defined
(§ 34171, subd. (h)) and allows for review to ensure accuracy. (See Emeryville, supra,
233 Cal.App.4th at pp. 298-299.)
2. The Loans Herein
There are no relevant factual disputes about the loans at issue, and the trial court
prepared a thorough statement of facts from which we borrow liberally.
The City, the Utility, and the RDA, were governed by the same five elected city
council members, and at oral argument on the petition the trial court referenced the “three
different hats” worn. Our Supreme Court has noted that “the Legislature could well
recognize that because of the conjoined nature of the governing boards of redevelopment
agencies and their community sponsors, [obligations between them] often were not the
product of arm’s-length transactions.” (Matosantos, supra, 53 Cal.4th at p. 258, fn. 12.)
1 All undesignated statutory references are to the Health and Safety Code.
3
The City is the successor agency to the RDA, bestowing yet another “hat” on city council
members. We refer to the City when referencing actions taken by city council members
in their capacity as the successor agency.2
The Utility provides water and electricity within the City and to some users
outside the City. The Utility and City act jointly. The Utility “sets rates and collects
money from its ratepayers in an amount sufficient to cover the costs of providing utility
services. It is financially self-sufficient, receiving no money from the City general fund
or local taxes. The money generated . . . is held in two separate enterprise funds: the
Light Fund and the Water Fund.” The Utility made six loans to the RDA, “totaling
nearly $8 million over the last two decades: four loans from the Light Fund and two
loans from the Water Fund. The first loan was made in 1988, and the last in 2011. By
2012, none of the loans had been repaid; the outstanding principal and interest was over
$10 million.” (Fn. omitted.) “It appears no payments were made on three of the loans,”
approximately $6,600 was paid on one loan, and “[s]ignificant payments were made on
the other two loans . . . although significant amounts remained due.”3
2 The fact the city council members wear four hats does not of itself infer impropriety.
“It is presumed that official duty has been regularly performed.” (Evid. Code, § 664; see
Emeryville, supra, 233 Cal.App.4th at pp. 302-303.)
3 The trial court interpreted a local ordinance to permit the Utility to loan money to the
City, but implied this did not permit loans to the RDA, and noted this “emphasizes the
‘conjoined nature’ of the City and the RDA.” The City argues it should be accorded
deference in interpreting its own ordinances. The Department asserts all the loans were
unauthorized by the ordinance, and also asserts that the Water Fund loans were unlawful
under Proposition 218. Because this action does not seek to invalidate the loans as ultra
vires or otherwise, and we resolve it on other grounds, we do not address this dispute.
The trial court also addressed a seventh loan, whereby the City loaned sales and use taxes
to the RDA in 1988. However, the City has not made any arguments about this seventh
loan, abandoning any claims about it. (See Meddock v. County of Yolo (2013) 220
Cal.App.4th 170, 175, fn. 2.)
4
The Department rejected these loans on the City’s ROPS, based on section 34171,
subdivision (d)(2), providing “ ‘enforceable obligation’ does not include any agreements,
contracts, or arrangements between the city . . . that created the redevelopment agency
and the former redevelopment agency.” The Department found the Utility was the City
for purposes of the dissolution law because it is “controlled by” the City. (See
§ 34167.10, subds. (a)(3); Stats. 2012, ch. 26, § 5.)
The Department issued a “finding of completion,” meaning the loans may be
repaid if the oversight board finds they were for legitimate redevelopment purposes. (See
§ 34191.4, subd. (b)(1).) But if that happens, the interest rate would be recalculated, and
20 percent of the loan repayment would be transferred to the “Low and Moderate Income
Housing Asset Fund.” (See § 34191.4, subd. (b)(2).)
DISCUSSION
The City heads four multi-faceted claims why it was improper for the Department
to refuse to treat the Utility loans as enforceable obligations of the City, acting as the
RDA’s successor agency: (1) The effect of the Department’s actions is to divert special
funds for an unlawful purpose; (2) the Department is unlawfully compelling increased
taxes; (3) the Department is effecting an unlawful gift of public funds; and (4) the
Department’s actions will result in unlawful takings.
As we shall explain (part I, post), the factual predicate--implicit or explicit--for
each of these legal claims is that some assets held by the RDA retained the character of
being ratepayer assets, because those assets came from the Utility’s Light Fund or Water
Fund. However, as the trial court found, this factual predicate is incorrect: As money
was loaned to the RDA, it became an RDA asset, and therefore was subject to legislative
disposition via the dissolution law. We shall then explain (part II, post), why each of the
City’s legal claims falters because of the failure of its factual predicate.
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I
RDA Assets as Ratepayer Assets
The City attacks the trial court’s central finding that the RDA assets from the loans
are not ratepayer assets. The City asserts the trial court was wrong, because the loans on
the books were liabilities of the RDA, not assets, and the dissolution law could not cancel
those liabilities to the detriment of the ratepayers. We disagree.
When the Utility loaned money to the RDA, the RDA took possession of the
money, and the Utility received a promise of repayment. But the money was an RDA
asset, whether it defaulted on the loan or not. All loans are potentially subject to default.4
On the effective date of the dissolution law, the RDA was in possession of that money, or
whatever objects or interests it had acquired by spending some or all of that money. The
dissolution law specifies how all of the assets held by the RDA were to be reallocated,
and sets forth detailed definitions of which obligations would and would not be treated as
“enforceable” obligations. The dissolution law does not provide for tracing RDA assets
so as to determine their source.
The “freeze” portion of the dissolution law “is intended to preserve, to the
maximum extent possible, the revenues and assets of redevelopment agencies so that
those assets and revenues that are not needed to pay for enforceable obligations may be
used by local governments to fund core governmental services . . . . All provisions of this
4 We note that each of the five operative promissory notes in the record is captioned as
an “unsecured” note, although anticipated payments would come from tax increment
revenue and other sources. The other note is not in the record, and although the RDA and
City resolutions pertaining to that loan spoke of a “secured” loan, it appears that merely
referred to the practice of anticipating RDA loans would be repaid via tax increment
revenue. Absent review of the note itself, we do not infer it was a “secured” note in the
ordinary sense that specific property or assets guaranteed the loan, nor does the City
claim the notes were so secured.
6
part shall be so construed as broadly as possible to support this intent and to restrict the
expenditure of funds to the fullest extent possible.” (§ 34167, subd. (a).)
The “dissolution” portion “requires successor agencies to continue to make
payments and perform existing [enforceable] obligations. [Citation.] However,
unencumbered balances of redevelopment agency funds must be remitted to the county
auditor-controller for distribution to cities, the county, special districts, and school
districts in proportion to what each agency would have received absent the
redevelopment agencies. [Citations.] Proceeds from redevelopment agency asset sales
likewise must go to the county auditor-controller for similar distribution. [Citation.]
Finally, tax increment revenues that would have gone to redevelopment agencies must be
deposited in a local trust fund each county is required to create and administer.
[Citations.] All amounts necessary to satisfy administrative costs, pass-through
payments, and enforceable obligations will be allocated for those purposes, while any
excess will be deemed property tax revenue and distributed in the same fashion as
balances and assets.” (Matosantos, supra, 53 Cal.4th at p. 251.) One section in this part
of the dissolution law provides that “All assets, properties, contracts, leases, books and
records, buildings, and equipment of the former redevelopment agency are transferred . . .
to the control of the successor agency, for administration pursuant to the provisions of
this part. . . . Any legal or contractual restrictions on the use of these funds or assets shall
also be transferred to the successor agency.” (§ 34175, subd. (b), italics added.) “All
assets” under this statute plainly encompasses loaned money. And although the RDA had
a contractual obligation to repay the loans, none of the money lent was restricted, that is,
the City makes no claim that the RDA was prevented from using any of the money lent in
any particular way.
Thus, it is incumbent on the City to identify any provision of the comprehensive
and detailed dissolution law that makes enforceable the particular loans at issue in this
case, and it has not attempted to do so. Instead, the City insists that on the effective date
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of the dissolution law, the RDA possessed certain types of assets that were not subject to
disposition by that law, because those assets, due to the encumbrance, actually belonged
to the Utility’s ratepayers. The City has provided no authority for this proposition,
which undermines the purpose of the dissolution law, namely, to dispose of all assets
(§ 34175, subd. (b)) held by the RDA.
What the dissolution law does provide, in part, is that “ ‘enforceable obligation’
does not include any agreements, contracts, or arrangements between the city . . . that
created the [RDA] and the former [RDA].” (§ 34171, subd. (d)(2).) As the trial court
found, the loans from the Utility to the City constitute “agreements, contracts, or
arrangements” between the City (acting as its controlled Utility) and the City’s RDA.
Thus, we uphold the trial court’s finding that no ratepayer money was diverted
when the Department sought to implement the dissolution law. As stated, the Legislature
wanted to divert all RDA assets, while specifying which RDA obligations remained
enforceable. Under section 34171, subdivision (d)(2), the trial court properly denied the
City’s mandamus petition seeking to treat the debts from the Utility loans that remained
on the RDA’s books on the effect date of the dissolution law as enforceable obligations.
II
The City’s Legal Claims
We now examine the City’s legal claims seriatim. In doing so, “we are mindful
that ‘all intendments favor the exercise of the Legislature’s plenary authority: “If there is
any doubt as to the Legislature’s power to act in any given case, the doubt should be
resolved in favor of the Legislature’s action. Such restrictions and limitations [imposed
by the Constitution] are to be construed strictly, and are not to be extended to include
matters not covered by the language used.” ’ ” (Matosantos, supra, 53 Cal.4th at p. 253;
see Methodist Hosp. of Sacramento v. Saylor (1971) 5 Cal.3d 685, 691.)
8
A. Diverting Special Funds
The City contends the effect of the Department’s actions is to divert special funds
for an unrelated and, hence, unlawful purpose. We disagree.
Generally speaking legislation cannot permanently divert special funds to
unrelated purposes, although legislation allowing or requiring loans of such money is
permitted. (See California Medical Assn v. Brown (2011) 193 Cal.App.4th 1449, 1456-
1458; Service Employees Internat. Union, Local 1000 v. Brown (2011) 197 Cal.App.4th
252, 268, fn. 8 [loans are “an integral component of the budgetary calculus”]; Edgemont
Community Service Dist. v. City of Moreno Valley (1995) 36 Cal.App.4th 1157, 1163-
1166; Veterans of Foreign Wars v. State of California (1974) 36 Cal.App.3d 688, 694.)
The City’s water and light funds collect money from ratepayers to produce and
distribute utility services. But, contrary to the City’s view, nothing in the dissolution law
diverted any money from those funds. The Legislature did not divert any money from the
Utility funds. That money was diverted by the city council years earlier when it loaned
money from the Utility to the RDA. Accordingly, we reject the City’s legal claims about
diversion of special funds.
B. Change in Statute Triggering a Higher Tax
The City next contends the Department is unlawfully compelling increased taxes.
It reasons that because the loans will not be paid off, Utility rates will have to be raised
and therefore, as applied to these facts, the dissolution law increases taxes (as broadly
defined as discussed post); however, it is uncontested that the dissolution law did not pass
by the two-thirds margin necessary to raise taxes.
The dissolution law did not increase taxes nor will it result in any tax increase,
which under Propositions 218 and 26 is defined to include certain government charges
whether or not denominated as a tax, and require voter approval therefor. (See Schmeer
v. County of Los Angeles (2013) 213 Cal.App.4th 1310, 1319-1329; Howard Jarvis
Taxpayers Association v. City of Roseville (2002) 97 Cal.App.4th 637, 640-646.)
9
Utility rates do not increase by operation of law; action is required by the Utility,
which sets the service rates. (See American Microsystems, Inc. v. City of Santa Clara
(1982) 137 Cal.App.3d 1037, 1042-1043 [“it is the public entity itself which fixes utility
rates”].) The Legislature plays no role in rate setting by municipal utilities.
If the residents of the City believe the unpaid loans have depleted the Utility’s
funds to the extent that a tax increase is required to ensure appropriate services, they are
free to enact such an increase. But the dissolution law will not, of itself, result in an
increase.5
C Gift of Public Funds
The City contends the Department is compelling an unlawful gift of public funds.
We disagree with this view.
With exceptions not relevant, “The Legislature shall have no power . . . to make
any gift or authorize the making of any gift, of any public money or thing of value to any
individual, municipal or other corporation whatever.” (Cal. Const., Art. XVI, § 6.) In
part, as the City argues, this provision prohibits taking funds from one group of taxpayers
and transferring them to benefit another group of taxpayers unless the funds are used to
further the purpose of the donor entity. (See California Redevelopment Assn. v.
Matosantos (2013) 212 Cal.App.4th 1457, 1464, 1469-1473, 1483-1484; Golden Gate
Bridge and Highway Dist. v. Luehring (1970) 4 Cal.App.3d 204, 206-211.)
Thus, the City’s contention echoes the “special funds” contention we have already
rejected. The City emphasizes that the money came from the Utility’s water and light
funds, and argues the Legislature has in effect taken ratepayer money from some users--
5We observe that the trial court found: “Some of these loans were made almost two
decades ago, yet no payments had been made by the time the RDA was dissolved.
Despite having lost the use of this money for decades, the City has not yet had to raise
utility rates.”
10
including some outside of the City--and “given” it to “the beneficiaries” of the City’s
redevelopment projects. The City further observes that, generally speaking, the
cancellation of a debt may equate to a “gift” within the meaning of the constitutional
proscription against gifts of public funds. (See Westly v. U.S. Bancorp. (2003) 114
Cal.App.4th 577, 585.) The City argues the Utility could not have given the money to the
RDA, but was required to loan it, to avoid the gift proscription, therefore legislative
invalidation of those loans results in a de facto gift of public money in violation of the
California Constitution.
This contention still does not account for the fact that, once loaned, the money in
the RDA’s coffers was an RDA asset. Neither the Utility, nor its ratepayers, retained any
possessory interest in the money lent. As the trial court found: “Section 34171 does not
take money from the ratepayers. The Dissolution Law only reallocates the former RDA’s
tax increment and assets to other local entities.”
D. Unlawful Takings
The City contends the Department’s actions result in unlawful takings. The
Department’s actions took money from the RDA, a government entity. No private
interests are harmed by such action. As we recently emphasized: “The Legislature is
free, within the confines of the California Constitution, to reconfigure and redistribute
authority to its subdivisions as it chooses.” (Emeryville, supra, 233 Cal.App.4th at p.
312; see Star-Kist Foods, Inc. v. County of Los Angeles (1986) 42 Cal.3d 1, 6; Mallon v.
City of Long Beach (1955) 44 Cal.2d 199, 209.) This includes the power to reallocate
public money, again, within the confines of the limitations in the California Constitution.
But no taking of private property--money or an uncollected debt--has occurred in this
case, where one political subdivision disgorges assets to another political subdivision.
In the trial court, the City conceded “the federal and state contracts clauses do not
forbid the impairment of loans among the City, [the Utility, and the RDA].” But in its
11
reply brief, the City claims standing to sue on behalf of the ratepayers as the trustee of
the water and light funds, citing various cases.
For example, Sanchez v. City of Modesto (2006) 145 Cal.App.4th 660 involved a
city’s defensive equal protection challenge to a statute that required changes in local
voting to eliminate alleged systemic discrimination. (Id. at pp. 671-676.) The court held:
“The point of the no-standing rule is to prevent local governments, whether as plaintiffs
or defendants, from using certain provisions of the federal Constitution to obtain
invalidation of laws passed by their creator, the state. This notion has no application
where the truly interested parties—citizens or constituents of the local government
entity—undisputedly do have standing and the entity merely asserts rights on their
behalf.” (Id. at p. 676, italics added; see Central Delta Water Agency v. State Water
Resources Control Bd. (1993) 17 Cal.App.4th 621, 630 [entity may challenge “statute or
regulation on behalf of its constituents where the constituents’ rights . . . are ‘inextricably
bound up with’ the subdivision’s duties under its enabling statutes”].)
This case implicates the emphasized language of Sanchez: The City, wearing the
mantle of trustee of the Utility funds, seeks to use the interests of ratepayers as a shield to
thwart its creator’s effort to dissolve redevelopment agencies. However, unlike in
Sanchez, the affected ratepayers are not interested parties herein. They long ago paid
their utility bills and received the services for which they paid. The Utility then lent
some of its money to the RDA, receiving in return a promise to repay the loan--a promise
that proved riskier than anticipated. Because the money in the RDA coffers was not
segregated, and the RDA had no obligation to repay the loans (other than the contractual
obligation to the Utility), we fail to see how current ratepayers can advance a
constitutional takings claim, let alone how the City can advance such a claim on their
behalf. As the trial court pointed out, if the ratepayers “have any claim, it is against the
City in loaning the ratepayer fees to the RDA, not against the State for dissolving the
RDA.”
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DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed. The plaintiffs shall pay the Department’s costs of this
appeal. (See Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.278.)
DUARTE , J.
We concur:
BLEASE , Acting P. J.
BUTZ , J.
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