FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS’
ASSOCIATION, on behalf of itself
and on behalf of all of its
members,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v. No. 07-56004
SAN DIEGO CITY EMPLOYEES’ D.C. No.
RETIREMENT SYSTEM; CITY OF SAN CV-05-01581-H
DIEGO; SCOTT PETERS; JIM Southern District of
California,
MADAFFER; RALPH INZUNZA; TONI
ATKINS; TONY YOUNG; BRIAN San Diego
MAIENSCHEIN; DONNA FRYE;
MICHAEL ZUCCHET; CATHY LEXIN; OPINION
MARY VATTIMO; TERRI WEBSTER;
ED RYAN; P. LAMONT EWELL;
MICHAEL UBERUARGA; BRUCE
HERRING,
Defendants-Appellees.
6905
6906 SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS v. SDCERS
SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS’
ASSOCIATION, on behalf of itself
and on behalf of all of its
members,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
No. 07-56483
SAN DIEGO CITY EMPLOYEES’
RETIREMENT SYSTEM; CITY OF SAN D.C. No.
DIEGO; SCOTT PETERS; JIM CV-05-01581-MLH
Southern District of
MADAFFER;RALPH INZUNZA; TONI
ATKINS; TONY YOUNG; BRIAN California,
MAIENSCHEIN; DONNA FRYE; San Diego
MICHAEL ZUCCHET; CATHY LEXIN;
MARY VATTIMO; TERRI WEBSTER;
ED RYAN; P. LAMONT EWELL;
MICHAEL UBERUARGA; BRUCE
HERRING,
Defendants-Appellees.
SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS v. SDCERS 6907
SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS’
ASSOCIATION, on behalf of itself
and on behalf of all of its
members,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
SAN DIEGO CITY EMPLOYEES’
RETIREMENT SYSTEM,
No. 07-56512
Defendant,
D.C. No.
SCOTT PETERS; JIM MADAFFER;
RALPH INZUNZA; TONI ATKINS; CV-05-01581-MLH
Southern District of
TONY YOUNG; BRIAN MAIENSCHEIN;
California,
DONNA FRYE; MICHAEL ZUCCHET;
San Diego
CATHY LEXIN; MARY VATTIMO;
TERRI WEBSTER; ED RYAN; P.
LAMONT EWELL; MICHAEL
UBERUARGA; BRUCE HERRING,
Defendants,
and
CITY OF SAN DIEGO,
Defendant-Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of California
Marilyn L. Huff, United States District Court Judge
Argued and Submitted
October 23, 2008—Pasadena, California
Filed June 10, 2009
6908 SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS v. SDCERS
Before: Consuelo M. Callahan and Sandra S. Ikuta,
Circuit Judges, and Milton I. Shadur,* Senior District
Judge.
Opinion by Judge Shadur
*The Honorable Milton I. Shadur, Senior United States District Judge
for the Northern District of Illinois, sitting by designation.
SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS v. SDCERS 6911
COUNSEL
Christopher D. Nissen, Susan M. Wilson and M. Alim Malik,
Law Offices of Jackson, DeMarco, Tidus, Petersen & Pecken-
paugh, Irvine, California, for San Diego Police Officers’
Association, plaintiff-appellant/cross-appellee.
Peter H. Benzian and Colleen C. Smith, Law Offices of
Latham & Watkins LLP, San Diego, California, for City of
San Diego, Scott Peters, Jim Madaffer, Ralph Inzunza, Toni
Atkins, Tony Young, Brian Maienschein, Donna Frye,
Michael Zucchet, Cathy Lexin, Mary Vattimo, Terri Webster,
Ed Ryan, P. Lamont Ewell, Michael Uberuaga and Bruce
Herring, defendants-appellees/cross-appellants.
Matthew M. Mahoney, Law Offices of Seltzer Caplan
McMahon Vitek, San Diego, California, for San Diego City
Employees’ Retirement System, defendants-appellees/cross-
appellants.
6912 SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS v. SDCERS
OPINION
SHADUR, Senior District Judge:
San Diego Police Officers’ Association (“Association”)
appeals the district court’s orders granting summary judgment
to the City of San Diego (“City”), San Diego City Employees’
Retirement System (“Retirement System”) and various indi-
viduals (“Individual Defendants”)1 (collectively “Appellees”)
on Association’s constitutional claims. In addition, Associa-
tion and Appellees cross-appeal from the district court’s final
order addressing the possible award of attorneys’ fees.
Association’s lawsuit charged that (1) Appellees’ involve-
ment in approving and enacting a city ordinance that reduced
City’s contributions to the employees’ retirement fund vio-
lated Association’s contractual right to an actuarially sound
pension system and (2) City’s imposition of its last, best and
final offer (“Final Offer”) after the breakdown of 2005 labor
negotiations between City and Association violated the lat-
ter’s vested contractual rights. After extensive briefing by the
parties, the district court found that none of the alleged
actions affected Association’s constitutionally protected
rights. It therefore granted summary judgment to Appellees
and relatedly entered a final order in which it awarded costs
to Appellees as prevailing parties but denied an award of
attorneys’ fees to any party. We affirm in all respects except
for the attorneys’ fees issue, which we remand to the district
court.
1
Individual Defendants include (1) current or former City Council mem-
bers Scott Peters, Jim Madaffer, Ralph Inzunza, Toni Atkins, Tony
Young, Brian Maienshein, Donna Frye and Michael Zucchet, (2) former
Retirement System Board of Trustees members Cathy Lexin, Mary Vat-
timo, Terri Webster, Ed Ryan and Bruce Herring and (3) former City
Managers P. Lamont Ewell and Michael Uberuaga. City Attorney Michael
Aguirre was originally named as a defendant in the case, but on June 5,
2008 we granted Association’s and Aguirre’s joint motion to dismiss him
from the appeals.
SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS v. SDCERS 6913
Background
Alleged Underfunding of San Diego’s City Pension System
Pursuant to the San Diego City Charter, the San Diego City
Council is empowered to set benefits and establish a retire-
ment plan for its employees. That City Charter vests the
Board of the Retirement System (“Board”) with the power to
determine eligibility for receipt of retirement benefits under
the system, which establishes a defined benefit pension plan.
In that role the Board administers the retirement system and
performs various functions related to the plan, including the
calculation of annual employer and employee contributions,
the management and investment of the plan’s funds and the
distribution of pension benefits to retired City employees.
Membership in the Retirement System is compulsory and a
condition of employment for City employees. Retirement ben-
efits under the plan are funded by contributions from both the
pension system’s members and City, which contributions are
in turn invested for the benefit of the Retirement System
members. Before 1996 City’s annual contribution to the
Retirement System was determined by a Retirement System
actuary, who set the contribution rate based on actuarial cal-
culations. In its collective bargaining agreement City agreed
to subsidize or “pick up” a portion of the employee contribu-
tion, in addition to making its employer contribution. Deter-
mination of the Retirement System’s funded ratio is based
upon the current value of the system’s assets compared to its
future liabilities as calculated by the actuary—any difference
between the two constitutes the “unfunded accrued actuarial
liability.”
In 1996 the Board and City Council approved an Employer
Contribution Rate Stabilization Plan, known as “MP1,” that
changed the way in which City’s employer contributions were
calculated. According to the terms of MP1, City’s annual con-
tribution to the Retirement System was set at an agreed-upon
rate that was lower than its actuarially determined contribu-
6914 SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS v. SDCERS
tion rate. In the event the Retirement System’s funded ratio
fell below a 82.3% “trigger percentage,” MP1 required City’s
contribution rate to be “increased on July 1 of the year follow-
ing the date of the actuarial valuation in which the shortfall
in funded ratio is calculated . . . to restore a funded ratio” back
to the 82.3% trigger level.2
As a result of declining financial conditions and losses to
the Retirement System fund in 2001, the system’s funded
ratio dropped and began to approach the 82.3% trigger per-
centage. To avoid having to pay the full amount to restore the
funded ratio to the trigger level by the following year, City
sought relief from its contribution obligations as part of the
2002 labor negotiations between City and Association. It
sought to condition any increase in benefits and compensation
to Association’s members on the Board’s approval of a pro-
posal easing City’s contribution burden under MP1. That new
proposal, aptly named MP2, retained the 82.3% trigger per-
centage but extended City’s fixed contribution rate for another
five years, during which time City would increase its payment
1% per year. Despite opposition from Association’s represen-
tative on the Board, MP2 was approved by the Board on
November 15, 2002, and three days later City Council
adopted an ordinance specifying that City’s contributions
were to be made at the agreed-upon rate.
2005 Labor Negotiations Between City and Association
In early 2005 City undertook labor negotiations with Asso-
ciation and three other unions, all of whose collective bargain-
ing agreements, each known as a Memorandum of
Understanding (“MOU”), were scheduled to expire on June
30, 2005. Acting through its outside labor relations attorney,
2
Although Association originally brought claims arising out of the
enactment of MP1, those claims were dismissed as barred by the relevant
statute of limitations. Hence the lawfulness of that earlier arrangement is
not at issue in this appeal.
SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS v. SDCERS 6915
City engaged in bargaining sessions with the unions over sev-
eral months with an eye toward a May 16, 2005 deadline for
reaching an agreement. Given its financial condition and the
pension funding crisis, City’s primary goal during negotia-
tions was to obtain financial concessions from the unions to
achieve recurring budgetary savings. To that end City origi-
nally proposed two options to the unions: a reduction in mem-
bers’ salaries or a reduction of City’s subsidy, or “pickup,” of
the employees’ pension contribution.
During the negotiations City discussed different proposals
with each of the unions, and the agreements ultimately
reached between City and the unions other than Association
contained variations as to each union. For example, because
some of the unions’ members participate in the Deferred
Retirement Option Program (“DROP”)3 and therefore do not
make pension contributions subject to the reduction in pickup,
City’s proposals to some of the unions, including Association,
contained a salary reduction for DROP employees in lieu of
a reduction in pickup.
Bargaining sessions between City and Association were
unsuccessful. After their last formal bargaining session on
May 5, 2005, City and Association met again on May 11, at
which time Association requested a final offer from City to
present to its members. Despite its expression of reluctance,
City presented a Final Offer containing a one year proposal
3
DROP allows an employee to continue working beyond the age set for
retirement and provides an alternative form of pension benefit accrual
under which an employee’s final pension benefits under the defined bene-
fit plan are determined and calculated as of the date the employee enters
DROP. In lieu of having continued compensation and additional years of
service taken into account for the defined benefit plan, DROP members’
pension benefits are deposited to a DROP account, to which each of the
employee and City contributes a percentage of the employee’s base salary.
That DROP account earns interest and is paid to the employee, in addition
to its previously defined benefits, once the employee leaves City employ-
ment.
6916 SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS v. SDCERS
with a 3.2% reduction in the amount of the employees’ pickup
and an equivalent reduction in the salary of DROP employees,
as well as certain changes in the service eligibility require-
ments for retiree health benefits. On the following day Asso-
ciation formally declared an impasse and requested a formal
hearing before City Council. Then on May 16 City Council
held an impasse hearing and voted to impose the terms of the
Final Offer on Association. On May 17 City voted to enact
the Salary Ordinance for Fiscal Year 2005-06, which included
the terms of City’s Final Offer.
Procedural History of This Litigation
On August 9, 2005 Association filed its Complaint against
Appellees, asserting various state law claims as well as fed-
eral claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.4 On March 21, 2006
Association filed its Third Amended Complaint. On January
3, 2007 Retirement System filed a motion for partial summary
judgment, which was then joined by City and Individual
Defendants. On February 12, 2007 Association filed a motion
for summary judgment asserting statute of limitations
defenses, a motion for summary adjudication related to the
discovery of Association’s injuries and a motion for summary
judgment on asserted affirmative defenses. Individual Defen-
dants also filed various motions for summary judgment and
partial summary judgment.
After permitting supplemental briefing by Association and
extensive argument on the motions for summary judgment,
the district court entered a May 18, 2007 order on several of
the motions. It granted summary judgment to Individual
Defendants on various grounds and granted partial summary
judgment to City and the Retirement System on Association’s
federal constitutional claims arising out of the 2005 labor
negotiations, but it declined to address Association’s claim as
4
All further references to Title 42’s provisions will simply take the form
“Section—.”
SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS v. SDCERS 6917
to pension underfunding. Instead the court requested addi-
tional briefing on that claim and held further argument on the
issue on June 25, 2007. Following that argument the court
granted summary judgment on June 26, 2007 to City and the
Retirement System on all of Association’s remaining federal
claims and declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over
Association’s state law claims. On July 2, 2007 Association
timely filed a notice of appeal from the district court’s May
18 and June 26 summary judgment orders.
On July 12, 2007, after considering the parties’ proposed
final judgment orders, the district court entered an order per-
mitting the parties “to submit additional briefing regarding
costs” and specifically requested that it be provided with
authority as to the appropriate apportionment of costs in light
of its declination to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over
Association’s remaining state law claims. In its supplemental
brief that followed, Association argued that it was entitled to
an award of costs and attorneys’ fees. Defendants, on the
other hand, addressed only the issue of costs and specifically
declined to address Association’s arguments regarding the
parties’ entitlement to attorneys’ fees pursuant to Section
1988, noting that the district court had not requested briefing
on the right to attorneys’ fees and asserting that Fed. R. Civ.
P. (“Rule”) 54(d)(2) allows just 14 days after entry of judg-
ment to submit any motion in pursuit of such fees.
On August 24, 2007 the district court entered an order find-
ing that defendants as prevailing parties were entitled to all of
their recoverable costs incurred during the litigation but that
neither side was entitled to recover its attorneys’ fees. Final
judgment in favor of defendants was entered that same day.
Both Association and defendants filed timely notices of
appeal of the district court’s August 24 order regarding costs.
6918 SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS v. SDCERS
Association’s Appeal
Standard of Review
We review de novo the district court’s order granting sum-
mary judgment (Buono v. Norton, 371 F.3d 543, 545 (9th Cir.
2004)). In doing so we are governed by the same principles
as the district court: whether, with the evidence viewed in the
light most favorable to the non-moving party, there are no
genuine issues of material fact, so that the moving party is
entitled to a judgment as a matter of law (Olsen v. Idaho State
Bd. of Med., 363 F.3d 916, 922 (9th Cir. 2004)).
Enactment of MP2
Association claims that its members had a contractual right
to an actuarially sound pension plan, so that the enactment of
MP2 and the resulting underfunding of the pension fund was
an impermissible impairment of that contractual right. Hence
Association brought a Contracts Clause claim, a Takings
Clause claim and a conspiracy claim on that premise. In
response Appellees contend that there is no federal constitu-
tional right under the Contracts Clause to an actuarially sound
pension system. They also argue that whether or not that is so,
the district court’s grant of summary judgment as to Associa-
tion’s underfunding claims should be affirmed because those
claims are precluded by McGuigan v. City of San Diego, No.
D050291, 2008 WL 4358551 (Cal. Ct. App. Sept. 25, 2008).
Because we find McGuigan to be dispositive of Association’s
underfunding claims, we eschew consideration of the liti-
gants’ constitutional dispute.
City and Individual Defendants maintain that the release
terms contained in the settlement and final judgment approved
in McGuigan bar Association’s current claims against them.
Although they made the same argument in the district court,
that court’s opinion correctly found that the settlement agree-
ment and final decision in McGuigan were not final for claim
SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS v. SDCERS 6919
preclusion purposes5 because they were then on appeal. City
and Individual Defendants maintained in their brief before us
that although the McGuigan action might ultimately preclude
recovery by Association, the agreement and judgment there
were not yet final for that purpose. Instead they claimed that
the January 16, 2003 judgment in Gleason v. San Diego City
Employees’ Retirement System, No. G1C803779 (Cal. Super.
Ct.) also precluded Association’s present action.6
After the parties had submitted their appellate briefs but
before we heard oral argument, the California Court of
Appeal affirmed the settlement agreement and judgment in
McGuigan. After oral argument we requested and the parties
submitted supplemental briefing on the effect of the Court of
Appeal’s McGuigan decision. Association did not file a peti-
tion for review by the California Supreme Court within the
prescribed time limits, so that the McGuigan judgment
became final on November 25, 2008. We now turn to the
effect of that final judgment on Association’s claims.
For that purpose we must follow California’s preclusion
rules (Noel v. Hall, 341 F.3d 1148, 1166 (9th Cir. 2003)).
Under California’s claim preclusion doctrine “a valid, final
judgment on the merits precludes parties or their privies from
5
Because the term “res judicata” has often been used to denote both pre-
clusion doctrines (both what were long called “collateral estoppel” and
“res judicata,” the latter in a more restricted sense), this opinion will fol-
low the lead of the Supreme Court in Migra v. Warren Sch. Dist. Bd. of
Educ., 465 U.S. 75, 77 n.1 (1984) by using the more precise term “claim
preclusion.”
6
In Gleason former City employees with vested contractual rights sued
City, the Retirement System and a number of individual defendants, alleg-
ing various violations arising from the underfunding of the Retirement
System. In July 2004 the Gleason lawsuit was resolved by a settlement in
which City agreed to make specific annual payments to the Retirement
System between 2006 and 2008, to pay actuarially determined contribu-
tion rates in 2006 through 2008 and to continue to make actuarially deter-
mined contributions beyond 2008.
6920 SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS v. SDCERS
relitigating the same ‘cause of action’ in a subsequent suit”
(Le Parc Cmty. Ass’n v. Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd., 2 Cal.
Rptr. 3d 408, 415 (Cal. Ct. App. 2003)). Thus three require-
ments have to be met: (1) the second lawsuit must involve the
same “cause of action” as the first one, (2) there must have
been a final judgment on the merits in the first lawsuit and (3)
the party to be precluded must itself have been a party, or in
privity with a party, to that first lawsuit. Because Association
itself was a party in McGuigan and because that judgment has
now become final, the only remaining question is whether this
case involves the same “cause of action” as McGuigan.
Le Parc Cmty. Ass’n, id. continues its claim preclusion
analysis in these terms:
California law defines a “cause of action” for pur-
poses of the res judicata doctrine by analyzing the
primary right at stake.
That concept “is indivisible: the violation of a single primary
right gives rise to but a single cause of action” (Crowley v.
Katleman, 881 P.2d 1083, 1090 (Cal. 1994)). As Eichman v.
Fotomat Corp., 197 Cal. Rptr. 612, 614 (Cal. Ct. App. 1983)
further explains:
[I]f two actions involve the same injury to the plain-
tiff and the same wrong by the defendant then the
same primary right is at stake even if in the second
suit the plaintiff pleads different theories of recov-
ery, seeks different forms of relief and/or adds new
facts supporting recovery.
But the “primary right” brush cannot be wielded too care-
lessly (Branson v. Sun-Diamond Growers of Cal., 29 Cal.
Rptr. 2d 314, 322 (Cal. Ct. App. 1994)):
On the other hand, different primary rights may be
violated by the same wrongful conduct.
SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS v. SDCERS 6921
What is critical to the analysis “is the harm suffered; that the
same facts are involved in both suits is not conclusive” (Agar-
wal v. Johnson, 603 P.2d 58, 72 (Cal. 1970)).
In McGuigan a retired city employee sued City on a repre-
sentative basis alleging various violations and theories regard-
ing City’s pension underfunding. That lawsuit eventuated in
a settlement agreement, binding on Association’s members as
members of the plaintiff class,7 which specifies the release
terms:
[E]ach member of the Settlement Class . . . hereby
release, discharge and dismiss with prejudice City,
from any and all claims or causes of action that arise
from the facts alleged in the . . . Those claims are:
(a) that City violated former Charter section 143; (b)
City violated former Municipal Code section 24.081;
(c) that City’s past practice of paying an employer
contribution less than that recommended by the actu-
ary employed by SDCERS8 rendered the pension
fund actuarially unsound and thereby impaired the
beneficiaries’ contractual right to an actuarially
sound pension fund; (d) for declaratory relief that
7
After the settlement agreement was agreed upon, McGuigan and City
obtained approval to amend the complaint. In the amended complaint the
class was defined as “All past, present and future San Diego City Employ-
ees’ Retirement System (‘SDCERS’) members and beneficiaries, their
spouses, children, heirs, successors and assigns, and the representatives of
such individuals, including, but not limited to, each of the plaintiffs or
claimants in the Pension Underfunding Claims (as defined in the parties’
Settlement Agreement and Release (collectively, the ‘Settlement Class’),”
and it included over 18,000 potential members. Because the class is a
“non-opt-out” class, as authorized by Rule 23(b)(2), the agreement is bind-
ing on Association’s members.
8
Although the litigants also regularly employ that acronym, our prefer-
ence for descriptive English language definitions rather than an alphabet
soup diet has led to our use of the plain-meaning term “Retirement Sys-
tem” instead. So “SDCERS” will be used here only in quotations from
other sources.
6922 SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS v. SDCERS
City underfunded the SDCERS pension system and
must pay additional amounts, plus interest, to rectify
such underfunding; and (e) for a peremptory writ of
mandate directing City to pay SDCERS the amount
of City’s shortfall in employer contributions from
1996-2006 (collectively the “Pension Underfunding
Claims”).
In its final judgment the trial court said this as to the release
(emphasis added):
The release does not extend to any claims other than
the claims or causes of action set forth in the Plain-
tiffs’ Second Amended Complaint, and, specifically,
the release does not extend to claims arising out of:
(1) City’s alleged failure to fund the pick-up portion
of the employee retirement contribution, (ii) City’s
alleged underfunding of retiree health benefits, (iii)
any conspiracy by the SDCERS actuary with City to
understate City’s employer contribution to SDCERS,
or (iv) claims not otherwise released or waived by
the Settlement Agreement; provided, however,
released claims would include damage claims under
42 U.S.C. section 1983 or any state, federal or com-
mon law to the extent that they are based upon the
City’s failure to pay the amount annually determined
by the SDCERS actuary and approved by the
SDCERS Board from 1996 to 2006. . .
Association maintains that language does not release the
underfunding claims it has brought in this action. It argues
that the McGuigan action involved allegations that City failed
to fund the retirement system at the fixed rate agreed to in the
MP1 and MP2 agreements, while in this action Association
contends that the underlying funding system created by MP2
was itself unlawful. City and Individual Defendants, on the
other hand, urge that the settlement agreement releases all
federal Section 1983 claims arising from the adoption of
SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS v. SDCERS 6923
MP2, so that all of Association’s Section 1983 claims related
to the pension underfunding, including its Contracts Clause
claim, Takings Clause claim and any conspiracy claim, are
precluded.
Association’s position is premised on a distinction without
a difference. Although its claims in this action literally focus
on the enactment of MP2 and the funding levels it created,
rather than on the question of City’s compliance with those
levels, they are nevertheless unquestionably “based upon
City’s failure to pay the amount annually determined by the
SDCERS actuary and approved by the SDCERS Board from
1996 to 2006.” Whether that failure is framed in terms of not
having funded Retirement System at the rate established by
MP2 or in terms of the enactment of MP2 as such, the alleged
violation is the same: the level at which payments were made
to Retirement System is claimed to have been impermissibly
lower than that determined by the Retirement System actuary.
For just those reasons, the claims that Association asserts
in this action against City are precluded by the McGuigan set-
tlement’s release. As to Individual Defendants, the fact that
they were not defendants in the first action does not prevent
them from asserting the defense of claim preclusion here
(Brinton v. Bankers Pension Servs., Inc., 90 Cal. Rptr. 2d 469,
473-74 (Cal. Ct. App. 1999)). Association’s claims here
allege the same injury to Association (the financial insecurity
of Retirement System) and the same wrong by City (the fail-
ure to fund Retirement System on an actuarially sound basis)
as those asserted in the McGuigan action. Because Associa-
tion’s claims against Individual Defendants thus involve the
same “cause of action” as those in McGuigan, they too are
barred by the doctrine of claim preclusion.9
9
Association’s claim for monetary relief against Retirement System in
connection with the enactment of MP2 was already extinguished by the
district court, and Association has not challenged that ruling on appeal.
6924 SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS v. SDCERS
Without those claims, all that remains is Association’s
request that we declare there is a federally recognized con-
tractual right to an actuarially sound pension system. But with
no live case or controversy before us, there is no call for such
declaratory relief (In re Burrell, 415 F.3d 994, 998 (9th Cir.
2005)). Hence any of Association’s remaining claims as to the
enactment of MP2 and its alleged underfunding of the pension
system are moot (id.).
2005 Labor Negotiations
Association also contends that City’s imposition of its Final
Offer in the 2005 labor negotiations and its corresponding
reductions in employees’ DROP salary and City’s pickup, as
well as modifications to the eligibility requirements for retiree
health benefits, impaired vested pension benefits in violation
of the Contracts and Takings Clauses. Because the first of
those contentions requires a great deal more analysis than the
second, we address them in that order.
1. Contracts Clause
Under U.S. Const. art. I, § 10, cl. 1, “No State shall . . . pass
any . . . Law impairing the Obligation of Contracts.” In that
respect courts undertake a threshold inquiry to determine
whether contract rights have been impaired, first examining
“whether the state law has, in fact, operated as a substantial
impairment of a contractual relationship” (Energy Reserves
Group, Inc. v. Kan. Power & Light Co., 459 U.S. 400, 411
(1983)). That inquiry includes (1) whether a contract exists as
to the specific terms allegedly at issue, (2) whether the law in
question impairs an obligation under that contract and (3)
whether the discerned impairment can fairly be characterized
as substantial (Gen. Motors Corp. v. Romein, 503 U.S. 181,
186 (1992); Robertson v. Kulongoski, 466 F.3d 1114, 1117
(9th Cir. 2006)). Laws that substantially impair state or local
contractual obligations are nevertheless valid if they are “rea-
SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS v. SDCERS 6925
sonable and necessary to serve an important public purpose”
(U.S. Trust Co. v. N.J., 431 U.S. 1, 25 (1977)).
Although federal courts look to state law to determine the
existence of a contract, federal rather than state law controls
as to whether state or local statutes or ordinances create con-
tractual rights protected by the Contracts Clause (Nev.
Employees’ Ass’n v. Keating, 903 F.2d 1223, 1227 (9th Cir.
1990)). Nevertheless, federal courts do “accord respectful
consideration and great weight to the views of the State’s
highest court” (Gen. Motors, 503 U.S. at 187). Under federal
law the state’s statutory language must evince a clear and
unmistakable indication that the legislature intends to bind
itself contractually before a state legislative enactment may be
deemed a contract for purposes of the Contracts Clause (Nat’l
R.R. Passenger Corp. v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Ry.,
470 U.S. 451, 465-66 (1985); U.S. Trust Co., 431 U.S. at 17-
18).
A. Final Offer’s Reduction in DROP Salary Does
Not Affect a Protected Contractual Right
Association maintains that DROP members’ salaries are
vested pension rights entitled to protection under the Con-
tracts Clause. Appellees respond that DROP salaries are a
term of active employment rather than contractual rights and,
as such, are subject to reduction without running afoul of con-
stitutional rights.
As California courts have noted, “[i]t is well established
that public employees have no vested rights to particular
levels of compensation and salaries may be modified or
reduced by the proper statutory authority” (Tirapelle v. Davis,
26 Cal. Rptr. 666, 678 (Cal. Ct. App. 1993)). Vielehr v. Cal.,
163 Cal. Rptr. 795, 797 (Cal. Ct. App. 1980) amplifies on that
principle:
[P]ublic employment and the rights, duties, and con-
ditions thereof are creatures of statute, not contract,
6926 SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS v. SDCERS
and unless and until vested rights to retirement ripen
into vested contractual rights, the Legislature may
modify conditions of employment without violating
vested pension rights which have become protected
under the contract clauses of the Constitutions.
So the question is whether a member’s DROP salary is con-
sidered a term of employment that can be modified without
constitutional consequences, or whether it is instead a vested
contractual pension right.
Appellees point to extensive evidence establishing that a
DROP participant is considered an active employee, subject
to all the terms and conditions of active employment. Munici-
pal Code provisions, the DROP manual and the MOU in
effect at the time of negotiations all confirm that DROP mem-
bers are considered as “retired”—a legal fiction—only for
purposes of the calculation of pension benefits, while they
remain subject to all other terms and conditions of employ-
ment, including disciplinary actions up to and including ter-
mination. Termination by its very nature would reduce a
member’s DROP “salary” to zero and is specifically autho-
rized by the terms of the members’ MOU.
Instead of trying to show directly that a DROP salary is
itself considered a vested pension benefit, Association con-
tends that amounts become vested benefits immediately upon
being contributed and credited to a member’s participation
account. In so doing it attempts to link the two inextricably,
claiming that salary reductions impact the value of a mem-
ber’s DROP account by reducing the amounts contributed by
both members and City and thereby reducing the return
earned by the DROP account.
But that effort is at odds with the established principle that
indirect effects on pension entitlements do not convert an oth-
erwise unvested benefit into one that is constitutionally pro-
tected (Vielehr, 163 Cal. Rptr. at 797; Miller v. Cal., 557 P.2d
SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS v. SDCERS 6927
970, 974-75 (Cal. 1977)). Miller, for example, concluded that
a statutory reduction in the mandatory retirement age that in
turn caused a reduction in an employee’s potential pension
benefits did not impact a vested contractual right. Although
the court recognized that the plaintiff acquired a vested right
to a pension upon his acceptance of public employment, it
based its rejection of plaintiff ’s position on its holdings that
his right to earn increased pension benefits was necessarily
contingent on his remaining in state employment and that he
had no vested contractual right to continue working for any
specific time (id. at 975).
In precisely the same way, any contractual rights that Asso-
ciation members have to DROP benefits is contingent upon
the salary amounts that they contribute and does not save
them from having to establish a vested contractual right in
that salary. It is noteworthy that Association’s argument, if
adopted, would apply equally to salaries earned by active
members who are not participants in the DROP program,
because those salaries of course also affect the ultimate pen-
sion benefits that those employees are entitled to receive. And
yet Association does not dispute that an active member’s sal-
ary is a term of employment, not a vested contractual right
subject to constitutional protections.
In sum, we hold that DROP salary is not a vested right sub-
ject to the protection of the Contracts Clause. Association’s
claim based on the reduction of such DROP salary fails as a
matter of law.
B. Final Offer’s Reduction in City’s Pickup Amount
Also Does Not Affect a Protected Contractual
Right
Next Association contends that City’s pickup of a portion
of its employees’ retirement contribution is a vested contrac-
tual right, so that the 3.2% reduction of that amount imposed
by the Final Offer violated the Contracts Clause. Here again
6928 SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS v. SDCERS
the relevant inquiry is whether City’s pickup is a vested retire-
ment benefit or a salary item subject to modification or reduc-
tion.
Association concedes that pickups are a mandatory subject
of bargaining, but it nonetheless claims that they are vested
retirement benefits such that any reduction must be accompa-
nied by a corresponding benefit. In attempted support of that
position Association points to cases dealing with a legislative
increase in the employee contribution rate, but that is not the
situation here, where the overall employee contribution
amount has not been changed—only the employee’s payment
toward that amount has been affected. To the extent that the
courts in Wisley v. City of San Diego, 10 Cal. Rptr. 765 (Cal.
Ct. App. 1961), and Allen v. City of Long Beach, 287 P.2d
765 (Cal. 1955) found a contractual right to the level of the
employees’ contribution amounts, the recognized right pro-
tected only increases in those total amounts, not the share paid
by employees.
Rather than citing any direct legal support for its assertion,
Association seeks to rely on City’s historical practice of nego-
tiating the amount of pickup only in lieu of or in conjunction
with salary increases. Yet that does not bear on the legal clas-
sification of City’s pickup amount. Indeed, the very fact that
City has historically equated modifications in pickup and sal-
ary amounts really confirms that City has treated pickups as
a compensation term, not a retirement benefit.10
Appellees, on the other hand, offer evidence establishing
that City’s pickup is considered equivalent to a negotiated sal-
ary item by both Association and other California cities. San
10
Association’s argument that employee contributions, and thus pickup
amounts, are made on a pre-tax basis is equally unavailing. Pickups are by
their very nature related to retirement payments. That the tax treatment of
those amounts recognizes that fact sheds no light on whether City’s contri-
bution is a vested retirement benefit protected by the Contracts Clause.
SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS v. SDCERS 6929
Diego City Charter art. IX, § 143 (emphasis added) expressly
states that “[t]he City shall contribute annually an amount
substantially equal to that required of the employees for nor-
mal retirement allowances, as certified by the actuary, but
shall not be required to contribute in excess of that . . .” In
addition, the MOU between Association and City in effect
before the 2005 labor negotiations states that in providing for
City’s pickup amount, “[t]he employee, upon termination,
will have no vested right in the amount so contributed by
City.”
It simply cannot be said that City’s pickup is a vested con-
tractual benefit entitled to protection under the Contract
Clause. As a result, the Final Offer’s reduction in the pickup
amount also did not violate any of Association’s constitu-
tional rights.
C. Lastly, Final Offer’s Modifications to Employee
Eligibility Requirements for Retiree Health Bene-
fits Also Do Not Affect a Protected Contractual
Right
Association’s third and final contention stemming from the
2005 labor negotiations is that the modifications imposed by
the Final Offer on employee eligibility requirements for
retiree health benefits impaired its vested contractual rights.
Those requirements, applicable only to current employees
hired before July 1, 2005, established service qualifications of
10 years for a 100% benefit and 5 years for a 50% benefit.
Citing Thorning v. Hollister Sch. Dist., 15 Cal. Rptr. 2d 91
(Cal. Ct. App. 1992) and Cal. League of City Employee
Ass’ns v. Palos Verdes Library Dist., 150 Cal. Rptr. 739 (Cal.
Ct. App. 1978), Association argues that the district court erro-
neously characterized the retiree health benefits at issue as
longevity-based benefits rather than vested rights. Cal.
League, id. at 741-42 held that certain fringe benefits for
long-term employees—a longevity salary increase, increased
6930 SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS v. SDCERS
vacation time and a paid sabbatical—were vested contractual
rights subject to constitutional protection. In determining
whether the benefits were “fundamental,” the court evaluated
“the effect of it in human terms and the importance of it to the
individual in the life situation” (id. at 741, quoting Bixby v.
Pierno, 481 P.2d 242, 252 (Cal. 1971)). Thorning, 15 Cal.
Rptr. 2d at 95-97 found that plaintiffs, retired school district
board members, had a vested contractual right to the retiree
health benefits expressly granted to them by an official decla-
ration of policy during their term of public office. Using the
framework established by Cal. League, the court found that
the benefits were fundamental and could not be unilaterally
terminated (id. at 96).
But we find the reasoning in Cal. League unpersuasive
because the court there did not acknowledge the heavy burden
on a plaintiff to “overcome [the] well-founded presumption”
(Robertson, 466 F.3d at 1118) that a legislative body does not
intend to bind itself contractually, nor did it look to the legis-
lative body’s intent to create vested rights (id. at 1117).
Instead we find the analysis in San Bernardino Pub. Employ-
ees Ass’n v. City of Fontana, 79 Cal. Rptr. 2d 634 (Cal. Ct.
App. 1998) far better attuned to the principles that we have
articulated in Robertson. That California Court of Appeal’s
decision held that longevity benefits, including pay and leave
accrual increases based on longevity, as provided for by
MOUs between the city and its bargaining groups, “could not
have become permanently and irrevocably vested as a matter
of contract law, because the benefits were earned on a year-
to-year basis under previous MOU’s that expired under their
own terms” (id. at 639). In the course of its extensive exami-
nation of the caselaw as to pension rights and vested retire-
ment benefits, the court (id. at 638 (citation omitted))
criticized the Cal. League court’s analysis:
The California League court’s reliance on Bixby is
misplaced. Bixby merely established a rule of judi-
cial review applicable to adjudicatory orders or deci-
SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS v. SDCERS 6931
sions of public agencies. The case cannot fairly be
read as establishing a new measure of substantive
rights to be protected under the contract clause.
That inquiry into the legislative intent to create a contract
is consistent with our analysis as to the existence of a contract
(see Robertson, 466 F.3d at 1117-18). Were the recognition
of constitutional contract rights to be based on the importance
of benefits to individuals rather than on the legislative intent
to create such rights, the scope of rights protected by the Con-
tracts Clause would be expanded well beyond the sphere dic-
tated by traditional constitutional jurisprudence. By contrast,
as with the benefits at issue in San Bernardino, Appellees
have presented evidence showing that the retiree medical ben-
efits here were considered a term of employment that could
be negotiated through the collective bargaining process. As
such, they were longevity-based benefits that continued only
insofar as they were renegotiated as part of a new agreement
and were not protectible contract rights.
Thus the last of Association’s arguments that the imposi-
tion of the 2005 Final Offer affected any of its rights under
the Contract Clause fails as well. Appellees are entitled to
summary judgment on Association’s claims premised on that
Final Offer.
2. Takings Clause and Conspiracy Claims
Far less discussion is required to dispatch Association’s
Takings Clause and conspiracy claims arising from the labor
negotiations that led to the Final Offer. Because, as we have
held, the Final Offer did not affect any constitutionally pro-
tected interest, those claims also fail as a matter of law. As to
the first of those claims, it founders under the principle suc-
cinctly stated in McIntyre v. Bayer, 339 F.3d 1097, 1099 (9th
Cir. 2003)):
6932 SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS v. SDCERS
In order to state a claim under the Takings Clause,
a plaintiff must first establish that he possesses a
constitutionally protected property interest.
And by the same token, the absence of any actionable consti-
tutional violation negates by definition the existence of a con-
spiracy to violate constitutional rights (Woodrum v.
Woodward County, 866 F.2d 1121, 1126 (9th Cir. 1989)).
In summary, we also affirm the district court’s grant of
summary judgment for Appellees on Association’s Takings
Clause and conspiracy claims that are premised on City’s
imposition of the 2005 Final Offer. And that means Associa-
tion has struck out on all substantive aspects of its appeal.
Final Judgment as to Costs and Attorneys’ Fees
That leaves for consideration the parties’ separate cross-
appeals of the district court’s final judgment as to costs and
attorneys’ fees. Association argues that the district court erred
in finding that the Appellees were “prevailing parties” entitled
to an award of costs—a finding of fact that we review for
clear error (Sablan v. Dep’t of Fin., 856 F.2d 1317, 1324 (9th
Cir. 1988)), although reversal is required if the district court
applied incorrect legal standards to reach that finding (Lummi
Indian Tribe v. Oltman, 720 F.2d 1124, 1125 (9th Cir. 1983)).
For their part Appellees contend that although the district
court was correct in finding that they were prevailing parties,
the court erred (1) by summarily denying Appellees attorneys’
fees without giving them an opportunity to set forth their
arguments in a post-judgment motion and (2) by failing to
announce its findings of fact and conclusions of law to
explain its denial of an award of attorneys’ fees.11 In those
11
Each of Association and Appellees argues that the other’s appeal as
to the award of costs should be deemed frivolous. But neither party sub-
mitted the motion required under Fed. R. App. P. 38. In the absence of
such a separately filed motion, we cannot grant a party its attorneys’ fees
and costs in defending an appeal, notwithstanding the potential merit of
any claim (Higgins v. Vortex Fishing Sys., Inc., 379 F.3d 701, 709 (9th
Cir. 2004)).
SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS v. SDCERS 6933
respects we review such denial for abuse of discretion (Webb
v. Ada County, 195 F.3d 524, 526 (9th Cir. 1999)).
1. Award of Costs
Rule 54(d)(1) provides that costs shall be allowed to the
prevailing party unless a federal statute, the rules or a court
directs otherwise. Courts consistently confirm that “[a] party
in whose favor judgment is rendered is generally the prevail-
ing party for purposes of awarding costs under Rule 54(d)”
(d’Hedouville v. Pioneer Hotel Co., 552 F.2d 886, 896 (9th
Cir. 1977); accord, such cases as Amarel v. Connell, 102 F.3d
1494, 1523 (9th Cir. 1997)). Nor is it necessary for a party to
prevail on all of its claims to be found the prevailing party
(see, e.g., K-2 Ski Co. v. Head Ski Co., 506 F.2d 471, 477 (9th
Cir. 1974)).
Despite the district court’s having granted summary judg-
ment to Appellees on all of Association’s federal claims,
Association contends that it should be considered the prevail-
ing party. To that end Association seeks to call into play the
definition in Farrar v. Hobby, 506 U.S. 103, 111-12 (1992):
In short, a plaintiff “prevails” when actual relief on
the merits of his claim materially alters the legal
relationship between the parties by modifying the
defendant’s behavior in a way that directly benefits
the plaintiff.
Farrar, id. at 113 further explained that “[n]o material alter-
ation of the legal relationship occurs until the plaintiff
becomes entitled to enforce a judgment, consent decree, or
settlement against the defendant.”
Association seeks to emulate the alchemists in the Middle
Ages in its effort to transmute the base metal of its total loss
on the merits into the gold of “prevailing party” status by
asserting that the district court’s order materially altered its
6934 SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS v. SDCERS
relationship with Appellees. That assertion (1) points to the
adverse finding that City’s pickup amount was a salary ele-
ment open to negotiation and (2) attempts to turn that into the
possibility that Association could force Appellees to pay back
wages and retirement benefits that had not been calculated
because of the belief that City’s pickup amount was not part
of the employees’ salaries.
That just won’t work, and not just because any purported
“prevailing party” status for Association is wholly counterin-
tuitive. After all, Association has obtained no judgment, con-
sent decree or settlement that it can enforce against Appellees
—an express prerequisite to such status under Farrar. Its
unproved and attenuated prospect of a better chance to assert
a claim for the payment of wages and retirement benefits in
some future case finds no support in the caselaw for “prevail-
ing party” status in this case.
By obtaining summary judgment on all of Association’s
federal claims, and with no claims remaining against them in
the district court, Appellees were clearly the prevailing parties
in this federal action. As such, they were entitled to the award
of costs as decreed by the district court.
2. Denial of Attorneys’ Fees
After the district court’s extensive discussion of the award
of costs to Appellees, it simply went on to say “[n]either party
is entitled to recover its attorneys’ fees.” City and Individual
Defendants appeal that denial of attorneys’ fees, complaining
that they were not given an opportunity to make a Rule
54(d)(2) motion and that the district court provided no expla-
nation of its ruling. In response Association argues (1) that
Appellees waived their right to challenge the district court’s
order by failing to make a Rule 54(d)(2) motion after the
court’s substantive judgment and (2) that no findings of fact
and conclusions of law were mandated by Rule 54(d)(2)(C)
SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS v. SDCERS 6935
because the district court’s determination was not made in
response to a Rule 54(d)(2) motion.
It is of course true that it has been firmly established for
nearly three decades that the award of attorneys’ fees under
Section 1988 emulates George Orwell’s Animal Farm: “Some
animals are more equal than others.” In sharp contrast to the
near-universal fee awards to prevailing Section 1983 plain-
tiffs, Hughes v. Rowe, 449 U.S. 5 (1980) (per curiam) adopted
the same standard for Section 1988 awards that the seminal
opinion in Christiansburg Garment Co. v. EEOC, 434 U.S.
412, (1978) had announced for a prevailing Title VII defen-
dant: It “may recover attorney’s fees from the plaintiff only
if the District Court finds that the plaintiff ’s action was frivo-
lous, unreasonable, or without foundation, even though not
brought in subjective bad faith” (Hughes, 449 U.S. at 14,
quoting Christiansburg Garment, 434 U.S. at 421).
But the problem here is that we are left to speculate as to
whether the unexplained denial of a fee award by the experi-
enced district judge (formerly Chief Judge of her District
Court) was predicated on an evaluation of Association’s
claims in those terms or on some other ground. Under the cir-
cumstances we cannot engage in an informed review of her
decision.
Accordingly we remand the portion of the district court’s
order that denied Appellees an award of attorneys’ fees. On
remand the provisions of Rule 54(d)(2) shall apply.
Conclusion
This has completed our review of all aspects of the district
court’s rulings. For the reasons we have set out in detail, we
AFFIRM those rulings in all respects save that denying an
award of attorneys’ fees, which we REMAND for consider-
ation by the district court in accordance with Rule 54(d)(2).
Each party shall bear its own costs on appeal.
6936 SAN DIEGO POLICE OFFICERS v. SDCERS
AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED AND
REMANDED IN PART.