Filed 1/14/16
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION EIGHT
AARON LEIDER, B244414
Plaintiff and Appellant, (Los Angeles County
Super. Ct. No. BC375234)
v.
JOHN LEWIS et al.,
Defendants and Appellants.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. John L.
Segal, Judge. Affirmed.
Wasserman, Comden & Casselman, David B. Casselman; Esner, Chang & Boyer
and Stuart B. Esner for Plaintiff and Appellant.
Sullivan & Crowell, Diane L. McGimsey, Edward E. Johnson, Janet Y. Galeria
and Jonathon D. Townsend for Animal Legal Defense Fund as Amicus Curiae on behalf
of Plaintiff and Appellant.
Zeynep J. Graves; The Bernheim Law Firm, Steven J. Bernheim and Nazo S.
Semerjian for Last Chance for Animals as Amicus Curiae on behalf of Plaintiff and
Appellant.
Michael N. Feuer, City Attorney and John A. Carvalho, Deputy City Attorney, for
Defendants and Appellants.
Duane Morris and Patricia P. Hollenbeck for Association of Zoos & Aquariums,
San Diego Zoo Global, International Elephant Foundation, Phoenix Zoo, North Carolina
Zoological Park, Saint Louis Zoo, and Busch Gardens Tampa as Amici Curiae on behalf
of Defendants and Appellants.
_______________________
INTRODUCTION
This case concerns the elephants and the elephant exhibit at the Los Angeles Zoo.
In litigation that began in 2007, plaintiffs and taxpayers Aaron Leider and the late Robert
Culp sought to enjoin the continued operation of the elephant exhibit. They also fought
to prevent the construction of a new, expanded elephant exhibit. According to plaintiffs,
the Zoo had engaged in years of egregious abuse and neglect of the elephants in its care.
They alleged the new proposed exhibit would not be large enough to ameliorate the
problems inherent in keeping elephants in traditional zoo-like enclosures. The plaintiffs
asserted the Zoo’s conduct violated animal cruelty provisions in the Penal Code, and
constituted illegal expenditures of, waste of, or injury to public funds and property. The
defendants vigorously disputed the claims. After the grant of defendants’ summary
judgment motion, a reversal on appeal by this court, an amended complaint, and pretrial
motions, the case went to trial.1 The trial court rejected many of Leider’s claims, but
issued limited injunctions prohibiting the use of particular forms of inappropriate
discipline, requiring the elephants have specific amounts of exercise time, and requiring
the rototilling of the soil in the exhibit.
Both sides appeal from the trial court judgment. The defendants challenge a trial
court order overruling their demurrer to the first amended complaint. The defendants
contend Leider could not base his taxpayer claims on alleged violations of the Penal Code
because of the principle that an injunction may not issue to enforce a penal law. They
alternatively challenge the injunctions as exceeding the requirements of relevant statutes
and regulations governing the care and maintenance of elephants. Leider, on the other
1 By this time Culp had died and Leider was the sole plaintiff.
2
hand, contends the trial court erred in failing to shut down the elephant exhibit. Leider
argues the trial court improperly rejected certain of his claims based on Penal Code
violations. He also challenges the trial court conclusion that he failed to establish a
justiciable claim for injury to public property under Code of Civil Procedure
section 526a, or a claim based on the violation of a federal regulation regarding animal
enclosures.
We agree with the trial court that our decision in the first appeal was law of the
case of Leider’s right to bring a taxpayer action based on violations of certain Penal Code
provisions concerning animal abuse. We alternatively conclude that Civil Code
section 3369, which prohibits the issuance of an injunction to enforce a penal law does
not apply to taxpayer suits. We also conclude that the trial court’s injunctions concerning
soil maintenance and exercise time were proper, but reject Leider’s claims that the trial
court erred by otherwise declining to close the elephant exhibit. We therefore affirm the
judgment.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In 2006, in the face of opposition from at least one animal welfare organization to
the continued operation or expansion of an elephant exhibit at the Los Angeles Zoo, the
mayor of Los Angeles sought an evaluation of the proposed exhibit and whether an
elephant exhibit should be continued at the Zoo. After consideration, including public
hearings involving the City Council, the City decided to proceed with an expansion and
redesign of the elephant exhibit. In 2007, the Zoo had two elephants, one male and one
female. At some point that year, the female elephant was sent to a sanctuary. In 2010,
the Zoo acquired two female elephants from the San Diego Zoo; the United States
Department of Agriculture had previously confiscated the two elephants from an
individual in Texas. The Zoo now has three elephants.
The Zoo opened the new elephant exhibit in December 2010. Although the
exhibit covers more than six and a half acres, the area available to the elephants is smaller
3
due to structures that prevent the elephants from ranging freely across the entire exhibit,
including electrically charged wires that keep the elephants away from certain areas with
vegetation.
In 2007, Leider and Culp sued the City of Los Angeles and the director of the Zoo,
John Lewis (collectively the City or defendants), in a taxpayer action under Code of Civil
Procedure section 526a (section 526a). The complaint sought an injunction closing the
existing exhibit and preventing construction of the new one. This is the second appeal in
this matter. In the first appeal, the plaintiffs challenged a trial court order granting
summary judgment to the City. This court concluded triable issues of fact existed
regarding whether defendants had engaged or would engage in illegal expenditures in
connection with the elephant exhibit and violation of Penal Code section 596.5.2 We
therefore reversed the summary judgment. (Culp v. City of Los Angeles (Sept. 23, 2009,
B208520) [nonpub. opn.].)3
Following the remittitur, Leider filed an amended complaint seeking injunctive
and declaratory relief. In addition to alleging the defendants had engaged in illegal acts
under Penal Code section 596.5, the amended complaint contended the defendants’
actions or omissions violated Penal Code sections 597 and 597.1, which are additional
cruelty to animal statutes. As in the original complaint, the amended complaint alleged
that between 1975 and 2006, multiple elephants at the Zoo died prematurely as a result of
inadequate space and hard surface conditions, inadequate veterinary care, and
mistreatment that included use of a bull hook. The amended complaint alleged the City’s
2 Penal Code section 596.5 renders it a misdemeanor “for any owner or manager of
an elephant to engage in abusive behavior towards the elephant, which behavior shall
include the discipline of the elephant by any of the following methods: (a) Deprivation
of food, water, or rest. [¶] (b) Use of electricity. [¶] (c) Physical punishment resulting
in damage, scarring, or breakage of skin. [¶] (d) Insertion of any instrument into any
bodily orifice. [¶] (e) Use of [head restraint devices known as] martingales. [¶] (f) Use
of block and tackle.”
3 For ease of reference we will refer to our decision in the first appeal as Leider I.
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actions cost taxpayers “the unnecessary expenditure of millions of dollars.” It further
alleged the proposed expansion of the elephant exhibit would permit more abuse and
waste of taxpayer funds. The amended complaint alleged the proposed expansion and
continued operation of the exhibit violated public policies described in California Fish
and Game Code sections 1600, 2051, 2052, 2116.5; California Code of Public Resources
section 21001; Penal Code section 596.5; and the United States Endangered Species Act
of 1973 (16 U.S.C. §§ 1531, 4202).
The City demurred to the first amended complaint. For the first time in the
litigation, the City contended Leider could not state a claim under section 526a for
injunctive or declaratory relief because the claims challenged alleged violations of the
Penal Code. The City based its argument on Civil Code section 3369, which states that
“neither specific nor preventive relief can be granted to enforce a penalty or forfeiture in
any case, nor to enforce a penal law, except in a case of nuisance or as otherwise
provided by law.” The City additionally relied on a California Supreme Court case
applying Civil Code section 3369 in a taxpayer action, Nathan H. Schur, Inc. v. City of
Santa Monica (1956) 47 Cal.2d 11 (Schur). The City argued the complaint failed to state
a cause of action on any theory because the trial court had previously concluded, in
connection with the City’s motion for summary judgment, that plaintiff’s waste claim
was not justiciable, and this court’s opinion reversing the summary judgment ruling did
not disturb the trial court’s prior conclusion on the waste theory.
Leider opposed the demurrer. He challenged the applicability of Civil Code
section 3369 and Schur to his case. Leider further argued the demurrer did not establish
the complaint failed to state any cause of action in that it did not address the allegation
that the City was illegally expending funds by violating the public policies underlying
provisions in the Fish and Game and Public Resources Codes, or the allegation that the
City was injuring public property. Leider asserted all theories in the complaint were at
large following this court’s opinion in the first appeal, including waste and injury. In
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reply, the City again contended the demurrer resolved all of plaintiffs’ claims because
they were barred or not justiciable.
The trial court issued a tentative opinion addressing both the City’s demurrer and
Leider’s motion for a preliminary injunction. After a round of supplemental briefing, the
trial court overruled the demurrer. The court concluded the amended complaint alleged
the City engaged in conduct such as electrical shocking and illegal use of bull hooks.
As such, the court determined the amended complaint stated valid causes of action in
alleging the City physically abuses its elephants in violation of Penal Code section 596.5.
The trial court rejected the Civil Code section 3369 argument as “not open on remand”
after our opinion in Leider I. In the context of Leider’s motion for a preliminary
injunction, the trial court considered several additional issues, including the proper
analysis of the “injury to property” prong of section 526a. The court denied the motion
on the ground that Leider had not demonstrated a probability of prevailing on the merits.
The case proceeded to a bench trial. In a detailed statement of decision, the trial
court concluded that while the evidence did not establish definitively how much space an
elephant in captivity needs, Leider had proved the ground of the elephant exhibit is hard,
not varied or soft, and creates a risk of injury to the elephants’ joints, feet, and nails. The
court credited evidence establishing that the size of the exhibit contributed to compacted,
hard soil as well as to contamination and increased risk of infection from the presence of
urine and fecal matter in a small space. The three elephants exhibit “stereotypic
behavior” which the court found was strong evidence that, with respect to at least the sole
male elephant, the zoo is not meeting his needs. The court further credited evidence
showing elephants in captivity inevitably develop foot problems as a result of a lack of
exercise. The court concluded the elephants are emotionally and socially deprived due to
the limited choices and enrichment activities available to them, and, in the case of the
sole male elephant, from living in isolation.
However, the court concluded Leider had not established the City was violating
Penal Code section 596.5, which prohibits an elephant owner or manager from engaging
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in abusive behavior of the elephant. The court found the evidence did not establish the
City’s conduct violated Penal Code section 597, nor had Leider presented any evidence
or authority that Penal Code section 597, subdivision (b) applied to elephants held captive
in a zoo. Although the court noted the elephants are “hardly, as defendants contend,
‘thriving,’ ” it concluded the City’s conduct is “not abusive, does not amount to causing
suffering, and is not cruel beyond the ‘ordinary’ circumstances of captivity (which
plaintiff does not challenge).” The court found Penal Code section 597.1 does not apply
to captive zoo animals.4 Similarly, the court found the evidence did not establish the
elephant exhibit runs afoul of a regulation promulgated the United States Department of
Agriculture regarding space for animals in enclosures.5
4 Penal Code section 597, subdivision (b) provides in relevant part: “whoever,
having the charge or custody of any animal, either as owner or otherwise, subjects any
animal to needless suffering, or inflicts unnecessary cruelty upon the animal, or in any
manner abuses any animal, or fails to provide the animal with proper food, drink, or
shelter or protection from the weather, or who drives, rides, or otherwise uses the animal
when unfit for labor, is, for each offense, guilty of a crime punishable pursuant to
subdivision (d).”
Penal Code section 597.1, subdivision (a)(1), provides, in part: “Every owner,
driver, or keeper of any animal who permits the animal to be in any building, enclosure,
lane, street, square, or lot of any city, county, city and county, or judicial district without
proper care and attention is guilty of a misdemeanor. Any peace officer, humane society
officer, or animal control officer shall take possession of the stray or abandoned animal
and shall provide care and treatment for the animal until the animal is deemed to be in
suitable condition to be returned to the owner. When the officer has reasonable grounds
to believe that very prompt action is required to protect the health or safety of the animal
or the health or safety of others, the officer shall immediately seize the animal and
comply with subdivision (f).”
5 The regulations Leider referenced concern specifications for the “humane
handling, care, treatment, and transportation” of certain warm-blooded animals. 9 Code
of Federal Regulations section 3.128 states: “Enclosures shall be constructed and
maintained so as to provide sufficient space to allow each animal to make normal
postural and social adjustments with adequate freedom of movement. Inadequate space
may be indicated by evidence of malnutrition, poor condition, debility, stress, or
abnormal behavior patterns.” The trial court concluded the evidence established the
7
The court further found Leider had not proved the City was engaged in waste
within the meaning of section 526a, a theory Leider had asserted “almost as an
afterthought.” And, although Leider established the elephant exhibit is injuring the three
elephants, the court concluded Leider had not provided “any applicable legal standard
against which the court could measure or ‘test’ defendants’ injurious (but not abusive)
conduct toward the elephants in the Los Angeles Zoo.”
Even so, the court concluded an injunction was appropriate to prevent the City
from engaging in forms of inappropriate discipline that had been used at the Zoo in the
past. Although the City asserted it had discontinued all conduct prohibited by Penal
Code section 596.5, the court, after evaluating numerous relevant factors, concluded
Leider was entitled to an injunction enjoining the City from using bull hooks or electric
shocks on the elephants. The court also found Leider proved a violation of Penal Code
section 597t by establishing that soil compaction deprived the elephants of an adequate
exercise area, and ordered the City to regularly rototill the soil and provide the elephants
one to two hours of daily supervised exercise.6
Accordingly, in a final judgment, the court enjoined the defendants from using
bull hooks and electric shock in the management, care, and discipline of the elephants at
the Los Angeles Zoo. The court further ordered the defendants to exercise the elephants
for a total of at least two hours a day, with appropriate breaks for the zoo staff and the
elephants, unless weather or emergency conditions make such exercise impracticable.
The court ordered defendants to rototill both the soil and the substrate of the elephant
elephants have enough space and freedom to make normal adjustments of their posture
and social movements.
6 Penal Code section 597t provides in part: “Every person who keeps an animal
confined in an enclosed area shall provide it with an adequate exercise area. If the animal
is restricted by a leash, rope, or chain, the leash, rope, or chain shall be affixed in such a
manner that it will prevent the animal from becoming entangled or injured and permit the
animal’s access to adequate shelter, food, and water. Violation of this section constitutes
a misdemeanor.”
8
exhibit regularly, consistent with the standards and recommendations of two experts
whose testimony was adduced at trial.
Both sides timely appealed from the judgment. On appeal, the City challenges the
trial court order overruling the demurrer. The City contends Civil Code section 3369
barred Leider’s action. The City alternatively argues the trial court erred in issuing the
injunctions requiring exercise and rototilling because the terms of the injunction exceed
the requirements of Penal Code section 597t and California regulations regarding
elephant enclosures and exercise. In his cross-appeal, Leider argues the trial court erred
in failing to order the City to close the elephant exhibit under the illegal expenditures
prong of section 526a. Leider contends the undisputed facts indicate the City is illegally
abusing the elephants under several Penal Code statutes, and closing the exhibit is the
only remedy that would address the proven harms. Leider further asserts the trial court
erred in finding no violation of Penal Code sections 596.5 or 597, or 9 Code of Federal
Regulations section 3.128, and the court erred in concluding Penal Code section 597.1,
subdivision (a) did not apply to animals held captive in a zoo. Leider also argues the trial
court erred in its interpretation of “injury” under section 526a, which, he asserts, also
mandated closure of the elephant exhibit.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review the trial court’s decision to grant or deny an injunction under the abuse
of discretion standard. (Horsford v. Board of Trustees of California State University
(2005) 132 Cal.App.4th 359, 390.) However, the evidence must support the trial court’s
exercise of discretion, and to the extent the trial court resolved disputed factual issues, we
apply the substantial evidence standard of review. (Ibid.)
To the extent we are required to interpret statutory language, we confront issues of
law that are resolved under the rules of statutory interpretation. (Ciani v. San Diego
Trust & Savings Bank (1991) 233 Cal.App.3d 1604, 1611.) Our primary task when
interpreting statutes is to determine the Legislature’s intent. “We first examine the words
9
used in the statute and give them a plain and commonsense meaning. If the language is
clear and unambiguous, there is no need for construction or for resort to indicators of the
Legislature’s intent. [Citation.] A statute’s literal meaning must be aligned with its
purpose. Its meaning may not be determined from a single word or sentence. Instead,
the words must be construed in context, and provisions relating to the same subject
matter or that are part of the same statutory scheme must be read together and
harmonized to the extent possible.” (Harbor Regional Center v. Office of Administrative
Hearings (2012) 210 Cal.App.4th 293, 310-311 (Harbor Regional), footnote omitted.)
“We must select a construction that best fits the Legislature’s apparent intent;
promotes instead of defeats the statute’s general purpose; and avoids absurd or
unintended consequences. [Citation.] The statute cannot be construed in a way that
would make its provisions void or ineffective, especially if that would frustrate the
underlying legislative purpose.” (Harbor Regional, supra, 210 Cal.App.4th at p. 311.)
DISCUSSION
A. The City’s Appeal
1. Our Holding in Leider I Is Law of the Case that Leider’s Action Is Proper
After our decision in Leider I, the City raised a new issue: that under Civil Code
section 3369, which prohibits injunctions to enforce penal laws, the entire action was
improper. The trial court overruled the City’s demurrer on that ground, finding that our
decision in Leider I was law of the case that taxpayer actions were a proper vehicle for
challenging government spending that also violated the criminal law. We now consider
the City’s contention that the trial court erred.
1.1 General Principles of Law of the Case
Under the law of the case doctrine an appellate court decision stating a rule of law
necessary to the decision of the case conclusively establishes that rule and determines the
rights of the parties in any later retrial or appeal. (Yu v. Signet Bank/Virginia (2002)
103 Cal.App.4th 298, 309 (Yu).) The doctrine promotes finality and prevents piecemeal
10
litigation of an issue by preventing the relitigation of issues that were already decided.
(Ibid.) The rule extends to issues that were implicitly determined because they were
essential to the prior decision. (Ibid.)
The law of the case doctrine has two limitations:
First, it does not apply to points of law that might have been, but were not, either
explicitly or implicitly, decided in the earlier appeal. (Yu, supra, 103 Cal.App.4th at
p. 309.)
Second, the doctrine is procedural, not substantive. It may be disregarded in
exceptional circumstances: (1) when there has been a manifest misapplication of existing
principles that results in a substantial injustice, or (2) there has been an intervening or
contemporaneous change in the law.7 (Ibid.)
1.2 The Leider I Decision
The trial court in Leider I had granted summary judgment for the City on the
ground that Leider’s taxpayer action, which was based on alleged violations of certain
animal abuse statutes, presented a non-justiciable issue of public policy concerns that
needed to be resolved as part of the political process. On appeal, Leider argued that once
he had raised triable issues of fact that the City’s treatment of the elephants violated the
Penal Code’s animal abuse provisions, he had satisfied the requirements of a taxpayer
action.
The City acknowledged that a taxpayer action was proper when challenging
“illegal government action,” but argued that such an action was not proper where the real
issue involved a disagreement over the manner in which the government has exercised its
discretion to address a problem. The City also contended that the Penal Code provisions
7 We asked for and received supplemental briefing on whether one new decision –
Animal Legal Defense Fund v. California Exposition and State Fairs (2015)
239 Cal.App.4th 1286 (ALDF) – showed that applying law of the case here would
constitute a misapplication of existing legal principles and whether it affects the merits of
the City’s appeal. Because both issues overlap, we will discuss this new decision
separately in section 3. of our DISCUSSION.
11
that Leider relied on did not provide a legal standard by which its treatment of the
elephants could be measured.
We examined the allegations of the complaint, in particular those alleging that the
City’s treatment of the elephants violated Penal Code section 596.5, which makes it a
misdemeanor to abuse elephants by conduct that includes: the use of electricity; physical
punishment that results in damage, scarring, or breaking of skin; and other unspecified
conduct. We first rejected the City’s claim that the appeal was moot because the new
elephant exhibit would be constructed with privately donated funds. In doing so, we held
that Leider had standing to challenge the City’s allegedly abusive conduct because City
funds would continue to be used to operate the exhibit in an allegedly illegal manner.
(Leider I, supra, slip opn. at p. 3.) We characterized section 526a as permitting taxpayer
actions to challenge the illegal expenditure of public funds, and held that Leider had
raised a triable fact issue that the City’s treatment of the elephants violated Penal Code
section 596.5. (Leider I, supra, slip opn. at pp. 7-8.) As part of our discussion, we also
held that these claims were justiciable because Penal Code section 596.5 provided an
adequate legal standard against which the City’s alleged conduct could be measured,
permitting an injunction enjoining such conduct if it were proven. (Id. at pp. 8-9.) Such
a standard is necessary to ensure that private plaintiffs in section 526a actions “do not
trespass into the domain of legislative or executive discretion.” (Harman v. City and
County of San Francisco (1972) 7 Cal.3d 150, 160-161.)
1.3 The City’s New Challenge Was Implicitly Decided Against It In
Leider I
In its current appeal from the ensuing judgment, the City now contends that the
trial court erred in overruling its demurrer to Leider’s entire amended complaint based on
a new ground: that under Civil Code section 3369, as interpreted by Schur, supra,
47 Cal.2d 11, Leider was barred from seeking injunctive relief to enjoin violations of the
Penal Code. We conclude that this issue was at least implicitly decided in Leider’s favor
in Leider I. Accordingly unless an exception applies, the law of the case precludes the
City from relitigating this issue.
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The decision in Yu, supra, 103 Cal.App.4th 298, illustrates the rule that both
“explicit and implicit conclusions of law establish[] the law of the case.” (Id. at p. 310.)
The plaintiffs in Yu sued a credit card issuer for unlawful business practices. The first
Court of Appeal decision reversed a summary judgment for the bank, rejecting the bank’s
contention that a leading appellate decision was distinguishable. A second appeal was
brought by the plaintiffs after the trial court, on remand, sustained without leave to amend
the bank’s demurrers to an amended complaint, and, in the second appeal, the bank
argued for the first time that the leading appellate decision had been wrongly decided and
was trumped by certain privileges.
The Yu court refused to consider these new arguments because they were barred
by the law of the case. The Yu court held that the law of the case exception for issues that
were not raised, but could have been, did not apply. Instead, the Yu court held that the
bank was simply refining its previous arguments. (Yu, supra, 103 Cal.App.4th at
pp. 311-312.)
As the Yu court observed, “[l]itigants are not free to continually reinvent their
position on legal issues that have been resolved against them by an appellate court,”
because it would be absurd to place a party who has chosen not to argue a point on appeal
in a better position than one who argued that point and lost. (Yu, supra, 103 Cal.App.4th
at p. 312.)
In short, the law of the case doctrine is not defeated by simply raising a new
argument that is essentially a twist on an earlier unsuccessful argument. With this in
mind, we see little difference between Yu and the facts of this case. In Leider I, the City
argued that Leider could not maintain his taxpayer action for Penal Code animal abuse
violations because those code sections did not provide a sufficient standard to make his
claims justiciable. We rejected that contention, holding that the relevant Penal Code
provisions supplied an adequate legal standard by which the City’s conduct could be
tested. (Leider I, supra, slip opn. at p. 9.)
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In the present appeal, the City contends again that under its new theory Leider
may not obtain injunctive relief for conduct that violates Penal Code provisions. We
disagree. By deciding that the animal abuse statutes provided a sufficient legal standard
to make Leider’s taxpayer action justiciable, we also implicitly decided that California
law permits section 526a actions based on violations of the Penal Code’s animal abuse
provisions. In short, the City is simply trying to refine its earlier argument by asserting
another reason why taxpayer action are not proper when based on the animal abuse
provisions of the Penal Code.
We reject the City’s reliance on Estate of Horman (1971) 5 Cal.3d 62 (Horman),
for the proposition that Leider I did not implicitly decide the new issue it raises here. In
Horman, the probate court ordered the distribution of a decedent’s estate to non-residents.
The State of California appealed, contending, as it had at trial, that the survivors had not
sufficiently established their relationship to the decedent. The State prevailed at the
retrial, but that judgment was reversed and another trial was held. At the third trial, the
State for the first time raised the five-year deadline for asserting claims contained in
Probate Code section 1026. The trial court found that the five-year period had been
tolled while the previous actions had been pending.
In the final appeal, the Supreme Court rejected the survivors’ contention that law
of the case barred the State from raising Probate Code section 1026 because the State had
not raised the issue during the first and second trials and appeals. The Supreme Court
held that the earlier proceedings had reached only the substantive merits of the survivors’
claims and therefore had not even implicitly reached the procedural time bar of Probate
Code section 1026. (Horman, supra, 5 Cal.3d at pp. 73-74.)
We believe Horman is distinguishable because the new issue raised there was a
procedural bar, while the earlier proceedings focused solely on the merits. In this case, as
in Yu, supra, 103 Cal.App.4th 298, the new issues raised – whether a taxpayer’s action
was proper based on violations of the Penal Code’s animal abuse provisions – bore an
analytically substantive relationship to the issues previously considered. (See also
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Greene v. Bank of America (2015) 236 Cal.App.4th 922, 932 [law of the case did not
preclude malicious prosecution defendant from raising new issue of collateral estoppel
because earlier proceedings focused solely on the merits of the plaintiff’s claims].)
1.4 Refusing to Apply Civil Code Section 3369 Will Not Create a
Substantial Injustice
Even where law of the case would otherwise apply, we may disregard the doctrine
if doing so would lead to a substantial injustice by a manifest misapplication of existing
legal principles or if there has been an intervening change in the law.
As to the first exception, we assume for discussion’s sake that Civil Code section
3369 does bar Leider’s action, and that we would have so held had the issue been raised
during the first appeal. Even so, we conclude that keeping the trial court’s judgment in
place by applying the law of the case doctrine to our decision in Leider I would not result
in a substantial injustice.
Pursuant to the trial court’s judgment, the City is barred from using bull hooks, a
practice it said it had already stopped, and was ordered to rototill the soil in the elephant
exhibit and make sure that the elephants get sufficient exercise. As the case law in this
area makes clear, allowing this result to stand, even if in error, is not a substantial
injustice.
We begin with People v. Shuey (1975) 13 Cal.3d 835 (Shuey), where the Court of
Appeal issue a writ overturning the denial of defendant’s motion to suppress evidence of
the marijuana found in his apartment on the ground that an illegal search and seizure
occurred when the police occupied his apartment for three hours while a search warrant
was obtained. As part of its order, the Court of Appeal held that the prosecutor had
waived the issue of whether a valid arrest based on probable cause had occurred. On
remand, the trial court held a limited hearing on another issue -- whether the evidence
should be suppressed as the fruit of the poisonous tree. The trial court again excluded the
evidence.
On appeal by the prosecution, the Supreme Court refused to consider the
prosecutor’s contention that a valid arrest had occurred. Relying on the law of the case
15
doctrine, the Shuey court held that even if the finding of waiver in the first appeal had
been in error, the substantial injustice exception to law of the case did not apply: “Yet if
the rule is to be other than an empty formalism more must be shown than that a court on a
subsequent appeal disagrees with a prior appellate determination. Otherwise the doctrine
would lose all vitality and the [law of the case doctrine] would be reduced to a vapid
academic exercise, since an unsuccessful petitioner for pretrial writ review could always
maintain on subsequent appeal that the prior adjudication resulted in an ‘unjust
decision.’ ” (Shuey, supra, 13 Cal.3d at p. 846.)
Similarly, the court in Chase Brass & Copper Co. v. Franchise Tax Board (1977)
70 Cal.App.3d 457 (Chase) held that a previous ruling that erroneously allowed a
corporation to underpay its state tax liability was protected from a new challenge to that
issue by the law of the case doctrine. Even though the company would pay less tax than
it owed, the Chase court held that law of the case applied and, albeit without discussion,
held that doing so did not demonstrate a manifest misapplication of existing principles
resulting in substantial injustice. (Id., at pp. 464-465.)
To reiterate, in Shuey, law of the case was invoked to prevent the prosecution from
raising an issue that could have defeated a criminal defendant’s motion to suppress the
key evidence against him. In Chase, the doctrine was invoked even though it allowed a
corporation to underpay its state income tax. The Courts of Appeal in the final appeals
found neither result worked a substantial injustice. Something more than an incorrect
decision must be shown.
The City contends that a substantial injustice will result because its employees
would risk losing their jury trial and higher burden of proof rights required in a criminal
trial. It also argues that, depending on how we rule, it could also lose its $42 million
elephant exhibit. As to the latter, our decision leaves the exhibit in place. As to the
former, individual defendants are enjoined in their official capacities only. None has
been prosecuted, sentenced, or fined. It is also doubtful that the judgment in this civil
16
injunction case could have collateral estoppel effect in any criminal proceeding. (People
v. Superior Court (Lucero) (1989) 49 Cal.3d 14, 20, fn. 3.)
Otherwise, the City has failed to address whether the judgment as it currently
stands will work any substantial injustice if it remains in place. The City must stop a
practice (using bull hooks and electric shocks to discipline elephants) that it has
disavowed, as well as exercise the elephants and turn the soil in the elephant exhibit. The
City does not contend, and we do not believe, that such a limited remedy amounts to a
substantial injustice. If anything, our decision tends to promote a just result, at least to
the extent it aligns with the prohibitions of the animal abuse statutes and the requirements
of federal regulations governing the treatment of elephants. (See 9 C.F.R. § 3.128
[ensuring freedom of movement]; 9 C.F.R. § 3.140 [humane handling procedures for
transporting animals].)
This is not a case like Sefton v. Sefton (2015) 236 Cal.App.4th 159, where the
Court of Appeal refused to apply law of the case because the trial court’s distribution of a
substantial portion of the trust to one beneficiary was contrary to hundreds of years of
rulings and deprived a rightful beneficiary of his share of the estate. (Id. at p. 172, fn. 6.)
Instead, as previously noted, the City must stop practices (using bull hooks and electric
shocks to discipline elephants) that it has already disavowed, turn the soil in the elephant
exhibit, and exercise the elephants. Under the authorities just discussed, such a result
does not amount to a substantial injustice.
1.5 There Has Been No Misapplication of Existing Principles Because
Schur Does Not Apply to Leider’s Action
Ultimately, we reject the City’s argument that the law of the case is inapplicable
because the authorities on which they rely, Schur and Civil Code section 3369, do not
apply here. We begin by setting forth the relevant provisions of Civil Code section 3369
and Code of Civil Procedure section 526a.
Civil Code section 3369 was enacted by the Legislature in 1872. It provides:
“Neither specific nor preventive relief can be granted to enforce a penalty or forfeiture in
17
any case, nor to enforce a penal law, except in a case of nuisance or as otherwise
provided by law.”8
Section 526a was enacted by the Legislature in 1909. It provides: “An action to
obtain a judgment, restraining and preventing any illegal expenditure of, waste of, or
injury to, the estate, funds, or other property of a county, town, city or city and county of
the state, may be maintained against any officer thereof, or any agent, or other person,
acting in its behalf, either by a citizen or resident therein, . . . who is liable to pay . . . a
tax therein.”
Civil Code section 3369’s prohibition against injunctive relief where the conduct
to be enjoined is criminal is designed to protect the defendant’s rights to both a jury trial
and the higher burden of proof required in criminal trials. (People v. Lim (1941)
18 Cal.2d 872, 880 (Lim).) However, section 3369 does not apply where the criminal
conduct also amounts to a civil nuisance that affects the complaining party’s property
rights. (Id. at pp. 879-880.)
The court in Schur, supra, 47 Cal.2d 11 considered the effect of Civil Code
section 3369 on a taxpayer suit brought to stop the City of Santa Monica from issuing
amusement licenses for games of skill that the plaintiff contended were in fact games of
chance that violated the state’s anti-gambling laws. The Schur court reversed a judgment
for the plaintiff. The Schur court framed the issue before it as one to enjoin the city from
committing a crime, even though the plaintiff asked that the city be enjoined from
spending funds to issue the supposedly illegal licenses. (Id. at p. 17) The Supreme Court
acknowledged that section 526a allowed taxpayers to obtain injunctions against a city’s
8 Civil Code section 3369 was amended in 1977 to delete specified exemptions for
unfair competition actions and insert the exception for actions as “otherwise provided by
law.” Leider contends this amendment opened the door to taxpayer actions based on
Penal Code violations, while the City contends that it referred to the unfair competition
laws. On its face, the “as otherwise provided by law” amendment seems to encompass
any statutory authorization for injunctive relief. We need not resolve this issue, however,
because our interpretation of sections 3369 and 526a is based on the pre-1977 version
present in Schur.
18
illegal use of funds. However, such relief was not proper where the City exercised its
valid quasi-judicial authority to issue licenses following a noticed public hearing attended
by the plaintiff, who could seek relief through an administrative mandate action. (Id. at
pp. 17-18.)
The Schur court then discussed Lim, supra, 18 Cal.2d 872, and its holding that an
action to enjoin someone’s operation of an illegal gambling house was not permitted
under Civil Code section 3369 because the Legislature had not declared such operations
to be public nuisances. The Schur court used its discussion of Lim as a guideline for the
trial court should there be a retrial: “Caution should be observed therefore upon retrial to
avoid violating that [Lim] rule. It should also be observed that whether licenses are or are
not issued the criminal law is still open to Schur.” (Schur, supra, 47 Cal.2d at pp. 18-19.)
In examining Schur’s reach, we are guided by the rule that the language used in an
opinion must be understood in light of the facts and the issues before the court, and an
opinion is not authority for a proposition not actually considered. (Elisa B. v. Superior
Court (2005) 37 Cal.4th 108, 118.) As we read Schur, it viewed the action as one to
enjoin a crime, not as a taxpayer action to stop the illegal use of funds. Our conclusion is
bolstered by the Schur court’s failure to discuss the meaning of “illegal expenditure” in
section 526a, as well as its reliance on Lim, supra, 18 Cal.2d 872, which was an action
against a private party to enjoin a nuisance, not a taxpayer action.9
In fact, as Lim itself made clear, an injunction against criminal activity is proper
where the Legislature provides for it. (Lim, supra, 18 Cal.2d at pp. 880-881.) Section
526a so provides. We begin by examining the statutory purpose behind section 526a. It
provides “a general citizen remedy for controlling illegal government activity.” (White v.
Davis (1975) 13 Cal.3d 757, 763.) Its primary purpose is to “ ‘enable a large body of the
citizenry to challenge governmental action which would otherwise go unchallenged in the
9 Even the court in ALDF, supra, 239 Cal.App.4th 1286, believed that Schur stood
for no more than the proposition that a taxpayer action based on violation of a criminal
statute is not proper where an administrative remedy is available. (Id. at p. 1301.)
19
courts because of the standing requirement.” (Blair v. Pitchess (1971) 5 Cal.3d 258, 267-
268 (Blair).) It is a remedial provision which must be broadly construed. (Id. at p. 268.)
To this end, our courts have endorsed taxpayer actions aimed at stopping
unconstitutional police activity. (White v. Davis, supra, 13 Cal.3d 757 [illegal covert
surveillance activity by police]; Blair, supra, 5 Cal.3d 258 [challenging use of claim and
delivery laws]; Wirin v. Parker (1957) 48 Cal.2d 890 [purchase of electronic
eavesdropping equipment]; Wirin v. Horrall (1948) 85 Cal.App.2d 497 [use of illegal
police blockades to search autos].) Closest on point in terms of the relief sought here is
Cornblum v. Board of Supervisors (1980) 110 Cal.App.3d 976, which allowed a
taxpayer’s action challenging a county jail’s inhumane treatment of prisoners. Not one
post-Schur decision interpreting section 526a has ever mentioned Schur or held that
section 526a applies only to illegal acts that are not criminal acts.10
We next consider the language of section 526a, which permits taxpayer actions
against “any illegal expenditures.” (Italics added.) That phrase is not defined but is
surely broad enough to include criminal acts in addition to acts otherwise prohibited by
law. (Safeco Ins. Co. v. Robert S. (2001) 26 Cal.4th 758, 763 (Safeco).)
At issue in Safeco was the enforceability of an insurance policy exclusion for
liability resulting from any illegal act. The Supreme Court said that “[t]he phrase ‘illegal
act’ is susceptible of two reasonable meanings.” Although the Court of Appeal had used
a dictionary definition that construed the term broadly to encompass “any act prohibited
by law . . . the term can also be interpreted more narrowly as meaning a violation of
criminal law.” (Safeco, supra, 26 Cal.4th at p. 763.) The court also noted that several
thesauruses treat the term “illegal” as synonymous with “criminal.” (Ibid.)
“Broadly construed, a violation of any law, whether civil or criminal, is an illegal
act.” (Safeco, supra, 26 Cal.4th at p. 764, original italics.) Had the insurer “wanted to
10 With one exception: the decision in ALDF, supra, 239 Cal.App.4th 1286, which
we mentioned in footnote 7, ante, was the first to mention Schur in connection with
section 526a. We asked for and received supplemental briefing from the parties on the
applicability of that decision, which we discuss post.
20
exclude criminal acts from coverage, it could have easily done so.” (Id. at p. 763.)
Because it chose not to do so, the Supreme Court could not read into the policy what the
insurer had omitted. (Id. at pp. 763-764.)
Although Safeco concerned the interpretation of an insurance policy under the
ordinary rules of contract interpretation, it is instructive here. The primary rule of
statutory construction is to ascertain the Legislature’s intent by examining the entire
statute. In doing so, we look first to the plain meaning of the words used, giving effect to
the “usual and ordinary import of those words.” (People v. Salcido (2008)
166 Cal.App.4th 1303, 1311.) The Safeco court tells us that the term “illegal act” is
susceptible of two reasonable constructions – a narrow one limited to criminal acts, and a
broad one that includes both criminal acts and other forms of unlawful conduct. Given
the mandate to broadly construe section 526a (Blair, supra, 5 Cal.3d at pp. 267-268), it
strikes us that the plain meaning of “any illegal expenditure” within that statute includes
criminal acts.
To hold otherwise would violate another rule of statutory construction – that when
interpreting a statute, we may not read into the provision language that does not appear.
(Doe v. City of Los Angeles (2007) 42 Cal.4th 531, 545.) Given the plain and broad
meaning of illegal expenditures, we would have to add the following language to prevent
its application here: that taxpayers may bring actions to prevent a government’s illegal
expenditures except when the illegal conduct is also a criminal act.
If, as we conclude, section 526a does permit taxpayer actions to enjoin a City’s
illegal use of funds that also violates a penal law, then one more rule of statutory
construction comes into play: when a specific provision and a general provision appear
inconsistent, and the general provision standing alone would include the same matter as
the specific provision, the specific provision will be considered an exception to the
general provision regardless of which was enacted first. (Stone Street Capital, LLC v.
California State Lottery Com. (2008) 165 Cal.App.4th 109, 119.) With this rule in mind,
Civil Code section 3369 and Code of Civil Procedure 526a can be harmonized as follows
21
– while Civil Code section 3369 prohibits injunctive relief to affirmatively enforce a
penal law, Code of Civil Procedure section 526a provides an exception for taxpayer
actions aimed at stopping government expenditures supporting conduct that is criminal.
Finally, the concerns about enforcing the criminal law through a civil proceeding
that animated the decision in Lim, supra, 18 Cal.2d 872, are not present here. In Lim, the
plaintiff tried to enjoin a private party defendant from engaging in illegal conduct. The
Lim court held an injunction was not allowed because the defendant would otherwise be
subject to a trial for a criminal offense without the protections of a jury trial or the higher
standard of proof required in criminal trials. In this taxpayer’s action, by contrast, it is
the government which will be prevented from engaging in illegal conduct, with the Penal
Code violations serving as the yardstick by which to measure its conduct. As we have
already observed, any individual defendants are enjoined solely in their official
capacities. No private parties will be prosecuted, and it is highly doubtful whether the
judgment from a civil injunction proceeding would have any collateral estoppel effect in
any later criminal prosecution. (People v. Superior Court (Lucero), supra, 49 Cal.3d at p.
20, fn. 3.)11
1.6 We Choose to Not Follow the ALDF Decision, Nor Does ALDF
Constitute an Intervening Change in the Law for Purposes of the
Law of the Case Doctrine
After oral argument in this matter, the First District Court of Appeal filed its
decision in ALDF, supra, 239 Cal.App.4th 1286, holding that a taxpayer action based on
an alleged violation of a criminal animal abuse provision was not proper. The City
contends this is an intervening change of law such that we should not apply law of the
case principles here.
11 In its supplemental briefing the City contends that, under Schur, Leider lacks
standing to bring this taxpayer’s action. Because we conclude that Schur and section
3369 are not applicable here, the standing argument founded on those two authorities
fails.
22
In ALDF, the plaintiffs sued the state agency in charge of organizing the annual
state fair, alleging that crates used to exhibit pigs at the fair were so small that their use
constituted animal abuse under Penal Code section 597t, one of the precise violations at
issue in the present appeal.
The ALDF court affirmed a judgment of dismissal after the trial court sustained
without leave to amend the defendant’s demurrer on the ground that violations of the
animal abuse laws are not enforceable through a taxpayer action. The ALDF court first
turned to its earlier decision in Animal Legal Defense Fund v. Mendes (2008)
160 Cal.App.4th 136, where the plaintiff sued a business that raised dairy calves, alleging
that they violated Penal Code section 597t by keeping the calves in small isolation crates.
The Mendes court held that state laws authorizing certain corporations dedicated to
preventing cruelty to animals to enforce those laws by filing complaints with a magistrate
preempted civil actions by anyone else to enforce those laws.12
Based on this comprehensive statutory enforcement scheme, the ALDF court
concluded that, assuming the state fair agency was violating the animal abuse laws, its
conduct would not go unchallenged even in the absence of a taxpayer’s action. As a
result, the plaintiff lacked standing to bring its taxpayer’s action. (ALDF, supra,
239 Cal.App.4th at pp. 5-7, 9.) The ALDF court found support for its holding in Schur,
supra, 47 Cal.2d 11. The ALDF court characterized Schur as holding that taxpayer
actions to enjoin criminal conduct are not allowed where administrative remedies were
available. Analogizing from that, the ALDF court concluded that the legislative
enforcement scheme for violations of the animal abuse laws should also be viewed as the
sole remedy for such violations. (ALDF, at p. 1301.)
The City contends we should adopt the reasoning of ALDF and reverse the
judgment for Leider. We decline to do so. The primary purpose of section 526a is to
“enable a large body of the citizenry to challenge governmental action which would
12 The Mendes decision did not mention Schur, Code of Civil Procedure section
526a, or Civil Code section 3369.
23
otherwise go unchallenged in the courts because of the standing requirement.” (Blair,
supra, 5 Cal.3d at pp. 267-268.) Although Corporations Code section 10404 gives
certain animal cruelty prevention organizations the power to file animal cruelty
complaints and “aid in [their] prosecution,” only public prosecutors may prosecute
criminal offenses, and they have the sole discretion to determine whether to do so. (Gov.
Code, § 100, subd. (b); People v. Eubanks (1996) 14 Cal.4th 580, 588-589.)
Because the Los Angeles City Attorney’s Office has apparently declined to
prosecute the Zoo for animal cruelty, the Zoo’s mistreatment of its elephants as found by
the trial court has gone unchallenged. To hold that the power of a local humane
organization to file a complaint bars a taxpayer action where the City refuses to prosecute
itself undermines the very purpose of taxpayer actions. To the extent the ALDF court
relied on Schur, we reject its holdings because, as discussed previously, Schur does not
control.
For related reasons, we also hold that the ALDF case does not alter our law of the
case analysis. First, the intervening authority exception to that doctrine applies to only
Supreme Court decisions. (Carson Harbor Village, Ltd. v. City of Carson (2015)
239 Cal.App.4th 56, 70.) Therefore the Court of Appeal’s decision in ALDF is not
eligible for such treatment. Second, because we reject that court’s holding, we also
conclude that there has been neither a misapplication of existing principles nor a
substantial injustice based on that case.
Having concluded that Leider could bring his action based on alleged violations of
the Penal Code’s animal abuse provisions, we next consider whether the trial court’s
judgment in regard to those allegations was proper.13
2. The Order to Rototill the Soil on the Exhibit Was Proper
13 The trial court enjoined the City from using bull hooks and electricity as methods
of controlling the elephants. Although the City contends the trial court erred because it
had discontinued those practices, the City concedes the issue and we therefore do not
reach it.
24
Penal Code section 597t provides: “Every person who keeps an animal confined
in an enclosed area shall provide it with an adequate exercise area. If the animal is
restricted by a leash, rope, or chain, the leash, rope, or chain shall be affixed in such a
manner that it will prevent the animal from becoming entangled or injured and permit the
animal’s access to adequate shelter, food, and water.”
The evidence showed that soil compaction led over time to numerous foot and
other anatomical problems for the elephants. The evidence also showed that elephants
are on the move for 18 hours a day in the wild, require at least one to two hours of
supervised exercise in captivity, and received only 40 minutes of such exercise each day.
Based on this evidence, and pursuant to section 597t, the trial court ordered the
City to regularly rototill the soil and make sure the elephants exercise one to two hours a
day. We set forth the relevant portions of the trial court’s factual findings: “Although
the evidence is disputed about whether the elephants at the Los Angeles Zoo have
‘adequate exercise area,’ it is undisputed that the elephants do not get enough exercise
time in their ‘enclosed area.’ According to witnesses called by defendants, . . . elephants
in captivity require one to two hours of daily exercise, and the evidence is undisputed . . .
that the elephants . . . get no more than 40 minutes of daily exercise, if that. Thus,
although the evidence does not directly show that the elephants need more ‘exercise
area,’ it is undisputed that they need more exercise time, which, because of the increased
impact on the ground that more exercise would cause, requires more exercise area. Or
rototilling, which would remedy the increased impact and resulting compactness and
hardness of the ground of the exhibit on which the elephants need to increase the time
they spend exercising.”
The City contends the trial court erred in fashioning its injunction based on the
need for more exercise time, not more exercise area, because Penal Code section 597t
mentions only space, not time. The City also contends that the order must be reversed
because regulations promulgated under the Fish and Game Code show that the elephants’
25
exercise time and exercise area each met or exceeded the minimum lawful standards. We
take each in turn.
Although the City contends that exercise time was the motivating factor behind the
trial court’s order, we believe the statement of decision was somewhat unclear and
ambiguous in regard to the relationship between the need for more exercise time and the
size of the exhibit. The City does not contend that it raised such an objection with the
trial court, and does not address what strikes us as an apparent ambiguity. As a result, we
resolve this ambiguity by inferring that the trial court decided the issue in Leider’s favor.
(Uzyel v. Kadisha (2010) 188 Cal.App.4th 866, 896.) We believe the trial court tried, but
failed to clearly express, that in order to accommodate the elephants’ need to exercise at
all, the soil had to be softened by regular rototilling. In other words, the risk of harm
caused by soil compaction left the elephants with an inadequate exercise area regardless
of its size.
We believe such a finding accords with the spirit and letter of Penal Code section
597t. No matter how large an exercise area might be, if other conditions render it
unusable or unsafe for movement by an animal, the area cannot be adequate. For
instance, a dog left in a confined space with sufficient room to move about would still
have an inadequate exercise area if the ground were littered with broken glass, leaving it
little safe room in which to maneuver. The evidence in this case showed that the
elephants were prone to serious foot, leg, and other anatomical injuries from the
repetitive stress of walking on compacted soil. Based on this, we conclude the trial court
could find that their exercise area was inadequate despite its size unless the ground was
softened.
The City also contends that the rototilling order is improper because the Zoo is in
compliance with Department of Fish and Game regulations concerning the minimum
standards for elephant enclosures. Fish and Game Code section 2120 calls for the
promulgation of regulations concerning the transportation, importation, possession,
keeping, and confinement of any and all wild animals. Section 671.3 of title 14 of the
26
California Code of Regulations prescribes the housing requirements for numerous wild
animals, including elephants. As relevant here, that regulation provides that “[e]lephants
shall be provided free exercise unchained on dirt for a minimum of 5 hours per each 24-
hour period.” (14 Cal. Code Regs., § 671.3, subd. (b)(M)(2).)14
The City contends that the regulation requires nothing more than that the elephants
be allowed to move about on dirt, and says nothing about alleviating soil compaction.
From this, it argues that its compliance with the regulation exempts it from the reach of
Penal Code section 597t. We disagree.
Statutory or regulatory compliance is not a defense to tort liability because statutes
and regulations ordinarily define only a minimum standard of conduct. (Myrick v.
Mastagni (2010) 185 Cal.App.4th 1082, 1087.) We believe that principle is applicable
here, especially where the regulatory standards are expressly designated as the minimum
standards. As discussed above, leaving an animal to exercise on a surface that is
unsuitable and potentially harmful results in the failure to provide an adequate exercise
area under section 597t.
Even if we affirm the rototilling requirement, we must still address the City’s
contention that the exercise duration requirement must be reversed because section 597t
says nothing about how much time confined animals must be allowed to exercise, making
that part of the order unlawful because it strays beyond the terms of the authorizing
statute. (Armstrong v. Picquelle (1984) 157 Cal.App.3d 122, 129-129.) The City also
contends that the Fish and Game regulations have been satisfied because they require
only five hours of free movement each day and the elephants are allowed to roam about
as they choose nearly all day long.
As we read the trial court’s statement of decision, the need for more exercise time
is inextricably linked to the poor soil conditions in the exhibit, which have left the
14 The regulation also sets minimum space standards for housing elephants. (14 Cal.
Code Regs., § 671.3, subd. (a)(10).) Because our analysis turns on the soil quality, not
the size of the enclosure, we need not address that issue.
27
elephants with an inadequate exercise area. Ensuring that the elephants get a set amount
of exercise time in conjunction with the regular rototilling of the soil is a way to measure
whether the rototilling in fact allows the elephants to exercise properly at all. If the
rototilling relieves the soil compaction problems and ultimately alleviates the physical
ailments that the soil compaction causes, the trial court might then wish to remove or
modify the exercise duration requirement. We believe the trial court should therefore
retain jurisdiction to monitor the effects of the rototilling and exercise requirements it has
imposed.
B. Leider’s Cross-Appeal
In the following portion of our decision, we address the issues raised by Leider’s
cross appeal concerning: (1) the trial court’s decision to have the elephant exhibit
remain open, (2) the court’s findings that the certain Penal Code provisions governing
animal cruelty either had not been violated or were not applicable, and (3) that Leider
was not entitled to relief under the injury prong of section 526a.
1. Substantial Evidence Supported the Findings the Conditions at the
Elephant Exhibit Did Not Amount to Abuse or Cruelty as Defined by the
Penal Code; Therefore the Trial Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion by
Declining to Shut Down the Elephant Exhibit
Leider contends that the trial court should have shut down the elephant exhibit
based on the court’s findings that the exhibit created conditions that were detrimental to
the physical, social, and emotional well being of the elephants. This included findings
that the elephants were subject to physical and emotional suffering due to the soil
compaction issues, the use of hot wires to restrict their movements away from trees and
grass, and the absence of an outlet for the male elephant’s sexual frustration. The trial
court was also concerned about the level of care the elephants received because their
keepers were ill informed and had misguided opinions about elephant care and behavior.
Despite these findings, the trial court concluded that the conditions at the exhibit
did not amount to abuse or cruelty under Penal Code sections 596.5 or 597. Instead, the
28
trial court found that the case “raises the question of whether the recreational or perhaps
educational needs of one intelligent mammal species outweigh the physical and
emotional, if not survival needs of another. Existing California law does not answer that
question.”
Leider contends the trial court erred because its own findings showed that the
elephants were suffering. We believe substantial evidence supported the trial court’s
decision. Penal Code section 596.5 makes it a misdemeanor to engage in abusive
discipline of elephants through a non-exclusive list of practices that includes: depriving
them of food, water, or rest; using electricity; physical punishment that damages, breaks,
or scars their skin; inserting any instrument into a bodily orifice; or using block and
tackle. Penal Code section 597 proscribes cruelty to animals in general, and provides
categories of conduct such as: maliciously and intentionally maiming, mutilating, or
torturing an animal; overdriving, overloading, torturing, tormenting, or cruelly beating an
animal; and depriving an animal of necessary food and water, or inflicting needless
suffering or unnecessary cruelty. (Pen. Code, § 597, subds. (a), (b).)
These provisions mark how our society has evolved to date in regard to the
treatment of animals. As the trial court suggested, the issues posed by this appeal mark
the path ahead we may one day move down as our understanding and appreciation of our
fellow creatures continue to move forward.
We agree that the exhibit places the elephants in an unnatural environment that is
perhaps only an echo of their life in the wild. Setting aside the dangers posed by ivory
poachers, we have no doubt the elephants would do better if they were not captive. We
also recognize that animal sanctuaries might well provide a better form of captivity, and
that a better zoo exhibit might be constructed. Even so, we cannot say that the current
conditions constitute abuse or cruelty as defined in Penal Code sections 596.5 and 597.
Instead, as the trial court observed, the deficiencies in the elephants’ living conditions are
in large measure by-products of their captivity.
29
In short, we conclude that substantial evidence supports the trial court’s finding of
the absence of abuse or cruelty under the law. At bottom, the scope of injunctive relief
was a matter left to the trial court’s discretion. Leider asked the trial court to shut down
the exhibit. Despite the trial court’s misgivings about the quality of care the elephants
received and the shortcomings in their conditions of captivity, the trial court did not
abuse its discretion by deciding that the deficiencies it found did not warrant the extreme
step of shutting down the exhibit.15
2. The Trial Court Properly Denied Relief Under Penal Code Section 597.1
Penal Code section 597.1 makes it a misdemeanor for any owner or keeper of an
animal “who permits the animal to be in any building, enclosure, lane, street, square, or
lot of any city, county, city and county, or judicial district without proper care . . . .”
(Pen. Code, § 597.1, subd. (a).) The statute goes on to provide guidelines for the seizure
or destruction by humane officers of stray or abandoned animals. (Pen. Code, § 597.1,
subds. (a)-(k).)
The trial court found that the elephants were not receiving proper care, but
declined to award injunctive relief for two reasons: (1) the provision applied to only
stray or abandoned animals, and did not apply to elephants kept in zoos; and (2) the
section did not “provide a legal standard by which defendants’ conduct can be tested for
purposes of the ‘illegal expenditure’ provision of . . . section 526a.”
Leider contends the trial court erred because nothing in the statute limits it to stray
or abandoned animals or precludes its application to zoo elephants. According to Leider,
the trial court’s finding that the elephants did not receive proper care – particularly in
15 Leider also contends that the City violated a federal regulation requiring that
elephants must be in enclosures that “provide sufficient space to allow each animal to
make normal postural and social adjustments with adequate freedom of movement.
Inadequate space may be indicated by evidence of malnutrition, poor condition, debility,
stress, or abnormal behavior patterns.” (9 C.F.R. § 3.128.) The trial court expressly
rejected such a finding because the exhibit allowed the elephants to make normal
movements. We see no basis for overturning the factual finding.
30
regard to the level and quality of veterinary care provided by the Zoo – virtually
mandated an injunction closing the exhibit, or, alternatively, as stated in his appellate
brief – take steps “to stop the violations which have been established.”
We disagree. The court in People v. Untiedt (1974) 42 Cal.App.3d 550 (Untiedt)
construed section 597f, which requires proper care and attention for animals that have
been “abandoned or neglected,” and concluded that the statute applied to only such
animals. (Id. at p. 553.) Section 597.1, subdivision (a) refers to animals that are “stray or
abandoned,” and, by the same logic, must apply to only such animals.
The Untiedt court also held that the phrase “proper care and attention” had to be
construed in context with its companion Penal Code provisions concerning abuse of and
cruelty to animals. (Untiedt, supra, 42 Cal.App.3d at p. 554.) When viewed in that
context, proper care and attention means inadequate care likely to result in the infliction
of unjustifiable pain, suffering, or cruelty. (Ibid.) As previously discussed, though less
than optimal, the care and treatment of the elephants does not amount to cruelty under the
applicable Penal Code provisions. The injunction the trial court issued may very well
ameliorate the most serious of the problems the elephants face in captivity. Because the
trial court will maintain jurisdiction to oversee the implementation of the injunction, the
court will have further opportunity to reconsider the treatment of the elephants in the
future.
3. Reversal In Favor of Leider Is Not Compelled Under the Injury Prong
Element of a Taxpayer’s Action
The trial court declined to provide further injunctive relief under the injury prong
of section 526a under the principle that a taxpayer’s action is not proper where there is no
legal standard against which the government’s conduct can be measured and the action
would intrude into the domain of legislative or executive discretion. (See Harman v. City
and County of San Francisco (1972) 7 Cal.3d 150, 160-161 [trial courts “cannot
formulate decrees that involve the exercise of indefinable discretion; their decrees can
only restrict conduct that can be tested against legal standards. [Citation.]”].)
31
Leider contends the trial court erred because it found the elephants were being
injured by the conditions at the zoo, and because section 526a clearly applies to such
injuries independent of that statute’s waste and illegal expenditure prongs.
We appreciate Leider’s contention but ultimately find it unpersuasive. First, we
affirm the trial court’s injunction imposing rototilling and exercise requirements on the
Zoo. That leaves shutting down the exhibit as the only other unfulfilled request for relief.
We realize that the harm suffered by the elephants is both cumulative and, because it can
occur only in the future, to some extent, speculative. We agree with the trial court that
there is no standard by which to measure this type of harm in order to justify closing a
multi-million dollar public exhibit.
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed and the trial court shall retain jurisdiction to monitor
whether the City is complying with the rototilling and exercise time requirements and to
modify those orders as appropriate if warranted by changed conditions. Plaintiff and
cross-appellant Leider shall recover his costs on appeal.
RUBIN, J.
I CONCUR:
FLIER, J.
32
Leider v. Lewis et al.
B244414
Bigelow, P. J., Dissenting:
I respectfully dissent. The majority’s decision in this case will empower Leider to
bring endless contempt proceedings against the Los Angeles Zoo, all based on
injunctions that are contrary to California law. The trial court’s findings of fact indicate
that, whether in violation of Penal Code provisions or not, the living conditions of the
elephants at the Zoo leave much to be desired, particularly when compared with what
experts know about wild elephant habits, health, and social behaviors. Still, in my view
this case ultimately turns not on any unique qualities or needs of elephants, but instead is
necessarily determined based on the general principles that apply to taxpayer suits.
Unlike the majority, I would conclude Civil Code section 3369 (section 3369),
which prohibits the issuance of an injunction to enforce a penal law, and which has been
interpreted to apply to taxpayer suits, barred the relief Leider sought based on alleged
violations of the Penal Code. I disagree with the majority that law of the case bars our
consideration of the section 3369 issue raised in the City’s appeal. Moreover, even if law
of the case would otherwise prevent our consideration of the City’s arguments, I find it
inappropriate to apply the doctrine here because doing so will result in substantial
injustice: the approval of injunctions unauthorized by law that will almost certainly
spawn litigation for some time to come. The City believes the injunctions are unlawful;
Leider believes the injunctions did not go far enough to protect the elephants. It seems
inevitable that disputes over the City’s compliance with the injunctions will ensue. While
this might not be of concern as to valid injunctions, if, as the City contends, section 3369
and legal precedent prohibited the injunctions issued here, it would be unjust to affirm
them and pave the way for contempt litigation in the future.
2
I. The Demurrer to the Amended Complaint Should Have Been Sustained
An order overruling a demurrer may be reviewed on an appeal from the final
judgment. (San Diego Gas & Electric Co. v. Superior Court (1996) 13 Cal.4th 893, 912-
913.) When determining whether the demurrer was properly overruled, we must accept
as true all facts properly pleaded in the complaint. (Quelimane Co. v. Stewart Title
Guaranty Co. (1998) 19 Cal.4th 26, 38.) The standard of review is de novo.1 (Bushell v.
JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. (2013) 220 Cal.App.4th 915, 918.)
A. This Court Should Not Invoke Law of the Case to Prevent Consideration
of the City’s Arguments
“ ‘The doctrine of “law of the case” deals with the effect of the first appellate
decision on the subsequent retrial or appeal: The decision of an appellate court, stating a
rule of law necessary to the decision of the case, conclusively establishes that rule and
makes it determinative of the rights of the same parties in any subsequent retrial or appeal
in the same case.’ [Citation.]” (Morohoshi v. Pacific Home (2004) 34 Cal.4th 482, 491
(Morohoshi).) The doctrine applies even if the subsequent reviewing court concludes the
first opinion was erroneous. (Ibid.; Lindsey v. Meyer (1981) 125 Cal.App.3d 536, 541.)
For the doctrine to apply, “ ‘[i]t is fundamental that the point relied upon as law of the
case must have been necessarily involved in the case.’ [Citation.]” (Gyerman v. United
States Lines Co. (1972) 7 Cal.3d 488, 498.) Law of the case does not apply to points of
law “which might have been but were not presented and determined in the prior appeal,”
but it is “applicable to questions not expressly decided but implicitly decided because
they were essential to the decision on the prior appeal.” (Estate of Horman (1971) 5
Cal.3d 62, 73.)
1 Were I considering the City’s argument as challenging errors that warranted
reversal of the final judgment, irrespective of the propriety of the ruling on the demurrer,
the standard of review and the analysis would be the same. The issues presented are legal
questions which we review de novo.
3
It is undisputed that the applicability of section 3369 as a bar to Leider’s claims
was neither raised by the parties in the prior appeal, nor was it expressly determined by
this court. However, whether the issue was essential to the decision is a closer question.
“Where the particular point was essential to the decision, and the appellate judgment
could not have issued without its determination, a necessary conclusion is that the point
was impliedly decided, even though the point was not raised by counsel or expressly
mentioned.” (Eldridge v. Burns (1982) 136 Cal.App.3d 907, 921.)
In the first appeal, the plaintiffs argued the trial court erred in concluding their
claims were not justiciable. In resolving this question, we concluded the plaintiffs had
raised triable issues of fact as to whether the City was engaging in illegal expenditures by
virtue of acts or omissions alleged to be in violation of Penal Code section 596.5.
We concluded Penal Code section 596.5 provided a legal standard by which the alleged
governmental conduct could be tested, thus the illegal expenditure claims were
justiciable. Other issues regarding the legal unavailability of injunctive relief under
section 526a when based on a penal law were neither raised nor determined in the first
appeal. Whether section 3369 barred injunctive relief for the alleged illegal expenditure
claims was not an explicit or implicit ground of the decision. (Morohoshi, supra, 34
Cal.4th at p. 492.) Our first decision did not state a rule of law necessary to the decision
of the case that we may apply in this subsequent appeal to resolve the section 3369 issue.
(Greene v. Bank of America (2015) 236 Cal.App.4th 922, 932; Sefton v. Sefton (2015)
236 Cal.App.4th 159, 172, fn. 6 (Sefton).)
It also cannot “fairly be said that determination of the issue was essential to the
decision.” (Estate of Horman, supra, 5 Cal.3d at p. 74; Gyerman v. United States Lines
Co., supra, 7 Cal.3d at p. 498.) Courts have concluded the determination of an issue was
essential to an appellate decision when the first opinion could not have been written had
the court not rejected the arguments advanced in subsequent proceedings. Thus, in
Nevcal Enterprises, Inc. v. Cal-Neva Lodge, Inc. (1963) 217 Cal.App.2d 799, the first
appellate court concluded a contract concerning property in Nevada was enforceable in
4
California. Law of the case applied in a second proceeding to prevent consideration of
the argument that the same contract was illegal under Nevada law. Although the
argument was not explicitly rejected in the first opinion, the second court concluded the
validity of the contract under Nevada law was an “essential condition precedent to the
previous determination of the contract’s enforceability in California[.]” (Id. at p. 804.)
Similarly, in Puritan Leasing Co. v. Superior Court (1977) 76 Cal.App.3d 140, 149, a
decision that a particular lease was valid and enforceable implicitly rejected the argument
that the lease was unenforceable for mistake or fraud.
In Yu v. Signet Bank/Virginia (2002) 103 Cal.App.4th 298 (Yu), in a first appeal,
the court reversed a summary judgment after concluding there were triable issues of fact
as to abuse of process and unlawful business practice claims arising out of alleged distant
forum abuse. Law of the case prevented the defendants from subsequently arguing a
California Supreme Court case relied upon in the first appeal was wrongly decided.
The doctrine also prevented the defendants from asserting the plaintiffs failed to state a
claim because the defendants’ conduct was protected by the litigation privilege and the
First Amendment. The court reasoned the issue of whether the plaintiffs had a cause of
action for abuse of process under existing precedent remained the same and the
defendants had merely “refined their arguments as to that issue.” (Id. at p. 311.)
While this case shares some similarities with Yu, I, unlike the majority, also find
applicable Estate of Horman, a proceeding to determine heirship in which the
government contended certain interests in the decedent’s estate should escheat to the
state. (Estate of Horman, supra, at p. 67.) In a first appeal, the court considered a
judgment finding the survivors had not sufficiently established their relationship to the
decedent. In subsequent trial court proceedings, the state argued for the first time that the
survivor claimants had not appeared and made a demand within a five-year period
prescribed by the Probate Code. Although this argument, if successful, would have
eliminated the claimants’ petition in its entirety in the first appeal, the California Supreme
Court concluded law of the case did not apply to bar consideration of the five-year
5
argument in proceedings after the first appeal. (Id. at pp. 73-74.) The majority
distinguishes Estate of Horman on the ground that the issue raised in the second appeal
was a procedural bar, while the first appeal concerned only the merits. Yet, whether
construed as a procedural issue or a substantive one, the “five-year period” problem was
a threshold issue that was not raised until after the case was returned to the trial court
following the first appeal. The Estate of Horman court concluded the first decision was
not law of the case on the five-year argument because it was not raised by either party,
was not expressly determined by the court, and was not essential to the first decision.
(Id. at p. 74.)
Applying the reasoning of these cases, I would conclude law of the case does not
prevent our consideration of the section 3369 issue in this second appeal. Our first
opinion considered only a narrow issue regarding the justiciability of the plaintiffs’
claims, and concluded there were triable issues of material fact related to alleged illegal
expenditures in connection with Penal Code section 596.5 alone. Whether section 3369
barred any injunctive relief for the alleged illegal expenditure claims was not a ground of
the decision. (Morohoshi, supra, 34 Cal.4th at p. 492.)
Moreover, departure from the rule of law of the case may be appropriate to
prevent an “unjust decision.” (People v. Shuey (1975) 13 Cal.3d 835, 846, abrogated on
another ground as stated in People v. Bennett (1998) 17 Cal.4th 373, 391, fn. 4.) This has
been interpreted, narrowly, to mean when “there has been a manifest misapplication of
existing principles resulting in substantial injustice or where the controlling rules of law
have been altered or clarified by a decision intervening between the first and second
appellate determinations.” (Morohoshi, supra, 34 Cal.4th at pp. 491-492.) Even if law of
the case would otherwise apply to prevent us from considering the section 3369
argument, I would find the “unjust decision” exception appropriate here. As discussed in
greater detail below, in my view, section 3369 and the decision in Nathan H. Schur Inc.
v. City of Santa Monica (1956) 47 Cal.2d 11 (Schur), represent longstanding principles
6
that foreclose the injunctive relief Leider sought for alleged violations of the Penal Code.
(Sefton, supra, 236 Cal.App.4th at p. 172, fn. 6.)
The majority asserts the only injustice to result from application of law of the case
is that the City will be required to rototill the soil in the elephant exhibit and provide the
elephants with a certain amount of exercise. I would agree with the majority’s decision
were this, in fact, the case. I wholly favor ensuring the elephants are properly housed and
exercised. However, I discern another outcome that would result in substantial injustice.
If we refuse to consider the applicability of section 3369, we will affirm ongoing
injunctive relief when no such relief is in fact available. (See Moore v. Kaufman (2010)
189 Cal.App.4th 604, 617 [refusing to apply law of the case where party sought to collect
a large amount based on patently void judgment and debtor faced incarceration for
resisting collection efforts].) This is no minor concern. If injunctive relief was not
available as a matter of law to address the concerns raised by the plaintiff, I view it to be
a substantial injustice that the City should be required, for an indefinite period of time, to
face potential contempt actions for any perceived or alleged failure to comply with the
injunctions. In my view, this would be a substantial injustice, warranting a departure
from the rule of law of the case, even if it would otherwise apply here.
Further, in light of the procedural posture of this case, the concerns motivating the
doctrine of law of the case—judicial economy and the desire to “ ‘avoid the further
reversal and proceedings on remand that would result if the initial ruling were not
adhered to in a later appellate proceeding’ ” (Nally v. Grace Community Church (1988)
47 Cal.3d 278, 302)—are not present here. Considering the City’s arguments raised in
this appeal has the potential to simply terminate the case, and would not lead to a remand
for further proceedings. I therefore would consider whether section 3369 prohibited the
issuance of an injunction as relief on Leider’s section 526a illegal expenditure claims
based on alleged violations of the Penal Code.
7
B. Civil Code Section 3369 Barred Leider’s Section 526a Claims Seeking
Enforcement of Penal Laws
i. Civil Code Section 3369
Civil Code section 3369 provides: “Neither specific nor preventive relief can be
granted to enforce a penalty or forfeiture in any case, nor to enforce a penal law, except
in a case of nuisance or as otherwise provided by law.” The statute was enacted in 1872
as merely “the expression of the fundamental rule that courts of equity are not concerned
with criminal matters and they cannot be resorted to for the prevention of criminal acts,
except where property rights are involved.” (Perrin v. Mountain View Mausoleum Ass’n
(1929) 206 Cal. 669, 671 (Perrin), citing Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence (2d Ed.)
pp. 4291-4292.) Thus, in cases in which the State seeks an injunction to prevent or stop
criminal behavior, courts have generally denied relief under section 3369, unless there is
evidence that the behavior, in addition to violating a penal law, also constitutes a public
nuisance. (People ex rel. Gallo v. Acuna (1997) 14 Cal.4th 1090 (Acuna)[acts of conduct
which qualify as public nuisances are enjoinable as civil wrongs or prosecutable as
criminal misdemeanors]; People v. Lim (1941) 18 Cal.2d 872, 880-882 (Lim) [urging
caution on criminal injunctions and keeping nuisance exception narrow, but concluding
complaint stated cause of action where People alleged gambling house drew crowds of
disorderly people who disturbed the peace and obstructed traffic]; Monterey Club v.
Superior Court (1941) 48 Cal.App.2d 131, 144-150 [rejecting injunction to abate
gambling operation alleged to be in violation of ordinance; no evidence of a public
nuisance]; People v. Steele (1935) 4 Cal.App.2d 206, 211 [refusing injunction to prevent
chiropractors from engaging in certain types of treatment; rejecting argument that the
treatment methods constituted nuisance in the absence of a statute prohibiting them];
People v. Seccombe (1930) 103 Cal.App. 306, 309-313 [no injunction to restrain
defendant from pursuing the “occupation of usurer”]; Weis v. Superior Court of San
Diego County (1916) 30 Cal.App. 730, 731-732 [injunction was permissible to abate
public nuisance of exhibition of naked women].)
8
Similarly, private citizens may not secure an injunction to enforce a penal law,
unless an exception under section 3369 applies. (Major v. Silna (2005) 134 Cal.App.4th
1485, 1498-1499 [in anti-SLAPP motion party failed to demonstrate probability of
prevailing where complaint attempted to enjoin another individual’s alleged violation of a
municipal campaign finance ordinance]; Perrin, supra, 206 Cal. at pp. 670, 674
[injunction denied to plaintiff seeking to enjoin defendants from constructing or operating
mausoleum; despite being convicted of violating ordinances, defendants continued
operations; complaint did not state facts constituting nuisance per se or that plaintiff
suffered some exceptional damage]; Smith v. Collison (1931) 119 Cal.App. 180, 183-184
[injunction allowed to restrain defendants from opening a store in violation of a zoning
ordinance on ground the erection of the store would create a nuisance and plaintiffs
would suffer exceptional damage]; Stegner v. Bahr & Ledoyen, Inc. (1954)
126 Cal.App.2d 220, 231 (Stegner) [no injunction where plaintiffs failed to prove the
operation of rock quarry constituted a nuisance or would cause them legal injury;
plaintiffs were seeking solely to enforce a penal law].)
A limited number of early cases took a broad view of the availability of an
injunction when allegedly criminal conduct was involved. These cases either expansively
interpreted the definition of nuisance, or suggested acts could be enjoined if, in addition
to being crimes, they also adversely affected the plaintiff’s property rights. (See e.g.,
In Herald v. Glendale Lodge No. 1289 (1920) 46 Cal.App. 325, 327, 333 [plaintiff
allowed injunction to restrain lodge from serving alcohol to members in violation of city
ordinance on theory that fine or attorney fees might cause club members, including
plaintiff, pecuniary loss]; In re Wood (1924) 194 Cal. 49, 52-57(Wood) [state allowed
injunction ordering Industrial Workers of the World to cease attempts to prevent
conspiracy to damage property and enjoining acts of criminal syndicalism].)
9
But in Lim, supra, the California Supreme Court took a more constrained approach
and established the standard and reasoning adopted in most subsequent cases regarding
the limited availability of injunctions to prevent crimes. (Acuna, supra, 14 Cal.4th at
pp. 1106-1107 [describing Lim as articulating an important limitation on the scope of the
government’s power to exploit the public nuisance injunction].) In Lim, the state sought
an injunction to restrain the defendants from operating a gambling establishment.
On appeal, the People argued gaming houses were inherent public nuisances and they
could therefore be enjoined, despite the section 3369 prohibition. In analyzing this claim,
the California Supreme Court acknowledged courts had issued injunctions against
criminal conduct if that conduct constituted a nuisance. (Lim, supra, 18 Cal.2d at
pp. 877-878.) But the court rejected any broadening of the exception by judicial
expansion of the public nuisance doctrine beyond the statutory definition set forth in
former Civil Code section 3479.2 (Id. at p. 878.)
The court offered a narrow interpretation of its earlier holding in Wood: “The case
of [Wood], which has been severely criticized . . . held only that the injunction granted
was not void even though conceivably erroneous. This was so because the conspiracy
there involved could be considered a public nuisance as a threatened impairment of the
free use of property of the citizens of the state.” (Lim, at pp. 878-879.) The court
explained “compelling reasons of policy require that the responsibility for establishing
those standards of public morality, the violations of which are to constitute public
nuisances within equity’s jurisdiction, should be left with the legislature.” (Id. at pp. 879-
880.) The court further reasoned:
2 Former Civil Code section 3479 stated: “Anything which is injurious to health, or
is indecent or offensive to the senses, or an obstruction to the free use of property, so as
to interfere with the comfortable enjoyment of life or property, or unlawfully obstructs
the free passage or use, in the customary manner, of any navigable lake, or river, bay,
stream, canal, or basin, or any public park, square, street, or highway, is a nuisance.”
(Amended by Code Am. 1873-74, ch. 612, § 284.)
10
“Conduct against which injunctions are sought in behalf of the public is frequently
criminal in nature. While this alone will not prevent the intervention of equity where a
clear case justifying equitable relief is present [citations], it is apparent that the equitable
remedy has the collateral effect of depriving a defendant of the jury trial to which he
would be entitled in a criminal prosecution for violating exactly the same standards of
public policy. [Citations.] The defendant also loses the protection of the higher burden
of proof required in criminal prosecutions and, after imprisonment and fine for violation
of the equity injunction, may be subjected under the criminal law to similar punishment
for the same acts. For these reasons equity is loath to interfere where the standards of
public policy can be enforced by resort to the criminal law, and in the absence of a
legislative declaration to that effect, the courts should not broaden the field in which
injunctions against criminal activity will be granted. Thus, for the reasons set forth, the
basis for an action such as this must be found in our statutes rather than by reference to
the common law definitions of public nuisance.” (Id. at pp. 880-881.)
Lim firmly established the general rule that in the absence of other specific
statutory authorization, a court may not grant the state an injunction to enforce a penal
law, unless the conduct to be enjoined is a nuisance. Subsequent courts applied the same
rule in denying injunctions to private citizens when the purpose of the injunction was
simply to enforce a penal law, and the enjoined conduct was not also a nuisance, or unfair
competition after section 3369 was amended to include that exception. (See Acuna,
supra, 14 Cal.4th at pp. 1106-1107; Stegner, supra, 126 Cal.App.2d at pp. 231-232;
International Etc. Workers v. Landowitz (1942) 20 Cal.2d 418, 422-423 (Landowitz);
People v. Brophy (1942) 49 Cal.App.2d 15, 31-32.)
ii. Schur
The question in this case is whether the section 526a claims based on the Zoo’s
alleged violations of Penal Code sections 596.5, 597, 597t, and 597.1, run afoul of section
3369’s prohibition against injunctions to enforce a penal law. In Schur, the California
Supreme Court concluded section 3369 barred a court from issuing an injunction under
section 526a to prevent expenditures alleged to be in violation of the Penal Code.
Schur concerned antigambling laws in the Penal Code and a Santa Monica
ordinance governing the issuance of licenses for gambling establishments. As relevant
here, the case involved a suit by the Nathan Schur corporation (Schur) against the city of
11
Santa Monica and its police chief. Schur alleged the city’s ordinance allowing issuance
of licenses for certain games was illegal under Penal Code section 337. (Schur, supra, 47
Cal.2d. at pp. 12-13.) Under Penal Code section 337: “Every state, county, city, city and
county, town, or judicial district officer, or other person who shall . . . issue, deliver, or
cause to be given or delivered to any person or persons, any license, permit, or other
privilege, giving, or pretending to give, any authority or right to any person or persons to
carry on . . . any game or games which are forbidden or prohibited by Section 330 of said
code; and any of such officer or officers who shall vote for the passage of any ordinance
or by-law, giving . . . any person or persons any authority or privilege to open . . . or
cause to be opened . . . any game or games prohibited by said Section 330 of the Penal
Code, is guilty of a felony.”
Schur also alleged the city and police chief had issued illegal licenses to several
plaintiffs, (“Troeger licensees”), for games which violated the Penal Code. Schur’s
complaint alleged “that because of the invalidity of the city laws and the licensing
thereunder the city is illegally spending money in such licensing and in policing the
games.” (Schur, supra, 47 Cal.2d at p. 13.) Before trial, the Troeger licensees attempted
to renew their gaming licenses. The city council held a noticed public hearing on the
renewal applications. Schur’s principal testified before the city council in opposition to
the renewal application. Following the hearing, the city council concluded the Troeger
licensees’ games did not violate the Penal Code antigambling laws and they were entitled
to licenses. (Id. at pp. 13-14.) Despite the city council determination, the police chief
continued to refuse to issue the licenses. (Ibid.) The Troeger licensees filed a
supplemental complaint challenging the city police chief’s refusal to renew their gaming
licenses. After a trial on the Schur and Troeger licensees complaints, the trial court found
the city was illegally licensing the challenged games. The court enjoined the city from
expending public funds to license games operated in violation of the Penal Code.
The Troeger licensees appealed. (Id. at p. 14.)
12
The California Supreme Court framed the issue presented in Schur’s complaint as
follows: “Basically the action was to enjoin the city officials from possibly committing a
crime by issuing licenses for gambling games contrary to state law, although it was also
asked that they be restrained from expending the city funds involved in issuing these
particular licenses, and that is as far as the judgment went in regard to preventative relief,
it did declare the games were contrary to the state laws.” (Schur, at p. 17.) The court
then held the judgment could not stand, for two reasons. First, the court held city
officials had the authority to determine whether the challenged games were legal, and the
only appropriate avenue to challenge that decision was a review without independent
evidence. (Ibid.) Second, the court stated “that unless the conduct complained of
constitutes a nuisance as declared by the Legislature, equity will not enjoin it even if it
constitutes a crime, as the appropriate tribunal for the enforcement of the criminal law is
the court in an appropriate criminal proceeding.” (Ibid.)
The court acknowledged that “a taxpayer may obtain preventive relief against the
illegal expenditure of funds by a municipal corporation. (Code Civ. Proc., § 526a;
Simpson v. City of Los Angeles, 40 Cal.2d 271.)” (Schur, at p. 17.) Yet, the court again
employed two lines of reasoning to explain why section 526a did not permit the relief
issued by the trial court. The court first stated that despite section 526a, when a
municipal corporation has, pursuant to valid authority, made a quasi-judicial decision
regarding the issuance of a license, the only available relief is a review of that decision by
a writ of mandamus or certiorari. A municipal corporation is not “required to justify its
actions in a trial de novo in the court whether the one attacking its determination is a
taxpayer or one of the applicants for a license.” (Id. at p. 17.) The court noted there had
been a public hearing on whether the Troeger licenses violated the Penal Code; notice
was provided to all concerned, including taxpayers; and Schur participated in the
hearing.3
3 Leider’s amended complaint did not involve alleged governmental actions whose
very legality was the subject of a public hearing or quasi-judicial decision. There were
13
Second, and most relevant here, the court again described the Schur action as
“basically one to enjoin the alleged commission of a crime.” (Schur, at p. 18.) The court
adopted and quoted the Lim court’s analysis regarding California courts’ refusal to grant
injunctions on behalf of the state by a judicial extension of the term public nuisance; the
collateral effects of granting an injunction against criminal conduct; and the direction that
courts should not broaden the field in which injunctions against criminal activity will be
granted. (Id. at pp. 18-19.) Therefore, the judgment enjoining the issuance of the
licenses could not stand. (Id. at pp. 17-18.)
iii. Application to this case
According to the majority, Schur stands only for the proposition that when
administrative review of a quasi-judicial governmental action is available, a taxpayer may
not use section 526a to challenge that action in court. The majority also reads Schur as
inapplicable to this case because the court viewed the action before it as one to enjoin a
crime, instead of as a taxpayer action to stop the illegal use of funds.
I disagree with this narrow reading of Schur and would find it governs the result in
this case. Like the case before us, Schur concerned a taxpayer allegation of illegal
expenditure of government funds. Schur claimed the city and police chief were illegally
expending government funds by issuing gambling licenses for games that violated the
Penal Code; the issuance of such licenses was itself alleged to be an illegal act under
Penal Code section 337. In this case, Leider alleged the City was illegally expending
government funds by abusing elephants in violation of the Penal Code. Our high court in
Schur acknowledged section 526a allows taxpayers to challenge a city’s illegal
expenditure of funds, but it did not accept that such authority extended to enjoining a
crime. Despite section 526a, the court described the action was “basically one to enjoin
the alleged commission of a crime.” Leider’s amended complaint, with respect to
public hearings relating to the City’s decision to expand and redesign the elephant
exhibit. But the record does not indicate that any entity involved in the hearings had the
authority to determine whether the Zoo had violated or would violate the Penal Code in
the operation of the elephant exhibit.
14
allegations based on the Penal Code, is also “basically one to enjoin the alleged
commission of a crime” or crimes. Schur further applied the language of Lim to a case
like this one in which a citizen, rather than the state, sought the challenged injunctive and
declaratory relief, against a governmental entity. Under Schur, section 526a does not
create an exception to section 3369.
I note that at least three other courts have recognized legal principles or statutes
may prevent relief under section 526a where it might otherwise seem to be available.
In Daar v. Alvord (1980) 101 Cal.App.3d 480 (Daar), the court held a taxpayer could not
prosecute a section 526a action seeking injunctive relief to prevent county and city
officials from spending allegedly illegally imposed and collected taxes. Provisions of the
California Constitution and Revenue and Taxation Code prohibit courts from preventing
or enjoining the collection of any tax. (Id. at p. 484.) The court considered whether there
was a conflict between section 526a and the relevant constitutional and Tax and Revenue
Code provisions. It concluded: “We have no difficulty in harmonizing these
constitutional and statutory provisions. We deem that the illegal governmental activity
which is subject to taxpayer challenge in [section 526a] does not include activity
characterized as illegal solely by reason of purportedly illegal tax collection. It can be
argued-but not reasonably so we think-that any expenditure of illegally collected taxes is
per se an illegal governmental activity. We reject any such broad characterization as
contrary to accepted principles of reasonable construction of constitutional and statutory
provisions.” (Id. at pp. 485-486.)
Similarly, in Chiatello v. City and County of San Francisco (2010) 189
Cal.App.4th 472 (Chiatello), the court found the plaintiff lacked standing to prosecute an
action under section 526a seeking to enjoin the collection of a challenged municipal
payroll tax. The reasoning in Daar was not controlling because the case concerned a
municipal, rather than state, tax. However, the Chiatello court explained the principle
that courts should not enjoin the collection of a tax had received judicial recognition for
nearly a century before it appeared in the California Constitution in 1910. (Chiatello, at
15
p. 495.) The court further noted there were no reported decisions in which tax collection
was enjoined, confirming, at least circumstantially, that the power to issue such an
injunction does not generally exist. (Id. at p. 496.) Thus, although the court recognized
there was “considerable force” in the argument that a “ ‘claim for a refund could never
redress the harm that [the plaintiff’s complaint] and Section 526a seek to prevent—the
wasteful expenditure of public monies in implementing an invalid ordinance,’ ” that
argument had to yield to the fact that the remedy sought—enjoining tax collection—“is a
remedy California’s common law had virtually forbidden prior to enactment of section
526a.” (Id. at pp. 497-498.) The court rejected the plaintiff’s contention that section
526a lacked an exception for tax-related cases, reasoning “the statute would have to be
construed to include such an exception because the Legislature would be presumed to
have been aware of the common law aversion to enjoining tax collection.” (Id. at p. 498.)
The court could not grant injunctive relief to prevent tax collection, section 526a
notwithstanding. (Ibid.)
Most recently, in Animal Legal Defense Fund v. California Exposition and State
Fairs (2015) 239 Cal.App.4th 1286 (California Exposition), the appellate court
concluded a taxpayer could not bring a section 526a claim based on a violation of Penal
Code section 597 or 597t, two animal cruelty provisions, both of which were also raised
in Leider’s amended complaint. In California Exposition, the court discussed a prior
case, Animal Legal Defense Fund v. Mendes (2008) 160 Cal.App.4th 136 (Mendes), in
which the court held there is no implied private right of action for a Penal Code section
597t violation. The court held the plaintiffs could not “circumvent the prohibition
recognized in Mendes by couching their claim as a section 526a taxpayer action.”
(California Exposition, supra, at p. 1295.) California Exposition addresses arguments
that were not made in this case. Yet, like Daar and Chiatello, the court found a limit on
the reach of a section 526a action. The court explained: “ALDF seeks to enjoin
defendants from illegally using public resources, as opposed to seeking to enforce the
animal cruelty law. But section 526a does not create an absolute right of action in
16
taxpayers to assert any claim for governmental waste. To the contrary, courts have
recognized numerous situations in which a section 526a claim will not lie. [Citations.]
To this list, we add a claim for alleged governmental waste based on an alleged violation
of Penal Code section 597 or 597t.” (Id. at p. 1298.)
Although Schur did not address the question of a potential conflict between
section 526a and section 3369 as explicitly as the courts did in Daar and Chiatello
regarding tax principles, or as the court did in California Exposition regarding section
526a and the holding in Mendes, I understand Schur as reaching a similar conclusion—
specifically that section 526a does not override the longstanding principle that injunctions
may not issue to enforce a penal law. I find no meaningful basis to distinguish Schur
from this case, or to avoid the conclusion that section 3369 barred the injunctive and
declaratory relief Leider sought on the basis of alleged violations of the Penal Code.
Indeed, on appeal, Leider has offered only two arguments to contend Schur does not
apply in this case. Neither is persuasive, as discussed below.
iv. The 1977 Amendment of Civil Code section 3369 Does Not Change
the Analysis
Leider’s primary response to the City’s argument is that Schur is no longer good
law because it was based on a prior version of section 3369. When Schur was decided in
1956, former Civil Code section 3369, subdivision (1) read: “Neither specific nor
preventive relief can be granted to enforce a penalty or forfeiture in any case, nor to
enforce a penal law, except in a case of nuisance or unfair competition.” (Stats. 1933,
ch. 953, § 1, p. 2482, unchanged until 1963.) Subdivisions (2) through (5) concerned the
injunctive relief available in actions for unfair competition. The statute’s provisions
regarding unfair competition were amended four more times. In 1977, the Legislature
amended section 3369, removing the unfair competition provisions and leaving only the
first subdivision which read and still reads: “Neither specific nor preventive relief can be
granted to enforce a penalty or forfeiture in any case, nor to enforce a penal law, except
in a case of nuisance or as otherwise provided by law.” (Civ. Code, § 3369.) The
17
provisions regarding unfair competition were moved to the Business and Professions
Code. (Legis. Counsel’s Dig., Assem. Bill No. 1280 (1977-1978 Reg. Sess.).) Newly
enacted Business and Professions Code section 17202 read: “Notwithstanding Section
3369 of the Civil Code, specific or preventive relief may be granted to enforce a penalty,
forfeiture, or penal law in a case of unfair competition.”
Leider reasons the pre-1977 version of section 3369 created impermissible
conflicts with statutes such as section 526a, requiring courts to “ultimately emasculate
one statute to honor another.” Essentially, Leider asserts the 1977 amendment was a
legislative response to Schur, or, even if not a direct response, the amendment changed
the law underlying the Schur decision. I disagree with this reasoning as inconsistent with
the language of section 3369, the legislative history, and the relevant caselaw.
In interpreting a statute, our “goal is to divine and give effect to the Legislature’s
intent.”4 (Brodie v. Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd. (2007) 40 Cal.4th 1313, 1324
(Brodie).) “We consider first the words of a statute, as the most reliable indicator of
legislative intent. [Citation.] ‘ “ ‘Words must be construed in context, and statutes must
be harmonized, both internally and with each other, to the extent possible.’ [Citation.]
Interpretations that lead to absurd results or render words surplusage are to be avoided.
[Citation.]” [Citation.]’ [Citation.]” (Tuolumne Jobs & Small Business Alliance v.
Superior Court (2014) 59 Cal.4th 1029, 1037.) We presume as we must that the
Legislature is aware of existing law, including caselaw interpreting a statute, and
decisions relating directly to the legislation enacted. (Borikas v. Alameda Unified School
Dist. (2013) 214 Cal.App.4th 135, 150; People v. Childs (2013) 220 Cal.App.4th 1079,
1104.)
4 The interpretation of a statute is a question of law we review de novo. (Lazarin v.
Superior Court (2010) 188 Cal.App.4th 1560, 1569.)
18
Further, as the reviewing court, “ ‘[w]e do not presume that the Legislature
intends, when it enacts a statute, to overthrow long-established principles of law unless
such intention is clearly expressed or necessarily implied.’ [Citations.]” (Brodie, supra,
40 Cal.4th at p. 1325; Regency Outdoor Advertising, Inc. v. City of Los Angeles (2006)
39 Cal.4th 507, 526.) Nothing in the language of section 3369 as amended in 1977
indicates a legislative intent to overrule the principle established by Schur. Indeed,
when the former and amended versions of the statute are compared, nothing in the
language explicitly or implicitly indicates any change of substantive law.
In fact, the language of some opinions before 1977 suggests courts already
construed section 3369 as not prohibiting injunctive relief “as otherwise provided by
law.” In Landowitz, supra, 20 Cal.2d 418, our high court rejected a claim seeking to
enjoin a violation of a city ordinance. The claim was based on an unfair competition
ordinance that provided for the regulation of competitive practices among cleaners and
dyers, and was “penal in nature.” (Id. at pp. 420-421.) An enabling statute specifically
authorized a person to seek injunctive relief for violations of the ordinance. However,
the enabling statute allowing for injunctive relief was repealed. Because the statutory
authorization for injunctive relief had been removed, and because the ordinance was
penal, the court concluded the plaintiffs’ action “to restrain . . . violation [of the
ordinance] requires specific authorization, in the absence of which it must be held that the
complaint fails to state a cause of action.” (Id. at p. 421.) The unfair competition
exception in section 3369 did not cover the conduct alleged in the complaint. Thus,
“[t]he statutory authority for such an action in equity, which was formerly provided
by . . . the statutes referred to, has now been withdrawn . . . therefore, no cause of action
is stated . . . No other authorization for this action has been called to our attention.”
(Ibid.)
19
This reasoning suggests courts already understood section 3369 to allow injunctive
relief to enforce a penal law when another statute specifically authorized such relief.
In Landowitz, the problem was that the specific statutory authorization had been
withdrawn. A similar idea was alluded to in People ex rel. Chiropractic League v. Steele
(1935) 4 Cal.App.2d 206 (Steele), in which the court refused to allow injunctive relief to
prevent acts which violated a penal statute but were not also a public nuisance. In
response to the People’s petition for rehearing, which in part asserted the consequence of
the decision would be “disastrous,” the court noted: “It is sufficient to point out that if
the legislature had deemed the remedy by injunction necessary to the enforcement of the
acts governing the practice of healing arts it would have been an easy matter to provide
therefor by statute.” (Id. at p. 213.) The apparent recognition of courts, prior to 1977,
that the Legislature could create exceptions to section 3369 in other statutes counters
Leider’s argument that the amended version of section 3369 changed the substantive
law.5
Landowitz and Steele were decided well before Schur. In my view, the most
reasonable interpretation of Schur is not, as Leider argues, that the court had an
impassable conflict and was forced to “emasculate” one statute over the other. Instead,
the Schur court concluded section 526a did not provide a statutory exception to section
3369. As a result, in 1977, over 20 years after Schur was decided, there was no conflict
between section 526a and section 3369. Under Schur, section 526a did not provide an
exception to section 3369. Accordingly, the 1977 amendment to section 3369 replacing
“unfair competition” with “as otherwise provided by law” would not include section
526a.
5 We need not accept the City’s argument that “as otherwise provided by law” refers
only to unfair competition as set forth in Business and Professions Code section 17200, et
seq. Other statutes specifically providing for injunctive relief to enforce a penal law may
fall within the gambit of the “otherwise provided by law” exception of section 3369.
(See e.g., Pen. Code, § 136.2 [court may restrain conduct intimidating or dissuading a
witness or victim].) The point here is that in light of Schur, section 526a is not, and, as
interpreted in Schur, never was, one of those provisions.
20
To the extent the language of section 3369 does not indisputably repudiate any
intent to allow injunctive relief under section 526a for claims based on penal laws, we
also consider the legislative history. (Brodie, supra, 40 Cal.4th at p. 1328.) If, as Leider
argues, the Legislature intended to overrule cases, including Schur, in which courts had
concluded injunctive relief under a particular statute was not available due to section
3369, one would expect this intent to be referenced in the legislative history. It is not.
Instead, the bill effecting the amendment was repeatedly described as a “technical
adjustment.”
For example, in an Assembly Committee on Judiciary Bill Digest, A.B. 1280, the
bill was described as follows: “The Civil Code contains a chapter . . . which contains the
general principles governing injunctive relief. As injunctive relief became more
prevalent in unfair competition cases, a process began of adding provisions to that
chapter which related only to unfair competition cases. As a result of this process there is
now a body of statutory law dealing solely with the enforcement of unfair competition
laws which is located in the wrong part of the codes. [¶] This bill transfers these
provisions, without substantive change, from the Civil Code to a more appropriate
location in the Business and Professions Code.” (Assem. Com. On Judiciary, Digest of
Assem. Bill No. 1280 (1977-1978 Reg. Sess.) May 19, 1977.) Similarly, a Senate
Committee on Judiciary report on A.B. 1280 commented: “This bill merely makes a
technical code adjustment in the location of various statutes relating to unfair
competition.” (Sen. Com. On Judiciary, com. On Assem. Bill No. 1280 (1977-1978 Reg.
Sess.) as amended June 3, 1977.)
The legislative history confirms only a single legislative intent behind the 1977
amendment—a “code adjustment.” The history is devoid of any intent to change any
substantive law, either relating to the general rule under section 3369, or the unfair
competition laws. In light of the caselaw, the language of the statute, and the legislative
history, there is no basis to conclude that by amending section 3369 to replace “unfair
21
competition” with “as otherwise provided by law,” the Legislature intended to effect a
change in the law, or address a problem of conflicting statutes.
The two cases Leider cites to support his argument do not mandate a contrary
conclusion. People v. E.W.A.P., Inc. (1980) 106 Cal.App.3d 315, concerned the scope of
unlawful business practices that could be considered unfair competition under Business
and Professions Code section 17200. The People sought to enjoin the distribution of
obscene matter as defined in the Penal Code. The court noted that while traditionally
courts of equity declined to issue injunctions to enforce penal laws, “the fact that certain
conduct is a crime will not prevent the issuance of an injunction if the conduct also falls
within a specific statute authorizing an injunction.” (Id. at p. 320.) Business and
Professions Code section 17202 provided such specific authorization. (Ibid.)
Similarly, in People v. K. Sakai Co. (1976) 56 Cal.App.3d 531, the People sought
an injunction under former section 3369 to enjoin violations of Penal Code sections
prohibiting the sale of whale meat. Although the alleged conduct violated a penal law,
the action was one seeking to enjoin unfair competition. (See id. at p. 533; People v.
McKale (1979) 25 Cal.3d 626, 633.) Thus, neither E.W.A.P. nor Sakai supports Leider’s
argument. Both cases concerned unfair competition at times when first section 3369,
then Business and Professions Code section 17202, specifically authorized the issuance
of an injunction even if it would also enforce a penal law. Neither case affects the
conclusion that under Schur, section 526a had been construed by our high court as not
providing a similar specific statutory authorization that would take such claims outside of
the general section 3369 prohibition against injunctions to enforce penal laws.
The language of the statute and the legislative history provide ample explanation
for the 1977 amendment that is entirely unconnected to Schur. We have no basis to
impute to the Legislature an intent to overrule Schur. (Brodie, supra, 40 Cal.4th at
p. 1328.)
22
v. Schur Did Not Eviscerate Governmental Liability for “Illegal
Expenditures” Under Section 526a
Leider’s only other argument is that the Schur court’s reasoning, or failing to read
section 3369 as authorizing injunctions under 526a to enforce penal laws, would
eliminate any claim under section 526a for illegal expenditures. I disagree. Schur and
section 3369 only concern actions seeking to enforce penal laws. Many section 526a
claims seeking relief for illegal expenditures concern alleged illegalities that are not penal
but are still unlawful. Thus, in the seminal case of Blair v. Pitchess (1971) 5 Cal.3d 258,
our high court affirmed a judgment issuing injunctive relief to prevent the enforcement of
what the court concluded was an unconstitutional claim and delivery law. Within the
context of illegal expenditures under section 526a, the court held an injunction under
section 526a would properly issue to restrain the enforcement of a statute or other law
that is unconstitutional. (Id. at pp. 268-269.) Even earlier, in Wirin v. Parker (1957)
48 Cal.2d 890, our high court concluded the plaintiff was entitled to seek injunctive relief
to prevent the expenditure of public funds to conduct police surveillance by means of
concealed microphones, on the theory that such surveillance violated the United States
and California Constitutions, and the expenditures were therefore illegal. (Id. at pp. 893-
894; see also Ames v. City of Hermosa Beach (1971) 16 Cal.App.3d 146, 150-151
[rejecting argument that section 526a may not be used to enjoin the expenditure of public
funds to enforce an unconstitutional penal statute].)
In other cases, plaintiffs have stated claims under section 526a for expenditures
that were allegedly illegal because they violated a city charter or other statutory or
municipal codes governing particular types of expenditures (Harman v. City and County
of San Francisco (1972) 7 Cal.3d 150 [alleged violation of city charter provisions
requiring city to obtain 90 percent market value for properties sold]; Terry v. Bender
(1956) 143 Cal.App.2d 198, 204 [charter provision prohibiting city officials from having
an interest in certain contracts involving the city; payment of a bribe to mayor with
respect to city contract violated charter and was illegal payment under section 526a];
23
Crowe v. Boyle (1920) 184 Cal. 117 [if contract was illegal and void becdause it
conflicted with violation of charter provisions, taxpayers had right to prevent such illegal
expenditures]; Osburn v. Stone (1915) 170 Cal. 480 [expenditures allegedly made
without following requirements such as resolution of intention and competitive bids].)
The illegal expenditures prong of section 526a has never been interpreted as
applying only to claims based on alleged violations of penal laws. We need not read
Schur as invalidating a portion of section 526a.6 Further we are bound to follow
California Supreme Court precedent in the absence of any indication that it is no longer
good law. (Auto Equity Sales, Inc. v. Superior Court (1962) 57 Cal.2d 450, 455.)
C. Conclusion
I, like the majority, remain concerned about the conditions of the elephants at the
Los Angeles Zoo, given the record developed at trial regarding the history of
mistreatment and the less than ideal conditions at present. But addressing these concerns
must be done within the confines of California law. No matter the nature of the
underlying evil sought to be remedied, Schur and section 3369 indicate section 526a suits
may not be used to enjoin violations of penal laws. As either pled or proven, I see no
other basis for the relief Leider has sought. I therefore would reverse the trial court
judgment issuing injunctions premised on a violations of the Penal Code.
I therefore, respectfully, dissent.
BIGELOW, P.J.
6 Amicus curiae Animal Legal Defense Fund contends that if this court interprets
section 3369 as prohibiting injunctive relief under section 526a to enforce a criminal law,
such an interpretation will take away a “crucial tool” currently used to “ensure the robust
enforcement of California’s animal abuse statutes, in cases where the government fails to
satisfy its legal obligations towards animals.” Although I am sympathetic to this
argument, we may not interpret statutes of broad and general application with only one
particular policy purpose in mind. Regardless of the required liberal construction of
section 526a, Schur dictates that the statute’s broad reach does not extend to enjoining
alleged violations of penal laws in contravention of section 3369.
24