Filed 3/25/19; On remand from Supreme Court
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION ONE
STATE OF CALIFORNIA
CATHERINE A. BOLING et al., D069626
Petitioners, (PERB Dec. No. 2464-M)
v.
PUBLIC EMPLOYMENT RELATIONS
BOARD,
Respondent;
CITY OF SAN DIEGO et al.,
Real Parties in Interest.
CITY OF SAN DIEGO, D069630
Petitioner, (PERB Dec. No. 2464-M)
v.
PUBLIC EMPLOYMENT RELATIONS
BOARD,
Respondent;
SAN DIEGO MUNICIPAL EMPLOYEES
ASSOCIATION et al.,
Real Parties in Interest.
PETITION FOR EXTRAORDINARY RELIEF from a decision of the Public
Employment Relations Board. Decision affirmed as modified.
Lounsbery Ferguson Altona & Peak, Kenneth H. Lounsbery, James P. Lough and
Alena Shamos for Petitioners Catherine A. Boling, T.J. Zane, and Stephen B. Williams in
No. D069626 and No. D069630.
Mara W. Elliot, City Attorney, and Michael Travis Phelps, Chief Deputy City
Attorney, for Petitioner and Real Party in Interest City of San Diego in No. D069630 and
No. D069626.
J. Felix de la Torre, Wendi L. Ross and Joseph W. Eckhart for Respondent Public
Employment Relations Board in No. D069626 and No. D069630.
Smith, Steiner, Vanderpool and Ann M. Smith for Real Party in Interest San Diego
Municipal Employees Association in No. D069626 and No. D069630.
Smith, Steiner, Vanderpool and Fern M. Steiner for Real Party in Interest San
Diego City Firefighters Local 145 in No. D069626 and No. D069630.
Rothner, Segall and Greenstone, Ellen Greenstone and Hannah Weinstein for Real
Party in Interest AFCSME Local 127 in No. D069626 and No. D069630.
Law Offices of James J. Cunningham and James J. Cunningham for Real Party in
Interest Deputy City Attorneys Association of San Diego in No. D069626 and No.
D069630.
2
I
INTRODUCTION
This case arises from a decision by the Public Employment Relations Board
(PERB) finding that the City of San Diego (City) violated the Meyers-Milias-Brown Act
(Gov. Code, § 3500 et seq.; Act)1 when the City's mayor made a policy decision to
advance a citizens' pension reform initiative (Initiative) without meeting and conferring
with the affected employees' unions (Unions). The California Supreme Court upheld
PERB's finding that the mayor's actions violated the City's meet and confer obligations.
(Boling v. Public Employment Relations Bd. (2018) 5 Cal.5th 898, 913, 919 (Boling).)
The Supreme Court then remanded the matter to this court to "address the appropriate
judicial remedy for the violation." (Id. at p. 920.) We also consider previously
unaddressed challenges to PERB's administrative remedies.
As we shall explain, we decline the Unions' request to invalidate the Initiative as a
judicial remedy because we conclude the Initiative's validity is more appropriately
addressed in a separate quo warranto proceeding. We further conclude we must modify
PERB's compensatory and cease-and-desist remedies to prevent the remedies from
impermissibly encroaching upon constitutional law, statutory law, and policy matters
involving initiatives, elections, and the doctrine of preemption that are unrelated to the
Act. (See Hoffman Plastic Compounds, Inc. v. NLRB (2002) 535 U.S. 137, 144, 147 [122
1 Further statutory references are to the Government Code unless otherwise
indicated.
3
S.Ct. 1275, 152 L.Ed.2d 271] (Hoffman Plastic) [a labor relations board's administrative
remedies may not encroach upon statutes and policies unrelated to the board's enabling
act].)2
Specifically, we modify PERB's compensatory remedy to order the City to meet
and confer over the effects of the Initiative and to pay the affected current and former
employees represented by the Unions the difference, plus seven percent annual interest,
between the compensation, including retirement benefits, the employees would have
received before the Initiative became effective and the compensation the employees
received after the Initiative became effective. The City's obligation to comply with the
compensatory remedy extends until completion of the bargaining process, including the
exhaustion of impasse procedures, if an impasse occurs. We modify PERB's cease-and-
desist remedy to order the City to cease and desist from refusing to meet and confer with
the Unions and, instead, to meet and confer with the Unions upon the Unions' request
before placing a charter amendment on the ballot that is advanced by the City and affects
employee pension benefits and/or other negotiable subjects. As so modified, we affirm
PERB's decision.
2 In interpreting the Act, courts may look to cases decided under analogous
provisions of the federal National Labor Relations Act (29 U.S.C. § 151 et seq.) and of
other California labor relations statutes. (See County of Los Angeles v. Los Angeles
County Employee Relations Com. (2013) 56 Cal.4th 905, 919; Fire Fighters Union v.
City of Vallejo (1974) 12 Cal.3d 608, 617; City of El Cajon v. El Cajon Police Officers'
Assn. (1996) 49 Cal.App.4th 64, 72, fn. 3; Agric. Labor Relations Bd. v. Tex-Cal Land
Management (1985) 165 Cal.App.3d 429, 438; Public Employment Relations Bd. v.
Modesto City Schools Dist. (1982) 136 Cal.App.3d 881, 895–896.)
4
II
BACKGROUND3
A
After concluding the City violated the Act, PERB imposed a compensatory
remedy intended to restore the parties and affected employees to their respective
bargaining positions before the failure to meet and confer occurred and to make affected
employees financially whole. PERB also imposed cease-and-desist and affirmative
action remedies to prevent further violations of the Act.
Specifically, PERB ordered the City to "[m]ake current and former bargaining-
union employees whole for the value of any and all lost compensation, including but not
limited to pension benefits, offset by the value of new benefits required from the City
under [the Initiative], plus interest at the rate of seven (7) percent per annum until [the
Initiative] is no longer in effect or until the City and the Unions agree otherwise."4 We
refer to this remedy as PERB's compensatory remedy or the compensatory remedy.
PERB also ordered the City to cease and desist from "[r]efusing to meet and
confer with the Unions before adopting ballot measures affecting employee pension
benefits and other negotiable subjects." PERB additionally ordered the City "[u]pon
3 The facts underlying PERB's decision and the Supreme Court's decision are
presented at length in Boling, supra, 5 Cal.5th at pp. 904–911. We limit our summation
to those facts necessary to resolve the issues remaining on remand.
4 PERB's remedies specifically applied to "the City, its governing board and its
representatives." Our reference to the City in our discussion of PERB's remedies
includes all these parties.
5
request, [to] meet and confer with the Unions before adopting ballot measures affecting
employee pension benefits and/or other negotiable subjects." We collectively refer to
these remedies as PERB's cease-and-desist remedy or the cease-and-desist remedy.
B
PERB and the Unions request we affirm PERB's administrative remedies. The
Unions also request we, as a judicial remedy, invalidate the Initiative. The Unions assert
this review proceeding is an appropriate forum to address the Initiative's validity because
there are no factual or legal issues to be resolved by another tribunal. PERB takes no
position on the propriety of any judicial remedy but asserts any judicial remedy must be
consistent with PERB's administrative remedies.
The City contends the validity of the Initiative may only be determined in a
separate quo warranto proceeding (see Code Civ. Proc., §§ 803–811).5 The City also
contends PERB's cease-and-desist remedy is unconstitutionally vague and overbroad to
5 "Quo warranto may be brought by the Attorney General 'upon his own
information, or upon a complaint of a private party.' [Citation.] ... 'Although the
Attorney General occasionally brings a quo warranto action on the initiative of that
office, or at the direction of the Governor, usually the action is filed and prosecuted by a
private party who has obtained the consent of the Attorney General, for "leave to sue in
quo warranto." The private party who obtains leave to sue is termed the "relator." The
action is brought in the name of the People of the State of California "on the relation of"
the private party who has been granted permission to bring the action.' [Citations.]"
(Nicolopulos v. City of Lawndale (2001) 91 Cal.App.4th 1221, 1228–1229.)
The Attorney General has the discretion to grant or deny an application to file a
quo warranto action. In determining how to exercise this discretion, the Attorney
General does not attempt to resolve the merits of the controversy. Rather, the Attorney
General determines whether the application presents a substantial issue of fact or law
requiring judicial resolution and whether granting the application serves the public
interest. (Bakersfield Police Officers Association, 95 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 31, 32 (2012).)
6
the extent the remedy can be interpreted to require that the City meet and confer over a
duly certified citizens' initiative prior to placing the initiative on the ballot. The City
further contends, to the extent PERB has directed the City to take actions effectively
nullifying the effects of the Initiative, the City cannot fully comply with these directions
unless the Initiative is invalidated in a quo warranto proceeding because the City has a
duty to enforce the Initiative's provisions.
Like the City, the Initiative's proponents (Proponents) contend the validity of the
Initiative can only be determined in a separate quo warranto proceeding. The Proponents
also contend PERB's compensatory remedy violates their constitutional rights because it
effectively invalidates the Initiative by reversing the Initiative's implementation and
denying the electorate its fiscal benefits. The Proponents additionally contend PERB's
cease-and-desist remedy violates the rights of citizens' initiative proponents because the
City has no discretion to meet and confer over the terms of a citizens' initiative.
III
DISCUSSION
A
We first consider the Union's request for us to invalidate the Initiative in this
review proceeding. Equitable remedies, including declaratory relief, are generally not
available when legal remedies, including quo warranto, are adequate. (Int'l Ass'n of Fire
Fighters v. City of Oakland (1985) 174 Cal.App.3d 687, 693–694 (Fire Fighters).)
Consequently, when the remedy of quo warranto is available, the remedy is exclusive
absent contrary constitutional or statutory authority. (Cooper v. Leslie Salt Co. (1969) 70
7
Cal.2d 627, 632–633; San Ysidro Irrigation Dist. v. Superior Court of San Diego County
(1961) 56 Cal.2d 708, 714–715; Fire Fighters, at p. 694; Oakland Municipal Improv.
League v. City of Oakland (1972) 23 Cal.App.3d 165, 169 (Oakland).)
The remedy of quo warranto is available to challenge "purported irregularities in
the legislative process of a charter amendment which has taken effect." (Pulskamp v.
Martinez (1992) 2 Cal.App.4th 854, 859, citing County of Santa Clara v. Hayes Co.
(1954) 43 Cal.2d 615, 618; Taylor v. Cole (1927) 201 Cal. 327, 333; Oakland, supra, 23
Cal.App.3d at p. 169.) Because the voters adopted the Initiative and the Initiative has
taken effect, the Initiative's procedural regularity may only be challenged in a quo
warranto proceeding. (City of Palo Alto v. Public Employment Relations Bd. (2016) 5
Cal.App.5th 1271, 1301 (City of Palo Alto); Fire Fighters, supra, 174 Cal.App.3d at
p. 694.)
There is some authority allowing a court in a mandamus proceeding to decide a
quo warranto issue (i.e., title to public office), when the quo warranto issue is incidental
to the mandamus issue. (See, e.g., Stout v. Democratic County Cent. Committee (1952)
40 Cal.2d 91, 93–94.) However, in such circumstance, the court's inquiry into and
determination of the quo warranto issue may not extend any further than necessary to
resolve the mandamus issue. (Morton v. Broderick (1897) 118 Cal. 474, 481 ["[W]hen
the writ [of mandate] is invoked to enforce a specific duty, and remedies at law are not
adequate, aid will not be refused merely because occupancy or incumbency or title is
incidentally involved. It will act under such circumstances as does equity, and inquire
into and determine rights so far as, but no further than, may be necessary to the granting
8
of the relief sought."]; 43 Cal.Jur.3d (2018) Mandamus and Prohibition, § 20.)
Assuming, without deciding, this authority applies by analogy to this review proceeding,
the Unions have not argued we should apply it. They also have not established it is
necessary for us to decide the validity of the Initiative now. Instead, there are compelling
reasons why the decision should wait for resolution in a separate quo warranto
proceeding.
The question of the Initiative's validity is a novel one. The determination of
compensation for employees of charter cities is a matter of local rather than statewide
concern. (Cal. Const. art. 11, § 5, subd. (b); County of Riverside v. Superior Court (2003)
30 Cal.4th 278, 288–289; Sonoma County Org. of Public Employees v. County of Sonoma
(1979) 23 Cal.3d 296, 316–317.) Local employee compensation decisions are
presumptively subject to initiative absent a clear showing of a contrary Legislative intent.
(Voters for Responsible Retirement v. Board of Supervisors (1994) 8 Cal.4th 765, 777
(Voters).) "[P]rocedural requirements imposed on the Legislature or local governments
are presumed not to apply to the initiative power absent evidence that such was the
intended purpose of the requirements. [Citations.]" (California Cannabis Coalition v.
City of Upland (2017) 3 Cal.5th 924, 942, italics omitted; accord, Friends of Sierra
Madre v. City of Sierra Madre (2001) 25 Cal.4th 165, 189 [imposing statutory
prerequisites on voter-sponsored initiatives may be an impermissible burden on the
electors' constitutional power to legislate by initiative]; DeVita v. County of Napa (1995)
9 Cal.4th 763, 785 (DeVita) ["the existence of procedural requirements for the adoptions
of local ordinances generally does not imply a restriction of the power of initiative"];
9
Native American Sacred Site & Environmental Protection Assn. v. City of San Juan
Capistrano (2004) 120 Cal.App.4th 961, 968 [regardless of the substantive law involved,
a voter-sponsored initiative is not subject to the procedural requirements imposed on a
statute or ordinance proposed and adopted by a legislative body].) Thus, contrary to the
Unions' assertion, the City's failure to comply with the Act before placing the Initiative
on the ballot does not necessarily invalidate the Initiative. (Associated Home Builders
etc., Inc. v. City of Livermore (1976) 18 Cal.3d 582, 594 [procedural requirements
governing city council action generally do not apply to a voter-sponsored initiative and
noncompliance with the procedural requirements does not invalidate the initiative].)
Nonetheless, the Supreme Court has previously stated the citizens' reserved power
of local referendum must yield in appropriate cases to the Act's requirements. (See
Voters, supra, 8 Cal.4th at p. 769.) The Supreme Court explained the Legislature has the
authority to restrict local referendums both from exceptions impliedly found in the state
constitution as well as "from its power to enact general laws of statewide importance that
override local legislation." (Voters, supra, at p. 779.) " 'The state's plenary power over
matters of statewide concern is sufficient authorization for legislation barring local
exercise of initiative and referendum as to matters which have been specifically and
exclusively delegated to a local legislative body.' [Citation.] [¶] Thus, the Legislature
may restrict the right of referendum if this is done as part of the exercise of its plenary
power to legislate in matters of statewide concern." (Ibid.) Because the Act embodies
matters of statewide concern, the Supreme Court concluded the Act, coupled with a
Government Code provision requiring a county ordinance adopting or implementing a
10
memorandum of understanding with an employee organization to take effect
immediately, evidenced an unmistakable legislative intent to preclude such ordinances
from being subject to local referendum. (Voters, at p. 780; DeVita, supra, 9 Cal.4th at p.
776 ["The presumption in favor of the right of initiative is rebuttable upon a definite
indication that the Legislature, as part of the exercise of its power to preempt all local
legislation in matters of statewide concern, has intended to restrict that right"].)
In reaching its conclusion, the Supreme Court noted there was no requirement for
comparable city ordinances to take effect immediately, and the Court expressly declined
to decide whether its holding otherwise applied to cities. (Voters, supra, 8 Cal.4th at
pp. 782, fn. 4, 784, fn. 6.) However, as PERB alludes to in its decision, the Initiative's
validity may depend on whether, under the general reasoning in the Voters case, the Act
wholly or partially preempts citizens' initiatives on matters within the Act's scope of
bargaining.
PERB's decision includes arguments in favor of preemption, but PERB did not
decide this question. The question is, therefore, beyond the scope of our review of
PERB's decision. Additionally, as the City points out in its briefing and at oral argument,
there may be interested persons, including the Attorney General and unrepresented
employees subject to the Initiative, who may wish to address the question, but who are
not parties to this review proceeding. The Proponents may also wish to present evidence
on the question, which they did not have an opportunity to do in this proceeding.
11
Consequently, we conclude the question is more appropriately decided in a separate quo
warranto proceeding.6
B
1
We next consider the propriety of PERB's administrative remedies. The parties do
not dispute PERB has broad powers to remedy a violation of the Act. (City of Palo Alto,
supra, 5 Cal.App.5th at p. 1310; International Assn. of Firefighters, Local 230 v. City of
San Jose (2011) 195 Cal.App.4th 1179, 1214; see § 3509, subd. (b) ["The initial
determination as to whether the charge of unfair practice is justified and, if so, the
appropriate remedy to effectuate the purposes of [the Act], shall be a matter within the
exclusive jurisdiction of [PERB] ... ."]; see also § 3541.3, subd. (i) [PERB has the power
and duty "[t]o investigate unfair practice charges or alleged violations of this chapter, and
take any action and make any determinations in respect of these charges or alleged
violations as [PERB] deems necessary to effectuate the policies of this chapter ..."];
§ 3541.3, subd. (n) [PERB has the power and duty "[t]o take any other action as [PERB]
6 During oral argument, the Unions asserted for the first time we should reform the
Initiative in a manner that would render the Initiative void and unenforceable as to the
employees represented by the Unions. The Unions have forfeited this assertion by failing
to raise it in their briefs. (See People v. Freeman (1994) 8 Cal.4th 450, 487, fn. 3.)
Further, before we could consider whether to reform the Initiative in the manner
requested, we would first need to conclude the Initiative is invalid as to the employees
represented by the Unions. For the reasons previously discussed, we conclude this
review proceeding is not the appropriate forum to decide this question.
12
deems necessary to discharge its powers and duties and otherwise to effectuate the
purposes of this chapter"].)
The parties also do not dispute PERB has the authority to impose the types of
remedies it imposed in this case. (See § 3541.5, subd. (c) ["[PERB] shall have the power
to issue [an] ... order directing an offending party to cease and desist from the unfair
practice and to take such affirmative action, including but not limited to the reinstatement
of employees with or without back pay, as will effectuate the policies of this chapter"];
Cal. Code Regs., tit. 8, § 32325 ["[PERB] shall have the power to issue a decision and
order in an unfair practice case directing an offending party to cease and desist from the
unfair practice and to take such affirmative action ... as will effectuate the policies of the
applicable statute"].) Rather, the parties dispute whether PERB has the authority to
impose remedies that effectively invalidate the Initiative, or at least assume the Initiative
is invalid or will be invalidated.
We review PERB's remedial orders for abuse of discretion. (See Oakland Unified
Sch. Dist. v. Public Employment Relations Bd. (1981) 120 Cal.App.3d 1007, 1015.)
Generally, a "remedial order 'should stand unless it can be shown that the order is a patent
attempt to achieve ends other than those which can be fairly said to effectuate the policies
of the Act.' [Citations.]" (Carian v. Agricultural Labor Relations Bd. (1984) 36 Cal.3d
654, 674; accord, Tri-Fanucchi Farms v. Agric. Labor Relations Bd. (2017) 3 Cal.5th
1161, 1168–1169; Jasmine Vineyards, Inc. v. Agricultural Labor Relations Bd. (1980)
113 Cal.App.3d 968, 982 ["It is only when the remedies ordered by the Board are
patently outside the Board's authority that a reviewing court can interfere"].)
13
Nonetheless, PERB's remedial orders may not be punitive. (Superior Farming Co.
v. Agric. Labor Relations Bd. (1984) 151 Cal.App.3d 100, 123.) They may not violate
the separation of powers doctrine. (City of Palo Alto, supra, 5 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1310–
1311.) And, they may not encroach upon statutes and policies unrelated to the Act and,
therefore, outside of PERB's competence to administer. (See Hoffman Plastic, supra,
535 U.S. 137 at pp. 144, 147.)
2
With these principles in mind, we first consider the propriety of PERB's
compensatory remedy. "Restoration of the status quo is the normal remedy for a
unilateral change in working conditions or terms of employment without permitting
bargaining members' exclusive representative an opportunity to meet and confer over the
decision and its effects. [Citation.] This is usually accomplished by requiring the
employer to rescind the unilateral change and to make employees 'whole' from losses
suffered as a result of the unlawful unilateral change. [Citations.]" (Cal. State
Employees' Ass'n v. Public Employment Relations Bd. (1996) 51 Cal.App.4th 923, 946.)
In its current form, PERB's compensatory remedy essentially invalidates the
Initiative by rendering the Initiative perpetually ineffectual. As we previously explained,
because the question of the Initiative's validity is novel, complex, and outside the scope
of our review of PERB's decision, the question is more appropriately decided in a
separate quo warranto proceeding. (See part III.A., ante.) Meanwhile, the Initiative is
presumptively valid. (See Professional Engineers in California Government v. Kempton
(2007) 40 Cal.4th 1016, 1042; see also San Francisco v. Cooper (1975) 13 Cal.3d 898,
14
915 & fn. 7 [under the separation of powers doctrine, which applies to local legislative
actions, "in the absence of some overriding constitutional, statutory or charter
proscription, the judiciary has no authority to invalidate duly enacted legislation."]
Accordingly, any action by PERB effectively invalidating the Initiative or assuming the
Initiative is or will be invalidated impermissibly encroaches on constitutional law,
statutory law, and policy matters involving initiatives, elections, and the doctrine of
preemption that are unrelated to the Act.
When, as here, PERB has no power to directly undo an action, PERB's remedy is
not to indirectly undo the action or treat the action as if it has been or will be undone.
Instead, PERB's remedy is to order bargaining over the effects of the action and backpay
for the affected bargaining unit employees during the bargaining process. (See Highland
Ranch v. Agricultural Labor Relations Bd. (1981) 29 Cal.3d 848, 862–866; El Dorado
County Deputy Sheriff's Assn. v. County of El Dorado (2016) 244 Cal.App.4th 950, 964;
see also Transmarine Navigation Corp. (1968) 170 NLRB 389, 390.)
We have the power under the Act, as we deem just and necessary, "to make and
enter a decree enforcing, modifying, and enforcing as modified, or setting aside in whole
or in part the decision or order of [PERB]." (§ 3509.5, subd. (b).) We shall, therefore,
modify PERB's compensatory remedy to order the City to meet and confer over the
effects of the Initiative and to pay the affected current and former employees represented
by the Unions the difference, plus seven percent annual interest, between the
compensation, including retirement benefits, the employees would have received before
the Initiative became effective and the compensation the employees received after the
15
Initiative became effective. The City's obligation to comply with the compensatory
remedy extends until completion of the bargaining process, including the exhaustion of
impasse procedures, if an impasse occurs. This modification serves the functions PERB
intended. "It is 'compensatory in that it reimburses employees for the losses they incur as
a result of delays in the collective bargaining process.' [Citation.] At the same time 'it ...
reduces the employer's financial incentive for refusing to bargain in order to avoid the
expenses [the employer] would be required to pay if [the employer] had entered into a
collective bargaining agreement.' [Citation.]" (Bertuccio v. Agric. Labor Relations Bd.
(1988) 202 Cal.App.3d 1369, 1390–1391.)
3
We next consider the propriety of PERB's cease-and-desist remedy. As written,
this remedy can be, and in the Unions' view should be, broadly construed to require the
City to meet and confer with the Unions before placing any citizens' initiative on the
ballot that involves matters within the Act's scope of bargaining. So construed, this
remedy assumes the Initiative, or any future similar citizens' initiative, is subject to the
Act's procedural requirements even though this question is novel, complex, and beyond
the scope of this review proceeding. Consequently, like PERB's compensatory remedy,
PERB's cease-and-desist remedy impermissibly encroaches on constitutional law,
statutory law, and policy matters involving initiatives, elections, and the doctrine of
preemption that are unrelated to the Act.
In addition, the cease-and-desist remedy exceeds PERB's authority because it is
not sufficiently tailored to the City's violation of the Act. "The Board's discretionary
16
authority to fashion remedies to purge unfair labor practices ... is contained by the
requirement that the remedy shall be 'appropriate,' [citation], and shall 'be adapted to the
situation which calls for redress,' [citation]. The Board may not apply 'a remedy it has
worked out on the basis of its experience, without regard to circumstances which may
make its application to a particular situation oppressive and therefore not calculated to
effectuate a policy of the Act.' [Citation.]" (NLRB v. District 50, UMW of America
(1958) 355 U.S. 453, 458 [78 S.Ct. 386, 389–390, 2 L.Ed.2d 401, 406].)
To avoid these infirmities, we shall modify PERB's cease-and-desist remedy to
order the City to cease and desist from refusing to meet and confer with the Unions and,
instead, to meet and confer with the Unions upon the Unions' request before placing a
charter amendment on the ballot that is advanced by the City and affects employee
pension benefits and/or other negotiable subjects. This modification prevents the City
from engaging in the same conduct that violated the Act in this case without
impermissibly encroaching on matters more appropriately decided in a separate quo
warranto proceeding. If the Initiative is invalidated in the quo warranto proceeding, then
a broader cease-and-desist remedy is unnecessary. If the Initiative is not invalidated, then
a broader cease-and-desist remedy is unenforceable.7
7 PERB acknowledged at oral argument it intended the cease-and-desist remedy to
be limited to the context creating the need for the remedy.
17
C
We turn now to PERB's assertion that the procedural issue regarding the
Proponents' limited participation in PERB's administrative proceedings is moot. The
Proponents contend the issue is not moot because their exclusion from the administrative
proceedings violated Perry v. Brown (2011) 52 Cal.4th 1116 (Perry).
The Perry case recognized that "since the adoption of the initiative power a
century ago, decisions of both [the California Supreme Court] and the courts of appeal
have repeatedly and uniformly permitted the official proponents of initiative measures to
participate as parties—either as interveners or as real parties in interest—in both
preelection and postelection litigation challenging the initiative measure they have
sponsored." (Perry, supra, 52 Cal.4th at p. 1143.) The Perry case went on to hold "that
when public officials decline to defend a voter-approved initiative or assert the state's
interest in the initiative's validity, under California law the official proponents of an
initiative measure are authorized to assert the state's interest in the validity of the
initiative and to appeal a judgment invalidating the measure." (Id. at p. 1139.) The
holding was expressly limited to judicial proceedings. (Id. at p. 1152.) The Perry case
did not discuss whether the holding would apply by analogy to administrative
proceedings such as occurred here.
We need not decide this issue because, although it is apparent from PERB's
decision that PERB does not believe the Initiative is valid, PERB did not actually
invalidate the Initiative. Moreover, we have concluded the Initiative's validity is beyond
the scope of this review proceeding and must be decided in a separate quo warranto
18
proceeding. Meanwhile, the Proponents have been afforded an opportunity to express
their views on the Initiative's validity before PERB and throughout this review
proceeding. There is no further practical or effectual relief we can provide the
Proponents at this juncture. Accordingly, we agree with PERB that the issue is moot in
this review proceeding. (See Association of Irritated Residents v. Department of
Conservation (2017) 11 Cal.App.5th 1202, 1222 ["[A] moot case is one in which there
may have been an actual or ripe controversy at the outset, but due to intervening events,
the case has lost that essential character and, thus, no longer presents a viable context in
which the court can grant effectual relief to resolve the matter"].)
D
Lastly, we consider the Proponents' request for us to award them attorney fees
against PERB and the Unions under Code of Civil Procedure section 1021.5 or under the
equitable private attorney general doctrine. The Proponents assert that, if this court
upholds the validity of the Initiative, they should receive an award of attorney fees
because they successfully enforced an important right affecting the public interest and
conferred a significant benefit on the general public. Since we have concluded the
validity of the Initiative must be decided in a separate quo warranto proceeding, we deny
the motion without prejudice to being resubmitted in that proceeding, if appropriate.
19
Given this decision, we need not address the Proponents' companion motion for judicial
notice of superior court records from another case.
IV
DISPOSITION
PERB's compensatory remedy is modified to order the City to meet and confer
over the effects of the Initiative and to pay the affected current and former employees
represented by the Unions the difference, plus seven percent annual interest, between the
compensation, including retirement benefits, the employees would have received before
the Initiative became effective and the compensation the employees received after the
Initiative became effective. The City's obligation to comply with the compensatory
remedy extends until completion of the bargaining process, including the exhaustion of
impasse procedures, if an impasse occurs. PERB's cease-and-desist remedy is modified
to order the City to cease and desist from refusing to meet and confer with the Unions
and, instead, to meet and confer with the Unions upon the Unions' request before placing
a charter amendment on the ballot that is advanced by the City and affects employee
pension benefits and/or other negotiable subjects. As so modified, PERB's decision is
affirmed. The Proponents' attorney fees motion is denied without prejudice to being
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resubmitted in a subsequent quo warranto proceeding, if appropriate. Each party is to
bear its own costs in this review proceeding.
McCONNELL, P. J.
WE CONCUR:
HUFFMAN, J.
NARES, J.
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