This lawsuit involves two facets of the San Diego City Employees' Retirement System (the SDCERS) that defendant and respondent City of San Diego (City)
Plaintiff and appellant San Diego City Firefighters, Local 145, IAFF, AFL-CIO (Local 145), a union, and individual plaintiffs and appellants
Plaintiff and appellant Ronald Saathoff is a retired City fire captain who, until 2008, served as president of Local 145. Saathoff also was impacted by City's repeal of the SDCERS program that calculated retirement benefits of incumbent presidents of municipal employee unions (including Local 145) based on a combination of their salary from the City and their salary from serving as union president. Saathoff and Local 145 asserted claims against City arising from the repeal of that program, including for breach of contract, unconstitutional impairment of contract and declaratory relief, and sought a writ of mandate compelling City and the SDCERS Board to reinstate the program and Saathoff's benefits under it.
Saathoff, Local 145 and Firefighter Plaintiffs (together, appellants) contend that the trial court erred in sustaining without leave to amend the demurrers of City and the SDCERS Board. As we will explain, we disagree and conclude the trial court properly sustained the demurrers without leave to amend. Judgment affirmed.
"San Diego is a charter city. It maintains a pension plan for its employees, the [SDCERS]. (San Diego City Charter, art. IX, § 141; San Diego Mun. Code, § 24.0101.) SDCERS is a defined benefit plan in which benefits are based upon salary, length of service, and age. (San Diego Mun. Code, §§ 24.0402-24.0405.) The plan is funded by contributions from both the City and its employees. (San Diego City Charter, art. IX, § 143; San Diego Mun. Code, § 24.0402.) Membership is compulsory. (San Diego Mun. Code, § 24.0104, subd. (a).)" (Lexin v. Superior Court (2010) 47 Cal.4th 1050, 1063
On October 21, 2002, the City Council adopted resolution No. R-297212. It provided that the retirement benefit formula for each of the incumbent presidents of three unions that represent municipal employees would be based on each of those individuals' highest one-year combined salaries from their City employment and their union employment, not to exceed the annual base salary of City's labor relations manager (the Incumbent President Program). At the time, Saathoff was the incumbent president of one of those unions, namely, Local 145.
Consistent with resolution No. R-297212, in October 2003 City entered into a written agreement with Saathoff stating that effective July 1, 2001, Saathoff's salary for purposes of calculating his retirement benefits would be based on his combined City and Local 145 salary, not to exceed the annual base salary of the City labor relations manager, and providing for employer and employee contributions to the SDCERS to be based on that salary amount (the Saathoff Agreement). According to Saathoff, he made lump-sum and biweekly contributions to the SDCERS based on the Saathoff Agreement.
In December 2007, the IRS issued a compliance statement (the IRS Compliance Statement) pursuant to its Voluntary Correction Program,
The IRS Compliance Statement also described the corrective action to be taken regarding the Incumbent President Program, including that "[City] will amend the [SDCERS] retroactively to remove any provisions relating to ... the Incumbent President Program" (italics added) and "[t]he resulting changes to the [SDCERS] will indicate that ... retirement benefits would be based solely on paid compensation and service associated with [City] or other participating employers."
Under the terms of the IRS Compliance Statement, the IRS would not pursue the sanction of disqualification of the SDCERS based on the qualification failures described therein, conditioned on "the completion of all corrections described" within 150 days.
By affixing their representatives' signatures to the IRS Compliance Statement, both City and the SDCERS Board indicated their agreement to its terms on December 20, 2007.
In April 2008, the City Council passed ordinance No. O-19740 to implement the corrections outlined in the IRS Compliance Statement. Among other things, ordinance No. O-19740 retroactively terminated the Incumbent President Program and provided that a union president's base compensation for purposes of retirement benefits "will not include any amounts paid by the labor organization."
A July 2002 memorandum of understanding between Local 145 and City (the 2002 MOU) specified certain changes to the SDCERS, including that employees in the bargaining unit (i.e., the City firefighters represented by Local 145) "will be allowed to convert annual leave cash equivalent to retirement service credit on a pre-tax basis." The 2002 MOU also provided
The Annual Leave Conversion Program was codified in former section 24.1310, subdivision (c) of the San Diego Municipal Code by ordinance No. O-19126 adopted by the City Council in December 2002.
Ordinance No. O-19126 stated that "[a]ny aspect of this ordinance affecting the retirement benefits shall take effect upon approval by the Membership of the Retirement System pursuant to [City] Charter section 143.1 ...." The City Charter, in turn, provided that "[n]o ordinance amending the retirement system which affects the benefits of any employee under such retirement system shall be adopted without the approval of a majority vote of the members of said system." (San Diego City Charter, former art. IX, § 143.1.) In December 2002, a vote of the SDCERS members was held to approve the Annual Leave Conversion Program and other changes to the SDCERS. Out of a total of 10,311 persons eligible to vote, 2,228 persons responded, with 2,193 persons voting in favor of the changes and 35 persons voting against them.
The Annual Leave Conversion Program was put into effect, and Firefighter Plaintiffs each participated in the program. Specifically, Firefighter Plaintiffs each completed and signed a form indicating that he wished to convert his eligible annual leave hours as payment for the purchase of retirement service credit.
The IRS Compliance Statement identified the Annual Leave Conversion Program as noncompliant with section 401(a) of the Internal Revenue Code. As described in the IRS Compliance Statement, "[s]tarting in the plan year
Ordinance No. O-19740 implemented the retroactive removal of the Annual Leave Conversion Program by repealing effective July 1, 2002, section 24.1310, subdivision (c) of the San Diego Municipal Code.
According to appellants, after terminating the Annual Leave Conversion Program City informed members of Local 145 that it would restore members' annual leave and would pay retired members a lump sum equivalent to any annual leave they had converted to retirement service credit.
Within a year after ordinance No. O-19740 repealed the Incumbent President Program and the Annual Leave Conversion Program, appellants filed written claims with City pursuant to Government Code section 945.4 seeking compensation and specific performance from City. City did not respond to the claims, and thus they were deemed to have been denied by City. (Gov. Code, § 912.4, subd. (c).)
Appellants then commenced this litigation by filing, in a single pleading, a verified petition for writ of mandate and a complaint against City and the SDCERS Board.
Firefighter Plaintiffs and Local 145 sought a writ of mandate against City and the SDCERS Board seeking to rescind the repeal of the Annual Leave Conversion Program and to reinstate the corresponding retirement service credit (second cause of action). Firefighter Plaintiffs and Local 145 also asserted claims arising from the repeal of the Annual Leave Conversion Program for (1) breach of contract against City (eighth cause of action); (2) unconstitutional impairment of contract against City and the SDCERS Board (fourth cause of action); (3) violation of public policy against City (sixth cause of action); (4) declaratory relief against City and the SDCERS Board
Based on the repeal of the Incumbent President Program, Saathoff and Local 145 sought a writ of mandate against City and the SDCERS Board (first cause of action). They also asserted claims for (1) breach of contract against City (seventh cause of action); (2) unconstitutional impairment of contract against City (third cause of action); (3) violation of public policy against City (fifth cause of action); (4) declaratory relief against City and the SDCERS Board (thirteenth cause of action); and (5) promissory estoppel against City (fifteenth cause of action).
Arising out of the repeal of both the Incumbent President Program and the Annual Leave Conversion Program, appellants asserted a single negligence claim against City (tenth cause of action).
The trial court sustained demurrers filed by City and the SDCERS Board to each of the causes of action in the petition/complaint. The trial court also denied leave to amend the petition/complaint and it entered judgment and orders of dismissal in favor of City and the SDCERS Board.
"`On appeal from an order of dismissal after an order sustaining a demurrer, our standard of review is de novo, i.e., we exercise our independent judgment about whether the complaint states a cause of action as a matter of law.'" (Los Altos El Granada Investors v. City of Capitola (2006) 139 Cal.App.4th 629, 650 [43 Cal.Rptr.3d 434].) "A judgment of dismissal after a demurrer has been sustained without leave to amend will be affirmed if proper on any grounds stated in the demurrer, whether or not the court acted on that ground." (Carman v. Alvord (1982) 31 Cal.3d 318, 324 [182 Cal.Rptr. 506, 644 P.2d 192].) In reviewing the petition/complaint, "we must assume
Further, "[i]f the court sustained the demurrer without leave to amend, as here, we must decide whether there is a reasonable possibility the plaintiff could cure the defect with an amendment. [Citation.] If we find that an amendment could cure the defect, we conclude that the trial court abused its discretion and we reverse; if not, no abuse of discretion has occurred. (Ibid.) The plaintiff has the burden of proving that an amendment would cure the defect. (Ibid.)" (Schifando v. City of Los Angeles (2003) 31 Cal.4th 1074, 1081 [6 Cal.Rptr.3d 457, 79 P.3d 569].) "[S]uch a showing can be made for the first time to the reviewing court [citation] ...." (Smith v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Ins. Co. (2001) 93 Cal.App.4th 700, 711 [113 Cal.Rptr.2d 399].)
We first examine the claims against City based on the repeal of the Incumbent President Program.
Except for claims for negligence and promissory estoppel, each of the causes of action against City by Saathoff and Local 145 depend on the existence of a valid contract establishing Saathoff's right to the benefits provided by the Incumbent President Program. Specifically, the existence of a valid contract is necessary for Saathoff and Local 145 to prevail on their claims of breach of contract (seventh cause of action), unconstitutional impairment of contract (third cause of action)
Saathoff and Local 145 identify two possible bases for City's contractual obligation: resolution No. R-297212 and the Saathoff Agreement. We consider each in turn.
Saathoff and Local 145 also argue that the Incumbent President Program is a valid contract because it is the subject of an agreement between City and Local 145 that should be treated as a memorandum of understanding as described in the Meyers-Milias-Brown Act (Gov. Code, § 3500 et seq.) (MMBA).
Saathoff and Local 145 point to a recital in resolution No. R-297212 that "the City . . . met and conferred with . . . the . . . unions" and "agreed to base
Saathoff and Local 145 have not identified any written memorandum of understanding between City and Local 145. Resolution No. R-297212 is an action taken by the City Council alone. It is not a "jointly prepare[ed] ... written memorandum of ... understanding" as required by the MMBA. (Gov. Code, § 3505.1.) Therefore, we conclude that the MMBA does not apply here.
Further, even if a jointly prepared memorandum of understanding existed that satisfied the MMBA, that agreement could not be given effect because doing so would conflict with the City Charter requirement that amendments to the SDCERS be adopted by ordinance and be approved by a vote of the SDCERS members. (Domar, supra, 9 Cal.4th at p. 171 ["Any act that is violative of or not in compliance with the charter is void."].)
Although not dependent on the existence of an enforceable contract,
Here, as the trial court concluded, applying the principle of estoppel would operate to defeat the public policy—expressed in the City Charter—of requiring the adoption of retirement benefits by ordinance and after a vote of approval by the SDCERS members. Therefore, we conclude the trial court properly sustained without leave to amend City's demurrer to the promissory estoppel cause of action asserted by Saathoff and Local 145.
The final cause of action by Saathoff and Local 145 against City is for negligence (tenth cause of action).
The cause of action for negligence relies on the respondeat superior exception to governmental immunity and alleges that unidentified "managerial employees" of City and "City Attorneys" did not "act with due care" when "implement[ing] the pension benefit promises." It further alleges that Saathoff and Local 145 "reasonably relied on the superior expertise and knowledge of the City's managerial employees and City Attorneys in determining that the pension benefits promised by the City pursuant to the [Incumbent President Program] were lawful and in full compliance with any federal, state, or city law, rules and regulations." The negligence cause of action incorporates by reference the allegation that in 2004 a deputy city attorney confirmed, in response to an e-mail inquiry from the SDCERS's general counsel, "that he agreed that [resolution No. R-297212] constituted a sufficient authorization for the SDCERS to pay the pension benefits authorized by [resolution No. R-297212]."
To the extent the negligence cause of action by Saathoff and Local 145 is based on the alleged representation of the deputy city attorney that resolution No. R-297212 constituted sufficient authorization for the Incumbent President Program, City is insulated by Government Code section 818.8, which states that "[a] public entity is not liable for an injury caused by misrepresentation by an employee of the public entity, whether or not such misrepresentation be negligent or intentional."
If the negligence cause of action is based on the fact that the City managerial employees or attorneys did not arrange for the Incumbent President Program to be adopted by ordinance rather than by resolution, City has immunity under Government Code section 818.2, which provides that "[a] public entity is not liable for an injury caused by adopting or failing to adopt an enactment...."
Saathoff and Local 145 argue that they can cure any deficiency in the negligence cause of action by amending the petition/complaint to allege that City failed to use due care in adopting the SDCERS provisions that failed to comply with section 401(a) of the Internal Revenue Code, and that City had a duty to adopt different provisions that would have complied with that section. Even with such an amendment, the negligence cause of action would fail because it would be based on an attempt to impose liability on City "for an injury caused by adopting or failing to adopt an enactment," for which City also has immunity. (Gov. Code, § 818.2.)
Thus, we conclude that the trial court did not error when it sustained without leave to amend the demurrer of City to the negligence claim of Saathoff and Local 145.
We next consider the claims asserted by Saathoff and Local 145 against the SDCERS Board arising from the Incumbent President Program, namely, (1) writ of mandate (first cause of action) and (2) declaratory relief (thirteenth cause of action). Those claims both depend on the same allegations as the cause of action for writ of mandate and declaratory relief against City, namely, that an enforceable contract exists concerning the Incumbent President Program.
As we have explained, however, no enforceable contract exists concerning the Incumbent President Program. Therefore, we conclude the trial court did not err when it sustained without leave to amend the demurrer of the SDCERS Board to the first and thirteenth causes of action.
We next examine the claims alleged against City arising out of the repeal of the Annual Leave Conversion Program.
Several of the claims asserted against City by Firefighter Plaintiffs and Local 145 are based on the allegation that City entered into an enforceable contract concerning the Annual Leave Conversion Program. Specifically, without the existence of a valid contract there would be no merit to the claims of Firefighter Plaintiffs and Local 145 against City for (1) breach of contract (eighth cause of action); (2) unconstitutional impairment of contract (fourth cause of action); (3) violation of public policy (sixth cause of action); (4) writ of mandate (second cause of action);
As we have discussed, the 2002 MOU (entered into between City and Local 145 pursuant to the MMBA)
City specifically relies on the "Savings Clause" set forth in article 5 of the 2002 MOU, which provides: "This Memorandum is subject to all current and future applicable federal, state and local laws, regulations and the Charter of City of San Diego. [¶] If any part or provision of this Memorandum is in conflict or inconsistent with such applicable provisions of federal, state or local laws or regulations, or is otherwise held to be invalid or unenforceable by any court of competent jurisdiction, such part or provisions shall be suspended and superseded by such applicable law or regulations, and the remainder of the Memorandum shall not be affected thereby." City argues that the IRS Compliance Statement establishes that the Annual Leave Conversion Program is in conflict or inconsistent with section 401(a) of the Internal Revenue Code, and therefore the provisions in the 2002 MOU relating to the Annual Leave Conversion Program are suspended and superseded. We agree.
The IRS Compliance Statement provides that the SDCERS was amended to include the Annual Leave Conversion Program "in violation of [Internal Revenue Code] section 401(a)." Consistent with this statement, the petition/complaint pleads that the IRS determined in the IRS Compliance Statement "that the Annual Leave Conversion [Program] did not comply with federal law and IRS Regulations." Therefore, the Savings Clause applies because the Annual Leave Program is "in conflict or inconsistent with . . . federal . . . laws or local laws or regulations" as provided therein.
Regardless of whether the conflict with the Internal Revenue Code was caused only by certain aspects of the Annual Leave Conversion Program, the Savings Clause is triggered when the Annual Leave Conversion Program, as described in the 2002 MOU, is in conflict or inconsistent with federal law. The IRS Compliance Statement clearly states that the Annual Leave Conversion Program adopted by City is in violation of Internal Revenue Code section 401(a). Further, the IRS Compliance Statement required that City amend the SDCERS to remove "any provisions relating to the [Annual Leave Conversion Program]" (italics added), not just certain aspects of the program. Therefore, regardless of the fact that City might have designed that program differently to comply with section 401(a), the IRS Compliance Statement establishes that the program, as enacted, did not comply.
Because of the conflict and inconsistency with federal law, the provisions of the 2002 MOU describing the Annual Leave Conversion Program are "suspended and superseded" by operation of the Savings Clause. The 2002 MOU accordingly does not provide a basis for any of the claims requiring the existence of valid contractual obligation on the part of City to provide benefits under the Annual Leave Conversion Program.
Ordinance No. O-19126 (and the portion of the municipal code that it enacted, San Diego Mun. Code, former § 24.1310(c)) provides the second possible source of a contractual obligation cited by Firefighter Plaintiffs with respect to the Annual Leave Conversion Program.
After oral argument in this case, we sought additional briefing from the parties regarding whether there was any legal theory or rule of contractual
Although there are two documents on which contractual rights allegedly originate (e.g., the 2002 MOU and ord. No. O-19126), we independently conclude that both documents relate to an overarching, singular transaction: the creation of a qualified
As we noted above, the 2002 MOU itself was insufficient to confer on Firefighter Plaintiffs any rights to the Annual Leave Conversion Program, given the requirement in the then applicable City Charter authorizing the establishment of a pension system by ordinance only. (See, e.g., San Diego City Charter, §§ 141, 144.)
Specifically, in article 26, subdivision (B) of the implementation articles of the 2002 MOU, City and Local 145 agreed that City "shall act as soon as possible to make the necessary changes in ordinances, resolutions, rules, policies and grievance procedures to conform to this agreement." Moreover, to ensure that ordinance No. O-19126 reflected the same benefit agreed on in the 2002 MOU, the 2002 MOU also required that "[a]ll such changes shall be
The recitals of ordinance No. O-19126 also support our conclusion that the 2002 MOU and ordinance No. O-19126 relate to the same subject matter and were executed by the parties as part of a single transaction. Specifically, ordinance No. O-19126 notes it was enacted after City's "Management Team agreed to implement a number of revisions to the Retirement System" as provided in the 2002 MOU because ordinance No. OO-19121 (e.g., O-2003-67) "did not include the revisions to the Retirement System giving members represented by Firefighters Local 145 the ability to convert on a pre-tax basis a Member's Unused Annual Leave accrued after July 1, 2002," and thus ordinance No. O-19126 was needed to "amend the San Diego Municipal Code to reflect the additional revisions to the Retirement System not set forth in Ordinance No. OO-19121 (O-2003-67)."
Because ordinance No. O-19126 was an inherent part of the 2002 MOU and was specifically enacted to implement the Annual Leave Conversion Program agreed to by the parties in the 2002 MOU (see Neptune Society Corp. v. Longanecker (1987) 194 Cal.App.3d 1233, 1250 [240 Cal.Rptr. 117] [affirming award of attorney fees based on a provision in the promissory notes because the "promissory notes were inherent parts of the [franchise] agreement, which is the subject matter of the litigation..."]), we further conclude that the Savings Clause in the 2002 MOU applies to ordinance No. O-19126.
Indeed, it would make little sense, on the one hand, to enforce the Savings Clause in the 2002 MOU negotiated by the parties, which subsequently applied to suspend the Annual Leave Conversion Program after it was determined by the IRS to contravene federal law, while on the other hand not apply the Savings Clause to ordinance No. O-19126 when that ordinance was part of one transaction (see § 1642), implemented the 2002 MOU and when the parties clearly contemplated at the time of contracting that if any provision (including the Annual Leave Conversion Program) contravened "applicable provisions of federal, state or local laws or regulations, or [was] otherwise held to be invalid or unenforceable by any court of competent jurisdiction," that provision would be "suspended and superseded."
Thus, we conclude the Savings Clause in the 2002 MOU properly applied to "suspend" (e.g., terminate) the Annual Leave Conversion Program as provided in the 2002 MOU and as implemented by ordinance No. O-19126.
We next consider the promissory estoppel claim against City arising out of the Annual Leave Conversion Program (sixteenth cause of action).
Here, we conclude that the promissory estoppel claim fails as a matter of law (see Ward v. Taggart (1959) 51 Cal.2d 736, 742 [336 P.2d 534]) because City did not promise Firefighter Plaintiffs they could participate in the Annual Leave Conversion Program even if that program was found to be noncompliant, which turned out to be the case. (See Cotta v. City and County of San Francisco (2007) 157 Cal.App.4th 1550, 1566 [69 Cal.Rptr.3d 612] [rejecting promissory estoppel claim of taxi drivers who purchased clean air vehicles after the city passed a resolution granting certain benefits to drivers of such vehicles (e.g., an incentive program) because the "facts do not show that the [c]ity promised not to amend the incentive program"].)
In addition, the purpose of the doctrine of promissory estoppel is "`to make a promise binding, under certain circumstances, without consideration in the usual sense of something bargained for and given in exchange. If the promisee's performance was requested at the time the promisor made his [or her] promise and that performance was bargained for, the doctrine is inapplicable.' [Citation.] Accordingly, a plaintiff cannot state a claim for promissory estoppel when the promise was given in return for proper consideration. The claim instead must be pleaded as one for breach of the bargained-for contract." (Fontenot v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. (2011) 198 Cal.App.4th 256, 275 [129 Cal.Rptr.3d 467].)
As was the case with the negligence claim arising from the repeal of the Incumbent President Program, the negligence claim (tenth cause of action) against City by Firefighter Plaintiffs and Local 145 arising from the repeal of the Annual Leave Conversion Program is based on a theory of vicarious liability under Government Code section 815.2, subdivision (a) for the acts or omissions of City's employees.
Firefighter Plaintiffs and Local 145 allege that unspecified City employees failed to use due care in implementing the promised pension benefits. More specifically, with respect to the Annual Leave Conversion Program, we understand Firefighter Plaintiffs and Local 145 to be alleging (or proposing to amend the petition/complaint to allege) that City employees failed to use due care to put in place a program that complied with Internal Revenue Code
However, as was the case with similar claims made with respect to the Incumbent President Program, City is immune because these claims amount to an attempt to impose liability on City for "an injury caused by adopting or failing to adopt an enactment" (Gov. Code, § 818.2) and for "injury caused by misrepresentation by an employee" (id., § 818.8).
We therefore conclude the trial court did not err when it sustained without leave to amend the demurrer to the negligence claim against City arising out of the Annual Leave Conversion Program.
Firefighter Plaintiffs and Local 145 assert a breach of contract claim against the SDCERS Board (ninth cause of action) premised on the allegation that when the SDCERS accepted the forms that Firefighter Plaintiffs filled out to participate in the Annual Leave Conversion Program, the SDCERS Board entered into a contractual obligation with Firefighter Plaintiffs to provide benefits under the Annual Leave Conversion Program. According to the petition/complaint, the SDCERS Board breached that contract when the SDCERS stopped providing benefits under the Annual Leave Conversion Program upon the repeal of the program.
As one basis for demurrer, the SDCERS Board contends that its acceptance of the forms filled out by Firefighter Plaintiffs did not give rise to a contractual obligation on its part to provide benefits under the Annual Leave Conversion Program because the SDCERS Board does not have the authority to create a right to receive benefits under the SDCERS. We agree.
Firefighter Plaintiffs and Local 145 also assert a claim against the SDCERS Board for unconstitutional impairment of contract (fourth cause of action). Although no acts by the SDCERS Board are identified in the petition/complaint's pleading of this claim, Firefighter Plaintiffs and Local 145 explain in their briefing that the SDCERS Board is liable for unconstitutional impairment of contract regarding the Annual Leave Conversion Program because the SDCERS Board president signed the IRS Compliance Statement, and the SDCERS then stopped providing benefits under the Annual Leave Conversion Program.
The SDCERS Board does not pass laws; it administers the retirement program created by City. (See City of San Diego, supra, 186 Cal.App.4th at pp. 79-80.) Although the IRS apparently required that a representative of the SDCERS Board sign the IRS Compliance Statement, we conclude that act did not transform the SDCERS Board into an entity that enacts the provisions of the SDCERS. The trial court therefore properly sustained the demurrer of the SDCERS Board to the unconstitutional impairment of contract claim arising from the repeal of the Annual Leave Conversion Program.
Firefighter Plaintiffs and Local 145 included the SDCERS Board as a defendant in their cause of action for declaratory relief regarding the Annual Leave Conversion Program (fourteenth cause of action). As we have explained, that cause of action seeks the following declarations: (1) that ordinance No. O-19740 is an unconstitutional impairment of contract and (2) that Firefighter Plaintiffs are entitled to benefits under the Annual Leave Conversion Program.
The SDCERS Board argues that to the extent the declaratory relief cause of action raises the issue of unconstitutional impairment of contract arising from
In addition, given our conclusion ante sustaining City's demurrer on the basis that the Savings Clause in the 2002 MOU applied to "suspend" and thus terminate the Annual Leave Conversion Program implemented by ordinance No. O-19126, we conclude for this separate reason that the trial court properly sustained without leave to amend the SDCERS Board's demurrer to the declaratory relief claim.
The SDCERS Board is named in the cause of action in which Firefighter Plaintiffs and Local 145 seek a writ of mandate concerning the Annual Leave Conversion Program (second cause of action). The specific relief that Firefighter Plaintiffs and Local 145 seek regarding the SDCERS Board is an order compelling the SDCERS Board to credit Firefighter Plaintiffs' retirement accounts pursuant to the Annual Leave Conversion Program.
Although the petition/complaint—through the causes of action for writ of mandate against City—seeks the rescission of the ordinance that repealed the Annual Leave Conversion Program, that rescission is only a future possibility: "[A]n applicant for a writ of mandate must show a present duty for the performance of the act sought to be compelled." (California Assn. for Health Services at Home v. State Dept. of Health Services (2007) 148 Cal.App.4th 696, 709 [56 Cal.Rptr.3d 102], italics added.) Because Firefighter Plaintiffs and Local 145 cannot make that showing, we conclude the trial court properly sustained the demurrer to the writ of mandate claim against the SDCERS concerning the Annual Leave Conversion Program.
The final cause of action we consider is Ditomaso's claim against the SDCERS Board for breach of fiduciary duty (twelfth cause of action). Ditomaso alleges that the SDCERS Board breached its fiduciary duty to him, as a member of the SDCERS, by allowing him to participate in and rely on the Annual Leave Conversion Program when—contrary to Ditomaso's knowledge—that program did not comply with Internal Revenue Code section 401(a). According to Ditomaso, the SDCERS Board induced his justifiable reliance on the Annual Leave Conversion Program when he made retirement decisions.
The SDCERS Board argues that it did not have a fiduciary duty to determine and communicate to its members whether the provisions of the SDCERS, enacted by City, complied with section 401(a) of the Internal Revenue Code. It argues that "[t]he City, not [the] SDCERS [Board], was required to ensure the legality of the laws it was enacting to grant benefits to its employees" and thus, the "SDCERS [Board] had no authority to either grant, take away, refuse to pay for, or allow members to participate in, the benefits adopted by the City." According to the SDCERS Board, because its duty was merely to administer those retirement benefits established by City, it could not have breached a duty to Ditomaso by allowing him to participate in the Annual Leave Conversion Program. We agree.
As we have explained, the role of the SDCERS Board is to administer the SDCERS as enacted by City. (See City of San Diego, supra, 186 Cal.App.4th at pp. 79-80.) In light of that limited role, Ditomaso has cited no authority, either in case law, in the City Charter or the municipal code, indicating that the SDCERS Board breached a duty to Ditomaso by permitting him to participate in the Annual Leave Conversion Program.
Ditomaso contends that he could amend his breach of fiduciary duty claim to allege that the SDCERS Board should have attempted to save the Annual Leave Conversion Program from violating Internal Revenue Code section
But City and not the SDCERS Board establishes the provisions of the SDCERS. Therefore, Ditomaso has no legal basis for an allegation that the SDCERS Board had a duty to demand that City put into place an Annual Leave Conversion Program that would not conflict with Internal Revenue Code section 401(a) because Ditomaso has not identified a fiduciary duty on the part of the SDCERS Board that is implicated by this case, we conclude the trial court properly sustained without leave to amend the SDCERS Board's demurrer to Ditomaso's breach of fiduciary duty claim.
We affirm the judgment entered following the order sustaining without leave to amend the demurrers of City and the SDCERS Board. City and the SDCERS Board are entitled to recover their costs of appeal.
McIntyre, J., concurred.
In my view, the trial court erred in sustaining the demurrer to (1) the contract-based and promissory estoppel causes of action against the City of San Diego (City) arising out of the City's repeal of the "Annual Leave Conversion Program," and (2) the cause of action for declaratory relief against the San Diego City Employees' Retirement System (SDCERS) board concerning the Annual Leave Conversion Program.
My colleagues acknowledge the long line of cases establishing that a public agency's pension plan, enacted into law, gives rise to contractual obligations on the part of the public agency. (Betts v. Board of Administration (1978) 21 Cal.3d 859, 864 [148 Cal.Rptr. 158, 582 P.2d 614] (Betts); Miller v. State of California (1977) 18 Cal.3d 808, 814 [135 Cal.Rptr. 386, 557 P.2d 970]; Allen v. City of Long Beach (1955) 45 Cal.2d 128, 131 [287 P.2d 765]; Kern v. City of Long Beach (1947) 29 Cal.2d 848, 855 [179 P.2d 799]
The Annual Leave Conversion Program became part of the City's pension plan (i.e., the SDCERS) through the enactment of ordinance No. O-19126 (and the corresponding portion of the municipal code, San Diego Mun. Code, former § 24.1310(c)). Normally, this would give rise to contractual obligations on the part of the City which, according to the Betts line of cases, could be modified only if the changes are reasonable and any resulting disadvantages to affected employees were accompanied by comparable new advantages. (Betts, supra, 21 Cal.3d at p. 864.) My colleagues conclude, however, that this action should not have proceeded past demurrer to a factual determination of whether the City's modifications to the SDCERS were reasonable and accompanied by comparable new advantages because, in their view, the "Savings Clause" in the 2002 memorandum of understanding (MOU) renders ordinance No. O-19126 and the municipal code ineffective to create any contractual rights under the Betts line of cases. I disagree.
The Savings Clause appears in the 2002 MOU, not in ordinance No. O-19126 or the municipal code. It provides as follows: "If any part or provision of this [2002 MOU] is in conflict or inconsistent with such applicable provisions of federal, state or local laws or regulations, or is otherwise held to be invalid or unenforceable by any court of competent jurisdiction, such part or provisions shall be suspended and superseded by such applicable law or regulations, and the remainder of the [2002 MOU] shall not be affected thereby." My colleagues read this language as an agreement (by Local 145 on behalf of its members) that, in the event the Annual Leave Conversion Program is
I find no support for the majority's conclusion that the Savings Clause applies to ordinance No. O-19126 because, as I will explain, that interpretation of the Savings Clause (1) is not supported by its plain language and (2) impermissibly creates a method of terminating a portion of the SDCERS that is in direct conflict with the method required by the City's charter.
First, the plain language of the Savings Clause does not support my colleagues' interpretation because the Savings Clause, by its own terms, operates to suspend and supersede "any part or provision of this [2002 MOU]." (Italics added.) The Savings Clause says nothing about suspending and superseding an ordinance or municipal code provision enacted as a result of the 2002 MOU. The 2002 MOU and ordinance No. O-19126 are part of the "same transaction" only in that ordinance No. O-19126 was enacted to fulfill the City's agreement in the 2002 MOU to implement the Annual Leave Conversion Program. (Maj. opn., ante, at p. 616.) This causal connection does not, however, transform the plain language of the Savings Clause, which deals with suspension of the 2002 MOU's provisions, into a provision that deals with suspension of the City's pension laws enacted as a result of the agreements in the 2002 MOU.
A much more reasonable reading of the Savings Clause is that it functions as a standard severability clause for the 2002 MOU, which is a 65-page document setting forth numerous agreements concerning the terms and conditions of employment of the members of Local 145. According to established law, the object of a contract must be lawful (Civ. Code, § 1596), and "[w]here a contract has but a single object, and such object is unlawful, whether in whole or in part, . . . the entire contract is void" (Civ. Code, § 1598, italics added). Under Civil Code section 1599, "[w]here a contract has several distinct objects, of which one at least is lawful, and one at least is unlawful, in whole or in part, the contract is void as to the latter and valid as to the rest ... ," but "Civil Code section 1599 grants courts the power, not the duty, to sever contracts in order to avoid an inequitable windfall or
My colleagues state that "it would make little sense" to apply the Savings Clause to the 2002 MOU but not apply it to ordinance No. O-19126. (Maj. opn., ante, at p. 617.) Again, I disagree. There are several scenarios where the Savings Clause would have meaning without applying it to ordinance No. O-19126. First, had the City discovered before enacting the Annual Leave Conversion Program into law that it conflicted with the Internal Revenue Code, the Savings Clause would have saved the City from being compelled, pursuant to its agreement in the 2002 MOU, to enact the Annual Leave Conversion Program as part of the SDCERS. (Huntington Beach Police Officers' Assn. v. City of Huntington Beach (1976) 58 Cal.App.3d 492, 496 [129 Cal.Rptr. 893] ["A written memorandum of understanding negotiated pursuant to the [Meyers-Milias-Brown] Act is, upon approval of the city council, binding upon the parties and performance of the city's obligations under the agreement may be enforced by the traditional mandate proceeding to compel performance of a ministerial duty or to correct an abuse of official discretion."].) Second, without the Savings Clause, if a majority vote of the SDCERS membership failed to approve ordinance No. O-19126, the City would still have been obligated under the 2002 MOU to implement the Annual Leave Conversion Program, even when implementation would conflict with the requirements of the City's charter. Third, when, as here, the Annual Leave Conversion Program was determined to conflict with IRS requirements after its enactment, the Savings Clause operated to lift the City's obligation under the 2002 MOU to maintain the Annual Leave Conversion Program even when doing so would threaten its status as a qualified retirement plan. Because of the Savings Clause, the City was free to save the SDCERS's status as a qualified retirement plan by undertaking modifications of its pension laws within the confines set by the Betts line of cases.
In sum, the most reasonable interpretation of the Savings Clause is that it suspends the portions of the 2002 MOU requiring the City to provide the Annual Leave Conversion Program, but it does not purport to render void
Because the majority opinion relies on the Savings Clause to invalidate ordinance No. O-19126, it did not consider the City's contention that ordinance No. O-19126 was not validly approved by a majority vote of the SDCERS membership and thus could not have given rise to contractual obligations. My view of this case requires that we decide whether ordinance No. O-19126 was approved by a majority vote of the SDCERS members, and I accordingly set forth my analysis of that issue.
My analysis begins with the relevant language of the City's charter. In 2002, when ordinance No. O-19126 was adopted, the City's charter stated that "[n]o ordinance amending the retirement system which affects the benefits of any employee under such retirement system shall be adopted without the approval of a majority vote of the members of said system." (San Diego City Charter, art. IX, § 143.1.) As shown by documents that were judicially noticed by the trial court, the entire SDCERS membership was given an opportunity to vote on whether to adopt the Annual Leave Conversion Program. Out of 10,311 persons eligible to vote, 2,228 votes were cast, with 2,193 votes in favor and 35 votes against adopting the amendments to the SDCERS. Thus, the Annual Leave Conversion Program was approved by a majority of those persons voting. However, because only 2,193 votes in favor were cast out of the 10,311 persons eligible to vote, the Annual Leave Conversion Program was not approved by a majority of the entire SDCERS membership.
According to the City, the result of the vote was not sufficient to approve the Annual Leave Conversion Program, because in referring to "the approval of a majority vote of the members of [the SDCERS]" (San Diego City Charter, art. IX, § 143.1), the City's charter requires an approval of the majority of the entire SDCERS membership, not just the approval of the majority of the SDCERS members who cast a vote.
An analysis of the City's argument requires an interpretation of the City's charter. "`The same rules of statutory interpretation that apply to statutory provisions also apply to local charter provisions.'" (Bohbot v. Santa Monica
The relevant phrase in the City's charter is "majority vote of the members of said [(SDCERS)] system." (San Diego City Charter, art. IX, § 143.1.) Applying a purely grammatical approach to the phrase to ascertain its plain meaning, the word "majority" acts as an adjective to modify the noun "vote." The prepositional phrase "of the members of said [(SDCERS)] system" modifies the word "vote," describing the universe of persons who may participate in the vote. Therefore, according to the plain meaning of the words, the City's charter requires a majority vote of the SDCERS members who participate in the election. It does not require a vote of approval by a majority of the entire SDCERS membership. (See Lake County Sheriff's Merit Bd. v. Buncich (Ind.Ct.App. 2007) 869 N.E.2d 482, 485 [in the context of an election to a police merit board, using grammatical approach to interpret the phrase "`majority vote of the members of the county police force'" to require only a "`majority vote'" of the members who participate in the election].)
This interpretation of the plain meaning of the words is consistent with the definition of the word "majority" in the context of voting as described in Black's Law Dictionary. As described therein, "[a] `majority' without further qualification usu[ally] means a simple majority." (Black's Law Dict. (9th ed. 2009) p. 1040, col. 2.) In turn, a "simple majority" means "[a] numerical majority of those actually voting.... Absent members, members who are present but do not vote, blanks, and abstentions are not counted." (Id. at p. 1041, col. 1.) In contrast, the term "absolute majority" means "[a] majority of all those who are entitled to vote in a particular election, regardless of how many voters actually cast ballots." (Id. at p. 1040, col. 2.) The City's charter did not qualify the word "majority" by indicating that it meant an absolute majority, and therefore the term "majority vote" at issue here plainly means a majority of those actually voting.
As I have discussed, in my analysis neither the 2002 MOU's Savings Clause nor the requirement of a majority vote of the SDCERS members to approve an amendment to the SDCERS invalidates the City's contractual obligations arising under the Betts line of cases based on the enactment of ordinance No. O-19126. Therefore, the City's demurrer did not succeed in establishing the absence of a valid contract for the contract-based causes of action against the City. I would therefore reverse the trial court's ruling sustaining the City's demurrer to the causes of action by the firefighter plaintiffs and Local 145 against the City for (1) breach of contract (eighth cause of action); (2) unconstitutional impairment of contract (fourth cause of action); (3) violation of public policy (sixth cause of action); (4) writ of mandate (second cause of action); and (5) declaratory relief (fourteenth cause of action).
I would also reverse the order sustaining the demurrer on the City's promissory estoppel cause of action relating to the repeal of the Annual Leave Conversion Program (sixteenth cause of action). My colleagues conclude that the demurrer was properly sustained on that cause of action because the Savings Clause established that the City did not promise to maintain the Annual Leave Conversion Program in the event it conflicted with federal law. As I disagree with that interpretation of the Savings Clause, I cannot agree with my colleagues' analysis of the promissory estoppel cause of action. The majority opinion did not discuss the theory advanced by the
In light of my view that the contract-based causes of action against the City arising from the repeal of the Annual Leave Conversion Program should have survived demurrer, I would also reverse the order sustaining the SDCERS Board's demurrer to the declaratory relief cause of action concerning the Annual Leave Conversion Program (fourteenth cause of action). That cause of action sought a declaration, among others, that the firefighter plaintiffs are entitled to benefits under the Annual Leave Conversion Program. The SDCERS Board's demurrer to that portion of the declaratory relief cause of action relied on the City establishing that the Annual Leave Conversion Program did not constitute a binding obligation of the City. As I have concluded that the City's demurrer did not succeed in establishing that principle, I would also conclude that the SDCERS Board's demurrer to the fourteenth cause of action for declaratory relief is without merit.