CA Dept. of Finance v. City of Merced

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 22, 2019
DocketC085761
StatusPublished

This text of CA Dept. of Finance v. City of Merced (CA Dept. of Finance v. City of Merced) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
CA Dept. of Finance v. City of Merced, (Cal. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Filed 3/22/19 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Sacramento) ----

CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE, C085761

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. 34-2016- 80002485CU-WM-GDS) v.

CITY OF MERCED et al.,

Defendants and Appellants;

LISA CARDELLA-PRESTO, as Auditor-Controller, etc.

Real Party in Interest.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Sacramento County, Michael P. Kenny, Judge. Affirmed as modified.

Xavier Becerra, Attorney General, Thomas S. Patterson, Senior Assistant Attorney General, R. Matthew Wise, Deputy Attorney General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.

Best, Best & Krieger, Iris P. Yang, T. Brent Hawkins for Defendants and Appellants.

1 This is an unusual “Great Dissolution” case (see City of Brentwood v. Campbell (2015) 237 Cal.App.4th 488, 491) that turns on basic civil procedure questions.1 The City of Merced (City) participated in the normal due diligence review (DDR) process to review what, if any, monies had to be disgorged when its former RDA was statutorily dissolved. The City did not initiate a judicial challenge to the amounts the Department of Finance (DOF) ultimately found had to be repaid and the reasons therefor. The DOF soon filed what amounted to a collection action, seeking mandamus compelling the City to transfer certain money to the RDA’s successor agency, and compelling that agency to transfer money to the relevant county’s auditor-controller. The City answered with a general denial and boilerplate affirmative defenses. The City then tried to challenge the merits of the DDR determinations, and later filed a belated cross-petition seeking to challenge the merits. The trial court struck the cross-complaint, declined to consider the City’s challenges to the merits of the disputed amounts, and ordered a writ compelling the monetary transfers. The City timely filed this appeal. We hold the trial court properly declined to consider the merits of the dispute, but we will direct the trial court to modify the judgment to clarify a particular monetary amount and affirm the judgment as modified.

1 “Given the many RDA [Redevelopment Agency] cases this court has decided, due to the designation of Sacramento County as the venue for such disputes [citations], its basic implementing mechanisms are well understood by the parties.” (City of Grass Valley v. Cohen (2017) 17 Cal.App.5th 567, 573, fn. omitted (Grass Valley).) Thus, we decline to elaborate on history and nomenclature except as necessary.

2 BACKGROUND The City had an RDA; the relevant successor entity is the Merced Designated Local Authority (Authority), consisting of three gubernatorial appointees vested with the powers and duties of a typical successor agency. (See Health & Safety Code, § 34173, subd. (d)(3)(A).)2 During the DDR process, as is typical, DOF reviewed various transactions to determine which, if any, were “enforceable obligations,” a term of art in dissolution cases. (See, e.g., Grass Valley, supra, 17 Cal.App.5th at pp. 574-575.) The Authority was late in submitting the two required reviews to DOF. DOF made determinations regarding the funds and initially determined some $13 million was owed. After a meet- and-confer process and additional correspondence, DOF agreed some of that money had already been paid, and on August 25, 2016, sent a letter stating $10,020,210.83 was owed and providing 60 days to pay the money or agree to a payment plan. The money was not paid, no payment plan was reached, and as the trial court phrased it: “Further, Respondents did not seek judicial review of DOF’s DDR determinations.” On November 15, 2016, DOF filed the instant petition for traditional mandamus against the City and the Authority, naming the Merced County Auditor-Controller (Auditor) as the real party in interest. It alleged the Authority filed its DDRs in 2015-- one for a housing fund and one for everything else--long past the statutory deadlines. (Cf. § 34179.6, subd. (a) [each was due in 2012].) “Respondents have not contested DOF’s DDR determinations but have neither made the required transfers of funds nor reached an agreement” on a payment plan. DOF alleged the City and the Authority had a present statutory duty to turn over the money. (See §§ 34179.6, 34179.9.)

2 Further undesignated statutory references are to the Health and Safety Code.

3 The Authority and City each answered with a general denial and boilerplate affirmative defenses.3 DOF’s memorandum in support of the petition described the process leading to its final DDR determinations, and emphasized that no challenges to its final determinations had been made. It claimed a ministerial duty on the part of the City and the Authority to comply with those findings, relying on statutes giving it the power to sue to enforce the dissolution statutes (§ 34177, subd. (a)(2)) and providing a five-day period for the successor agency to comply once DOF has given notification of its determinations. (See § 34179.6, subd. (f).) The City’s opposition partly claimed documents purportedly damaged by flooding as well as its own decision not to become the successor agency for its former RDA were factors outside its control, causing the delays and impairing its ability to contest some claims. The City argued, on the merits, that a particular housing project was an enforceable obligation ($5,688,500) and that certain bond proceeds ($491,815 transferred by the former RDA to the Authority and $280,359 of “pre-2011 bond proceeds that were used” pre-dissolution) could not be disbursed to taxing entities.4

3 Real party Auditor advised this court that she has no direct interest in the appeal and filed no brief. The Authority’s position was that it never held the money at issue and it, too, should have been deemed a real party rather than a respondent. DOF disagreed, as did the trial court, on the theory that once the City paid over the money it owed, the Authority would have a legal duty to distribute it in accordance with the dissolution statutes. 4 Procedurally, the City claimed mandamus was unavailable because DOF had an adequate remedy at law, purportedly a “full trial” on the merits of DOF’s claims. In City of Bellflower v Cohen (2016) 245 Cal.App.4th 438, 453 and footnote 10 we explained that “ ‘injunctive or other appropriate relief’ ” could be sought by statute. (See § 34177, subd. (a)(2).) Traditional mandamus was therefore available to compel compliance with ministerial duties defined by statute, as DOF contended.

4 DOF’s reply repeated there had been no legal challenge to the approximately $10 million determined to be owed via the DDR process. DOF objected that this lawsuit was not an appropriate vehicle for the City to seek review of the DDR determinations, because this petition merely sought transfer of the money pursuant to statutes so providing. DOF conceded $491,815 in bond proceeds had already been transferred to the Authority and therefore DOF “no longer seeks the return” of that money, but pointed out that its DDR review had already disallowed the City’s claim regarding the $280,359 in previously spent bond money, consisting “of unencumbered bond proceeds that must be transferred” under the dissolution statutes. DOF pointed out the City was not contesting about $3.5 million of the total determined due by the DDR review. Confusingly, DOF also defended the merits of its determinations. On June 15, 2017, the trial court issued a tentative ruling for DOF, partly finding that the City had never properly challenged the DDR determinations. At the first of four hearings, held on June 16, 2017, the City claimed that based on ongoing negotiations with DOF, as well as other issues, the City had not had time to file a petition to challenge the DDR results, and sought a continuance so it could file a petition.

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Bluebook (online)
CA Dept. of Finance v. City of Merced, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ca-dept-of-finance-v-city-of-merced-calctapp-2019.