Campbell Municipal Employees Ass'n v. City of Campbell

131 Cal. App. 3d 416, 182 Cal. Rptr. 461, 1982 Cal. App. LEXIS 1569
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 4, 1982
DocketCiv. 48931
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 131 Cal. App. 3d 416 (Campbell Municipal Employees Ass'n v. City of Campbell) 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
Campbell Municipal Employees Ass'n v. City of Campbell, 131 Cal. App. 3d 416, 182 Cal. Rptr. 461, 1982 Cal. App. LEXIS 1569 (Cal. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

Opinion

GRODIN, J. *

This appeal stems from a proceeding in mandamus instituted by the Campbell Municipal Employees Association (CMEA) against the City of Campbell, the members of its city council, and various of its managerial employees. CMEA’s complaint was, and is, that the city council violated both its own Employee Relations Ordinance and the Meyers-Milias-Brown Act (Gov. Code, § 3500 et seq.) by establishing for city employees represented by CMEA a date for retroactive payment of salary and medical insurance premium increases which was less favorable to those employees than city representatives had agreed to in negotiations, and less favorable than the city council adopted for employees represented by other organizations. After a hearing based on essentially stipulated facts, the trial court entered judgment denying the writ, and it is from that judgment that CMEA appeals.

Factual and Procedural Background

In May 1978 CMEA entered into “meet and confer” sessions with representatives of the City of Campbell with the object of negotiating, on behalf of employees represented by CMEA, a memorandum of understanding establishing their wages and conditions of employment for the *419 period 1978-1980. After two sessions, the city proposed that further negotiations be deferred until November, due to the uncertain fiscal situation created by the existence of Proposition 13 on the general election ballot. CMEA accepted that proposal, and agreed with the city that existing salaries and insurance coverage would continue in effect.

In November, the parties resumed negotiations, and by the end of January 1979, they had reached agreement on all but two issues. The two remaining issues were the amount of the city’s 1978-1980 contributions toward health insurance premiums for city employees and the method of disposing of any savings realized by the city from the city’s anticipated depooling of participation in the Public Employees’ Retirement System. One issue which the parties later agreed was not in dispute was that the negotiated increases would be paid retroactive to October 1, 1978.

On January 31, 1979, the city’s negotiating committee requested an “impasse meeting” pursuant to the impasse procedures established by the city’s Employee Relations Ordinance. 1 Such a meeting was held on February 6, 1979, at which time the parties agreed that the only issues in dispute were the two issues identified above, but the parties were unable to resolve them. The parties then agreed to mediation under the auspices of the state Conciliation Service, in accordance with the impasse procedures outlined in the ordinance, but that, too, wajs unsuccessful. Finally, in accordance with those procedures, the matter was referred to the city council for its determination.

*420 On March 13, 1979, the city council conducted a hearing on the disputed issues, at which the city’s negotiators and the CMEA presented arguments and facts in support of their respective positions. Thereafter, the city council adjourned to executive session, and met with the city’s negotiators.

On March 22, 1979, the city council announced its decision. The decision adopted the position of the city negotiators as to the disputed issues, and the agreements which had been reached by the respective negotiators on all other issues, with one exception: instead of providing for increases in salary and medical insurance retroactive to October 1, 1978, as had been agreed, the city council decided that for employees represented by CMEA retroactivity would be provided only to February 1, 1979.

This decision on retroactivity was unique to employees represented by CMEA. All other employee groups received retroactivity to October 1, 1978. CMEA is the only employee organization which negotiated to impasse with the city and utilized the impasse procedures under the ordinance.

Discussion

CMEA contends that the only issues subject to determination by the city council under the impasse procedures established by the Employee Relations Ordinance are those which remain in dispute after negotiations between representatives of the city and the employee organization involved, and that the council therefore acted contrary to the ordinance when, in the course of implementing those procedures, it reached back into the package of settled issues and modified it to the detriment of employees.

We are of the view that CMEA’s interpretation of the ordinance is correct. Under the terms of the ordinance, a party seeking to initiate the impasse procedure does so by filing a request for an impasse meeting together with “a statement of its position on all disputed issues.”. The purpose of the impasse meeting is “to review the position of the parties in a final effort to resolve such disputed issue or issues,” and to discuss utilization of impasse procedures “if the dispute is not resolved.” If the matter is not otherwise resolved, then it is submitted to the city council for its “determination . .. after a hearing on the merits of the dispute.”

*421 It seems plain from this language that the dispute which the council is to determine “after a hearing on the merits” is the dispute over issues not previously resolved. Indeed, the hearing which the council conducted in this matter was limited to the receipt of evidence and argument pertaining to those issues. Since it received neither evidence nor argument on the issue of retroactivity, it is difficult to understand how the council could determine that issue “on the merits” as the ordinance prescribes. 2

If this were the only objectionable feature of the council’s conduct in this case, it would be at least debatable whether CMEA would be entitled to the relief which it seeks, which is to require the city to pay employees within its bargaining unit retroactively to the date agreed upon in negotiations. This is so by reason of Government Code section 3505.1, which provides: “If agreement is reached by the representatives of the public agency and a recognized employee organization .. . they shall jointly prepare a written memorandum of such understanding, which shall not be binding, and present it to the governing body or its statutory representative for determination.” (Italics added.) This language, it has been held, “reflect[s\ the legislative decision that the ultimate determinations are to be made by the governing body itself or its statutory representative and not by others.” (Long Beach City Employees Assn., Inc. v. City of Long Beach (1977) 73 Cal.App.3d 273, 278 [140 Cal.Rptr. 675]; (italics omitted.)

CMEA argues that the city, through its Employee Relations Ordinance, has “modified” section 3505.1, but it is not at all clear that the city has the power to do so. Thus, while the city may be said to have violated its statutory duty to meet and confer “in good faith” (Gov. *422

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Bluebook (online)
131 Cal. App. 3d 416, 182 Cal. Rptr. 461, 1982 Cal. App. LEXIS 1569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-municipal-employees-assn-v-city-of-campbell-calctapp-1982.