Opinion
SILLS, P. J.
I. INTRODUCTION
This case presents an instructive contrast to another election petition case that we publish today,
Preserve Shorecliff Homeowners v. City of San Clemente
(2008) 158 Cal.App.4th 1427. In
Preserve Shoreclijf,
there is substantial evidence of reliance by petition circulators on the acceptance by local elections officials of the practice of having petition signers also sign a circulator’s affidavit when the circulators do not live in the city involved in the petition. And that evidence was
accepted
by the trial court. Moreover, in
Preserve Shoreclijf
the practice relied on was developed in precise response to a facially unconstitutional statute. And the Attorney General had already published an opinion stating that an identical statute in another part of the Elections Code was indeed unconstitutional. (All one would have to do is compare the two statutes to realize that the same went for the statute at issue in
Preserve Shoreclijf.)
Under such circumstances, any arguable noncompliance with a requirement that petition circulators themselves had to sign circulators’ affidavits could be excused. (See
Assembly v. Deukmejian
(1982) 30 Cal.3d 638, 651-652 [180 Cal.Rptr. 297, 639 P.2d 939].)
Here, we have a different practice. Circulators would fill in signers’ addresses for them in a recall election involving multiple targets. There is no substantial evidence of
reliance
on the acceptance of that practice by local elections officials. And any such evidence of reliance was in fact
rejected
by the trial court. Nor is there any hint that the practice of having circulators fill in signers’ addresses was developed in response to an unconstitutional statute.
On top of that, the practice of having circulators fill in signers’ addresses for them
in a recall petition
substantially circumvents an important statutory protection afforded officials who are the targets of recall petitions—the right to be judged on their own individual merits. That right is expressed in statutes requiring recall petitions be individuated, concerned with a specific official, and which give that official the right to include his or her own
answer
to the recall petition. In other words, recall law requires potential petition signers to be exposed to both sides of the question of whether a specific official should be recalled. The practice of filling in signers’ addresses for them after a signer signs and addresses one petition and then hurriedly signs another six petitions effectively obliterates the statutory protections afforded officials as individuals.
II. BACKGROUND
In the summer and fall of 2005, a group of voters in the Capistrano Unified School District
wanted to recall all seven members of the school board. Voters donated countless hours of personal time to collecting signatures for the recall.
But the recall never happened because the registrar of voters disqualified signatures where the signers’ addresses had been filled in by someone other than the actual signer. This appeal is solely confined to the validity of the registrar’s disqualifications.
So, after petition signers signed their names to the multiple petitions and wrote in
one
residence address, volunteers would (helpfully, they thought) fill in the residence addresses for the remaining petitions. At the time the process saved time.
The problem was, cutting that comer violated at least two California statutes. Those statutes, Elections Code sections 100
and 11043,
practically duplicate each other, and both plainly require that each signer of a recall petition
personally
“affix” his or her residence address to a recall petition. Disallowing signatures where signers hadn’t themselves actually filled out the address box meant that none of the recall petitions had the requisite number of signatures (20,421). Recall supporters then filed this proceeding in superior court seeking a writ requiring the registrar to count the disputed signatures. After the trial court entered a judgment formally denying the request, this appeal followed.
III. DISCUSSION
A. No Excusable Reliance
Recall supporters argued to the trial court and again on appeal that employees of the registrar’s office told them the practice of writing in signers’ addresses was permissible.
The evidence on that point was
at best
contested. At least two employees of the registrar’s office unequivocally declared that recall supporters would have been told no such thing, as a matter of policy.
We say
at best
contested, because the trial judge doubted that the declarations submitted by recall supporters even supported the idea that they had been told by the registrar’s employees that it was okay to copy addresses.
In any event, though, even if those declarations did provide an evidentiary basis for some sort of reliance argument, the presence of substantial evidence in the form of the unequivocal denials from the two employees is sufficient to dispose of the issue.
Pointing out that the trial court did not actually receive any
testimony
on the evidence proffered on the reliance issue, the recall supporters assert that they, rather than the party prevailing on appeal, should receive the benefit of any conflicts in the evidence, such as would be the case in a summary judgment motion.
The argument fails because the trial court disposed of the case in a proceeding for traditional mandamus under section 1085 of the Code of Civil
Procedure. Such a proceeding is, in substance, a trial to the court, as distinct from a pretrial summary judgment motion. The case law is well established that in a proceeding for a writ of mandate, when the matter is heard only on written evidence, all conflicts in the written evidence are resolved in favor of the
prevailing
party, and factual findings are examined for substantial evidence. (E.g.,
Appelgate v. Dumke
(1972) 25 Cal.App.3d 304, 311, 307 [101 Cal.Rptr. 645] [in case where trial court denied petition for writ of mandate “receiving evidence in the form of declarations and depositions,” facts had to viewed “in the light most favorable to the findings of fact of the trial court”];
W. W. Dean & Associates
v.
City of South San Francisco
(1987) 190 Cal.App.3d 1368, 1371 [236 Cal.Rptr.
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Opinion
SILLS, P. J.
I. INTRODUCTION
This case presents an instructive contrast to another election petition case that we publish today,
Preserve Shorecliff Homeowners v. City of San Clemente
(2008) 158 Cal.App.4th 1427. In
Preserve Shoreclijf,
there is substantial evidence of reliance by petition circulators on the acceptance by local elections officials of the practice of having petition signers also sign a circulator’s affidavit when the circulators do not live in the city involved in the petition. And that evidence was
accepted
by the trial court. Moreover, in
Preserve Shoreclijf
the practice relied on was developed in precise response to a facially unconstitutional statute. And the Attorney General had already published an opinion stating that an identical statute in another part of the Elections Code was indeed unconstitutional. (All one would have to do is compare the two statutes to realize that the same went for the statute at issue in
Preserve Shoreclijf.)
Under such circumstances, any arguable noncompliance with a requirement that petition circulators themselves had to sign circulators’ affidavits could be excused. (See
Assembly v. Deukmejian
(1982) 30 Cal.3d 638, 651-652 [180 Cal.Rptr. 297, 639 P.2d 939].)
Here, we have a different practice. Circulators would fill in signers’ addresses for them in a recall election involving multiple targets. There is no substantial evidence of
reliance
on the acceptance of that practice by local elections officials. And any such evidence of reliance was in fact
rejected
by the trial court. Nor is there any hint that the practice of having circulators fill in signers’ addresses was developed in response to an unconstitutional statute.
On top of that, the practice of having circulators fill in signers’ addresses for them
in a recall petition
substantially circumvents an important statutory protection afforded officials who are the targets of recall petitions—the right to be judged on their own individual merits. That right is expressed in statutes requiring recall petitions be individuated, concerned with a specific official, and which give that official the right to include his or her own
answer
to the recall petition. In other words, recall law requires potential petition signers to be exposed to both sides of the question of whether a specific official should be recalled. The practice of filling in signers’ addresses for them after a signer signs and addresses one petition and then hurriedly signs another six petitions effectively obliterates the statutory protections afforded officials as individuals.
II. BACKGROUND
In the summer and fall of 2005, a group of voters in the Capistrano Unified School District
wanted to recall all seven members of the school board. Voters donated countless hours of personal time to collecting signatures for the recall.
But the recall never happened because the registrar of voters disqualified signatures where the signers’ addresses had been filled in by someone other than the actual signer. This appeal is solely confined to the validity of the registrar’s disqualifications.
So, after petition signers signed their names to the multiple petitions and wrote in
one
residence address, volunteers would (helpfully, they thought) fill in the residence addresses for the remaining petitions. At the time the process saved time.
The problem was, cutting that comer violated at least two California statutes. Those statutes, Elections Code sections 100
and 11043,
practically duplicate each other, and both plainly require that each signer of a recall petition
personally
“affix” his or her residence address to a recall petition. Disallowing signatures where signers hadn’t themselves actually filled out the address box meant that none of the recall petitions had the requisite number of signatures (20,421). Recall supporters then filed this proceeding in superior court seeking a writ requiring the registrar to count the disputed signatures. After the trial court entered a judgment formally denying the request, this appeal followed.
III. DISCUSSION
A. No Excusable Reliance
Recall supporters argued to the trial court and again on appeal that employees of the registrar’s office told them the practice of writing in signers’ addresses was permissible.
The evidence on that point was
at best
contested. At least two employees of the registrar’s office unequivocally declared that recall supporters would have been told no such thing, as a matter of policy.
We say
at best
contested, because the trial judge doubted that the declarations submitted by recall supporters even supported the idea that they had been told by the registrar’s employees that it was okay to copy addresses.
In any event, though, even if those declarations did provide an evidentiary basis for some sort of reliance argument, the presence of substantial evidence in the form of the unequivocal denials from the two employees is sufficient to dispose of the issue.
Pointing out that the trial court did not actually receive any
testimony
on the evidence proffered on the reliance issue, the recall supporters assert that they, rather than the party prevailing on appeal, should receive the benefit of any conflicts in the evidence, such as would be the case in a summary judgment motion.
The argument fails because the trial court disposed of the case in a proceeding for traditional mandamus under section 1085 of the Code of Civil
Procedure. Such a proceeding is, in substance, a trial to the court, as distinct from a pretrial summary judgment motion. The case law is well established that in a proceeding for a writ of mandate, when the matter is heard only on written evidence, all conflicts in the written evidence are resolved in favor of the
prevailing
party, and factual findings are examined for substantial evidence. (E.g.,
Appelgate v. Dumke
(1972) 25 Cal.App.3d 304, 311, 307 [101 Cal.Rptr. 645] [in case where trial court denied petition for writ of mandate “receiving evidence in the form of declarations and depositions,” facts had to viewed “in the light most favorable to the findings of fact of the trial court”];
W. W. Dean & Associates
v.
City of South San Francisco
(1987) 190 Cal.App.3d 1368, 1371 [236 Cal.Rptr. 11] [testing trial court decision on writ of mandate to prohibit a referendum election on substantial evidence standard with facts “viewed in the light most favorable to the findings of the trial court”]; accord,
Lynch v. Spilman
(1967) 67 Cal.2d 251, 259 [62 Cal.Rptr. 12, 431 P.2d 636] [“When an issue is tried on affidavits, the rule on appeal is that those affidavits favoring the contention of the prevailing party establish not only the facts stated therein but also all facts which reasonably may be inferred therefrom, and where there is a substantial conflict in the facts stated, a determination of the controverted facts by the trial court will not be disturbed.”].)
B. No Actual Compliance
The text of both sections 100 and 11043 is inescapable: Both statutes refer to “each signer,” and use the active voice in describing the requirement of personally affixing the residence address.
The Legislature could have used the vaguer, passive voice for the residence requirement (e.g., “Each signer will personally sign the petition, on which the residence of the signer shall be printed”) and in fact it
did
use the passive voice for another requirement set forth in section 100 (the need for the consecutive numbering in the format of the petition).
But it did not use the passive voice for the affixation-of-residence requirement. The contrast in voices underscores the intent of the Legislature for personal affixation by “each signer” of his or her residence address.
Confirming that reading, both statutes also use the word “shall,” which is a mandatory usage, as distinct from a permissive one, and particularly in the context of this exact language.
(Assembly v. Deukmejian, supra,
30 Cal.3d 638, 648 [holding that election statute requiring that petition sections “ ‘shall
be designed so that each signer shall personally affix his or her’ ” residence address was so “ ‘clear’ ” as to not be subject to “ ‘liberal construction’ ”]; see also
Jones v. Catholic Healthcare West
(2007) 147 Cal.App.4th 300, 307 [54 Cal.Rptr.3d 148] [general rule that “Courts routinely construe the word ‘may’ as permissive and words like ‘shall’ or ‘must’ as mandatory.”].)
Boxed in by the text of sections 100 and 11043, the recall supporters rely on another statute in the Elections Code, section 100.5, as specifically allowing nonsigners to fill in signers’ addresses.
The statute allows a petition signer to make a mark or signature but also allows the signer to request “another person to print the voter’s name and place of residence on the appropriate spaces of the petition or paper.” (§ 100.5.)
The statute, however, was plainly designed for disabled voters, as revealed in the critical introductory clause (“Notwithstanding Section 100, a voter who is unable to personally affix on a petition or paper the information required by Section 100____”).
That plain meaning is confirmed by section 100.5’s legislative history. The Senate Rules Committee analysis of the final version of Senate Bill No. 1853 (1995-1996 Reg. Sess.) as amended August 15, 1996, that gave rise to section 100.5 showed that the Legislature had in mind
disabled
voters—not voters too busy to write in their addresses. (“This provision is to insure that disabled voters may fully participate in all aspects of the democratic process.” (Sen. Rules Com. Office of Sen. Floor Analyses, analysis of Sen. Bill No. 1853 (1995-1996 Reg. Sess.) as amended Aug. 15, 1996).)
In the context of the statute, it would be unreasonable to stretch the word “unable” to include harried shoppers who simply do not want to take the time to write in their residence addresses six more times. To do so would be to allow the exception in section 100.5 to obliterate the rule in section 100.
Indeed, not only does section 100.5 not support allowing nonsigners to write in residences on petition forms, it affirmatively refutes it. The fact that the Legislature sought fit to make an
exception
to the “information required by Section 100,” which includes all three items listed in section 100, not
just the signature, confirms the plain meaning of section 100. Each
nondisabled
signer must personally affix his or her residence address as well as signature.
C. No Substantial Compliance
We stress the context of this case: We are not dealing with situations involving elderly or disabled voters (who might need assistance in, literally, writing in their addresses), nor are we dealing with the proposed recall of a single official. This case involves petition circulators writing in signers’ addresses for them on multiple recall petitions for
different
officials. In essence, petition signers were first personally signing and addressing
one
petition, then quickly signing six other petitions leaving the addresses blank. It was as if signing and addressing
once
was considered good enough for all seven.
The statutes governing recall elections in California (§ 11000 et seq.) unmistakably preclude the en banc recall of groups of officials. There must be a separate petition for every official sought to be recalled. (§ 11044 [“Separate petitions are necessary to propose the recall of each officer.”].)
Furthermore, officials also have the right to individually file an answer to the recall petition (albeit of not more than 200 words). (§ 11023.)
The requirement that individual officials be given the right to individually answer a recall petition is nothing more than common sense. Just as the law allows codefendants in a civil or criminal case to present their own, individual, defenses, it also allows for officers who are the targets of recall efforts to do the same.
We have already established that, coming to this court from a court trial, all conflicts and inferences must be resolved in favor of the judgment. One of the inferences that may be reasonably drawn from the judgment is
this: All board members were being lumped together as one. After all—if signers cannot take the time merely to personally write in their own addresses (again, we stress that we do not deal with a case involving disabled signers, as contemplated in § 100.5) for the recall petitions of the remaining board members, they certainly were not reading the answers of those members. The practice simply crosses the line from being an essentially harmless goof that courts may legitimately excuse (e.g.,
Costa
v.
Superior Court
(2006) 37 Cal.4th 986, 1028-1030 [39 Cal.Rptr.3d 470, 128 P.3d 675] [nonsubstantive discrepancy in text submitted to Secretary of State from text submitted to Attorney General]) to one that thwarts important rights and statutory protections.
The two substantial compliance cases mainly relied on by the recall supporters,
Nelson
v.
Carlson
(1993) 17 Cal.App.4th 732 [21 Cal.Rptr.2d 485] and
Malick v. Athenour
(1995) 37 Cal.App.4th 1120 [44 Cal.Rptr.2d 281], are distinguishable.
As to
Nelson,
the supporters rely on dicta in a footnote. It is dicta because the case actually held that failure to attach an exhibit containing the city’s general plan to a referendum petition on a local land use resolution was substantial compliance, but fatal. (See
Nelson v. Carlson, supra,
17 Cal.App.4th at p. 741, fn. 6.) The point of the dicta in the footnote was that (1) use of a draft version of the resolution that was the subject of the referendum could not invalidate the referendum because the differences between the draft and final version were “insignificant”; and (2) a requirement that
circulators
give the dates between which signatures were obtained could not invalidate the referendum because the “apparent purpose” of the requirement was still fulfilled by using date stamps. The use of date stamps did not impede the city clerk in her duties of ascertaining that the signatures were obtained in the proper timeframe and in determining whether signers were also registered voters. (Since voters regularly change residences, the date of a signature helps ascertain whether a voter is registered.)
Nelson
is simply a case where an appellate court observed in a footnote that the failure to comply with a technical statute simply caused no harm.
Malick
involved disqualifications of signatures based on the theory that signers had not also properly
printed
their name because they wrote in cursive. The signers did not “separately” print “each letter of his or her full name” in signing the referendum petition. (See
Malick v. Athenour, supra,
37 Cal.App.4th at p. 1127.) The court refused to interpret section 105 (which tracks § 100) as requiring the separate printing of each letter because such an interpretation did not go to the purpose of the printed-name requirement of assisting the clerk in ascertaining the validity of the signature. Such an interpretation also ran “afoul” of the policy of resolving doubts in favor of referendums.
(Malick, supra,
37 Cal.App.4th at p. 1126.)
Malick
is an extreme example of a no harm case. The fact that some letters in the printed name box put there by some signers might have been touching each other (transforming a “printed” name into a “written” name) of course makes no difference when the name is otherwise legible. The opposite result would mean that the signatures supporting every candidate and ballot proposition would be scrutinized by opponents hoping for a technical disqualification based on, literally, a slip of the pen. De minimis non curat lex.
IV. DISPOSITION
The judgment denying the writ of mandate is affirmed. In the interests of justice each side shall bear its own costs on appeal.
Rylaarsdam, J., and Moore, J., concurred.