City and County of S.F. v. All Persons Interested etc.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 17, 2021
DocketA160659M
StatusPublished

This text of City and County of S.F. v. All Persons Interested etc. (City and County of S.F. v. All Persons Interested etc.) 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
City and County of S.F. v. All Persons Interested etc., (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 8/17/21 (unmodified opinion attached) CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FOUR

CITY AND COUNTY OF SAN A160659 FRANCISCO, Plaintiff and Respondent, (City & County of San Francisco Super. Ct. No. CGC-18-569987) v. ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN ORDER MODIFYING OPINION; THE MATTER OF PROPOSITION AND ORDER DENYING G (NOWAK), PETITION FOR REHEARING Defendants and Appellants. [NO CHANGE IN JUDGMENT]

THE COURT: It is ordered that the opinion filed herein on July 26, 2021, be modified in the following particulars: 1. On page 4, line 17, the sentence beginning “By mid-November 2017” is deleted and replaced with the following sentence: By Autumn 2017, the District and Union were considering whether the parcel tax could be proposed as a citizens’ initiative.

2. On page 24, lines 3 and 4, the clause “Without disputing that Proposition G met the criteria set forth in the Charter” is deleted and replaced with the following clause: Without disputing that Proposition G met the criteria set forth in Section 14.101 of the Charter . . .

 Pollak, P.J., Tucher, J. and Brown, J. participated in the decision.

1 These modifications do not effect a change in the judgment. Appellant’s petition for rehearing is denied.

Dated:___________________ _______________________ P.J.

2 Trial Court: City & County of San Francisco Superior Court

Trial Judge: Hon. Ethan P. Schulman

Counsel for Appellants: Greenberg Traurig: Bradley R. Marsh and Colin W. Fraser

Counsel for Amicus Curiae Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Foundation; on behalf of Appellants: Jonathan M. Coupal, Timothy A. Bittle, Laura E. Dougherty

Counsel for Respondents: Dennis J. Herrera, City Attorney; Wayne K. Snodgrass, Deputy City Attorney

CCSF v. All Persons – Prop G (A160659)

3 Filed 7/26/21 (unmodified opinion)

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

CITY AND COUNTY OF SAN FRANCISCO, Plaintiff and Respondent, A160659

v. (City & County of San Francisco ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN Super. Ct. No. CGC-18-569987) THE MATTER OF PROPOSITION G, Defendants and Appellants.

Proposition 13 and Proposition 218 amended the California Constitution to require that any special tax adopted by a local government entity take effect only if approved by a two-thirds vote of the electorate. We recently interpreted these constitutional provisions “as coexisting with, not displacing, the people’s power to enact initiatives by majority vote.” (City and County of San Francisco v. All Persons Interested in the Matter of Proposition C (2020) 51 Cal.App.5th 703, 708 (Matter of Prop. C).) In Matter of Prop. C we held that a measure placed on the ballot as a local citizens’ initiative requires a majority, not a supermajority, vote to pass. (Id. at pp. 708–709.) This case raises the questions whether Matter of Prop. C was properly decided and whether it can be distinguished. In 2018, some 60 percent of San Franciscans voting on Proposition G— an initiative measure entitled “Parcel Tax for San Francisco Unified School

1 District”—approved the measure. Thereafter, the City and County of San Francisco (the City) filed this action to establish that Proposition G was validly enacted. The City’s complaint against “All Persons Interested” was answered by defendant Wayne Nowak, who contends that Proposition G is invalid because it failed to garner the two-thirds vote required by article XIII A, section 4 of the California Constitution1 (added by Proposition 13) and article XIII C, section 2 (added by Proposition 218), the same arguments we rejected in Matter of Prop. C. Nowak also contends that a provision of Proposition 218 unique to parcel taxes—article XIII D, section 3, subdivision (a) (art. XIII D, § 3(a))—requires a two-thirds vote of the electorate to enact Proposition G. Although the argument is new, it fails for similar reasons, as does Nowak’s alternative argument that an older constitutional provision precludes a per-parcel tax on real property. Finally, Nowak seeks to distinguish Matter of Prop. C on the grounds that Proposition G was conceived and promoted by local government officials and is thus not a valid citizens’ initiative. We reject this argument as based on a misunderstanding of the initiative process. Because we stand by our decision in Matter of Prop. C and reject Nowak’s additional arguments, we affirm the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to the City. BACKGROUND I. The Pleadings In September 2018, the City filed a complaint to validate Proposition G, seeking a judicial declaration that Proposition G was “duly enacted by the voters . . . and is legal, valid and binding.” (See Code Civ. Proc., § 867 et seq.) The complaint describes Proposition G as a proposal to authorize the City to

1 Citations to “articles” refer to the California Constitution.

2 collect an annual parcel tax, with all revenues from the tax to be transferred to the San Francisco Unified School District (District) and placed in a fund for restricted uses, including paying teacher salaries and funding staff at high-needs schools. The City alleges that proponents of Proposition G circulated petitions to the San Francisco electorate, qualifying the measure for placement on the ballot in the June 5, 2018 election. The City also alleges that Proposition G was “legally and validly adopted” because its passage required only a simple majority of votes cast and it “received the affirmative votes of 60.76% of the 238,133 San Francisco voters who voted on the measure.” In his answer to the complaint, Nowak admits the City’s description of Proposition G is accurate and that it was approved by 60.76 percent of the voters, but he denies that Proposition G was legally and validly adopted. Nowak alleges that Proposition G violates state constitutional requirements precluding local government from imposing a special tax absent approval of a two-thirds vote of the electorate. (Art. XIII A, § 4; Art. XIII C, § 2, subd. (d) (art. XIII C, § 2(d)); Art. XIII D, § 3(a).) Nowak also alleges that Proposition G represents an invalid attempt by the District to evade the constitution’s supermajority vote requirement. According to this theory, the District and “its union,” the United Educators of San Francisco (Union), agreed to a “16 percent pay increase for union employees that was contingent upon additional revenue being approved by San Francisco voters.” Then, instead of the District proposing “its own tax,” the “union members and others crafted . . . Proposition G as a citizen initiative,” so they could argue that it was “subject to only a 50% vote threshold.” Nowak alleges that this “deliberate action to reduce the vote threshold requirement is impermissible.”

3 II. Summary Judgment Proceedings In May 2020, the trial court heard cross-motions for summary judgment and granted judgment to the City. In a 20-page order, the court found the material facts to be undisputed and concluded that Proposition G was validly enacted by a majority of the voting electorate. A. Undisputed Material Facts In February 2017, the District and Union began negotiating the terms of their 2017–2020 labor contract. During an initial meeting, both the District and Union expressed the view that “ ‘teachers deserve and will receive a raise, the question is how the funds for the raise will be realized.’ ” The District “ ‘expressed its willingness to work collaboratively with the Union to find’ ” a solution. In the following months, the District considered raising funds via a parcel tax measure to be placed on the ballot in 2018, discussed that option with the Union, and participated with Union representatives and “political consultants” in a Parcel Tax Planning Committee.

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