Franzblau v. Monardo

108 Cal. App. 3d 522, 166 Cal. Rptr. 610, 1980 Cal. App. LEXIS 2078
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 24, 1980
DocketDocket Nos. 46648, 46649, 47591
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 108 Cal. App. 3d 522 (Franzblau v. Monardo) 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
Franzblau v. Monardo, 108 Cal. App. 3d 522, 166 Cal. Rptr. 610, 1980 Cal. App. LEXIS 2078 (Cal. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

Opinion

SCOTT, Acting P. J.

On November 7, 1978, appellant George Monardo was elected to the Board of Directors of the Marin Hospital District. Thereafter, respondent electors in the Marin Hospital District brought this action contesting appellant’s election. Appellant appeals from a judgment annulling and setting aside his election. The court determined that appellant, as president of the Ralph K. Davies Medical Center in San Francisco, was ineligible to hold office as a director of the Marin Hospital District because of his disqualification pursuant to Health and Safety Code section 32110.

*525 Health and Safety Code section 32110 is a conflict of interest statute making certain people ineligible to hold office as a director of a hospital district. The statute provides in relevant part: “No person possessing any property interest in, or owning any of the stocks, bonds, or other securities issued by, any private hospital serving the same area served by the district, or who is a director or other officer of any such private hospital, shall be eligible for or hold any district office, either as a member of the board, or an officer of the medical staff. No person who is a director or an officer of, or who occupies any management position or office whatsoever, on the administrative staff of any such private hospital, shall be eligible for or hold any district office or any management position or office whatsoever in any district hospital. The possession or ownership of such interest, stocks, bonds, or other securities by the spouse or minor children of any person shall be deemed, for the purposes of this section, to be the possession or interest of such person.”

The facts here are essentially not in dispute. The Ralph K. Davies Medical Center, of which appellant is president, is a nonprofit private hospital located in San Francisco. For a number of years the hospital offered the Bay Area, including Marin County, certain specialty services: microsurgery, spinal cord injury, vascular surgery, and a macular unit. Vascular surgery has since become more widespread and the macular unit was moved to the University of California in 1976. However, the hospital is still unique in its spinal cord injury facilities and, perhaps to a lesser extent, in its microsurgery department. Marin County residents account for 2.18 percent of the Davies Medical Center in-patients. Estimates of patients coming from outside of San Francisco County are 39 percent in-patients, 35 percent out-patients. A brochure published by the hospital states that the normal patient census on any day could reveal as many as 47 percent of the hospital patients coming from outside San Francisco County. Other publications by the hospital state that Davies Medical Center is a hospital serving the Bay Area and Northern California. The Marin Hospital District falls within the provisions of Health and Safety Code section 32000 et seq. relating to hospital districts.

The trial court found that appellant, as president of the Davies Medical Center, is an officer of and occupies a management position with a private hospital serving the same area served by the Marin Hospital District, and as such was ineligible to hold office as a director of the Marin Hospital District.

*526 Appellant initially contends that the superior court was without jurisdiction to hear and decide contests of election pursuant to Health and Safety Code section 32110.

“The statutory procedure to contest an election is. . .not available in elections in nonpolitical public service districts whose governing statutes do not provide for election contests or adopt the provisions of the Elections Code with respect thereto.” (28 Cal.Jur.3d, Elections, § 198, p. 544; Castle R. C. Fire P. Dist. v. Sup. Ct. (1951) 105 Cal.App.2d 816, 820 [234 P.2d 726].) Appellant asserts that the statutes governing hospital district elections do not provide for election contests, and that, therefore, the lower court had no jurisdiction to hear the contest.

However, section 32002 of the Health and Safety Code provides that the manner of conducting the elections for local hospital districts shall be as in the manner provided in division 14 of the Elections Code (the Uniform District Election Law, § 23500 et seq.). Section 23502.5 of the Uniform District Election Law provides, in part: “Where neither the provisions of this part nor the provisions of the principal act apply, the general election laws of this state shall govern.” Since neither the Uniform District Election Law nor the Health and Safety Code sets forth procedures for an election contest, it is clear that Elections Code section 20020 et seq., governing contests of general elections, apply to the instant case. Finally, since jurisdiction of election contests is lodged in the superior court by the constitutional provision vesting original jurisdiction in such court in all causes except those given by statute to other trial courts, the superior court had jurisdiction to hear thé instant case. (Cal. Const., art. VI, § 10.)

Appellant next contends that Health and Safety Code section 32110 does not apply to nonprofit private hospitals. He asserts that the section applies only to proprietary private hospitals. The evidence is uncontradicted that Ralph K. Davies Medical Center, of which appellant is president, is a nonprofit hospital.

Health and Safety Code section 32110 was originally enacted in 1959, and read in pertinent part as follows: “No person possessing any property interest greater than 5 percent in, or owning more than 5 percent of the stocks, bonds, or other securities issued by, any private hospital serving the same area served by the district, or who is a director or other officer of any such private hospital, shall be eligible for or hold any district office, either as a member of the board or otherwise.”

*527 The statute was enacted by Senate Bill No. 1005. The bill memorandum evidencing the legislative intent provided: “Senate Bill 1005 prohibits a person owning a 5 percent interest in a private hospital serving as a member of the Board of the Hospital District in the same area.” Appellant points to this language as supporting his contention that the ineligibility is directed only at hospitals capable of being owned, that is, proprietary hospitals, and is not directed at nonprofit hospitals of the type of which appellant is president. The legislation, however, exceeds that suggested in the bill memorandum. It clearly disables directors or other officers of private hospitals from holding district office, as well as persons owning a 5 percent interest in private hospitals. The bill memorandum is a mere summary of the statute and does not purport to provide an exhaustive list of persons ineligible to hold office as a director of a hospital district.

Health and Safety Code section 32110 was amended in 1970 to add: “No person who is a director or an officer of, or who occupies any management position or office whatsoever, on the administrative staff of any such private hospital, shall be eligible for or hold any district office or any management position or office whatsoever in any district hospital.” The Legislative Counsel’s Digest of Assembly Bill No. 831 (Knox, Feb.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 Cal. App. 3d 522, 166 Cal. Rptr. 610, 1980 Cal. App. LEXIS 2078, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/franzblau-v-monardo-calctapp-1980.