FRIENDS OF BAY MEADOWS v. City of San Mateo

68 Cal. Rptr. 3d 916, 157 Cal. App. 4th 1175
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 12, 2007
DocketA115674, A115503
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 68 Cal. Rptr. 3d 916 (FRIENDS OF BAY MEADOWS v. City of San Mateo) 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
FRIENDS OF BAY MEADOWS v. City of San Mateo, 68 Cal. Rptr. 3d 916, 157 Cal. App. 4th 1175 (Cal. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion

RICHMAN, J.

Before us are three appeals from two superior court judgments in different cases, all involving a single subject, namely, the decision of county election officials not to certify a referendum to overturn a measure adopted by the San Mateo City Council, which decision resulted from the election officials’ invalidation of a number of categories of purported voter signatures. The officials’ decision was upheld by the trial court.

The parties raise a number of claims concerning the officials’ determinations on various categories of disqualified signatures. We find it necessary to decide only one of those claims: whether the officials properly disqualified 36 signatures where the voter did not personally write out identifying information as required by Elections Code section 100. We agree that the officials acted correctly in this regard, and hold, in this case of first impression, that the deficiency could not be cured by construing Election Code section 100.5 to validate the signatures by the declaration of the petition circulator on each sheet of signatures. In light of this decision, all remaining contentions become moot because, no matter how any of the parties’ other contentions are resolved, there would still be an insufficient number of valid signatures to qualify the referendum for submission to the voters. We therefore affirm one judgment and dismiss two of the appeals.

*1180 BACKGROUND

The Bay Meadows racetrack is a prominent feature of the history, economy, and geography of San Mateo County. The racetrack is located on a parcel of approximately 75 acres; an adjoining parcel of about 83 acres is not used for track operations, and was apparently unimproved. Both parcels are owned by Bay Meadows Land Company (Bay Meadows Land Company).

In 1997, the San Mateo City Council (Council) adopted a specific plan for the parcels. 1 It appears that thereafter Bay Meadows Land Company came to believe that the property would be more profitable if the racetrack were closed and other commercial uses were promoted. In November 2005, the Council adopted resolution No. Ill which, among other things, amended the specific plan and approved a master tentative parcel map for the 83-acre parcel. That same month the Council approved a development agreement for creation of a “commercial district with capacity of more than one million square feet of retail, office and service-commercial space.”

Opposition to the proposed development was led by an unincorporated association named Friends of Bay Meadows (Friends), which prepared a referendum petition and gathered signatures to put it on the ballot. Friends’ attempt failed in early January 2006, when Norma Gomez, the San Mateo City Clerk, and Warren Slocum, the San Mateo County Chief Elections Officer, refused to certify the petition on the ground it lacked the requisite numbers of qualified voters.

On January 23, 2006, 2 Friends commenced the first action, Friends of Bay Meadows v. City of San Mateo (San Mateo Super. Ct., No. Civ452450), filing a petition for writ of mandate and complaint against the City of San Mateo (City), Gomez, and Slocum. The principal relief sought was a writ of mandamus directing those respondents “to reverse their disqualification or invalidation” of certain signatures “to correct their certification ... to indicate that the referendum has qualified.” Friends also prayed for declaratory relief “that Elections Code § 105, both facially and as applied under the facts and *1181 conditions of this case is invalid in that it violates the people’s right of referendum under the California Constitution by disallowing the petition signatures of electors and voters who, under Elections Code § 2204, remain duly qualified voters in spite of having moved to another residence within the same precinct. . . .”

Bay Meadows Land Company was not named as a party in Friends’ action, and moved to intervene. The motion was denied, following which Bay Meadows Land Company, joined by taxpayer Suzanne Flecker, initiated the second action, their own petition for writ of mandate and complaint in Flecker v. Gomez (San Mateo Super. Ct., No. 453728). This action named Gomez and the City as respondents, and Friends as a real party in interest. It alleged that the referendum petition had fatal defects of form that made it invalid even before the gathering of voter signatures began, specifically that the petition “(1) fails to advise potential signers that the referendum is protesting the adoption of an ordinance or resolution, as required by Elections Code section 9237; (2) fails to provide either the number or the correct title of the ordinance or resolution being challenged, as required by Elections Code section 9238; and (3) fails to include the full text and accompanying exhibits of the ordinance or resolution being challenged, as required by the same statute.” Like Friends in its suit, this complaint sought a writ of mandate and injunctive relief prohibiting officials “from taking any steps to place Real Parties’ referendum on the ballot, submitting it to the voters for approval, or repealing Resolution No. Ill in response to it.”

In light of the obvious overlap between the two actions, the trial court effected an informal consolidation by establishing a unified briefing schedule.

The Friends action was resolved first, on the basis of competing motions: Slocum, the City, and Gomez moved “for judgment to dismiss writ of mandate,” and Friends filed a “cross-motion to grant peremptory writ of mandate and judgment.” The motions were submitted for decision on the basis of argument and stipulated facts which, as relevant here, and with minor editorial adjustments, read as follows:

“1. On November 7, 2005, the San Mateo City Council approved Resolution No. Ill (2005) adopting the Bay Meadows Specific Plan and took certain other related actions. Petitioners and Plaintiffs' 3 ! circulated a ‘Referen *1182 dum Against An Ordinance/Resolution Passed By The City Council,’ ‘Bay Meadows Specific Plan Amendment.’ (‘Petition’) and collected signatures.
“2. The Petition was filed with Gomez on December 7, 2005. . . .
“HO . • • fi[] 4. On December 15, the petition was received in Slocum’s office. It contained 232 petition sections and 5,708 signatures.
“[][] . . . [][] 6. The City of San Mateo has 46,610 registered voters as stated in Slocum’s last official report of registration dated October 24, 2005 to the Secretary of State prior to the Petition.
“7. Gomez determined that the Petition must have 4,661 . . . signatures to be certified. This represents 10 percent of the registered voters within the City.
“8. Slocum’s staff determined the sufficiency of the 5,708 signatures on the Petition ... by examining the voter registration affidavits, if . . . any, of the signers.
“9. From this examination and subsequent reviews, Slocum has determined the following:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 Cal. Rptr. 3d 916, 157 Cal. App. 4th 1175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/friends-of-bay-meadows-v-city-of-san-mateo-calctapp-2007.