Frye v. County of Butte

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 27, 2013
DocketC069500
StatusPublished

This text of Frye v. County of Butte (Frye v. County of Butte) 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
Frye v. County of Butte, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 11/27/13 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Butte) ----

ELLEN FRYE et al., C069500 Plaintiffs and Appellants, (Super.Ct.No. 148438) v.

COUNTY OF BUTTE et al.,

Defendants and Appellants.

ELLEN FRYE et al., C070095

Plaintiffs and Appellants, (Super.Ct.No. 153564)

v.

BUTTE COUNTY ANIMAL CONTROL et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Butte County, Barbara L. Roberts and Sandra L. McLean, Judges. Dismissed and Affirmed. Michael R. Bush, for Plaintiffs and Appellants. Law Office of Deems & Keller, LLP, Michael R. Deems, and Bruce S. Alpert, for Defendants and Respondents. In two cases, animal control officers seized horses they believed to be at risk. The proceedings leading to the consolidated appeals now before us are convoluted.

1 Penal Code section 597.1 (§ 597.1) provides: “When [an animal control] officer has reasonable grounds to believe that very prompt action is required to protect the health or safety of the animal or the health or safety of others, the officer shall immediately seize the animal and comply with subdivision (f) [providing for a post-seizure hearing]. In all other cases, the officer shall comply with the provisions of subdivision (g) [providing for notice in lieu of seizure, and a pre-seizure hearing].” (§ 597.1, subd. (a).) “Penal Code section 597.1[fn.] is a self-contained regulatory scheme covering treatment of animals. It provides that the failure to provide animals with ‘proper care and attention’ is a misdemeanor. (Subd. (a).) It covers the authority of animal control officers over sick, injured, straying, or abandoned animals in nonemergency situations. It further provides that animals may be seized or impounded when such an officer ‘has reasonable grounds to believe that very prompt action is required to protect the health or safety’ of the animals. (Subds. (a) & (b).) . . . Animals that were ‘properly seized’ are to receive ‘care and treatment,’ the costs of which ‘shall constitute a lien on the animal’ that the owner must pay before the animal is returned. (Subds. (a) & (b).) The owner of a seized or impounded animal is entitled to ‘a postseizure hearing to determine the validity of the seizure or impoundment,’ return of the animals, and liability for costs. (Subds. (f) & (j).)” (Broden v. Marin Humane Society (1999) 70 Cal.App.4th 1212, 1216 (Broden).) The County of Butte, acting via its animal control department (hereafter collectively “the County”), seized horses on separate occasions from plaintiffs Ellen Frye and Marlene Schultz (collectively “Frye” except as context otherwise indicates) and each sought a post-seizure hearing to contest the propriety of those seizures. Separate administrative hearing officers sustained the seizures in each case. Frye then filed a mandamus petition (Butte Co. Super. Ct. No. 148438, the “first petition”). The trial court (Roberts, J., “the first trial court”) issued a document captioned “Statement of Decision” holding that the administrative findings did not adequately justify the County’s election of remedies, and remanding both cases for new

2 administrative hearings. Long after those new hearings were completed, the first trial court issued a document captioned “Judgment,” from which the County appealed, and Frye cross-appealed. In 3 Civil No. C069500, we hold the County’s appeal and Frye’s cross-appeal are untimely, because the “Statement of Decision” was a judgment, albeit a misleadingly- captioned judgment, and therefore the purported judgment arising much later out of the same case was a nullity and did not extend the time in which to file a notice of appeal. Accordingly, we dismiss the untimely appeal and cross-appeal from that purported judgment. The new administrative hearings resulted in findings again sustaining the County’s seizures of the horses. Frye filed a new mandamus petition challenging those findings (Butte Co. Super. Ct. No. 15364, the “second petition”), and filed a timely appeal (3 Civ. No. C070095) from the judgment denying that petition. We shall affirm that judgment. DISCUSSION I The First Petition A. Procedural Background On February 25, 2010, Frye filed a second amended petition seeking a writ of administrative mandate and declaratory relief, later characterized by Frye as a “review” petition. Frye alleged various defects in the initial administrative hearings, including inadequate discovery, lack of neutral hearing officers, lack of evidence to support the decisions, and imposition of excessive administrative costs. On September 28, 2010, the first trial court issued a document captioned as a “Statement of Decision” finding the administrative decisions were deficient because “the record is devoid of any findings . . . as to the proper procedure to be used, therefore these cases must be remanded . . . to first determine whether or not pre-seizure hearings should have been implemented before seizing the animals and proceeding with the post-seizure

3 hearing. To allow the agency to proceed with a post-seizure hearing only would deprive the party of any remedy to address whether a pre-seizure hearing would have been more appropriate in each circumstance. [¶] The cases are remanded to the agency to conduct a hearing on the proper procedure that should have been used in these cases.”1 In November and December 2010, the respective hearing officers upheld the post- seizure process used by the County in each case, after the hearings on remand ordered by the trial court. On January 24, 2011, the first trial court issued an order stating new administrative hearings had been conducted and if the parties wanted to challenge the new findings, they had to file a new petition that could be heard before a different judge. On March 4, 2011, Frye filed an original petition for writ of mandate in this court (Frye v. Superior Court, 3 Civ. No. C067527), complaining that the first trial court “has refused to enter any judgment” in the matter. On April 7, 2011, we disposed of Frye’s original petition as follows:

“Inasmuch as Code of Civil Procedure section 1094.5 does not permit remand before the writ issues, ‘but instead specifies that the writ shall issue and the reviewing court may then remand’ (Sierra Club. v. Contra Costa County (1992) 10 Cal.App.4th 1212, 1220-1221 [Sierra Club]), respondent court’s inartfully worded Statement of Decision issued September 28, 2010, was in fact intended by respondent court as a final judgment setting aside the administrative decision and directing reconsideration of the matter as specified in the Statement of Decision. As a result, and as noted by respondent court in its order of January 24, 2011, any challenge to the most recent administrative decision must be based on a new petition for writ of mandate. Accordingly, the instant petition for writ of mandate is denied. On April 15, 2011, Frye moved to have the first trial court enter a judgment commanding the County to set aside the first administrative decisions, compelling return

_____________________________________________________________________ 1 The record does not contain any objections to this “Statement of Decision.”

4 of the horses, returning costs already paid for seizing and caring for Frye’s horses, and awarding court costs. Frye’s points and authorities acknowledged we had ruled that the first trial court had issued a final judgment, but argued further issues remained to be decided and therefore the “interlocutory order” was not a final judgment--in effect arguing to the trial court that we had erred and it should disregard our ruling. The County did not oppose entry of a final judgment, but sought a more limited judgment that merely remanded the matters for further hearings.

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