Malkenhorst v. City of Vernon CA2/8

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 7, 2016
DocketB258793
StatusUnpublished

This text of Malkenhorst v. City of Vernon CA2/8 (Malkenhorst v. City of Vernon CA2/8) 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
Malkenhorst v. City of Vernon CA2/8, (Cal. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Filed 4/7/16 Malkenhorst v. City of Vernon CA2/8 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION EIGHT

BRUCE V. MALKENHORST, B258793

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. BC516321) v.

CITY OF VERNON,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. Steven J. Kleifield, Judge. Affirmed.

Law Offices of John Michael Jensen and John Michael Jensen, for Plaintiff and Appellant.

Liebert Cassidy Whitmore, Steven M. Berliner, Joung H. Yim and Alex Polishuk, for Defendant and Respondent.

____________________________ Bruce Malkenhorst sued his former employer, the City of Vernon (hereafter, the City). Malkenhorst’s pleading attempted to allege that the City entered into a direct contract with him requiring the City itself to pay him a retirement pension of $40,000 each month. The trial court entered a judgment of dismissal in favor of the City after sustaining a demurrer without leave to amend. We affirm the judgment. FACTS As always when reviewing a judgment on demurrer, we accept as true all properly alleged facts in the operative pleading, and treat the demurrer as admitting those facts, but do not accept contentions, deductions or conclusions of law as necessarily true. (Evans v. City of Berkeley (2006) 38 Cal.4th 1, 6.) Read in the light of this standard of review, the operative pleading involved here, Malkenhorst’s first amended complaint (FAC), alleged the following facts. The City employed Malkenhorst as an assistant city clerk and finance director, a city clerk and finance director, and a city administrator. Malkenhorst worked for the City from September 1975 until his retirement on June 30, 2005. At the time of his retirement, his salary, including “longevity pay,” totaled $44,127.50 per month. Upon Malkenhorst’s retirement, he began receiving a pension in the amount of approximately $40,000 per month, with the payments administered through the California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS). These pension payments to Malkenhorst conformed with a series of express and implied promises made by the City to Malkenhorst at various times and in various contexts during the parties’ employment relationship to the effect that the City itself would pay him a pension of $40,000 per month. Malkenhorst had decided to keep working for the City in exchange for its promises that it would pay him a pension of $40,000 per month.1

1 Malkenhorst’s allegation in the text of his FAC regarding the existence of a binding contract for a $40,000 per month pension paid by the City––which may be accurately described as a generalized contention or legal conclusion––was supported by reference to more than two dozen exhibits attached to the pleading. Those exhibits are in the form of various documents, including among others, employee salary resolutions adopted by the City through its city council, internal memoranda to and from different

2 During 2005, CalPERS “raised issues about how much CalPERS [should] pay to Malkenhorst . . . .” Specifically, CalPERS sent a letter to the City in mid-2005 questioning the longevity pay that it had recited as being part of Malkenhorst’s final compensation for purposes of calculating his pension payment administered through CalPERS. The City’s lawyers at that time (the law firm of Loeb & Loeb) thereafter exchanged a series of “appeal” letters with CalPERS concerning the longevity pay issue. In November 2006, CalPERS sent a letter to Malkenhorst in which it advised him that it had determined that his monthly pension payment would be in the amount of $40,022.66. At some point in time around 2012, CalPERS revisited the issue of the amount of Malkenhorst’s pension payments, and gave indications that it was examining whether it should re-calculate his pension payments in accord with the Public Employees’ Pension Law (PERL; Gov. Code, § 20000 et seq.). Malkenhorst responded by filing a complaint against CalPERS in 2012 in the Orange County Superior Court. In his 2012 litigation, Malkenhorst sought declaratory and injunctive relief and a writ of traditional mandate (see Code Civ. Proc., § 1085) challenging CalPERS’s then-pending contemplations as to whether it could re-calculate his pension under the PERL. CalPERS filed a demurrer in which it argued that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to adjudicate Malkenhorst’s case because he had not exhausted his available administrative remedy afforded within the CalPERS system for challenging an adverse pension determination. The trial court sustained CalPERS’s demurrer without leave to amend and entered a judgment of dismissal in favor of the retirement system. Malkenhorst then pursued an appeal. Division Three of the Fourth Appellate District affirmed the judgment of dismissal in CalPERS’s favor. (See Malkenhorst v. California Public Employees’ Retirement System (Apr. 23, 2014, G047959) [nonpub. opn.], rev. denied Oct. 23, 2014, (S214045).)

City officials, and copies of minutes of city council meetings. Malkenhorst’s exhibits are discussed further below in this opinion.

3 Meanwhile, in September 2013, Malkenhorst filed a separate action against the City for breach of contract and related causes of action. It is this action which gives rise to Malkenhorst’s current appeal. Malkenhorst’s allegations against the City are discussed more fully below in addressing his claims in his current appeal that his FAC alleged sufficient facts to state a cause of action. On April 1, 2014, CalPERS determined the long-reviewed issue of the proper amount of Malkenhorst’s monthly pension payment, and reduced his monthly pension payment to $9,800. Malkenhorst promptly commenced an administrative appeal within CalPERS to challenge its decision to reduce his monthly pension amount. At the time of the ruling on the City’s demurrer to Malkenhorst’s FAC in this case, his CalPERS administrative appeal proceeding had not yet been finally concluded.2 In May 2014, Malkenhorst filed his FAC against the City which is at issue in his current appeal. The FAC alleged 12 causes of action, listed respectively as follows: breach of express contract; breach of implied contract; promissory estoppel; violation of due process as guaranteed by the United States Constitution; violation of due process as

2 The CalPERS administrative appeal proceedings are still not finally concluded. While his current appeal from the ruling on the City’s demurrer to his FAC was pending in our court, Malkenhorst filed two separate requests for judicial notice related to the CalPERS administrative appeal proceedings. We hereby grant his requests for judicial notice. The materials so noticed show that Malkenhorst initiated a CalPERS appeal to challenge the decision to reduce his pension. Further, that CalPERS issued a decision in December 2015 providing that CalPERS is presently and properly paying a pension to Malkenhorst based on a calculated “final compensation” of $9,450 per month, rather than the previously calculated “final compensation” of $44,128 per month. CalPERS’s decision included a provision that the retirement system “may recoup the overpayments arising from this erroneous final compensation.” The judicially noticed materials also show that Malkenhorst has filed a petition for writ of administrative mandamus in the trial court (see Code Civ. Proc., § 1094.5) to challenge CalPERS’s administrative appeal decision.

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Malkenhorst v. City of Vernon CA2/8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/malkenhorst-v-city-of-vernon-ca28-calctapp-2016.