Naidu v. Superior Court of Riverside Cnty.
This text of 229 Cal. Rptr. 3d 29 (Naidu v. Superior Court of Riverside Cnty.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal, 5th District primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
RAMIREZ, P.J.
*305Petitioners, Jimmy and Uma Naidu, challenge a trial court order preventing them from using their licenses from the Contractors' State Licensing Board (CSLB) as a condition of bail. Because we agree that this condition could not have been imposed without some sort of evidentiary hearing at which it was established that the bail condition was necessary to protect the public, we grant the petition.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Petitioners allegedly sold at least one of their business licenses to one Raj Suri, whose own CSLB license was suspended, and then failed to supervise Suri despite retaining the status of "Responsible Managing Employee" in CSLB's records. On *32December 15, 2016, CSLB initiated an administrative proceeding to suspend or revoke petitioners' business licenses.
Petitioners are also now defendants in a prosecution charging them with fraudulent use of a contractor's license ( Bus. & Prof. Code, § 7027.3 ) and conspiracy ( Pen Code, § 182, subd. (a)(1) ), at least one of which is a felony. ( Pen. Code, § 182, subd. (a).) Prior to petitioners' arraignment, the CSLB filed a request that the trial court suspend petitioners' business licenses from the CSLB as a condition of bail. Petitioners filed written opposition to CSLB's request and argued against the license suspension at the bail hearing. Nevertheless, on April 5, 2017, the trial court released petitioners on their own recognizance (O.R.) but ordered their CSLB licenses suspended. To allow time to seek relief here, the trial court made the order effective May 1, 2017. The order is to remain effective "while on bail pending resolution of this criminal proceeding, or while on pretrial O.R. release, or as a condition of probation *306and until any Contractors State License Board's disciplinary proceeding becomes final, whichever concludes last."
After receiving the petition filed here, we stayed the trial court action, requested an informal response, and set an order to show cause. In conjunction with the traverse, petitioner filed a request for judicial notice of a notice of withdrawal of CSLB's administrative charge against them. As the pendency of administrative proceedings is relevant in part for the reasons discussed post , we grant petitioners' request for judicial notice.
DISCUSSION
In this court, petitioners argue the trial court had no authority to suspend their CSLB licenses as a condition of O.R. release because this order infringes on their due process rights. They also contend the scope of the order containing the probation conditions constitutes cruel and unusual punishment because the license suspension could last beyond the conclusion of any criminal proceedings, even if petitioners are acquitted. Because we agree with the first premise, we do not reach the second.
This petition poses pure questions of law. (Cf., e.g., In re Sheena K. (2007)
In this case, CSLB indicated it was appearing "under the authority granted by Penal Code section 23." In briefing in this court and the trial court, it also relies on Penal Code sections 1275 and 1318 as potential support for the trial court's license suspension order. We briefly discuss these statutory underpinnings before addressing due process principles, more generally.
Penal Code section 23 reads, as relevant: "In any criminal proceeding against a person who has been issued a license to engage in a business or profession by a state agency pursuant to provisions of the Business and Professions Code or the Education Code, or the Chiropractic Initiative Act, the state agency which issued the license may voluntarily appear to furnish pertinent information, make recommendations regarding specific conditions of probation, or provide any other assistance necessary to promote the interests of justice and protect the interests of the public, or may be ordered by the court to do so, if *33the crime charged is substantially related to the *307qualifications, functions, or duties of a licensee." The only published case we have found that construes this statute is Gray v. Superior Court (2005)
In Gray , the Medical Board appeared without notice at an arraignment and persuaded the trial court to order the medical license of one Dr. Gray suspended as a condition of bail. ( Gray , supra , 125 Cal.App.4th at p. 635,
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RAMIREZ, P.J.
*305Petitioners, Jimmy and Uma Naidu, challenge a trial court order preventing them from using their licenses from the Contractors' State Licensing Board (CSLB) as a condition of bail. Because we agree that this condition could not have been imposed without some sort of evidentiary hearing at which it was established that the bail condition was necessary to protect the public, we grant the petition.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Petitioners allegedly sold at least one of their business licenses to one Raj Suri, whose own CSLB license was suspended, and then failed to supervise Suri despite retaining the status of "Responsible Managing Employee" in CSLB's records. On *32December 15, 2016, CSLB initiated an administrative proceeding to suspend or revoke petitioners' business licenses.
Petitioners are also now defendants in a prosecution charging them with fraudulent use of a contractor's license ( Bus. & Prof. Code, § 7027.3 ) and conspiracy ( Pen Code, § 182, subd. (a)(1) ), at least one of which is a felony. ( Pen. Code, § 182, subd. (a).) Prior to petitioners' arraignment, the CSLB filed a request that the trial court suspend petitioners' business licenses from the CSLB as a condition of bail. Petitioners filed written opposition to CSLB's request and argued against the license suspension at the bail hearing. Nevertheless, on April 5, 2017, the trial court released petitioners on their own recognizance (O.R.) but ordered their CSLB licenses suspended. To allow time to seek relief here, the trial court made the order effective May 1, 2017. The order is to remain effective "while on bail pending resolution of this criminal proceeding, or while on pretrial O.R. release, or as a condition of probation *306and until any Contractors State License Board's disciplinary proceeding becomes final, whichever concludes last."
After receiving the petition filed here, we stayed the trial court action, requested an informal response, and set an order to show cause. In conjunction with the traverse, petitioner filed a request for judicial notice of a notice of withdrawal of CSLB's administrative charge against them. As the pendency of administrative proceedings is relevant in part for the reasons discussed post , we grant petitioners' request for judicial notice.
DISCUSSION
In this court, petitioners argue the trial court had no authority to suspend their CSLB licenses as a condition of O.R. release because this order infringes on their due process rights. They also contend the scope of the order containing the probation conditions constitutes cruel and unusual punishment because the license suspension could last beyond the conclusion of any criminal proceedings, even if petitioners are acquitted. Because we agree with the first premise, we do not reach the second.
This petition poses pure questions of law. (Cf., e.g., In re Sheena K. (2007)
In this case, CSLB indicated it was appearing "under the authority granted by Penal Code section 23." In briefing in this court and the trial court, it also relies on Penal Code sections 1275 and 1318 as potential support for the trial court's license suspension order. We briefly discuss these statutory underpinnings before addressing due process principles, more generally.
Penal Code section 23 reads, as relevant: "In any criminal proceeding against a person who has been issued a license to engage in a business or profession by a state agency pursuant to provisions of the Business and Professions Code or the Education Code, or the Chiropractic Initiative Act, the state agency which issued the license may voluntarily appear to furnish pertinent information, make recommendations regarding specific conditions of probation, or provide any other assistance necessary to promote the interests of justice and protect the interests of the public, or may be ordered by the court to do so, if *33the crime charged is substantially related to the *307qualifications, functions, or duties of a licensee." The only published case we have found that construes this statute is Gray v. Superior Court (2005)
In Gray , the Medical Board appeared without notice at an arraignment and persuaded the trial court to order the medical license of one Dr. Gray suspended as a condition of bail. ( Gray , supra , 125 Cal.App.4th at p. 635,
The expressio unius doctrine, however, is not applied without resort to other interpretive aids, such as "indicia of legislative intent." ( J.W. , supra , 29 Cal.4th at p. 209,
However, the Enrolled Bill Report recommends that trial courts have the power to "prevent a probationer (a person convicted of [a] crime) from engaging in specified activities" regarding use of a business license because, "[t]he key to public protection is the criminal court's power to restrict the activities of a convicted person." (Italics added.) It also indicates that the recommended " 'one stop' system of agency participation in criminal proceedings enlightens the criminal court and promotes appropriate restriction of the convicted licensee's activities" and recommends that these "restrictions can be incorporated in the court's conditions of probation ." (Italics added.) Petitioners have not been convicted, and they are not on probation. The Enrolled Bill Report therefore does not describe them, and does not assist the People in establishing that the trial court could restrict petitioners' business *308licenses as a condition of bail rather than as a condition of probation. While we grant the request for judicial notice and consider the Enrolled Bill Report, we find it unpersuasive.
Having found Penal Code section 23 cannot form the basis for the order issued in these proceedings, we now consider whether the other statutes mentioned ante directly authorize the order preventing petitioners from using their CSLB licenses as a condition of bail, as the People contend. We take no quarrel with the idea that public safety is very important in the bail-setting process, nor could we, as Penal Code section 1275, subdivision (a)(1), explicitly *34provides that "[t]he public safety shall be the primary consideration." In addition, we are aware that Penal Code section 1318 authorizes imposition of "reasonable conditions" above and beyond those designed to ensure the defendant's presence at trial. ( Pen. Code, § 1318, subd. (a)(2) ; see In re York (1995)
Petitioners do not specify whether they assert rights under the federal or the state due process clauses. With respect to whether the due process clauses are triggered at all when a government entity suspends a business license, we are aware that state and federal due process jurisprudence diverges; federal law requires a litigant asserting due process rights to establish a protected interest in the right that was lost due to government action, while California's approach is more " 'flexible' " and instead "depends on a careful and clearly articulated balancing of the interests at stake in each context." ( People v. Ramirez (1979)
In this case, we are concerned not so much with whether petitioners have established a right that is worthy of any procedural protections at all, but with what specific protections are due before the trial court can suspend their business licenses. This is because, "the state may of course regulate the qualifications of individuals employed by licensed business establishments and may discipline those licensees who jeopardize the public welfare by their hiring practices." ( Endler , supra , 68 Cal.2d at p. 170,
We again find Gray instructive. There, a doctor who specialized in psychiatry was charged with multiple criminal counts, including possession of controlled substances ( Health & Saf. Code, §§ 11153, subd. (a), 11350, subd. (a), 11375, subd. (b)(2) ) and child pornography ( Pen. Code, § 311.11 ), as well as sexually exploiting a patient or former patient ( Bus. & Prof. Code, § 729 ). ( Gray , supra , 125 Cal.App.4th at p. 635,
The Medical Board defended its decision not to use administrative procedures that would have allowed interim suspension of the defendant's license on the theory that a decision in his favor at the administrative level might have collaterally estopped the prosecution. ( Gray , supra , 125 Cal.App.4th at p. 639,
The People dismiss Gray as "distinguishable on its facts" because here petitioners received notice and an opportunity to respond to CSLB's request regarding bail conditions, where the defendant in Gray did not receive the same procedural protections.1 In keeping with this characterization of Gray , they accuse petitioners of relying on dictum when they cite Gray for its comments on the need to submit evidence at the hearing, because in the People's view all that court held was that notice of the Medical Board's recommendation was required. Dictum is defined as " '[a] judicial comment made while delivering a judicial opinion, but one that is unnecessary to the decision in the case and therefore not precedential (although it may be considered persuasive)....' " ( People v. Vang (2011)
We disagree that the only holding in Gray was that the trial court failed to *36require notice of and an opportunity to respond to the Medical Board's request regarding probation conditions. While Gray did emphasize that the lack of notice to the defendant was problematic (e.g. Gray , supra , 125 Cal.App.4th at p. 638,
We start with the undisputed premise that, under both state and federal law, "due process is flexible and calls for such procedural protections as the particular situation demands." ( Morrissey v. Brewer (1972)
In this case, as in Gray , "only the governmental interest appears to have been given much weight by the trial court. Little consideration was given to [the licenseholders'] private interest in [their] license or the risk of erroneously depriving [them] of [their] license." ( Gray, supra , 125 Cal.App.4th at p. 638,
In our view, this dignitary interest presupposes that the trial court considers actual evidence regarding the danger petitioners allegedly pose to the public. After all, " 'The public has the right to expect its officers ... to make adjudications on the basis of merit.' " ( Ramirez , supra , 25 Cal.3d at p. 267,
As discussed ante , Ramirez also mentions a "dignitary interest" in providing notice and an opportunity to be heard. ( Ramirez , supra , 25 Cal.3d at p. 269,
*38Finally, we acknowledge the government's interest in protecting the public is also weighty; it is, in fact, the "primary consideration" in setting bail. ( Pen. Code, § 1275, subd. (a)(1) ; see Bus. & Prof. Code, § 7000.6 ["Protection of the public shall be the highest priority for the Contractors' State License Board in exercising its licensing, regulatory, and disciplinary functions."].) Still, we reject any notion that the People have an interest in protecting the public at the expense of a criminal defendant's due process *313rights, and, as we have intimated, due process requires that at least some evidence of danger to the public support an order suspending a business license as part of a bail order. We do not see why it would impose an undue burden on the government if we imposed such a rule in this case. CSLB initiated the request for a license suspension, and it provided counsel at the bail hearing. It was therefore already involved in this proceeding. Moreover, CSLB had initiated an administrative proceeding that also would have consumed time and resources had it followed that path instead of requesting that the court effectuate the license suspension the administrative charge requested. We do not see why requiring some presentation of evidence on this topic would pose an undue burden.
Having established that the due process clauses, both state and federal, require some presentation of evidence on the element of danger to the public, we now examine whether that rule was satisfied in this case. We conclude it was not. No witnesses testified at the bail hearing. While CSLB filed a written request for suspension of petitioners' business license, it submitted very little that might even be construed as evidence that the public would be in danger if petitioners retained use of their business license. The brief supporting the request asserts that petitioners' "conduct exhibits a profound lack of judgment, a flagrant disrespect for the health and safety of others, and a violation of the trust accorded to a licensed contractor." However, "statements by counsel are not evidence." ( People v. Richardson (2008)
The most we found in the way of admissible evidence supporting this assertion is the following statement in a declaration from counsel: "It is the position of the Registrar of the Contractors State License Board, that based on the [ ] charges [at issue], Jimmy Ratan Naidu and Uma Devi Naidu, are unsafe to work as a contractor and should be deprived of that privilege pending completion of these criminal proceedings and any proceedings by the CSLB itself. This Court's exercise of authority under sections 1275 (release of defendant on bail) and 1318 (regarding own recognizance [O.R.] release), in conjunction with section 23 of the Penal Code, addresses both the interest of justice and the need for prompt public protection." Read literally, this statement tells us no more than CSLB's "position" and its belief that it would be beneficial if the trial court suspended petitioners' license. Even interpreted more liberally, it does not constitute evidence that petitioners pose such a danger to the public that suspending their business licenses was necessary. (Cf. Gray , supra , 125 Cal.App.4th at p. 641,
We find, when we apply the Ramirez factors, that declining to require actual evidence of petitioners' dangerousness before ordering their business licenses suspended exposed them to a significant risk of erroneous deprivation despite the fact that they had a substantial private interest at stake. It also denied them the dignitary benefit of having a forum in which to be not just heard, but meaningfully heard. Although the People have a weighty interest in protecting the public, we find it would impose no undue burden to require them to submit more in the way of evidence that petitioners are dangerous if allowed to maintain their license.
On balance, then, we conclude that the trial court violated due process when it suspended petitioners' business license without requiring evidence that they were dangerous. As the Endler court held, "Procedural due process requires notice, confrontation, and a full hearing whenever action by the state significantly impairs an individual's freedom to pursue a private occupation." ( Endler , supra , 68 Cal.2d at p. 172,
The People rely on Gilbert v. Homar (1997)
"The first pleading on the part of the people in the superior court in a felony case is the indictment, information, or the complaint in any case certified to the superior court under [Penal Code s]ection 859a.[3 ] The first *315pleading on the part of the people in a misdemeanor or infraction case is the complaint except as otherwise provided by law." ( Pen. Code, § 949.) Penal Code section 737 further provides: "All felonies shall be prosecuted by indictment or information, except as provided in Section 859a." An "information" may not be filed until there is "a preliminary examination of the case against the defendant and an order holding him to answer made." ( Pen. Code, § 738.) In a felony case, the filing of a complaint commences, not the charging of a felony, but "[t]he proceeding for a preliminary examination." (Ibid .) If "it appears from the [preliminary] examination that a public offense has been committed, and there is sufficient cause to believe that the defendant is guilty, the magistrate shall make or indorse on the *40complaint an order" holding the defendant to answer. ( Pen. Code, § 872, subd. (a).) The initial pleading in a felony case can also be an indictment, which "is an accusation in writing, presented by the grand jury to a competent court, charging a person with a public offense." ( Pen. Code, § 889.) In contrast, "all misdemeanors and infractions must be prosecuted by written complaint ." ( Pen. Code, § 740, emphasis added.)
The California Supreme Court has further explained: "A felony complaint, unlike a misdemeanor complaint, does not confer trial jurisdiction. It invokes only the authority of a magistrate, not that of a trial court. ( [Pen. Code,] § 806.) ... The felony complaint functions to bring the defendant before a magistrate for an examination into whether probable cause exists to formally charge him with a felony. Only if probable cause exists may an information invoking the trial jurisdiction of the superior court be filed.... The misdemeanor complaint, by contrast, is not a preliminary accusation. It is a formal charge, an accusatory pleading giving the court jurisdiction to proceed to trial." ( Serna v. Superior Court (1985)
We explain these rules not because they directly govern whether the trial court had the authority to suspend petitioners' business license, but because they illustrate the difference between the filing of a complaint in a felony case and the filing of an information or indictment. As we have explained, a complaint in a felony case only invites the fact-finding procedure that will determine if there is probable cause to hold the defendant to answer; the People's first "pleading" does not come into being until an information is *316filed, and the information may not be filed until after the preliminary hearing. ( Serna , supra , 40 Cal.3d at p. 257,
This difference between an information or indictment and a felony complaint is why we find that neither Mallen nor American Liberty holds, as the People assert, that the single act of filing of a felony "complaint" is sufficient justification for suspending a business license without an evidentiary hearing. In fact, we conclude both cases support petitioners' position more than the People's.
In Mallen , the president and director of a bank was indicted under federal law on charges "that unquestionably involve[d] dishonesty or breach of trust." ( Mallen , supra , 486 U.S. at p. 236,
Petitioner in this case has had no evidentiary hearing; there is neither an indictment nor an information. Such a finding of probable cause, under *317Mallen , is an important way to "assure that the suspension was not baseless." ( Mallen , supra , 486 U.S. at p. 241,
American Liberty is distinguishable on essentially the same ground. In that case, the Insurance Commissioner suspended the license of one Mustafa Yousef after learning he had been charged with multiple felonies.5 ( American Liberty , supra , 141 Cal.App.4th at p. 1049,
In other words, American Liberty interpreted Mallen , as we do, to require some form of fact-finding before the suspension of the license to practice a trade is "[ ]justified." ( American Liberty , supra , 141 Cal.App.4th at p. 1060,
Finally, we explain why even the ruling in Homar does not defeat the petition. In Homar , a state university employee who worked as a campus police officer challenged a suspension without pay and a demotion after he was arrested on drug charges. ( Homar , supra , 520 U.S. at p. 927,
The Homar court addressed not whether the filing of criminal charges, standing alone, could support the revocation of a business license, but whether it could support temporary adverse actions that were taken against an employee who was still able to work in the same trade and for the same employer. That court also emphasized that the employee's interest was less weighty than that of a business licensee *43facing suspension. ( Homar , supra , 520 U.S. at p. 932,
Homar is also factually distinguishable in another respect. There, the court found that "the State has a significant interest in immediately suspending, when felony charges are filed against them, employees who occupy positions of great public trust and high public visibility, such as police officers." ( Homar , supra , 520 U.S. at p. 932,
We have now explained why, in our view, an analysis of procedural due process rules compels the conclusion that a trial court may not suspend a criminal defendant's business license as a condition of bail without some kind of evidence regarding that defendant's danger to the public if the license remains active. For the reasons stated ante , Mallen , American Liberty , and Homar do not alter this conclusion. However, those cases do inform that due process requires only a showing of probable cause that a criminal defendant poses an immediate risk of danger to the public if allowed to continue to operate under a professional license in order to ensure that the suspension is not arbitrary, baseless, or unwarranted. ( Mallen , supra , 486 U.S. at pp. 240-241, 244,
DISPOSITION
Petitioners' request for dismissal filed November 17, 2017, is denied.
The Peoples' request for judicial notice filed July 31, 2017 is granted.
Petitioners' request for judicial notice filed September 11, 2017 is granted.
Let a writ of mandate issue, directing the Superior Court of Riverside County to vacate its order restricting use of petitioners' CSLB licenses. Any additional trial court proceedings regarding the suspension of petitioners' business licenses shall be in accordance with this opinion.
*320Petitioner is directed to prepare and have the peremptory writ of mandate issued, copies served, and the original filed with the clerk of this court, together with proof of service on all parties.
We concur:
McKINSTER, J.
MILLER, J.
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