Opinion No. (2011)

CourtCalifornia Attorney General Reports
DecidedAugust 22, 2011
StatusPublished

This text of Opinion No. (2011) (Opinion No. (2011)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Opinion No. (2011), (Cal. 2011).

Opinion

KAMALA D. HARRIS Attorney General DIANE E. EISENBERG Deputy Attorney General

THE HONORABLE BILL EMMERSON, MEMBER OF THE STATE SENATE, has requested an opinion on the following question:

May a city council remove its appointee to the Board of Trustees of a Mosquito and Vector Control District at the council's pleasure?

CONCLUSION
A city council may not remove its appointee to the Board of Trustees of a Mosquito and Vector Control District at the council's pleasure. *Page 2

ANALYSIS
Since 1915, mosquito abatement and vector control districts ("mosquito abatement districts") have protected California communities against the threats of vector-borne diseases.1 In 2002, the Legislature enacted the Mosquito and Vector Control District Law2 ("Mosquito District Law") in order "to create and continue a broad statutory authority for a class of special districts with the power to conduct effective programs for the surveillance, prevention, abatement, and control of mosquitoes and other vectors."3

Each mosquito abatement district is governed by a board of trustees consisting of at least five members.4 The board is a legislative body charged with establishing policies for the operation of the district and providing for the faithful implementation of those policies by the employees of the district.5 The composition of the board of trustees depends on whether the district is located in one or more than one county, and on whether the district consists of only unincorporated territory, or of both unincorporated and incorporated territory.6 Trustees of mosquito abatement districts are appointed, not *Page 3 elected.7

We are asked whether a city council that has appointed a person to the board of trustees of a mosquito abatement district may later remove that person from the board at the council's discretion — that is, before the expiration of the appointee's term and without specific statutory authority for the removal. We conclude that a city council may not remove its appointee to a mosquito abatement district board of trustees at the council's will or pleasure.8

Government Code section 1301 provides: "Every office, the term of which is not fixed by law, is held at the pleasure of the appointing power."9 We have no hesitation in *Page 4 determining for the purposes of this opinion that mosquito abatement district trustees are public officers.10

Whether a public office has a fixed term is determined by reference to the law creating the office.11 For this purpose, the most relevant statute is section 2024, which provides in full:

(a) Except as provided in Section 2023, 12 the term of office for a member of the board of trustees shall be for a term of two or four years, at the discretion of the appointing authority. Terms of office commence at noon on the first Monday in January.

(b) Any vacancy in the office of a member appointed to a board of *Page 5 trustees shall be filled pursuant to Section 1779 of the Government Code. Any person appointed to fill a vacant office shall fill the balance of the unexpired term.

In interpreting section 2024, we employ well-established principles of statutory construction. As our Supreme Court has instructed:

[O]ur first task is to ascertain the intent of the Legislature so as to effectuate the purpose of the law. In determining such intent, [we] must look first to the words of the statute themselves, giving to the language its usual, ordinary import and according significance, if possible, to every word, phrase and sentence in pursuance of the legislative purpose. A construction making some words surplusage is to be avoided. The words of the statute must be construed in context, keeping in mind the statutory purpose, and statutes or statutory sections relating to the same subject must be harmonized, both internally and with each other, to the extent possible. . . . Both the legislative history of the statute and the wider historical circumstances of its enactment may be considered in ascertaining the legislative intent.13

The ordinary import of the words of section 2024(a) is not that the term of office of a trustee is generally subject to the appointing authority's discretion, but rather that the appointing authority may choose whether the term of a trustee is for two years or for four years. We are assisted to this conclusion by the longstanding rule of statutory construction commonly known as the "last antecedent rule," according to which "modifying phrases are to be applied to the words immediately preceding them and are not to be construed as extending to more remote phrases" unless the context or the evident meaning of the statute requires a different construction.14 Thus, the phrase "at the discretion of the appointing authority" refers to "a term of two or four years;" we find no reason to favor a different construction.15 Indeed, reading section 2024(a) to mean that a *Page 6 trustee serves at the will of the appointing authority requires that the phrase "for a term of two or four years" be accorded no significance and rendered a nullity. We consider such a reading to be untenable.

We further find that section 2024(a) plainly provides for a fixed, not an indeterminate, term of office. The disjunctive word "or" signifies that a term of two years and a term of four years are alternative possibilities, 16 but each alternative nevertheless constitutes a fixed term. Indeed, as our Supreme Court has observed, "[t]he word `term,' when used in reference to the tenure of office, means ordinarily a fixed and definite time."17

Our view that the term of a district trustee is fixed finds further support in the statutory context and legislative history of section 2024. Context is provided by section 2007(c), which states that a mosquito abatement district "shall be deemed an `independent special district,' as defined by Section 56044 of the Government Code." Government Code section 56044, in turn, defines the term "independent special district" to include "any special district18 having a legislative body all of whose members are *Page 7 elected by registered voters or landowners within the district, or whose members are appointed to fixed terms." Because the trustees of mosquito abatement districts are not elected, it follows that their appointments are for fixed terms. Sections 2024 and 2007 may thus be construed together to achieve a uniform and consistent legislative purpose.19

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Opinion No. (2011), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/opinion-no-2011-calag-2011.