P. ex rel. Lacey v. Robles

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 29, 2020
DocketB290697
StatusPublished

This text of P. ex rel. Lacey v. Robles (P. ex rel. Lacey v. Robles) 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
P. ex rel. Lacey v. Robles, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 1/29/20 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FIVE

THE PEOPLE ex rel. JACKIE B290697 LACEY as District Attorney, etc., (Los Angeles County Plaintiff and Respondent, Super. Ct. No. BC608075)

v.

ALBERT ROBLES,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, James C. Chalfant, Judge. Affirmed. Albert Robles, in pro. per., for Defendant and Appellant. Jackie Lacey, District Attorney, Phyllis Asayama and Kenneth Von Helmolt, Deputy District Attorneys, for Plaintiff and Respondent. Albert Robles (Robles) served simultaneously as a member of the board of directors of the Water Replenishment District of Southern California (WRD) and as mayor of Carson, California. The Los Angeles County District Attorney (District Attorney) obtained permission from the Attorney General to sue Robles in quo warranto, a Latin term for a legal proceeding that demands a person show by what authority he or she exercises a public office. In the quo warranto suit, the District Attorney argued Robles was violating Government Code section 1099 (Section 1099), which makes it unlawful to simultaneously hold incompatible public offices—meaning, as relevant here, offices for which “there is a possibility of a significant clash of duties or loyalties” based on the powers and jurisdiction of the offices. (§ 1099, subd. (a)(2).) The trial court agreed, removing Robles as a director of the WRD. We now consider, in the main, whether the District Attorney properly initiated the quo warranto action and whether Robles’s two public offices are indeed incompatible within the meaning of the statute.

I. BACKGROUND A. Robles’s Dual Offices The WRD serves 43 cities in southern Los Angeles County, including Carson.1 The WRD is governed by a five-member board

1 “Prior to the formation of the [WRD], groundwater was being produced from the Central Groundwater Basin . . . and the West Coast Groundwater Basin (collectively Basins) that provided water to residents in Los Angeles County in amounts that ‘greatly exceeded natural replenishment, creating a condition in the Basins known as “overdraft.” That overdraft condition caused numerous problems, including drastic overall decline of the elevation of the groundwater table and the

2 of directors, each of whom is assigned to represent one of five geographic divisions. Prior to his removal from office, Robles represented WRD division five, a division that includes Carson within its boundaries. He was first elected to the WRD in 1992, and he was re-elected continuously through November 2016 (his most recent term was to expire in 2020). The Water Replenishment District Act empowers the WRD to replenish groundwater supplies by buying, selling, and exchanging water; spreading, sinking, and injecting water into aquifers; storing, transporting, recapturing, recycling, purifying, and treating water; and building infrastructure. (Water Code, § 60221.) The WRD is also authorized to make expenditures and take legal action to prevent contamination of, and remove contaminants from, water basins. (Water Code, § 60224.) The WRD board of directors charges a “replenishment assessment” to fund its operating expenses and other activities. (Water Code, § 60305.) The replenishment assessment is “levied upon the production of groundwater from groundwater supplies within the district during the ensuing fiscal year” and “fixed by the board at a uniform rate per acre-foot of groundwater produced.” (Water Code, § 60317.) Carson contracts with two private companies to provide pumped groundwater to the city and its residents, and the companies pay the WRD’s

intrusion of seawater into the Basins.’ As a result of these concerns, in 1959 the [WRD] was formed by a vote of the citizens of Los Angeles County and pursuant to the Water Replenishment District Act enacted in 1955, codified at [Water Code] section 60000 et seq. . . .” (Water Replenishment Dist. of Southern California v. City of Cerritos (2013) 220 Cal.App.4th 1450, 1454 (Cerritos).)

3 replenishment assessment and pass on the cost in the water rates they charge. Having opted to levy a replenishment assessment, the WRD board of directors is statutorily obligated to hold hearings each year to “determin[e] whether and to what extent the estimated costs thereof for the ensuing year shall be paid for by [the] replenishment assessment.” (Water Code, § 60306.) Members of the public can attend these hearings, and as Robles testified during a deposition, residents in the area served by the WRD do attend the assessment-setting hearings every year. City council members (from cities other than Carson, Robles said) also attend to object to the amount of proposed replenishment assessments. Beyond expressing views at a replenishment assessment hearing, a party opposing a replenishment assessment may file a “judicial action or proceeding to attack, review, set aside, void, or annul a resolution or motion . . . levying a replenishment assessment.” (Water Code, § 60317.) In addition, as mayor of Carson, Robles can file—and has in the past filed—a protest with the Public Utilities Commission to object to the rates being charged by the two private water companies contracting with Carson. While serving as a WRD director, Robles opted to run for a city council seat in Carson, and he was elected to the council in March 2013.2 Late the following year, the District Attorney

2 Robles’s involvement in Carson politics, however, began earlier. In 2012, for instance, he lobbied the Carson city council not to join a lawsuit in which several neighboring cities challenged the WRD’s 2010-2011 replenishment assessment as an illegal tax under Article XIII D of the California Constitution

4 informed Robles he was holding two incompatible offices under Section 1099, which meant under the law he would forfeit his WRD directorship. Robles nonetheless continued to occupy both offices, and in April 2015, Robles’s Carson city council colleagues appointed him to fill the vacant office of mayor (as mayor he still sits on the city council).

B. Quo Warranto Proceeding In April 2015, the District Attorney applied to then- Attorney General Kamala Harris for leave to sue Robles in quo warranto. General Harris granted the application in a December 2015 published opinion, finding that “[w]hether the doctrine of incompatible offices precludes [Robles] from simultaneously serving as a director of the [WRD] and as city council member and mayor for the City of Carson presents substantial questions of fact and law warranting judicial resolution.” (98 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 94 (2015).) Having obtained the Attorney General’s leave to sue, the District Attorney filed a complaint in quo warranto in January 2016. The complaint alleged Robles had “usurped, intruded into, and unlawfully held and exercised the office of Director of the WRD in violation of [Section 1099], and continued to do so once he was sworn into the office of Mayor of the City of Carson . . . .” The complaint further alleged the two offices were incompatible under Section 1099 “because the WRD and the City of Carson have overlapping territory, duties and responsibilities, and a clash of duties is likely to arise in the exercise of both offices

(Proposition 218). (Cerritos, supra, 220 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1454- 1461.)

5 simultaneously.” The District Attorney sought Robles’s ouster from the WRD board of directors under Section 1099 plus a fine and costs under Code of Civil Procedure section 809. At the November 2016 general election, when the mayoral term the city council appointed him to fill was set to expire, Robles was elected mayor of Carson.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

City of San Diego v. Boggess CA4/1
216 Cal. App. 4th 1494 (California Court of Appeal, 2013)
People Ex Rel. Smith v. City of San Jose
222 P.2d 947 (California Court of Appeal, 1950)
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center v. Superior Court
954 P.2d 511 (California Supreme Court, 1998)
City of Oakland v. Hogan
106 P.2d 987 (California Court of Appeal, 1940)
People Ex Rel. Chapman v. Rapsey
107 P.2d 388 (California Supreme Court, 1940)
American Canyon Fire Protection District v. County of Napa
141 Cal. App. 3d 100 (California Court of Appeal, 1983)
McClain v. County of Alameda
209 Cal. App. 2d 73 (California Court of Appeal, 1962)
People Ex Rel. City of Downey v. Downey County Water District
202 Cal. App. 2d 786 (California Court of Appeal, 1962)
People Ex Rel. City of Bellflower v. Bellflower Cty. Water Dist.
247 Cal. App. 2d 344 (California Court of Appeal, 1966)
Nicolopulos v. City of Lawndale
111 Cal. Rptr. 2d 420 (California Court of Appeal, 2001)
Central & West Basin Water Replenishment District v. Southern California Water Co.
135 Cal. Rptr. 2d 486 (California Court of Appeal, 2003)
Nagle v. Superior Court
28 Cal. App. 4th 1465 (California Court of Appeal, 1994)
San Ysidro Irrigation District v. Superior Court
365 P.2d 753 (California Supreme Court, 1961)
Water Replenishment District v. City of Cerritos
220 Cal. App. 4th 1450 (California Court of Appeal, 2013)
Rando v. Harris
228 Cal. App. 4th 868 (California Court of Appeal, 2014)
T-Mobile West LLC v. City and County of S.F.
438 P.3d 239 (California Supreme Court, 2019)
Thurston v. Clark
40 P. 435 (California Supreme Court, 1895)
People ex rel. Stephenson v. Hayden
49 P.2d 314 (California Court of Appeal, 1935)
People v. Cherry
209 Cal. App. 3d 1131 (California Court of Appeal, 1989)
Contractors' State License Bd. v. Superior Court of Contra Costa Cnty.
232 Cal. Rptr. 3d 558 (California Court of Appeals, 5th District, 2018)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
P. ex rel. Lacey v. Robles, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/p-ex-rel-lacey-v-robles-calctapp-2020.