Pease v. Zapf

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 17, 2018
DocketD074405
StatusPublished

This text of Pease v. Zapf (Pease v. Zapf) 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
Pease v. Zapf, (Cal. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Filed 8/17/18

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

BRYAN PEASE, D074405

Contestant and Appellant,

v. (Super. Ct. No. 37-2018-00033348-CU-PT-CTL) LORIE ZAPF,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Peter C.

Deddeh, Judge. Affirmed.

Singleton Law Firm, Gerald B. Singleton and Trenton G. Lamere; Law Office of

Bryan W. Pease and Bryan W. Pease for Contestant and Appellant.

The Sutton Law Firm, James R. Sutton, Bradley W. Hertz and Matthew C.

Alvarez for Defendant and Respondent.

In November 1992, San Diego voters approved an amendment to the city charter

that established a term limit for members of the San Diego City Council. Bryan Pease is a city council candidate who did not qualify for the November

2018 general election. He contends Councilmember Lorie Zapf—who received the most

votes in the primary election—is termed out of office and ineligible to run in the general

election. He maintains he should be placed on the ballot instead. We disagree.

Here, the parties agree Councilmember Zapf represented District 6 during her first

term of office and represented District 2 during her second term of office. The parties

also agree that, as a result of redistricting that occurred during Councilmember Zapf's

first term of office, she resided in District 2 for both terms. Based on her residency,

Pease contends Councilmember Zapf has already served two consecutive terms from the

same district and is termed out of office.

Because this interpretation is not supported by the language of the term limit

provision and fails to take into account other relevant charter provisions, including the

impact of the redistricting provision, we reject Pease's argument. The term limit

provision regulates the number of terms an incumbent may serve on behalf of the electors

of a given district, and is not dependent solely on residency. This holding follows from

the language of the charter as a whole, while also giving due deference to the

fundamental right of voters to select among eligible candidates to represent them in

elected office.

Councilmember Zapf is eligible for reelection in the November 2018 general

election. We affirm the trial court's judgment in her favor.

2 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

On November 2, 2010, Councilmember Zapf was elected to serve a four-year term

on the San Diego City Council as the representative for District 6. At that time, District 6

encompassed Bay Ho (where Councilmember Zapf lived), Bay Park, Clairemont Mesa,

Kearny Mesa, Serra Mesa, and Mission Valley. In the same year, then-Councilmember

Kevin Faulconer, who lived in Point Loma, ran for and won reelection to serve on the

city council as the representative for a neighboring district, District 2. Councilmembers

Zapf and Faulconer were sworn into office on December 3, 2010.

Following the 2010 national decennial census, San Diego's Redistricting

Commission—a panel of appointed voters with authority to approve city council district

boundaries (San Diego City Charter, art. II, § 5.1)—adopted a plan to redraw San Diego's

district boundaries, effective September 24, 2011.1 As a result of redistricting, the

newly-drawn District 2 included both Councilmember Faulconer's residence in Point

Loma and Councilmember Zapf's residence in Bay Ho. Although the city charter

provided a method to designate which district each council member would represent for

the remainder of his or her term, there is no evidence the city council implemented this

option. However, after redistricting, the city council's meeting agendas, minutes, and

website continued to refer to Councilmember Faulconer as the representative for District

1 The version of the San Diego City Charter in effect at the time provided that the Redistricting Commission's adoption of a redistricting plan "shall be effective thirty (30) days after adoption." (Former San Diego City Charter, art. II, § 5.1.) The Redistricting Commission approved the redistricting plan on August 25, 2011. Therefore, the redistricting plan was effective on September 24, 2011.

3 2 and Councilmember Zapf as the representative for District 6, and the council members

acted in those official capacities for the remainder of their terms.

In a 2014 special election, Councilmember Faulconer was elected the mayor of

San Diego and, in the 2014 general election, Councilmember Zapf was elected to city

council as the representative for District 2, the district in which her Bay Ho residence was

located due to the redistricting that had occurred in 2011. Councilmember Zapf was

sworn into office on December 10, 2014, and her term will end in December 2018.

Councilmember Zapf and several other candidates campaigned for the soon-to-be-

vacant position of District 2 representative on the city council. In the primary election

held on June 5, 2018, Councilmember Zapf and Dr. Jennifer Campbell were the top two

vote-getters and thus qualified for the ballot in the upcoming general election.

Councilmember Zapf received 43 percent of the vote and Dr. Campbell received 21

percent of the vote.2 Pease, who finished the primary race in third place with 20 percent

of the vote, did not qualify for the general election.

On July 6, 2018, Pease filed a petition under Elections Code section 16101,3 in

which he challenged Councilmember Zapf's eligibility for office and asked the trial court

2 The top two vote-getters in a primary election to fill an elective city office qualify for the general election, irrespective of whether one candidate has received a majority of votes cast for all candidates. (San Diego City Charter, art. II, § 10.)

3 All further statutory references are to the Elections Code, unless otherwise noted.

4 to set aside her nomination and declare him nominated for the general election.4

According to Pease, Councilmember Zapf's nomination contravenes the voter-approved

term limit provision in the city charter and thus she is ineligible to run for another term.

That provision states "no person shall serve more than two consecutive four-year terms as

a Council member from any particular district." (San Diego City Charter, art. III, § 12,

subd. (c).) A partial term in excess of two years is treated as a full term under the term

limit provision. (Ibid.)

In the trial court, Pease initially argued that, effective upon the date of

redistricting, Councilmember Zapf no longer represented District 6 and instead began to

represent District 2, where she resided. In support of this argument, Pease contended that

upon redistricting, a council member represents the newly drawn district in which he or

she resides, not the district that elected the council member.5 Based on this theory, Pease

maintained that Councilmember Zapf had already served two terms as the council

member for District 2—one term from the effective date of redistricting until 2014

4 Section 16101 states in pertinent part as follows: "Any candidate at a primary election may contest the right of another candidate to nomination to the same office by filing an affidavit alleging . . . [¶] . . . [t]he defendant is not eligible to the office in dispute."

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