People v. Superior Court of Riverside Cnty.
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Opinion
**571 Liu, J.
*233 Government Code section 1090 prohibits public officers and employees from making contracts in which they have a financial interest when they act in their official capacities. Knowing and willful self-dealing can result in criminal liability. In this case, the District Attorney of Riverside County seeks to prosecute Dr. Hossain Sahlolbei under section 1090 for allegedly influencing the public hospital where he worked to hire another doctor and then profiting from that doctor's contract. The Court of Appeal held that because Sahlolbei was an independent contractor and not an employee of the hospital, section 1090 does not apply to Sahlolbei. We conclude that independent contractors are not categorically excluded from section 1090. Liability under the statute can extend to independent contractors who have duties to engage in or advise on public contracting. Because Sahlolbei's duties brought him within the scope of the statute, we reverse.
*440 I.
Sahlolbei was a surgeon at Palo Verde Hospital (the Hospital) in Blythe, Riverside County. The Hospital is a public entity under California law. It is undisputed that Sahlolbei was an independent contractor and never an employee of the Hospital. In addition to providing medical services as the Hospital's codirector of surgery, Sahlolbei served on the Hospital's medical executive committee (the Committee). The Committee, comprised of members of the medical staff, is independent of the Hospital and advises the board of governors of the Hospital (the Board) on the Hospital's operations, including physician hiring. Sahlolbei was at times the chief of staff or the vice-chief of staff of the Committee, and he is alleged to have had considerable influence over the Board's decisions in those roles.
*234 The prosecution alleges that Sahlolbei in 2009 recruited an anesthesiologist, Dr. Brad Barth, to work at the Hospital. Sahlolbei negotiated a contract with Barth under which Barth would receive $36,000 a month with a one-time relocation fee of $10,000. But Sahlolbei pressured the Board into hiring Barth for $48,000 a month with a one-time relocation fee of $40,000 as well as a directorship position of $3,000 a month. Sahlolbei allegedly threatened to have the medical staff stop admitting patients to the Hospital if the Board did not agree to his terms. Sahlolbei instructed Barth to have Barth's paychecks deposited directly into Sahlolbei's account, out of which Sahlolbei remitted to Barth the $36,000 a month on which they had agreed. The Board was not aware that Sahlolbei was profiting from Barth's contract. When this was brought to the Board's attention, the Hospital renegotiated Barth's contract to pay Barth directly.
The Riverside County District Attorney charged Sahlolbei with grand theft and violation of Government Code section 1090, which provides in relevant part: "Members of the Legislature, state, county, district, judicial district, and city officers or employees shall not be financially interested in any contract made by them in their official capacity, or by any body or board of which they are members." (Gov. Code, § 1090, subd. (a) ; all undesignated statutory references are to this code.) A willful and knowing violation of section 1090 is punishable by a fine of up to $1,000 or imprisonment, and disqualification "from holding any office in this state." (§ 1097, subd. (a);
People v. Honig
(1996)
The trial court dismissed the section 1090 count. It considered itself bound by
People v. Christiansen
(2013)
**572 II.
Whether section 1090 applies to independent contractors is a question of statutory construction that we review de novo. (
Lexin v. Superior Court
(2010)
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**571 Liu, J.
*233 Government Code section 1090 prohibits public officers and employees from making contracts in which they have a financial interest when they act in their official capacities. Knowing and willful self-dealing can result in criminal liability. In this case, the District Attorney of Riverside County seeks to prosecute Dr. Hossain Sahlolbei under section 1090 for allegedly influencing the public hospital where he worked to hire another doctor and then profiting from that doctor's contract. The Court of Appeal held that because Sahlolbei was an independent contractor and not an employee of the hospital, section 1090 does not apply to Sahlolbei. We conclude that independent contractors are not categorically excluded from section 1090. Liability under the statute can extend to independent contractors who have duties to engage in or advise on public contracting. Because Sahlolbei's duties brought him within the scope of the statute, we reverse.
*440 I.
Sahlolbei was a surgeon at Palo Verde Hospital (the Hospital) in Blythe, Riverside County. The Hospital is a public entity under California law. It is undisputed that Sahlolbei was an independent contractor and never an employee of the Hospital. In addition to providing medical services as the Hospital's codirector of surgery, Sahlolbei served on the Hospital's medical executive committee (the Committee). The Committee, comprised of members of the medical staff, is independent of the Hospital and advises the board of governors of the Hospital (the Board) on the Hospital's operations, including physician hiring. Sahlolbei was at times the chief of staff or the vice-chief of staff of the Committee, and he is alleged to have had considerable influence over the Board's decisions in those roles.
*234 The prosecution alleges that Sahlolbei in 2009 recruited an anesthesiologist, Dr. Brad Barth, to work at the Hospital. Sahlolbei negotiated a contract with Barth under which Barth would receive $36,000 a month with a one-time relocation fee of $10,000. But Sahlolbei pressured the Board into hiring Barth for $48,000 a month with a one-time relocation fee of $40,000 as well as a directorship position of $3,000 a month. Sahlolbei allegedly threatened to have the medical staff stop admitting patients to the Hospital if the Board did not agree to his terms. Sahlolbei instructed Barth to have Barth's paychecks deposited directly into Sahlolbei's account, out of which Sahlolbei remitted to Barth the $36,000 a month on which they had agreed. The Board was not aware that Sahlolbei was profiting from Barth's contract. When this was brought to the Board's attention, the Hospital renegotiated Barth's contract to pay Barth directly.
The Riverside County District Attorney charged Sahlolbei with grand theft and violation of Government Code section 1090, which provides in relevant part: "Members of the Legislature, state, county, district, judicial district, and city officers or employees shall not be financially interested in any contract made by them in their official capacity, or by any body or board of which they are members." (Gov. Code, § 1090, subd. (a) ; all undesignated statutory references are to this code.) A willful and knowing violation of section 1090 is punishable by a fine of up to $1,000 or imprisonment, and disqualification "from holding any office in this state." (§ 1097, subd. (a);
People v. Honig
(1996)
The trial court dismissed the section 1090 count. It considered itself bound by
People v. Christiansen
(2013)
**572 II.
Whether section 1090 applies to independent contractors is a question of statutory construction that we review de novo. (
Lexin v. Superior Court
(2010)
Like the Court of Appeal, Sahlolbei relies primarily on
Christiansen
. In that case, the defendant Karen Christiansen, as Director of Planning and Facilities of the Beverly Hills Unified School District, advised the district to enter into contracts with Johnson Controls. (
Christiansen
,
supra
, 216 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1184-1187,
But the Court of Appeal in
Christiansen
misconstrued
Reynolds
. As
Reynolds
makes clear, its rule regarding the interpretation of "employees" was a specific application of the general rule that we do not presume the Legislature intends to abrogate the common law unless it " ' " 'clearly and unequivocally' " ' " says so. (
Reynolds
,
supra
, 36 Cal.4th at p. 1086,
We start with the legislative history of the 1963 revisions to section 1090. Prior to those revisions, section 1090 extended only to "officers."
**573
(Former § 1090, as amended by Stats. 1961, ch. 381, § 1, p. 1435.) As now, a "public officer" was generally understood to be one who satisfied two criteria: "First, a tenure of office 'which is not transient, occasional or incidental,' but is of such a nature that the office itself is an entity in which incumbents succeed one another ..., and, second, the delegation to the officer of some portion of the sovereign functions of government, either legislative, executive, or judicial." (
Spreckels v. Graham
(1924)
In
Schaefer v. Berinstein
(1956)
Although
Schaefer
was seemingly in tension with
Spreckels
's longstanding understanding of "public officer" as that term had generally been used in other statutory provisions, the Legislature endorsed
Schaefer
's holding and reasoning when it amended section 1090 in 1963 to include "employees." We ordinarily presume the Legislature to "have enacted and amended statutes ' " 'in the light of such decisions as have a direct bearing upon them' " ' " (
Viking Pools, Inc. v. Maloney
(1989)
In light of this history, we conclude that the Legislature understood
*443
section 1090's reference to "officers" to apply to outside advisors with responsibilities for public contracting similar to those belonging to formal officers, notwithstanding
Spreckels
's definition of "public officer" for other statutes. It stands to reason that when the Legislature added the term "employees" to section 1090, it similarly intended to include outside advisors with responsibilities for public contracting similar to those belonging to formal employees, notwithstanding the common law distinction between employees and independent contractors. (See Assem. Rep.,
supra
, at p. 32 [recognizing that the "tendency of the law is to widen rather than circumscribe the scope of 'conflict of interest' statutes such as Section 1090"].) At the very least, it does not seem plausible to believe that the Legislature, in "widen[ing]" section 1090 to include "employees," meant in the same breath to also "circumscribe" section 1090 by categorically excluding outside advisors previously understood to be within the statute's scope. (Assem. Rep.,
supra
, at p. 32.)
**574
This understanding of the 1963 amendments to section 1090 is almost as old as the amendments themselves. Writing two years after the amendments, the Attorney General observed that
Schaefer
and
Terry
had applied "the policy, if not the letter, of section 1090" to include outside advisors. (46 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 74, 79 (1965).) The Attorney General concluded that "the Legislature in ... amending section 1090 to include 'employees' intended to apply the policy of the conflicts of interest law, as set out in the
Schaefer
and
Terry
cases, to independent contractors who perform a public function and to require of those who serve the public temporarily the same fealty expected from permanent officers and employees." (
Ibid
.) The Attorney General reasoned that "a statute ... is presumed to have been enacted or amended in the light of such existing judicial decisions as have a direct bearing upon it." (
Ibid
.)
*238
The Courts of Appeal have generally agreed with the Attorney General. (See
Campagna v. City of Sanger
(1996)
Other conflicts statutes confirm that the Legislature did not intend to categorically exclude independent contractors from the scope of section 1090. Section 87100 of the Political Reform Act of 1974 (§ 81000 et seq.; the Act) addresses conflicts in government decisionmaking. We have said that section 1090 and section 87100" 'are two of the most important
*444
statutes in California addressing the problem of conflict of interest by public officials and employees. They both deal with a relatively small class of people, public officers and employees, and share the same purpose or objective, the prevention of conflicts of interests, and hence can fairly be said to be in pari materia.' [Citations.]" (
Lexin
,
supra
, 47 Cal.4th at p. 1091,
Section 82048, part of the Act, defines " 'public official' " to include any "officer, employee, or consultant of a state or local government agency." (§ 82048, subd. (a).) Sahlolbei argues that this shows that the Legislature knows how to include independent contractors when it wants to. But if we read the two statutes "to the extent their language permits" "as incorporating congruent principles" (
Lexin
,
supra
, 47 Cal.4th at pp. 1091, 1092,
This conclusion is consistent with, and helps give effect to, the purposes of section 1090. Section 1090"codifies the long-standing common law rule that barred public officials from being personally financially interested in the contracts they formed in their official capacities." (
Lexin
,
supra
, 47 Cal.4th at p. 1072,
Recognizing the prophylactic purposes of conflicts statutes, the case law makes clear that section 1090 should be construed broadly to ensure that the public has the official's "absolute loyalty and undivided allegiance." (
Stigall v. City of Taft
(1962)
*445
of a contract for the purposes of section 1090 includes "planning, preliminary discussions, compromises, drawing of plans and specifications and solicitation of bids," and not just the moment of signing. (
Stigall
, at p. 571,
*240
(
Honig
,
supra
, 48 Cal.App.4th at p. 317,
That said, we do not hold that
all
independent contractors are covered by section 1090. As the case law makes clear, section 1090 liability extends only to independent contractors who can be said to have been entrusted with " 'transact[ing] on behalf of the Government' " (
Stigall
,
supra
, 58 Cal.2d at p. 570,
In the ordinary case, a contractor who has been retained or appointed by a public entity and whose actual duties include engaging in or advising on public contracting is charged with acting on the government's behalf. Such a person would therefore be expected to subordinate his or her personal financial interests to those of the public in the same manner as a permanent officer or common law employee tasked with the same duties. (See 46 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen., supra , at p. 79 ["[Section 1090 ] require[s] of those who serve the public temporarily the same fealty expected from permanent officers and employees."].) Thus, for instance, a person who was initially hired as an officer or employee with responsibilities for contracting and then rehired as an independent contractor to perform the same duties and functions would be expected to continue to serve the public faithfully. Such a contractor would be subject to section 1090. This general rule might give way in circumstances where a contractor reasonably believed *446 he or she was not expected to subordinate his or her financial interests to the public's. But we are not faced with any such circumstances here.
Sahlolbei argues that all independent contractors are exempt from section 1090 liability, but we do not find his arguments persuasive. It is true that in describing the conflicts statutes, we have never explicitly said they apply to
*241
independent contractors. We have characterized the statutes as "barr [ing]
public officials
from being personally financially interested in the contracts they formed in their official capacities." (
Lexin
,
supra
, 47 Cal.4th at p. 1072,
Sahlolbei cites
People v. Lofchie
(2014)
Sahlolbei also cites
Klistoff v. Superior Court
(2007)
The California Medical Association (CMA), as amicus curiae, argues that physicians *447 should not be subject to section 1090 because of the nature of their relationships with their hospitals. CMA observes that physicians serve as independent contractors of hospitals and, in that capacity, often play major roles in running hospitals. Expanding section 1090 to cover physicians, CMA argues, has the potential to criminalize much of what those physicians currently do. For example, a physician who advises a hospital about the effectiveness of certain drugs could be deemed to have participated in the making of a contract if the hospital enters into a contract with the supplier of those drugs. And, CMA contends, if the physician also has a relationship with the supplier, even if only to keep informed of new developments, the physician could be deemed financially interested in the contract. But CMA overlooks sections 1091 and 1091.5, which exempt interests that are remote or minute. At the same time, if the physician owned more than 3 percent of the drug supplier or derived more than 5 percent of his or her income from the supplier (see § 1091.5, subd. (a)(1)), we see nothing unreasonable about subjecting the physician to potential liability under section 1090 if the physician chooses to advise the hospital.
More fundamentally, we are not convinced that the practice of medicine cannot bear the weight of conflicts of interest statutes. Contrary to CMA's claim, section 1090 does not require public officials to have sole or undivided loyalty to the public entity . Section 1090 seeks to ensure that, to the extent the official has any responsibility to advise on how the public's money should be spent, the official's advice is independent of the official's own financial interests. Applied to physicians, the statute would not disturb their existing duties to the medical staff or their patients. It would simply require physicians, to the extent they spend taxpayer money in the exercise of their duties, not to spend that money in their own financial interest. As CMA notes, despite the general corporate bar on the practice of medicine, between 2004 and 2011 the Legislature temporarily exempted certain rural health care districts from the bar, allowing them to employ physicians directly. (Bus. & Prof. Code, former § 2401.1, added by Stats. 2003, ch. 411, § 2, p. 3058 and repealed by its own terms eff. Jan. 1, 2011.) Physicians who were employed by public hospitals pursuant to this exemption were indisputably subject to section 1090. Yet CMA does not contend that those physicians were impaired in the performance of their duties as a result.
Sahlolbei also notes that the Legislature considered, but did not pass, a bill amending section 1090 to explicitly include independent contractors shortly after Christiansen was decided. (See Assem. Bill No. 1059 (2013-2014 Reg.
*243
Sess.), § 1.) The Legislature did pass Senate Bill No. 952 (2013-2014 Reg. Sess.) that same session, amending section 1090 to include aider and abettor liability. (Stats. 2014, ch. 483, § 1.) This, Sahlolbei argues, indicates that the Legislature ratified
Christiansen
. But Assembly Bill No. 1059 was introduced three months before
Christiansen
was decided; the bill could not have been intended as a response to
Christiansen
and does not indicate that the Legislature was even aware of
Christiansen
. Moreover, inferences from legislative inaction are necessarily speculative, and we are especially wary of using unpassed legislation as evidence of what the Legislature that enacted the original statute intended. (See
People v. Mendoza
(2000)
The perverse consequences of exempting independent contractors from section 1090 provide another reason against ascribing to the Legislature such an intent. An official "could manipulate the employment relationship to retain 'official capacity' influence, yet avoid liability under section 1090" (
California Housing
,
supra
, 148 Cal.App.4th at p. 693,
In declining to follow
California Housing
and
Hub City
, the
Christiansen
court observed that those cases, like the ones they built on, involved only civil liability under section 1090, whereas Christiansen's case involved criminal liability. (
Christiansen
,
supra
, 216 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1189-1190,
The rule of lenity does not require a stricter interpretation of section 1090. We have held that lenity applies only when " 'two reasonable interpretations of the same provision stand in relative equipoise, i.e., that resolution of the statute's ambiguities in a convincing manner is impracticable.' " (
People v. Avery
(2002)
We are mindful that a criminal defendant must have fair notice as to what conduct is prohibited. (
Williams v. Garcetti
(1993)
Sahlolbei's broader objection is that the standard advanced by the dissent in the Court of Appeal-that independent contractors come within the scope of section 1090 when they occupy positions "that carry the potential to exert 'considerable' influence over public contracting" (see
California Housing
,
supra
, 148 Cal.App.4th at p. 693,
*245
formulation from cases concerning when officials can be said to have "made" contracts in their official capacities. (See
Gnass
,
supra
, 101 Cal.App.4th at p. 1298,
In this case, the Hospital's former CEO testified that Sahlolbei was asked around 2006 "to try to bring physician services to the hospital because [Sahlolbei] had better connections than [the Hospital] did." The record does not specify whether Sahlolbei was asked because of his roles on the medical staff of the Hospital or his positions on the Committee, or both, but the distinction is immaterial. A physician who was an officer or a common law employee of the Hospital who was similarly tasked with engaging in and advising on physician recruitment would have been expected to be faithful to the public in performing those duties and would have come within the scope of section 1090. Sahlolbei is not exempt from section 1090 liability merely because he was an independent contractor.
III.
Sahlolbei contends that even if section 1090 can apply to some independent contractors, the Court of Appeal correctly held there is no evidence that he was *450 acting in an official capacity when he negotiated Barth's contract with the Board. The Court of Appeal agreed with Sahlolbei that during the negotiations he was acting solely as Barth's representative, a fact the Board was well aware of given the antagonistic nature of the proceedings.
The Court of Appeal in this case appears to have construed section 1090 too narrowly. On a motion to dismiss a count under Penal Code section 995, we ask only "whether the evidence is such that 'a reasonable person could harbor a strong suspicion of the defendant's guilt.' " (
Lexin
,
supra
, 47 Cal.4th at p. 1072,
As explained, section 1090 prohibits officials from being "financially interested in any contract made by them in their official
*246
capacity." Officials make contracts in their official capacities within the meaning of section 1090 if their positions afford them "the opportunity to ... influence execution [of the contracts] directly or indirectly to promote [their] personal interests" and they exploit those opportunities. (
Sobel
,
supra
, 40 Cal.App.3d at p. 1052,
We do not mean to suggest that the requirement that the contract have been made in the defendant's "official capacity" is an empty one. There may be instances where officials subject to section 1090 will be involved in the making of public contracts in which they benefit, but will not be liable because they were not acting in their official capacities. (See, e.g.,
Campagna
,
supra
, 42 Cal.App.4th at pp. 539-540,
Sahlolbei contends that he did not act in an official capacity because his written duties did not include finding doctors to serve on the hospital's staff. But this is immaterial because there is evidence that Sahlolbei was actually asked by Hospital leadership to assist in identifying physicians to recruit to the Hospital and that he did so. Moreover, even if the Board thought that Sahlolbei was acting exclusively as Barth's representative, a reasonable person could harbor a strong suspicion that Sahlolbei was only able to make the threats he allegedly made to secure Barth's contract-ordering the medical staff to stop admitting patients-because he occupied official positions on the Committee
*451
and on the medical staff. We therefore conclude that under Penal Code section 995, the evidence is sufficient for Sahlolbei to be held to account for making Barth's contract with the Hospital in Sahlolbei's official capacity at the Hospital. (
Lexin
,
supra
, 47 Cal.4th at p. 1072,
Finally, Sahlolbei argues that because his own contract with the Hospital had lapsed between April and December of 2009, he was not even an
*247
independent contractor-and thus had no official position whatsoever-when the Hospital signed Barth's contracts in October 2009. The prosecution argues there is evidence that Barth's contracts were actually signed at a later date and backdated to October and notes that the making of a contract encompasses more than just the moment of signing. (
Stigall
,
supra
, 58 Cal.2d at p. 571,
CONCLUSION
We reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeal and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion. We disapprove
People v. Christiansen
(2013)
We Concur:
Cantil-Sakauye, C.J.
Werdegar, J.
Chin, J.
Corrigan, J.
Cuéllar, J.
Kruger, J.
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