Sokolow v. County of San Mateo

213 Cal. App. 3d 231, 261 Cal. Rptr. 520, 1989 Cal. App. LEXIS 856, 62 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 42,404
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 17, 1989
DocketA039117
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 213 Cal. App. 3d 231 (Sokolow v. County of San Mateo) 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
Sokolow v. County of San Mateo, 213 Cal. App. 3d 231, 261 Cal. Rptr. 520, 1989 Cal. App. LEXIS 856, 62 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 42,404 (Cal. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

Opinion

MERRILL, J.

Sonya Sokolow and Sidney Schieber appeal from an order denying their motion for attorney fees and costs incurred in prosecuting their sex discrimination lawsuit against respondents County of San Mateo (the County) and Leonard E. Cardoza, the Mounted Patrol of San Mateo County (the Patrol), and Jerry Williams. We have concluded that the denial of attorney fees must be reversed.

I

As alleged in the amended complaint, the Patrol was formed in 1942 for the purpose of providing military support and civil defense during World War II. After the War, the Patrol continued in operation. According to the Patrol’s Articles of Incorporation, its purposes include: “To form a body of men desiring to promote civil defense and for the primary purpose of patrolling, when necessary, the unincorporated areas of the County and more particularly those sections which are inaccessible by automobile and in which horses would be useful.” (Italics added.) As stipulated by the bylaws *236 of the Patrol, the first qualification for any person seeking membership in the Patrol was that the person be “male.” 1

At some point in the 1970’s, the sheriff’s department developed a program for search and rescue operations in the County utilizing the coordinated services of seven organizations, including the Patrol. Each of these organizations was selected for its particularized skills useful in search and rescue. 2 Other than these organizations, the only resources called upon for search and rescue operations would be those of the sheriff’s department itself and affiliated law enforcement groups in neighboring counties. Prior to this, County search and rescue operations were handled solely by on-duty, paid personnel of the sheriff’s department, together with informal assistance from friends, relatives and local civilians.

Over the years, the Patrol developed a close relationship with the office of the San Mateo County Sheriff. Sheriff Brendan P. Maguire testified in deposition that although he had joined the sheriff’s office in 1964, became a lieutenant in 1977, and then became Sheriff in January 1985, no one ever told him that the Patrol was not a public entity under the sheriff’s department. He actually did not determine that the Patrol was a private organization until 1984 or 1985.

The intimate relationship between the sheriff’s department and the Patrol was expressed in a wide variety of practical ways. In all of its literature, the Patrol presented itself as an arm of the sheriff’s department. All applicants for membership in the Patrol, after being favorably passed by the Patrol’s Membership Committee, were required to obtain clearance from the sheriff’s department to qualify as “Deputy Sheriffs.” After being cleared by the sheriff’s department, and as part of his initiation into the Patrol, each new member of the Patrol was sworn in as a “Deputy Sheriff” of San Mateo *237 County. According to the bylaws, a new member of the Patrol was “considered to have assumed by his oath and his acceptance of membership in the Patrol, the obligation to render to the Patrol and to the Sheriff of the County of San Mateo, when and as called upon, such assistance within the objectives, purpose and customs of the Patrol as may lie within his abilities.” (Italics added.)

After being sworn in as a “Deputy Sheriff,” a member of the Patrol was entitled to wear a distinctive “Deputy Sheriff” badge and to carry a card identifying him as a “Deputy Sheriff.” The bylaws stated that the “nature and detail” of the badge and card and the “regulations concerning their use shall be as may, from time to time, be prescribed by the Sheriff of the County of San Mateo and the Board [of Directors of the Patrol].” Issuance of the identification card was handled almost entirely by the sheriff’s office. Each Patrol member was photographed and fingerprinted by the sheriff’s department; the identification card was then issued bearing the member’s photograph and right index fingerprint, the signature of the Sheriff, a prominent legend identifying the member as a “Deputy Sheriff,” and a statement that the card was the “Property of [the] San Mateo Sheriff’s Office.”

The badge and insignia of the Patrol consisted of a seven-pointed star reminiscent of a sheriff’s badge, with the words “Mounted Patrol, San Mateo Co.” and “Deputy Sheriff” surrounding an eagle. 3 The words “Deputy Sheriff” also appeared on programs, stationery, decals, signs and vehicles belonging to the Patrol. The “Commander in Chief’ of the Patrol was the Sheriff of San Mateo County himself. 4 Patrol members wore windbreakers with the word “Sheriff” on the back, and had T-shirts bearing the “Deputy Sheriff” insignia.

The sheriff’s office rendered numerous valuable services to the Patrol. When the Patrol needed to get “Deputy Sheriff” badges back from former members, the sheriff himself wrote letters to them on County stationery, demanding on behalf of “the Mounted Patrol of the San Mateo County Sheriffs [s/c] office” that the former members return their badges. The sheriff’s office trained Patrol members in search and rescue techniques; supplied the Patrol with jail inmates to perform up to 430 man-hours a week in public service work on the Patrol’s private grounds under the Sheriff’s correctional work program; and provided first aid teams, a first aid van, and salaried deputies for security, traffic and parking control at Patrol *238 events. Sheriff’s department personnel often attended Patrol meetings and outings in their official capacity; and they were paid by the County for doing so, including overtime pay when they attended such functions on off-duty hours. 5

II

In or about 1975, appellant Sokolow began making attempts to be admitted to the Patrol as a member. On or about May 18, she wrote a letter to John R. McDonald, Jr., at that time the county sheriff, inquiring about how she could join the Patrol. On May 23, Sheriff McDonald sent her a written reply stating that his position as “Commander-in-Chief’ of the Patrol was an “honorary” position “due to [the Patrol’s] traditional connection to the office of the Sheriff’; that the Patrol was a private nonprofit membership organization operating under its own bylaws; that “[t]he tradition built in to the . . . Patrol is for the office of the Sheriff to have an organized group that he may call on under the posse comitatus laws to assist him to maintain the peace of the county”; that nevertheless “[t]his office has no membership and no power to interfere with those rules and regulations that govern this organization”; and that “[s]ometimes there is confusion to the citizenry of which group is governed by the office of the Sheriff and which is a private organization.” Sheriff McDonald suggested that Sokolow direct her inquiries regarding membership to the captain of the Patrol.

Thereafter, Sokolow engaged in an unsuccessful 10-year attempt to gain admission to the Patrol as a member.

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Bluebook (online)
213 Cal. App. 3d 231, 261 Cal. Rptr. 520, 1989 Cal. App. LEXIS 856, 62 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 42,404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sokolow-v-county-of-san-mateo-calctapp-1989.