Southwest Voter Registration etc. v. Ramona Unified School Dist. CA4/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 11, 2024
DocketD081500
StatusUnpublished

This text of Southwest Voter Registration etc. v. Ramona Unified School Dist. CA4/1 (Southwest Voter Registration etc. v. Ramona Unified School Dist. CA4/1) 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
Southwest Voter Registration etc. v. Ramona Unified School Dist. CA4/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 7/11/24 Southwest Voter Registration etc. v. Ramona Unified School Dist. CA4/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SOUTHWEST VOTER D081500 REGISTRATION EDUCATION PROJECT et al.,

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. 37-2020- 00036554-CU-CR-CTL) v.

RAMONA UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from a judgment and order of the Superior Court of San Diego County, John S. Meyer, Judge. Affirmed. Artiano Shinoff, Daniel Shinoff, Paul V. Carelli, IV and Jack M. Sleeth, Jr., for Defendant and Appellant. Shenkman & Hughes, Kevin I. Shenkman, Mary R. Hughes and Andrea A. Alarcon for Plaintiffs and Respondents. Defendant Ramona Unified School District challenges the trial court’s finding that it violated the California Voting Rights Act of 2001 (Elec. Code, § 14025 et seq.; Act). The District, however, fails to show a lack of substantial evidence to support the court’s findings of racially polarized voting and dilution. The District also challenges the court’s award of prevailing plaintiff attorney fees to Southwest Voter Registration Education Project, Terry Maxson, and Janie Ramos (the Project). Under the circumstances, we conclude the court was within its discretion to find the Project prevailed. We therefore affirm the judgment in favor of the Project and the order awarding the Project its attorney fees. I. A. The District has five members on its governing board. All board members are elected to four-year terms through staggered elections every two years—two seats are open for election at the same time, then two years later the other three seats are open. More than 15 years after the Act’s enactment, in May 2018, the Project notified the District that its at-large election system violated the Act because it “dilutes the ability of Latinos (a ‘protected class’)—to elect candidates of their choice or otherwise influence the outcome of the District’s board elections.” In response, the District approved changing its elections to a trustee-area system at a special meeting in September 2018, selected a map in January 2019, and passed a resolution to seek a necessary waiver from the California Department of Education in February 2019. The District also paid the Project $30,000 in statutory attorney fees under section 10010, which applies when a political subdivision adopts trustee-area elections without a court action. The District’s superintendent retired in July 2019 before seeking the waiver from the state, and the incoming superintendent was unaware that process was not completed until July 2020, at which time the new

2 superintendent started researching the issue. The District submitted the waiver request in September 2020. With the next election approaching in November 2020 and the at-large election system still in place, the Project informed the District in October 2020 that it would be filing a lawsuit. In its complaint, the Project sought (1) a declaration from the court that the District’s at-large elections violated the Act, (2) injunctive relief enjoining the District from further applying an at-large method of election, (3) injunctive relief requiring the District to implement trustee-area elections employing a lawful map tailored to remedy the District’s violation of the Act, (4) a special election to promptly implement trustee-area elections, and (5) an injunction prohibiting anyone who was not lawfully elected from acting as a District board member. The California Department of Education approved the District’s waiver request in November 2020. Because of the District’s delay in seeking the waiver, the November 2020 election proceeded as an at-large election. B. Trial commenced in May 2022. Given the impending November 2022 election, the Project sought an order for all five seats to be open for election at that time, in addition to its other requests for relief. During the two-day trial, the Project presented expert witness Morgan Kousser, who did an ecological regression analysis of five elections in the three most recent election cycles to determine whether racially polarized voting occurred in the District. Kousser opined that Latino voters strongly

supported the Latino candidate or ballot choice, while “non-Hispanic white”1 voters did not, and due to the numerical superiority of non-Hispanic white voters, the Latino candidate or ballot measure lost within the District.

1 We use the same terms the parties used to refer to the electorate. 3 The Project also presented David Ely, a demographics expert who prepared data sets for Kousser’s statistical analysis. Additionally, he evaluated the trustee-area map that the District developed in 2019 and determined it was not appropriate. He determined that another map—Map 104B—was appropriate and testified that trustee-area one on that map has a population of 52% Latino, which would give Latino voters in that area the power to elect their preferred candidate. The District had adopted Map 104B shortly before trial. The court ruled that the District’s at-large voting system violated the Act because it exhibited racially polarized voting and diluted the votes of Latinos, impairing their ability to select candidates of their choice or influence the outcome of elections. The court found that the appropriate remedy was what the District “has committed to implementing”—electing its board through trustee-area elections under Map 104B, and having three of the five board seats up for election in November 2022, including the seat corresponding to trustee-area one on Map 104B, where Latinos are concentrated. It also permanently enjoined the District from holding any further at-large elections, and ordered that all further elections be by trustee- area under Map 104B. The court explained it was not necessary to order a special election since the next election was “not that long from now.” Similarly, it was not necessary to have, and the court expressed concern about potential negative consequences of having, all five board seats open in November 2022. The Project moved to recover its attorney fees as the prevailing plaintiff under section 14030. In determining who prevailed in the litigation, the court looked to the Project’s operative complaint and the District’s trial brief to reveal their respective objectives. The court found the Project achieved its

4 litigation objectives, succeeded on a practical level, and furthered the purpose of the Act. Therefore, the Project prevailed and was entitled to recover its attorney fees. The District appealed from both the judgment and the order awarding the Project’s attorney fees. II. A. The District asserts it did not violate the Act, arguing (1) the Project did not offer evidence on dilution and (2) the Project’s evidence on polarized voting was flawed. The Project, however, did present evidence relevant to acceptable methods of analyzing polarized voting and dilution through two experts. And the court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the expert testimony. The District’s arguments regarding evidence it presented or evidence the Project’s experts did not consider go to the weight of the evidence but do not render the experts’ testimony inadmissible. We thus conclude the District fails to establish the lack of substantial evidence to support the trial court’s finding that the District violated the Act. 1. The Act provides California voters with greater protections than those provided by the federal Voting Rights Act of 1965 (52 U.S.C.

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

Related

Thornburg v. Gingles
478 U.S. 30 (Supreme Court, 1986)
Crawford v. Board of Education
200 Cal. App. 3d 1397 (California Court of Appeal, 1988)
Zuehlsdorf v. Simi Valley Unified School District
55 Cal. Rptr. 3d 467 (California Court of Appeal, 2007)
Rey v. Madera Unified School District
203 Cal. App. 4th 1223 (California Court of Appeal, 2012)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Southwest Voter Registration etc. v. Ramona Unified School Dist. CA4/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwest-voter-registration-etc-v-ramona-unified-school-dist-ca41-calctapp-2024.