Taxpayers for Improving Public Safety v. Schwarzenegger

172 Cal. App. 4th 749, 91 Cal. Rptr. 3d 370, 2009 Cal. App. LEXIS 428
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 24, 2009
DocketC057542
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 172 Cal. App. 4th 749 (Taxpayers for Improving Public Safety v. Schwarzenegger) 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
Taxpayers for Improving Public Safety v. Schwarzenegger, 172 Cal. App. 4th 749, 91 Cal. Rptr. 3d 370, 2009 Cal. App. LEXIS 428 (Cal. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Opinion

HULL, J.

In response to severe overcrowding in the state’s prison system, the Legislature enacted Assembly Bill No. 900 (2007-2008 Reg. Sess.), the Public Safety and Offender Rehabilitation Services Act of 2007 (Assembly Bill 900 or the Act), authorizing the State Public Works Board (board) to issue up to approximately $7.4 billion in bonds for the construction and renovation of prisons to be operated by California’s Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR).

Plaintiffs, Taxpayers for Improving Public Safety, Gail Brown, and Matt Gray, initiated this taxpayer lawsuit against Arnold Schwarzenegger, in his capacity as the Governor of California, James Tilton, in his capacity as the Secretary of the CDCR, and John Chiang, in his capacity as the State Controller, asking for declaratory and injunctive relief to bar implementation of Assembly Bill 900. Plaintiffs allege the proposed bonds will violate article XVI, section 1 of the California Constitution (article XVI, section 1 or the state debt limit), which prohibits the Legislature from creating any debt that exceeds an allowable maximum without obtaining a two-thirds vote of the Legislature and a majority vote of the people.

Defendants demurred to the complaint, and the trial court sustained the demurrers without leave to amend. The court concluded that, because bonds issued by the board under Assembly Bill 900 will be repayable solely from a special fund maintained through lease payments received by the board from CDCR, no debt will be created within the meaning of the state debt limit.

Plaintiffs contend the trial court erred, because (1) a declaratory relief claim is not subject to demurrer; (2) the complaint states a claim under article XVI, section 1; and (3) they should have been granted leave to amend in order to present evidence supporting their claim.

We conclude that, while plaintiffs’ declaratory relief claim may not have been subject to demurrer, we may nevertheless resolve the legal issue presented by that claim.

*758 We further conclude defendants’ demurrers to the complaint were properly sustained. The underlying purpose of the state debt limit is to force government to operate within its means. Consistent with this purpose, the courts have carved out a number of “exceptions,” including one where the state undertakes an obligation to make periodic payments that are contingent on the future use or availability of property, goods, or services. The most common example of this contingency exception is where the state enters into a long-term lease of property and future lease payments are contingent on future availability of the property.

Because plaintiffs have mounted a facial challenge to the Act, it must be upheld if there is any way the Act may be implemented that would not violate the state debt limit. As we shall explain, we conclude the Act may be implemented in such a way as to fall within the contingency exception. The Act provides for the construction of prison facilities financed by bonds to be repaid from the state’s general fund. Those bonds may be structured in such a way that future periodic payments are contingent on future use or availability of the facilities. Hence, the state has not undertaken an obligation that offends the pay-as-you-go principle underlying the state debt limit.

Finally, we conclude defendants’ demurrers were properly sustained without leave to amend because a demurrer tests the adequacy of the complaint’s allegations, not whether plaintiffs can produce evidence to support those allegations. We therefore affirm the judgment of dismissal.

Facts and Proceedings

Overcrowded prisons are nothing new to California. In 1985, 47,082 state prisoners were housed in facilities designed to hold only 29,042. (Carlin, Chapter 252: Helping to Manage California’s Overcrowded Jails (2008) 39 McGeorge L.Rev. 602, 603, fn. 8.) By 2007, the prison population had increased to approximately 173,000, while the prison capacity had grown to only half that amount. (Muradyan, Government: California’s Response to Its Prison Overcrowding Crisis (2008) 39 McGeorge L.Rev. 482, 485.) It has been suggested this increase in prison population has been due to several factors, including enactment of the determinate sentencing law, which tended to increase terms for most offenses, the three strikes law, and the state’s parole and rehabilitation systems. (Muradyan, at pp. 485-487.) Prison overcrowding has prompted federal class action lawsuits attacking the adequacy of medical and mental health care provided by CDCR. (See id. at pp. 487-488.) On February 14, 2006, in Plata v. Schwarzenegger, No. C01-1351 TEH, the United States District Court for the Northern District of California took the drastic step of appointing a receiver to take control of the delivery of medical care within the state’s prisons. (We grant defendants’ *759 request for judicial notice of the federal court’s February 14 order, attached as exhibit B to defendants’ May 27, 2008 request for judicial notice. We also grant defendants’ request for judicial notice of exhibits C and D, which are federal court orders convening a three-judge panel to consider the release of prisoners as a remedy for overcrowding. The trial court previously took judicial notice of each of these items. (See Evid. Code, § 459, subd. (a)(1).))

To address the prison overcrowding problem, the Governor called a special session of the Legislature in the summer of 2006. However, this failed to produce any meaningful improvements. (California Correctional Peace Officers Assn. v. Schwarzenegger (2008) 163 Cal.App.4th 802, 809 [77 Cal.Rptr.3d 844].) On October 4, 2006, the Governor issued a proclamation directing the CDCR to mitigate overcrowding in 29 state prisons by transferring inmates to out-of-state correctional facilities. (We grant defendants’ request for judicial notice of this proclamation, attached as exhibit A to defendants’ request for judicial notice. The trial court previously took judicial notice of this item as well.) The proclamation said there were more than 15.000 inmates being housed in areas of the indicated prisons that were “never designed or intended for inmate housing, including, but not limited to, common areas such as prison gymnasiums, dayrooms, and program rooms,” thereby posing substantial health and safety risks to both inmates and prison employees. According to the proclamation, “in addition to the 1,671 incidents of violence perpetrated in these 29 severely overcrowded prisons by inmates against CDCR staff last year, and the 2,642 incidents of violence perpetrated in these prisons on inmates by other inmates in the last year, the suicide rate in these 29 prisons is approaching an average of one per week . . . .”

The following year, the Legislature enacted Assembly Bill 900. The Act adds two chapters to part 10b, division 3, title 2 of the Government Code, the State Building Construction Act of 1955 (the State Building Construction Act or SBCA) (Gov. Code, § 15800 et seq.; further undesignated section references are to the Government Code). As recently amended by Senate Bill No. 14 (2009-2010 Reg.

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Bluebook (online)
172 Cal. App. 4th 749, 91 Cal. Rptr. 3d 370, 2009 Cal. App. LEXIS 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taxpayers-for-improving-public-safety-v-schwarzenegger-calctapp-2009.