Westinghouse Electric Corp. v. Superior Court

551 P.2d 847, 17 Cal. 3d 259, 131 Cal. Rptr. 231, 1976 Cal. LEXIS 293
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 27, 1976
DocketS.F. 23376
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 551 P.2d 847 (Westinghouse Electric Corp. v. Superior Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Westinghouse Electric Corp. v. Superior Court, 551 P.2d 847, 17 Cal. 3d 259, 131 Cal. Rptr. 231, 1976 Cal. LEXIS 293 (Cal. 1976).

Opinion

Opinion

MOSK, J.

We decide five related matters that revolve around conflicting interpretations of one ambiguously worded sentence in a change of venue statute, Code of Civil Procedure section 394, subdivision (1).

The matters come to us on petitions for writs of mandate. In the action below, the San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit District (BART) seeks damages of more than $100 million from its principal contractors, who provided the district with allegedly defective equipment and faulty services. Defendants filed change of venue motions in an attempt to transfer the case out of respondent Alameda Superior Court. The court denied the motions, concluding (1) section 394 does not apply to a multi-county agency plaintiff such as BART, and (2) defendants are, in any event, ineligible to seek relief under section 394 because each of them does business in Alameda County. 1

I

The first issue is whether a private party defendant sued by a multi-county agency may ever obtain the change of venue provided for by section 394. The problem arises because of the ambiguity in the second sentence of the section, which provides that “Whenever an action or proceeding is brought by a county, city and county, city, or local agency within a certain county .. . against a resident of another county .. . or a corporation doing business in the latter . . .” the action must be transferred, on motion of either party, to a neutral county. The court apparently reasoned that in a suit brought by an agency the transfer remedy is available only when plaintiff is located wholly within one county. As BART’s operations encompass not only Alameda County, but also Contra Costa County and the City and County of San Francisco, the court held that the district is not a “local agency within a county” and a change of venue is not available.

*265 Some of the defendants urge that the phrase “within a certain county” modifies not just “local agency,” but the entire first part of the sentence. Under this interpretation, a transfer to a neutral county is available in appropriate cases whenever a governmental entity brings suit “within a certain county ....”

While Bart proposes a contrary tenable grammatical interpretation, 2 it does not necessarily follow that section 394 precludes mandatory change of venue in actions brought by multi-county agencies. Assuming that “within a certain county” modifies only “local agency,” BART may still be a “local agency within a certain county” for the purposes of section 394. Indeed, an analysis of the phrase within the context of the language of and purpose behind the entire statute leads inexorably to that conclusion.

To begin with, we have problems with BART’s assertion that the clause on its face has a plain meaning. 3 The district’s position would have merit if the statute referred to a “local agency located wholly within a certain county.” But the phrase “local agency within a county” is susceptible of another plausible interpretation in the context of the entire sentence. Prior to the Legislature’s inclusion of governmental agencies within the scope of section 394, the second sentence of the section referred to suits “brought by a county, city and county, or city, against a resident of another county, city and county, or city . ...” Its meaning was *266 clear: the sentence applied to suits brought by a county against residents of another county, by a city against residents of another city, and by the City and County of San Francisco against non-San Franciscans. However, when the Legislature sought to add agencies to the list of governmental plaintiffs subject to section 394, the addition of the phrase “local agency” by itself would obviously have been inadequate. A suit by a “local agency” against “a resident of another county” is grammatically irreconcilable, because an agency is not a county. Therefore, the phrase “within a certain county” may well have been added to “local agency” not to exclude regional agencies from the scope of the section, but to insure that the phrase “against a resident of another county” would continue to have meaning. The proper interpretation of “within a certain county” cannot be decided outside of the overall context of section 394.

The purpose of section 394 “ ‘is to guard against local prejudices which sometimes exist in favor of litigants within a county as against those from without and to secure to both parties to a suit a trial upon neutral grounds.’ ” (Finance & Construction Co. v. Sacramento (1928) 204 Cal. 491, 493 [269 P. 167].) As the statute is remedial in its purpose, it should receive a liberal construction which will promote rather than frustrate the policy behind the law. (Ibid.; City of L. A. v. Pac. Tel. & Tel. Co. (1958) 164 Cal.App.2d 253, 256 [330 P.2d 888].)

These general principles were applied to a proceeding brought by an agency in Garrett v. Superior Court (1974) supra, 11 Cal.3d 245. In that case, the Riverside County Flood Control and Water Conservation District instituted condemnation proceedings, and the nonresident owners of the affected property moved for a change of venue under section 394. In holding that the landowners were entitled to relief provided by the mandatory change of venue provisions of the statute, we declared, “District is the type of ‘local agency within a certain county’ which has a potentially prejudicial advantage in a condemnation suit . against a nonresident defendant. . . . Although there are other water districts and zones within Riverside County, it is still possible that a Riverside County juror will also be a District taxpayer with an interest in keeping the condemnation award unreasonably low. This situation would be precisely one which the Legislature must have intended to avoid by enacting section 394.” (Id., at p. 248.)

The applicability of the Garrett reasoning to the present case is evident. BART is authorized to levy a property tax on Alameda County homeowners (Pub. Util. Code, §§ 29121, 29123) and is also funded by a *267 Vi percent sales tax on goods bought in Alameda County. (Rev. & Tax. Code, § 7261, subd. (a); Pub. Util. Code, § 29140.) While it was “possible” in Garrett that a juror would be a district taxpayer, it is virtually certain that an Alameda County juror in this case will be a BART taxpayer with more than an academic interest in a damage suit totaling more than $100 million. We are confronted with the paradigm case of potential prejudice that the Legislature sought to avoid by enacting section 394.

But BART contends that its interpretation of section 394 is justified on the ground that the Legislature apparently determined that any taxpayer prejudice in favor of a single-county agency is “diluted” in the case of a regional agency, and thus application of the transfer remedy is precluded.

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Bluebook (online)
551 P.2d 847, 17 Cal. 3d 259, 131 Cal. Rptr. 231, 1976 Cal. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/westinghouse-electric-corp-v-superior-court-cal-1976.