Wolfe v. City of Fremont

50 Cal. Rptr. 3d 524, 144 Cal. App. 4th 533, 2006 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 10170, 2006 Daily Journal DAR 14537, 2006 Cal. App. LEXIS 1711
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 31, 2006
DocketA112386
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 50 Cal. Rptr. 3d 524 (Wolfe v. City of Fremont) 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
Wolfe v. City of Fremont, 50 Cal. Rptr. 3d 524, 144 Cal. App. 4th 533, 2006 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 10170, 2006 Daily Journal DAR 14537, 2006 Cal. App. LEXIS 1711 (Cal. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Opinion

MARGULIES, J.

This appeal requires us to construe a provision of the Ralph M. Brown Act (Brown Act) (Gov. Code, 1 § 54950 et seq.) that *538 prohibits a majority of the members of a local legislative body, when outside a noticed public meeting, from using “direct communication, personal intermediaries, or technological devices ... to develop a collective concurrence as to action to be taken on an item.” (§ 54952.2, subd. (b).)

The police department of the City of Fremont (City) devised a new policy to govern its response to activated home invasion alarms. Plaintiff J. Dennis Wolfe alleges that, in an effort to preempt any interference by the city council with the department’s implementation of the policy, the city manager met individually with council members to explain the new policy, gamer their support, and secure their agreement not to take any action with respect to the policy. In addition to these meetings, the council members discussed the policy privately among themselves.

After word of the new policy became public, the city council set the matter for formal discussion at a regular meeting. During that meeting, the city manager is alleged to have acknowledged that he met individually with council members to discuss the new policy. Moreover, one council member is alleged to have stated that council members, after having been briefed on the new policy, had expressed their support for it in advance of the meeting.

Wolfe filed suit against the City, the city manager, the chief of police, and the council members, contending that the activities of the city manager and the city council constituted a violation of the Brown Act’s requirement that city council meetings be open and public. The trial court granted defendants’ demurrer, concluding that the allegations of the complaint failed to state a claim against any of the defendants. While we affirm the trial court’s dismissal of the claims against the city manager and the chief of police, we conclude that Wolfe has stated a claim as to the City and the city council. We reverse and remand for further proceedings as to these defendants.

I. BACKGROUND

Wolfe is a City resident. His first amended complaint asserted a single claim for declaratory and injunctive relief under the Brown Act against the City, the Fremont City Council and its individual members (collectively City Council), Fred Diaz, the city manager, and Craig Steckler, the City’s chief of police.

*539 According to the allegations of the first amended complaint, 2 in November 2004, Steckler devised a new policy to govern the police department’s response to residential home invasion alarms (the verified response policy). Under the verified response policy, the department would no longer respond to activated home alarms unless an “acceptable reason” for the alarm was verified by a third party. If the police department implemented the verified response policy, it would necessarily cease enforcement of the City’s existing false alarm ordinance.

After Diaz learned of the new policy and expressed his support, he and Steckler decided to ensure that the City Council would not interfere with or delay its implementation. Accordingly, “in order to deter the City Council from taking any action against, or in regard to,” the verified response policy, Diaz “met individually and privately with a majority of the members of the City Council to discuss the . . . verified response plan and to obtain, among other things: their support for the plan; their collective concurrence to take no action in regard to the plan; their collective concurrence to take no action in regard to amending the Fremont False Alarm Ordinance ... or in regard to the nonenforcement of the ordinance.” As a result of Diaz’s meeting with the council members, Diaz “obtained the support and collective concurrence of a majority of the members of the City Council to support the verified response plan and to take no Council action in regard to [the] plan or in regard to the Fremont False Alarm Ordinance.”

When news of the verified response policy became public, it caused some discontent in the community. Through local newspapers, it became known that a group of citizens intended to appear at the February 22, 2005 meeting of the City Council to address the verified response policy during the public oral communications portion of the agenda. 3 Thereafter, “a majority of the defendant City Council members discussed the[se] matters . . . among themselves prior to February 22, 2005.” Although tide verified response policy was not an agenda item, the City Council arranged for Steckler to speak for 45 minutes on the topic of the new policy before the meeting was opened for general public comment. Steckler’s address had been arranged during Diaz’s meetings with council members for the purpose of “curbing] and countering] public criticism of the policy that all defendants had agreed to support.”

After the February 22 meeting, the City Council placed on the agenda for their March 8 meeting an item entitled, “Alarm Response Policy, Public *540 Comment on the Fremont Police Department Policy of Verified Response to Intrusion Alarms.” During the course of that March meeting, Diaz “admitted that after meeting with defendant Steckler and supporting his ‘verified response’ proposal, Diaz met individually with each of the members of the City Council to provide them information on the ‘verified response’ proposal and to answer their questions.” Councilmember Dominic Dutra then “admitted on the record that [the] Council had been fully briefed on the ‘verified response’ proposal and had expressed their support before February 22, 2005,” when the first meeting occurred. Although the complaint does not specify the ultimate fate of the verified response policy, it appears that the City Council took no action to prevent its implementation.

In addition to these specific allegations, the complaint contains more general allegations of what Wolfe claims to have been unlawful conduct by City officials. He alleged that “there is a common and continuing practice in Fremont city government in which the City Manager meets serially and individually with a majority of members of the City Council to discuss business items that are, will be, or may be on the agendas of upcoming meetings of the City Council” and that “the purposes of the serial meetings ... are to exchange information, explore viewpoints, reach decisions, and help develop a collective concurrence of a majority of the members of the defendant City Council on how to respond to and deal with issues that come before, or may come before, the defendant Fremont City Council.” Wolfe also alleged that City Council closed sessions, ordinarily restricted to the discussion of confidential matters, are used for a similar purpose. 4

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Bluebook (online)
50 Cal. Rptr. 3d 524, 144 Cal. App. 4th 533, 2006 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 10170, 2006 Daily Journal DAR 14537, 2006 Cal. App. LEXIS 1711, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolfe-v-city-of-fremont-calctapp-2006.