Opinion
Thе 22nd District Agricultural Association (the District) appeals a judgment in favor of the City of Del Mar (the City) declaring Del Mar Municipal Code section 3.08 et seq. (the ordinance) facially valid and the City entitled under Business and Professions Code section 19610.6 1 to assess and collect license fees and admissions taxes on certain events conducted under contract with the District. The District asks us to declare the ordinance unconstitutional as ultra vires, or alternatively as applied on the grounds it (1) infringes on the District’s sovereign immunity; (2) attempts to regulate fields preempted by state law; and (3) burdens the District’s First Amendment rights. In a consolidated appeal, Lawrence Bame, an event promotor who rents space from the District, appeals the court’s judgment of dismissal entered after it granted the City’s demurrer to Bame’s complaint for declaratory relief and money damages. Bame contends the court abused its discretion and denied him due process by refusing to allow his intervention in the City’s lawsuit for declaratory relief, and erroneously ruled his action was barred by res judicata and collateral estoppel by virtue of the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in the City’s favor.
We conclude the District’s sovereign immunity extends to entities contracting with the District that operate consumer exhibitions and demonstrations encompassed within the District’s broad functions and reverse the judgment against the District with directions. We further conclude the court erred in sustaining the City’s demurrer to Bame’s complaint to the extent Bame sought a refund of fees and taxes paid to the City. Consequently, we reverse the judgments with directions set forth below.
Factual and Procedural Background 2
The District is a “state institution” created under the provisions of the Food and Agricultural Code. (Foоd & Agr. Code, § 3953;
Sixth District etc. Assoc, v. Wright
(1908)
Chapter 3.08 of the Del Mar Municipal Code authorizes the City to levy and collect a 10 percent tax on the price of admission for each admission to “any event anywhere in the City,” and also more specifically a 40 cent tax on each admission to any horse racing event. 3 Del Mar Municipal Code section 3.08.020, entitled Distribution in Lieu of Tax, reflects the City’s election to receive funds from entities conducting horse racing meetings and satellite horse racing meetings and to suspend imposition of admissions taxes and other fees in accordance with the Business and Professions Code. Del Mar Municipal Code section 3.08.020 provides:
“A. For those entities which conduct horse racing meetings and which distribute funds to the City in accordance with the provisions of the Business and Professions Code, the City elects to receive those funds in lieu of the Admissions Tax imposed by this Chapter and will suspend the imposition of other taxes and fees in accordance with the requirements of the Business and Professions Code.
“B. For those entities which conduct satellite horse racing meetings and which distribute funds to the City in accordance with the provisions of the Business and Professions Code, the City elects to receive those funds in lieu of the Admissions Tax imposed by this Chapter and will suspend the imposition of other taxes and fees in accordance with the requirements of the Business and Professions Code. [(Ord. 511).]” 4 It is undisputed that the admissions tax is “paid 100% by contractors who put on events at [the] Del Mar Fairgrounds”; the tax is not collected by the City at any other location.
Since 1985, the City has received a percentage of the parimutuel wagers from live horse racing in lieu of imposing the admissions tax on Del Mar
Thoroughbred Club patrons. In 1988, after the District expanded its activities to include satellite wagering, the City received a percentage of the parimutuel wagers from satellite racing in lieu of imposing an admissions tax on the District. Since that time, the City has consistently received a percentage of the parimutuel satellite wagers. In approximately 1993, the District increased its efforts to contract with private entities that conduct conventions and exhibitions on the Del Mar Fairgrounds. According
In January 1996, event oрerators began to refuse to pay the business license fees and admissions taxes. After certain contractors demanded the City refund fees and taxes paid by them for past events, the City sought a judicial determination that it had the ability under section 19610.6 to assess and collect those fees and taxes on events unrelated to the Del Mar Fair and horse racing and conducted by contract with the District. Bame, who alleged that up until 1997 he paid the City a 10 percent admissions tax for conducting his home and garden show, unsuccessfully sought to intervene in the City’s lawsuit. 5
The City moved for summary judgment or alternatively summary adjudication of issues, arguing neither section 19610.3 nor section 19610.4 applied to the City, and the plain language of section 19610.6 authorized the City to impose fees and taxes on events unrelated to horse racing and wagering conducted by contract with the District. 6 After considering further briefing on issues related to the City’s claim that it elected to receive distributions under section 19610.6, the court granted the City’s motion, ruling as a matter of law that under section 19610.3, “the City is entitled to assess and collect taxes on the events conducted by contract with 22nd District Agricultural Association, which are unrelated to horse racing, satellite wagering and the fair.” The court denied the District’s motion to the extent it was not moot. Following its ruling, the court received additional arguments as to the ordinance’s constitutionality and issued a supplemental order ruling the ordinance was not facially invalid. The court entered judgment in the City’s favor.
Discussion
I. District’s Appeal
A. Standard of Review
On appeal from a summary judgment, we review the record de novo to determine whether the District is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
(McManis
v.
San Diego Postal Credit Union
(1998)
The District’s contention that it, as a state agency, is protected by sovereign immunity raises a question of law based on undisputed facts and is therefore subject to our independent or de novo review.
(Laidlaw Waste Systems, Inc.
v.
Bay Cities Services, Inc.
(1996)
B. Analysis
We emphasize that the only matter at issue is whether the City may validly impose its admissions tax on entities that, under contract with the District and on District property, conduct consumer-oriented events unrelated to horse racing and satellite wagering. The City maintains it “does not impose a business license requiremеnt on the District or the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club, the association which conducts horse racing and satellite wagering. Nor does the City impose admissions taxes on patrons of the racetrack or the Del Mar Fair.” Given these admissions, in resolving the City’s request for declaratory relief we do not address the validity of the ordinance to the extent it arguably permits the City to tax or impose fees upon the District itself or Del Mar Thoroughbred Club patrons, as that would be an advisory opinion only. The controversy that is the subject of declaratory relief “ ‘ “must be of a character which admits of specific and conclusive relief by judgment within the field of judicial determination, as distinguished from an advisory opinion upon a particular or hypothetical state of facts .... While ordinances and statutes are inherently proper subjects of declaratory relief, ... a declaratory judgment may not be rendered in respect to them in disregard of the customary limitations upon the granting of such relief.” [Citations.]’ [Citation.]”
(Redwood Coast Watersheds Alliance v. State Bd. of Forestry & Fire Protection
(1999)
The District’s argument that it is immune from the City’s tax combines the distinct concepts of sovereign immunity and preemption. It contends the City cannot apply its admissions tax to events occurring at the District’s facilities because the fields of horse racing and District activities are matters of statewide concern, the District’s public purpose includes making its facilities available to various groups, and the tax is regulatory, not revenue raising. The City maintains its ordinance is a valid exercise of its constitutional power to tax (Cal. Const., art. XI, § 5, subd. (a)) and further asserts that when the District is acting in a “proprietary” as opposed to its governmental capacity, as here when it contracts with entities tо put on private shows and events, it is not entitled to the protection of sovereign immunity. By referring to article XI, section 5, subdivision (a) of the state Constitution, the City raises its “home rule” powers.
(Johnson
v.
Bradley
(1992)
In determining whether the District’s contractors are exempt from local regulations under the doctrine of sovereign immunity, the relevant inquiry is whether the District acts within its governmental capacity in contracting with these entities. The City’s “home rule” authority is not
The parties acknowledge that the District’s immunity is limited to situations where the District is operating in its governmental capacity.
(Board of Trustees v. City of Los Angeles
(1975)
Pointing to its statutory purpose of “[h]olding fairs, expositions and exhibitions” as well as “[constructing, maintaining, and operating recreational and cultural facilities of general public interest” (Food & Agr. Code, § 3951), the District argues its actions in making its facilities available to private entities is “part of its intended public purpose, not merely ancillary revenue raising.” The District also points out it is empowered to lease its property for public park, recreation or playground purposes. (Food & Agr. Code, § 4051.) The City, relying primarily on
Board of Trustees, supra,
Based on the record before us, we reject the argument that the District’s leasing of its property to private entities for consumer events is solely a revenue-producing or proprietary activity not within its governmental functions. The scope of the relevant inquiry is defined by the particular activities in question—contracting with entities that put on events such as home and garden, gun and antique shows at the District’s facilities. (See
Guidi
v.
California
(1953)
In
Board of Trustees,
events such as swap meets and circuses plainly had “no relation to” the governmental function of the university.
(Board of Trustees, supra,
It is settled that the Legislature can expressly consent to regulatiоn and to that extent waive sovereign immunity. But in order to be effective, such a waiver must be express, and not inferred by implication.
Del Norte Disposal, Inc. v. Department of Corrections
(1994)
In the Horse Racing Law, an “association” is defined as any person engaged in the conduct of a recognized horse race meeting. (§ 19403.) A “person” includes any “individual, partnership, corporation, limited liability company, or other association or organization.” (§ 19413.) The District is identified as a “state designated fair,” and is also referred to as a “fair” in that chapter. (§§ 19418, subd. (a), 19418.1, subd. (22).) The undisputed facts establish that the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club is the “association” (as defined in § 19403) that conducts horse race meetings on District property as the District’s lessee. As indicated, the District itself conducts satellite wagering on the fairgrounds.
Section 19610.3
8
as applied here addresses deduction of parimutuel wagers by
The Legislature enacted section 19610.6 effective in 1989. (Stats. 1988, ch. 1277, § 1, p. 4268.) That section applies solely to the District. By its plain language, section 19610.6 mandates that the District deduct certain amounts of parimutuel wagers from satellite wagering in lieu of making deductions under sections 19610.3 and 19610.4. The section reads: “Notwithstanding Section 19605.71, and in lieu of any deduction under Section
19610.3 or 19610.4, the 22nd District Agricultural Association shall deduct an additional amount of 0.33 of 1 percent from the total parimutuel wagers placed at its satellite wagering facility, Forty percent of the amount deducted pursuant to this section shall be distributed to the City of Del Mar and 40 percent shall be distributed to the City of Solana Beach, if the respeсtive city
Although it can be fairly argued that the above referenced statutes suggest a municipality may tax the District (e.g., § 19610.6: “If the City of Del Mar . . . has elected by ordinance to receive a distribution ... it shall not at any time thereafter assess or collect . . . any license or excise tax or fee . . . .”), nothing in them expressly authorizes the City to impose license fees or taxes on the District or entities contracting with it, nor do they expressly state that the District, its lessees or persons contracting with the District shall be subject to City license taxes or fees. These provisions do not constitute express consent by the state to taxing or regulation of the District or its сontractors by the City, should the City decline distributions from horse race meetings conducted by the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club or satellite wagering conducted by the District. 10 Consequently, as applied to permit the City to impose an admissions tax on the entities contracting with the District to put on consumer shows, section 3.08.010 of the ordinance taxes the District’s sovereign activities and is invalid and unenforceable. Similarly, to the extent the City seeks to impose a license fee on entities contracting with the District to put on consumer shows on the fairgrounds, its actions and such fees constitute an improper invasion on the District’s sovereignty and the District or its contractors are not subject to the license fees.
Section 3.08.020 of the ordinance is valid insofar as it constitutes the City’s election to take deductions from horse race meetings and satellite wagering as permitted by the Business and Professions Code. The effect of the ordinance is as follows: The City has elected to receive one-third of 1 percent of total parimutuel wagers from racing meetings from the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club (the “association that conducts a racing meeting”) under section 19610.3, following the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club’s permanent election to make that deduction. As the quid pro quo for taking this distribution, the City must provide the association with “ordinary and traditional” municipal services that were
Having concluded the taxing provision of the ordinance is invalid to the extent it is applied to the District’s sovereign activities in contracting with entities to put on consumer-oriented events such as home and garden, gun or antique shows, we need not address the District’s preemption arguments or its argument thаt the ordinance is unconstitutional as applied to the District or events held on its property.
II. Bame’s Appeal
Bame contends the court erred in denying his motion to intervene in the City’s action (case No. N079707) and further argues he was denied due
process when the court sustained the City’s demurrer to his separate complaint on grounds of res judicata and collateral estoppel (case No. N080584). The City responds by pointing out Bame failed to appeal the court’s order denying his motion to intervene, and asserts he consequently cannot challenge that ruling. We agree. An order denying intervention is directly appealable because it finally and adversely determines the right of the moving party to proceed in the action.
(Dollenmayer v. Pryor
(1906)
Bame is not prevented, however, from appealing the judgment of dismissal entered after the court sustained the City’s demurrer to his separate complaint. On appeal from a judgment of dismissal after a demurrer is sustained without leave to amend, we review the order de novo, exercising our independent judgment on whether, as a matter of law, the complaint states a cause of action.
(Lazar
v.
Hertz Corp.
(1999)
By the first cause of action in his verified complaint, Bame sought a judicial declaration that the City had no legal right to assess and collect business license and admissions taxes on the events conducted by him under contract with the District and on District property. In a second cause of action, Bame sought a refund оf all business license and admissions taxes paid by him. The City demurred to Bame’s complaint on the grounds that it was barred by the doctrines of law of the case, res judicata, and collateral estoppel as a result of the court’s order denying Bame intervention in the City’s action against the District. Before the hearing on the City’s demurrer in Bame’s action, the court in the City’s action granted summary judgment in the City’s favor. The court in Bame’s action sustained the City’s demurrer without leave to amend, ruling the controversy in the City’s action was fully litigated and concluding Bame’s claims were actually litigated in the City’s action.
We conclude the trial court, in denying Bame’s motion to intervene in the City’s action and in granting the City’s motion for summary judgment, did not necessarily decide the issue of Bame’s entitlement to reimbursement raised in his complaint against the City. Presented with a motion for intervention, the court must determine whether the intervener has established (1) it has a direct interest in the lawsuit; (2) intervention would not enlarge the issues raised by the original parties; and (3) the intervener would not “ ‘tread on the rights of the original parties to conduct their own lawsuit.’ ”
(Lincoln National Life Ins. Co. v. State Bd. of Equalization
(1994)
To the extent Bame challenged the validity or constitutionality of the ordinance as applied to entities contracting with the district, we agree those issues were actually litigated and determined in the City’s action. But Bame’s entitlement to а refund was not encompassed within the court’s ruling; indeed it could not have been given the court’s finding that the City’s fees and taxes were validily imposed under section 19610.6 and a facially
valid ordinance. The City acknowledges that the court’s ruling in the City’s favor rendered Bame’s request for refund moot. We observe the contrary point—if the fees and taxes are held invalid, Bame’s separate cause of action for a refund is not moot. While Bame’s claim for a refund is dependent upon a declaration of invalidity of the imposition of license fees or taxes, having now concluded those fees and taxes were invalidly imposed on entities contracting with the District to put on shows such as Bame’s home and garden show, Bame is entitled to litigate his claim. Without addressing the merits of that claim, we reverse the judgment with directions that the superior court еnter a
Disposition
The judgment in superior court case No. N079707 is reversed and the case remanded with directions to enter a new judgment declaring section 3.08.010 of the ordinance invalid as applied to entities that contract with the District to operate consumer exhibitions and demonstrations encompassed within the District’s functions. The judgment of dismissal in superior court case No. N080584 is reversed and the superior court directed to vacate the judgment and order sustaining the City’s demurrer without leave to amend and enter a new order overruling the City’s demurrer as to Bame’s second cause of action. The District and Bame shall recover their costs on appeal.
Nares, Acting P. J., and McIntyre, J., concurred.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Business and Profеssions Code unless otherwise indicated.
For purposes of determining the propriety of the court’s grant of summary judgment, we set forth the facts undisputed by the parties and other facts in the light most favorable to the City.
(Crouse v. Brobeck, Phleger & Harrison
(1998)
Del Mar Municipal Code section 3.08.010 provides: “A. Unless otherwise provided in this Chapter, when a charge of admission price for a single admission is paid for the right or privilege of being admitted to any event anywhere in the City, there is levied and assessed, and there shall be collected, a tax of 10 percent of the price of admission for each such admission, with a minimum tax due on each such admission of 15 cents. . . . [IQ B. (1) When a chargе or admission price for a single admission is paid for the right or privilege of being admitted to any horse racing event, there is levied and assessed, and there shall be collected, a tax of 40 cents for each such admission . . . .” At oral argument, the City’s counsel stated the ordinance was adopted in 1988, just prior to the Legislature’s enactment of section 19610.6. The parties do not contest that fact.
Del Mar Municipal Code section 3.08.030 contains exemptions and provides: “A. The City Council may at any time, by the affirmative vote of at least three of its members entered upon the City Council minutes, waive any or all of the requirements of this Chapter with respect to any business or event which is conducted or sponsored within the City by any institution, organization, association or corporation which is organized and carried on wholly for the benefit of rеligious, charitable, educational, recreational or scientific purposes and from which no individual person, other than bona fide employees and help necessarily contracted for, receives or is eligible to receive any gain, remuneration or profit. (Ord. 24, Par. 13) [10 B. The provisions of this Chapter shall not apply to admissions to a county fair regularly conducted by a district agriculture association organized pursuant to Division 1, Chapter 3, Article 2, of the Agricultural Code of the State, nor to events conducted as part of such county fair. (Ord. 24, Par. 16)”
According to the City, the superior court clerk inadvertently filed Bame’s proposed complaint for declaratory relief and money damages as superior court case No. N080584. The City in any event demurred to the complaint, stating it failed to state a cause of action on the ground the trial court’s order denying intervention in the City’s action against the District was law of the case and barred Bame’s action by res judicata. The court sustained City’s demurrer without leave to amend, ruling the controversy was litigated in the City’s action against the District. Bame appealed the order sustaining the demurrer, and we consolidated his appeal with the District’s. Noting that an order sustaining a demurrer is not separately appealable but is reviewable on appeal from the final judgment
(Shepardson
v.
McLellan
(1963)
Sections 19610.3, 19610.4 and 19610.6 are contained in chapter 4, division 8 of the Business and Professions Code (thе Horse Racing Law). As discussed post, those sections authorize specified entities that conduct live horse racing or satellite wagering to deduct portions of total parimutuel wagers and distribute them to the city or county in which the racing is conducted after payment of any possessory interest taxes.
As noted by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in
Great Western Shows, Inc. v. Los Angeles County
(9th Cir. 2000)
Section 19610.3, originally enacted in 1982, provides: “In addition to the amounts required or allowed to be deducted from the parimutuel pools as provided by this chapter, and except as otherwise provided in this section, every association that conducts a racing meeting may elect permanently to deduct an additional amount up to 0.33 of 1 percent from the total parimutuel wagers placed within its inclosure. This election is not available to the California Exposition and State Fair or to a county or district, agricultural association fair unless, prior to January 1, 1984, the city or county in which the fair meeting was being conducted levied a license fee or excise tax pursuant to Section 19495 or imposed an admission tax on track patrons. [¶] The amounts deducted pursuant to this section shall be retained by the association or fair for the payment of possessory interest taxes, if any, assessed against the organization described in Section 19608.2, the racing association, or fair, and after payment of these taxes shall be distributed to the city in which the racing meeting is conducted or, if the meeting is conducted outside the limits of any city, to the county in which the racing meeting is conducted. If a сity or county has elected by ordinance to receive a distribution from a racing association under this section, it shall not at any time thereafter assess or collect, with respect to an event conducted by that racing association, or an event conducted by or by contract with that association or fair, any license or excise tax or fee, including, but not limited to, any admission, parking, or business tax, or any tax or fee levied solely upon the racing association conducting a racing meeting or any racing patron, participant, service-supplier, promoter, or vendor thereof. Further, a city or county electing to receive a distribution under this section shall continue to provide ordinary and traditional municipal services, such as police services and traffic control, in connection with racing meetings. ‘Ordinary and traditional services,’ as used in this section, means those services provided by the city or county at no charge to the racing association in 1981. If an eligible city or county does not elect to receive a distribution under this section, the amount remaining after payment of possessory interest taxes, if any, as provided in this section shall be paid to the state as an additional license fee."
Section 19610.4 provides: “Notwithstanding Section 19610.3, any association that conducts a racing meeting pursuant to Section 19549.3 or 19549.9, or any fair that operates a satellite wagering facility, may elect to deduct an additional amount of 0.33 of 1 percent from the total parimutuel wagers placed within its inclosure or at its satellite wagering facility. [¶] The amounts deducted pursuant to this section shall be retained by the assоciation or fair for the payment of possessory interest taxes, if any, assessed against the organization described in Section 19608.2, the racing association, or fair, and after payment of these taxes shall be distributed to the city or county in which the racing meeting or wagering is conducted, at the option of the association or fair. If a city or county has elected by ordinance to receive a distribution from a racing association or fair under this section, it shall not at any time thereafter assess or collect, with respect to an event conducted by that racing association or, an event conducted by or by contract with that fair, any license or excise tax or fee, including, but not limited to, any admission, parking, or business tax, or any tax or fee levied solely upon the racing association or fair conducting a racing meeting or satellite wagering, or any patron, participant, service-supplier, promoter, or vendor thereof. Further, a city or county electing to receive a distribution under section shall provide ordinary and traditional municipal services, such as police services and traffic control, in connection with the racing meetings or satellite wagering. If an eligible city or county does not elect to receive a distribution under this section, the amount remaining after payment of possessory interest taxes, if any, as provided in this section shall be paid to the state as an additional license fee.” (Italics added.) The section was amended in 1995 to add the italicized phrases, among other changes. (Stats. 1995, ch. 959, § 4.)
We note an ambiguity in section 19610.3 as it is drafted that becomes irrelevant in view of our holding. Section 19610.3 authorizes an association that conducts a racing meeting to permanently deduct the specified рercentage of wagers if it chooses, and the City to elect to take such distribution, but in the event the City makes such an election, the section prohibits it from taxing “event[s] conducted by that racing association, or an event conducted by or by contract with that association or fair . . . .” (Italics added.) The italicized words “or fair” inject ambiguity because under the statute it is not the fair that elects to make the deduction. As we read section 19610.3, the italicized words “or fair” are reasonably interpreted to refer to a fair that conducts a racing meeting. Because the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club, not the District, conducts racing meetings, if the City declined a distribution under this section, it could arguably tax events conducted by the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club (the “association”) or events conducted by contract with the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club, but only to the extent those events do not fall within the sovereign functions of the District.
