*964 Opinion
City and County of San Francisco Defendant-appellant (hereafter City) appeals from an order granting a preliminary injunction restraining enforcement of the five-year durational residency requirement provided in the city charter for persons appointed to boards and commissions of the City.
Facts
Respondents, who are members of an association interested in the participation of women in public affairs, brought the instant suit against the City. Each respondent alleged in the complaint that she sought consideration for appointment to a San Francisco board or commission but has been precluded therefrom by administrative application of section 8.100(a) of the charter. 1 Each of the individual respondents is a taxpayer and resident of the City, but failed to qualify for consideration for appointive office because she had not met the five-year durational residency requirement. It was also alleged that respondents “have had intentions of traveling and residency elsewhere than in San Francisco in order to obtain work and education experience,’’ but have had their intentions “chilled” and have been discouraged from applying due to the existence of section 8.100.
Respondents also filed a declaration of the Mayor of San Francisco, George Moscone, which stаted that the five-year residency requirement of section 8.100(a) “operates to limit the potential of qualified candidates” for appointment to various boards and commissions and “constitutes an unnecessary and harmful restriction upon the appointment of important public officials.”
*965 The complaint sought a declaration that the subject durational residency requirement was unconstitutional, along with preliminary and permanent injunctions restraining the enforcement thereof. Accompanying the complaint was a motion for preliminary injunction which was opposed by the City.
On March 26, 1977, the superior court granted the motion and enjoined enforcement of the challenged provision, stating: “In making this determination and granting the preliminary injunction, the Court finds that under either the ‘strict scrutiny’ or ‘rational basis’ tests, Charter Section 8.100 requiring a five year duration residency is arbitrary and unreasonable.”
Discussion
Is city charter section 8.100 unconstitutional as a denial of equal protection of the law?
Section 8.100(a) insofar as it is here applicable, 2 sets up as a prerequisite for appointment to a board or commission of the City, the qualification that an individual must have been a City resident for a period of at least five years. The effect of this charter provision is to impose what is commonly referred to as a “durational residency” requirement, dividing residents into two classes, оld residents and new residents. It discriminates against the latter to the extent of totally denying them candidacy for appointive office. The question presented here is whether such a classification denies new residents equal protection under law as guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
The primary step in our analysis is to determine under which standard of review the present classification must be judged. In considering laws challenged under the equal protection clause, the United States Supreme Court has applied either the “rational basis” test or the “strict scrutiny” (also referred to as the “compelling state interest”) test, depending upon the interest affected or the classification involved.
(Dunn
v.
Blumstein
(1972)
It can be seen immediately that new residents do not comprise a “suspect class.” Such a group must be one which has been “saddled with such disabilities, or subjected to such a history of purposeful unequal treatment” as to justify extraordinary protection. (See
San Antonio School District
v.
Rodriguez
(1973)
In
Zeilenga
v.
Nelson, supra, 4
Cal.3d 716, the California Supreme Court held that a county charter provision which imposed a five-year residency requirement on all candidates for board of supervisors to be unconstitutional as a denial of equal protection. In so doing, the court applied the “strict scrutiny” test because of the fundamental nature of the right to hold public office: “ ‘[T]he right to hold publiс office,
either by election or appointment,
is one of the valuable rights of citizenship.’
(Carter
v.
Commission on Qualifications of Judicial Appointments
(1939)
However, the continued viability of the quoted language, insofar as it implies that the right to hold public office is a “fundamental” right under the United States Constitution, is open to some question. In
Bullock
v.
Carter
(1972)
The court found that the size of the required filing fees
3
reflected their “patently exclusionary character,”
(id.,
at p. 143 [
Subsequently, in
Thompson
v.
Mellon
(1973)
Obviously, restrictions on eligibility for appointive office do not have the impact on the right to vote which characterizes restrictions on eligibility for elective office. Nor, in view of
Adams
v.
Superior Court
(1974)
However, in Thompson, supra, 9 Cal.3d 96, the California Supreme Court found an entirely new and independent basis for applying the strict scrutiny test in analyzing durational residency *968 requirements—namely, the penalizing effect that such restrictions have upon the fundamental right to travel. (9 Cal.3d at pp. 101-102.)
In
Dunn
v.
Blumstein, supra,
The City argues that the right to travel is not impaired by its durational residency requirement because a person’s motive to travel “could hardly be affected” by section 8.100(a), and that the present requirement was not
intended
to prevent respondents from moving from one place to anothеr. This is the precise view which the United States Supreme Court has characterized as “a fundamental misunderstanding of the law.”
(Dunn, supra,
We therefore conclude that the durational residency requirements sought to be imposed by the City in this case upon thе right to seek appointive office must be judged by the “strict scrutiny” test.
We find nothing in
Adams
v.
Superior Court, supra,
The City argues that only where durational residency requirements impose a penalty by invoking a denial or delay of access to basic necessities or a fundamental right found explicitly set forth in the Constitution, should they be subjected to the strict scrutiny test. However, if this were so it would be unnеcessary to conclude, as did the Supreme Court in
Thompson, supra,
While it may not be fundamental in the constitutional sense, in
Zeilenga,
the Supreme Court termed the right to hold public office, either elective or appointive, “one of the valuable rights of citizenship” and one which the First Amendment protects against infringement. (
*970 In order to meet the “strict scrutiny test” the City must establish that the durational residency requirements are reasonably necessary to promote a compelling governmental interest. Measured by this test these requirements cannot be upheld, and the City concedes this in its brief.
The test, as it applies to such residence requiremеnts, is well articulated by the United States Supreme Court in
Dunn
v.
Blumstein, supra,
In the instant case, the City sets forth as its interest, to “insure that those individuals charged with the administration of public affairs would not only be acquainted with the city and its affairs but also would have a vested interest in the quality of their work product.”
The argument that a durational residency requirement is necessaiy to further a compelling governmental interest in insuring a knowledge and understanding of local issues has been repeatedly rejected by the California Supreme Court.
(Zeilenga
v.
Nelson, supra, 4
Cal.3d 716, 722;
Thompson
v.
Mellon, supra,
Nor can the five-year residence requirement be justified as necessary to insure that an appointee have a “vested interest” in the performance of his or her job. The concurrent residence requirement already contained in section 8.100 provides, among other methods, a less drastic means of accomplishing the same objective.
In summaiy, it appears that the five-year durational residence requirement of section 8.100(a) is not justified as furthering any compelling governmental interest, nor does it constitute the “ ‘least restrictive method of achieving the desired purpose.’ ”
(Westbrook
v.
Mihaly, supra,
Affirmed.
Caldecott, P. J., and Christian, J., concurred.
Notes
Assigned by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
That section (hereinafter section 8.100(a)) provides: “No person shall be a candidate for any elective office nor shall be appointed as a member of any board or commission unless he shall have been a resident of the city and county for a period of at least five years and an elector thereof for at least one year immediately prior to the time of his taking office, unless otherwise specifically provided in this charter, and every elected officer and member of any board or commission shall continue to be a resident of the city and county during incumbency of office, and upon ceasing to be such resident, shall be removed from office.”
After the Supreme Court decision in
Zeilenga
v.
Nelson
(1971)
It should be noted at the outset that respondents have only challengеd that portion of section 8.100 which imposes a five-year durational residence requirement, not the portion which requires that appointees to boards or commissions be concurrent residents of the City.
The fees were fixed by the county executive committee of the particular political party; were payable to the committee; were required to be based on “ ‘the importance, emolument, and term of office for which the nomination is to be made' ” (
