INTRODUCTION
This case arises from a decision by the Public Employment Relations Board (PERB) finding that the City of San Diego (City) violated the Meyers-Milias-Brown Act ( Gov. Code, § 3500 et seq. ; Act)
As we shall explain, we decline the Unions' request to invalidate the Initiative as a judicial remedy because we conclude the Initiative's validity is more appropriately addressed in a separate quo warranto proceeding. We further conclude we must modify PERB's compensatory and cease-and-desist remedies to prevent the remedies from impermissibly encroaching upon constitutional law, statutory law, and policy matters involving initiatives, elections, and the doctrine of preemption that are unrelated to the Act. (See Hoffman Plastic Compounds, Inc. v. NLRB (2002)
II
BACKGROUND
A
After concluding the City violated the Act, PERB imposed a compensatory remedy intended to restore the parties and affected employees to their respective bargaining positions before the failure to meet and confer occurred and to make affected employees financially whole. PERB also imposed cease-and-desist and affirmative action remedies to prevent further violations of the Act.
Specifically, PERB ordered the City to "[m]ake current and former bargaining-union employees whole for the value of any and all lost compensation, including but not limited to pension benefits, offset by the value of new benefits required from the City under [the Initiative], plus interest at the rate of seven (7) percent per annum until [the Initiative] is no longer in effect or until the City and the Unions agree otherwise."
PERB also ordered the City to cease and desist from "[r]efusing to meet and confer with the Unions before
B
PERB and the Unions request we affirm PERB's administrative remedies. The Unions also request we, as a judicial remedy, invalidate the Initiative. The Unions assert this review proceeding is an appropriate forum to address the Initiative's validity because there are no factual or legal issues to be resolved by another tribunal. PERB takes no position on the propriety of any judicial remedy but asserts any judicial remedy must be consistent with PERB's administrative remedies.
The City contends the validity of the Initiative may only be determined in a separate quo warranto proceeding (see Code Civ. Proc., §§ 803 - 811 ).
Like the City, the Initiative's proponents (Proponents) contend the validity of the Initiative can only be determined in a separate quo warranto proceeding. The Proponents also contend PERB's compensatory remedy violates their constitutional rights because it effectively invalidates the Initiative by reversing the Initiative's implementation and denying the electorate its fiscal
III
DISCUSSION
A
We first consider the Union's request for us to invalidate the Initiative in this review proceeding. Equitable remedies, including declaratory relief, are generally not available when legal remedies, including quo warranto, are adequate. ( Int'l Ass'n of Fire Fighters v. City of Oakland (1985)
The remedy of quo warranto is available to challenge "purported irregularities in the legislative process of a charter amendment which has taken effect." ( Pulskamp v. Martinez (1992)
There is some authority allowing a court in a mandamus proceeding to decide a quo warranto issue (i.e., title to public office), when the quo warranto issue is incidental to the mandamus issue. (See, e.g., Stout v. Democratic County Cent. Committee (1952)
The question of the Initiative's validity is a novel one. The determination of compensation for employees of charter cities is a matter of local rather than statewide concern. ( Cal. Const. art. 11, § 5, subd. (b); County of Riverside v. Superior Court (2003)
In reaching its conclusion, the Supreme Court noted there was no requirement for comparable city ordinances to take effect immediately, and the Court expressly declined to decide whether its holding otherwise applied to cities. ( Voters , supra , 8 Cal.4th at pp. 782, fn. 4, 784, fn. 6,
PERB's decision includes arguments in favor of preemption, but PERB did not decide this question. The question is, therefore, beyond the scope of our review of PERB's decision. Additionally, as the
1
We next consider the propriety of PERB's administrative remedies. The parties do not dispute PERB has broad powers to remedy a violation of the Act. ( City of Palo Alto , supra ,
The parties also do not dispute PERB has the authority to impose the types of remedies it imposed in this case. (See § 3541.5, subd. (c) ["[PERB] shall have the power to issue [an] ... order directing an offending party to cease and desist from the unfair practice and to take such affirmative action, including but not limited to the reinstatement of employees with or without back pay, as will effectuate the policies of this chapter"]; Cal. Code Regs., tit. 8, § 32325 ["[PERB] shall have the power to issue a decision and order in an unfair practice case directing an offending party to cease and desist from the unfair practice and to take such affirmative action ... as will effectuate the policies of the applicable statute"].) Rather, the parties dispute whether PERB has the authority to impose remedies that effectively invalidate the Initiative, or at least assume the Initiative is invalid or will be invalidated.
We review PERB's remedial orders for abuse of discretion. (See Oakland Unified Sch. Dist. v. Public Employment Relations Bd. (1981)
Nonetheless, PERB's remedial orders may not be punitive. ( Superior Farming Co. v. Agric. Labor Relations Bd. (1984)
2
With these principles in mind, we first consider the propriety of PERB's compensatory remedy. "Restoration of the status quo is the normal remedy for a unilateral change in working conditions or terms of employment without permitting bargaining members' exclusive representative an opportunity to meet and confer over the decision and its effects. [Citation.] This is usually accomplished by requiring the employer to rescind the unilateral change and to make employees 'whole' from losses suffered as a result of the unlawful unilateral change. [Citations.]" ( Cal. State Employees' Ass'n v. Public Employment Relations Bd. (1996)
In its current form, PERB's compensatory remedy essentially invalidates the Initiative by rendering the Initiative perpetually ineffectual. As we previously explained, because the question of the Initiative's validity is novel, complex, and outside the scope of our review of PERB's decision, the question is more appropriately decided in a separate quo warranto proceeding. (See part III.A., ante .) Meanwhile, the Initiative is presumptively valid. (See Professional Engineers in California Government v. Kempton (2007)
We have the power under the Act, as we deem just and necessary, "to make and
3
We next consider the propriety of PERB's cease-and-desist remedy. As written, this remedy can be, and in the Unions' view should be, broadly construed to require the City to meet and confer with the Unions before placing any citizens' initiative on the ballot that involves matters within the Act's scope of bargaining. So construed, this remedy assumes the Initiative, or any future similar citizens' initiative, is subject to the Act's procedural requirements even though this question is novel, complex, and beyond the scope of this review proceeding. Consequently, like PERB's compensatory remedy, PERB's cease-and-desist remedy impermissibly encroaches on constitutional law, statutory law, and policy matters involving initiatives, elections, and the doctrine of preemption that are unrelated to the Act.
To avoid these infirmities, we shall modify PERB's cease-and-desist remedy to order the City to cease and desist from refusing to meet and confer with the Unions and, instead, to meet and confer with the Unions upon the Unions' request before placing a charter amendment on the ballot that is advanced by the City and affects employee pension benefits and/or other negotiable subjects. This modification prevents the City from engaging in the same conduct that violated the Act in this case without impermissibly encroaching on matters more appropriately decided in a separate quo warranto proceeding. If the Initiative is invalidated in the quo warranto proceeding, then a broader cease-and-desist
C
We turn now to PERB's assertion that the procedural issue regarding the Proponents' limited participation in PERB's administrative proceedings is moot. The Proponents contend the issue is not moot because their exclusion from the administrative proceedings violated Perry v. Brown (2011)
The Perry case recognized that "since the adoption of the initiative power a century ago, decisions of both [the California Supreme Court] and the courts of appeal have repeatedly and uniformly permitted the official proponents of initiative measures to participate as parties-either as interveners or as real parties in interest-in both preelection and postelection litigation challenging the initiative measure they have sponsored." ( Perry , supra ,
We need not decide this issue because, although it is apparent from PERB's decision that PERB does not believe the Initiative is valid, PERB did not actually invalidate the Initiative. Moreover, we have concluded the Initiative's validity is beyond the scope of this review proceeding and must be decided in a separate quo warranto proceeding. Meanwhile, the Proponents have been afforded an opportunity to express their views on the Initiative's validity before PERB and throughout this review proceeding. There is no further practical or effectual relief we can provide the Proponents at this juncture. Accordingly, we agree with PERB that the issue is moot in this review proceeding. (See Association of Irritated Residents v. Department of Conservation (2017)
D
Lastly, we consider the Proponents' request for us to award them attorney fees against PERB and the Unions under Code of Civil Procedure section 1021.5 or under the equitable private attorney general doctrine. The Proponents assert that, if this court upholds the validity of the Initiative, they should receive an award of attorney fees because they successfully enforced an important right affecting the public interest and conferred a significant benefit on the general public. Since we have concluded the validity of the Initiative must be decided in a separate quo warranto proceeding, we deny the motion without prejudice to being resubmitted in that proceeding,
IV
DISPOSITION
PERB's compensatory remedy is modified to order the City to meet and confer over the effects of the Initiative and to pay the affected current and former employees represented by the Unions the difference, plus seven percent annual interest, between the compensation, including retirement benefits, the
WE CONCUR:
HUFFMAN, J.
NARES, J.
Notes
Further statutory references are to the Government Code unless otherwise indicated.
In interpreting the Act, courts may look to cases decided under analogous provisions of the federal National Labor Relations Act (
The facts underlying PERB's decision and the Supreme Court's decision are presented at length in Boling , supra , 5 Cal.5th at pp. 904-911,
PERB's remedies specifically applied to "the City, its governing board and its representatives." Our reference to the City in our discussion of PERB's remedies includes all these parties.
"Quo warranto may be brought by the Attorney General 'upon his own information, or upon a complaint of a private party.' [Citation.] ... 'Although the Attorney General occasionally brings a quo warranto action on the initiative of that office, or at the direction of the Governor, usually the action is filed and prosecuted by a private party who has obtained the consent of the Attorney General, for "leave to sue in quo warranto ." The private party who obtains leave to sue is termed the "relator." The action is brought in the name of the People of the State of California "on the relation of" the private party who has been granted permission to bring the action.' [Citations.]" (Nicolopulos v. City of Lawndale (2001)
The Attorney General has the discretion to grant or deny an application to file a quo warranto action. In determining how to exercise this discretion, the Attorney General does not attempt to resolve the merits of the controversy. Rather, the Attorney General determines whether the application presents a substantial issue of fact or law requiring judicial resolution and whether granting the application serves the public interest. (Bakersfield Police Officers Association ,
During oral argument, the Unions asserted for the first time we should reform the Initiative in a manner that would render the Initiative void and unenforceable as to the employees represented by the Unions. The Unions have forfeited this assertion by failing to raise it in their briefs. (See People v. Freeman (1994)
PERB acknowledged at oral argument it intended the cease-and-desist remedy to be limited to the context creating the need for the remedy.
