DALILA BARAJAS, VERONICA AGUIRRE, GINGER L. WALLIS, CRYSTAL ROSEMARIE ARBALLO, TERRI SANTILLAN, MELISSA COBINE, LAURA COBINE, PAUL COBINE, VICTOR RESENDEZ, AMANDA RAMIREZ, LUTHER WALLIS, TERESA M. PIERE, THE COUNTY OF KINGS, and LUPE VILLA, IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS THE REGISTRAR OF VOTERS OF THE COUNTY OF KINGS v. ALVARO PRECIADO, LETICIA GAMEZ, PABLO HERNANDEZ, and DAVID REYNOSA
No. 26-601
OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL State of California
June 17, 2026
TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
ROB BONTA, Attorney General; NICOLE WELINDT, Deputy Attorney General
OPINION
DALILA BARAJAS, VERONICA AGUIRRE, GINGER L. WALLIS, CRYSTAL ROSEMARIE ARBALLO, TERRI SANTILLAN, MELISSA COBINE, LAURA COBINE, PAUL COBINE, VICTOR RESENDEZ, AMANDA RAMIREZ, LUTHER WALLIS, TERESA M. PIERE, THE COUNTY OF KINGS, and LUPE VILLA, IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS THE REGISTRAR OF VOTERS OF THE COUNTY OF KINGS (the Relators) have applied for leave to sue ALVARO PRECIADO, LETICIA GAMEZ, PABLO HERNANDEZ, and DAVID REYNOSA (the Defendants) in quo warranto to remove them from the Avenal City Council.
We conclude that the application meets all three of the Attorney General‘s criteria to grant leave to sue: quo warranto is the appropriate remedy; the application raises a substantial legal issue; and resolution of that issue would serve the public interest. Consequently, we GRANT leave to sue.
BACKGROUND
This application arises from a recall election of four of the City of Avenal‘s five Councilmembers, specifically, Alvaro Preciado, Leticia Gamez, Pablo Hernandez, and David Reynosa. Because a pre-certification dispute reached the Court of Appeal, we cite facts from the superior court‘s findings, in addition to the party‘s submissions here.
For years, the County of Kings has conducted the City‘s elections—a collaboration permitted by the state‘s Elections Code.1 The City adopted resolutions providing for the County to conduct the City‘s elections in 2018, 2020, 2022, and 2024.2 In May 2024, the City and County informally agreed that the County would continue to administer local elections on behalf of the City.3
.In June 2025, Avenal residents began a recall process for four City Councilmembers.4 In late June, recall proponent Dalila Barajas went to the County Elections Department to inquire about the recall process, explaining that the Avenal City Clerk had directed her there.5 Barajas later returned to the County‘s office, after the City Clerk again directed her to the County and advised her that the County Registrar‘s Office was responsible for the election.6
Between June and December 2025, the Kings County Registrar of Voters engaged with City staff and officials on the recall process and election.7 The superior court found that there was “an extensive series of communications and interactions” between the City and County, “extending over an approximately 6 month period, regarding the recall election.”8
In November 2025, the County Registrar notified the City Clerk that the recall petitions satisfied the legal requirements and he would thus present certificates of sufficiency to the City Council at the December 11 City Council meeting.9 The City posted on social media that the petitions had been validated and the City had to call a
On December 25, 2025, the City Attorney faxed a letter to the County stating that the City did not want the County Registrar to conduct the recall election.12 “Due to technical errors with the fax machine[,] the [Registrar] and the County were not aware of the City‘s objections” until weeks later.13
At the January 8, 2026, City Council meeting, the County Registrar presented the certificates of sufficiency to the City Council and City Clerk.14 Under
The County, however, concluded that the 14-day statutory clock had been triggered.17 Because the City did not issue an order of election, the County Registrar on January 27 set the recall election for three months later, April 28.18
On March 4, the City filed a petition for a writ of mandamus in superior court.19 In early April, the City applied for a preliminary injunction to restrain the April 28 recall election.20 The City argued that the County was conducting the election without lawful
On April 23, the superior court denied the City‘s request for a preliminary injunction.24 The court concluded that the City had not shown a likelihood of success on the merits because the City had reached an informal agreement with the County and had for months been treating the County as having the authority to conduct the election.25 Violations of different election provisions, the court explained, may carry different consequences.26 Election provisions that go to the merits or results of the election, including provisions “relating to the time and place of holding elections, [or] the qualifications of voters and candidates,” are mandatory. Violations of mandatory provisions vitiate an election.27 By contrast, other types of election regulations are directory. Departure from a directory provision will not void an election where “there has been substantial compliance with the law, and there is no indication that the result of the election was changed or the rights of the voters impaired.”28
Applying that distinction, the superior court concluded that
Finally, the superior court held that vitiating the election would significantly impair the democratic process. The court found that the City had twice directed a recall proponent to the County to start the petition.34 The City “then spent six months in communications with the County in what can only be described as working with the County‘s administering of that very recall election.”35 It was not until after the County told the City that there were sufficient signatures for a recall election and attempted to deliver the certificates of sufficiency that the City raised an objection.36 The superior court warned of the grave risk in stopping an election where a municipality misleads the voting public and tells them to start the process over.37 “Such a ruling,” the court cautioned, “would clearly undermine our democratic process, the public‘s confidence in our governmental bodies and would cause irreparable harm to the form of government.”38
The City filed a petition for a writ of mandate in the Court of Appeal.39 The Court of Appeal stayed the trial court proceedings and directed the County Registrar “to sequester the ballots from th[e] election, to refrain from tallying and canvassing the ballots, and to refrain from certifying the results of th[e] election pending further order of
The votes were canvassed and certified.43 With over three-quarters of voters voting “Yes” to recalling each Councilmember, the County Registrar of Voters certified that Councilmembers Preciado, Gamez, Hernandez, and Reynosa had been recalled.44
Despite the election results, the Defendants continue to occupy office, participate in City Council meetings, and approve City expenditures.45 At the June 11 City Council meeting, three of the Defendants approved a resolution declaring the recall election illegitimate and asserting that they have a duty to continue acting as Councilmembers.46
Also on June 11, twelve recall proponents applied to the Attorney General for permission to sue the four Councilmembers subject to the recall in quo warranto to remove them from office. The County of Kings and the County Registrar of Voters later filed a second application, seeking to join the recall proponents as co-relators. All parties here agree that proceeding in a single quo warranto suit with both sets of applicants joined as relator plaintiffs is appropriate, so we refer collectively to all applicants as the Relators.
The Relators contend that the Defendants are unlawfully holding office. The Relators cite
ANALYSIS
“Quo warranto” refers to the legal process to challenge an individual‘s right or eligibility to a public office.47
A private party that seeks to pursue a quo warranto action must apply for and obtain the Attorney General‘s consent.48 The Attorney General performs a “gatekeeping” role in quo warranto litigation: “[t]he remedy of quo warranto belongs to the state in its sovereign capacity, to protect the interests of the state as a whole and guard the public welfare, and the Attorney General is the proper one to determine, in the first instance, when the public interests justify a resort to this remedy.”49
In determining whether to authorize a quo warranto action, we do not attempt to resolve the merits of the controversy.50 Rather, we consider (1) whether quo warranto is an available and appropriate remedy; (2) whether the proposed relator has raised a substantial issue of law or fact that warrants judicial resolution; and (3) whether authorizing the quo warranto action will serve the public interest.51
Here, the answer to all three questions is “yes.” We therefore grant leave to sue.
1. Availability of the Quo Warranto Remedy
We turn first to whether quo warranto is the appropriate legal procedure for this challenge. Quo warranto is the proper legal process to challenge an individual‘s right to hold a public office, including a city council seat.52 The Relators challenge the Defendants’ continued holding of their City Council seats after a majority of voters voted to recall each of them. If a majority of voters vote in favor of recalling a local officer,
2. Substantial Issue of Law or Fact Warranting Judicial Resolution
We next examine whether the application presents a substantial issue of law or fact warranting judicial resolution. The Relators argue that there is a substantial issue of law as to whether
We conclude that there is a substantial legal issue as to the application of
3. Public Interest in Favor of Authorizing Suit
Finally, we consider whether granting leave to sue will serve the public interest. Generally, the existence of a substantial question of law or fact warranting judicial resolution presents a sufficient “public purpose” to permit an action in quo warranto.57 That is particularly true here, where the substantial question goes to whether the Defendants are unlawfully disregarding election results. As the superior court explained, there exists “a strong public policy of allowing our citizens to participate in our democracy by exercising their constitutional right to elect their representatives.”58 Granting leave to sue is in the public interest.
First, the Defendants argue that it is not in the public interest to authorize suit against Preciado and Hernandez because their terms expire in November 2026, at which time City residents will vote to fill their seats. We are not persuaded. If the Relators are correct on the merits, then the Defendants are not lawfully occupying office. It would not be in the public interest to permit elected officials to disregard election results. “While we cannot say with certainty whether a court will resolve this matter before” November, we believe that allowing the judicial process to proceed serves the public interest in these circumstances.59
Second, the Defendants argue that removing all four Councilmembers would leave the City Council without a quorum, harming the Council‘s ability to maintain the functions of city government. But if a court ultimately concludes that the Defendants were removed in the recall election, then any impact on city operations would result from the expressed will of the City‘s electorate. In any event, as with past quo warranto applications raising similar arguments, we view the Defendants’ practical concern as a factor for the court to consider in fashioning any remedy, not as a bar to granting leave to sue.60
The Defendants make various other requests as to how litigation should proceed here. The Defendants may raise their arguments at the appropriate junctures in the superior court.61
Accordingly, the application for leave to sue in quo warranto is GRANTED.
