Opinion
Thе California Medical Association (CMA) contests the legality of a loan made from the Contingent Fund (Contingent Fund) of the Medical Board of California (Medical Board) to the state General Fund to help balance the state’s fiscal year 2008-2009 budget. Government Code section 16310 authorizes loans from special funds to the General Fund if the
I. INTRODUCTION
A. Factual and Procedural Background
Item No. 1110-011-0758 of section 2.00 of the Budget Act of 2008 provided for “transfer by the Controller, upon оrder of the Director of Finance, from the Contingent Fund of the Medical Board of California to the General Fund” the sum of $6 million. (Stats. 2008, ch. 268, § 2.00.) The provision stipulated: “The amount transferred in this item is a loan to the General Fund. This loan shall be repaid with interest calculated at the rate earned by the Pooled Money Investment Account at the time of the transfer. Repayment shall be made so as to ensure that the programs supported by the Contingent Fund of the Medical Board of California are not adversely affected by the loan through reduction in services or through increased fees.” (Ibid.) The Budget Act of 2008 was signed into law on September 23, 2008, and the money was transferred to the General Fund in October 2008.
In October 2009, the CMA petitioned for a writ of mandate directing that the money be returned, with interest, to the Contingent Fund. The named respondents included Arnold Schwarzenegger, as Governor, John Chiang, as State Controller, and Michael Genest, as Director of the Department of Finance (these respondents or their successors are hereafter referred to collectively as defendants).
The petition states that CMA is “a not-for-profit, professional association of approximately 35,000 physicians and medical students, [which] [f|or more than 150 years . . . has promoted the science and art of medicine, the care and well-being of patients, the protection of the public health, and the betterment of the medical profession. CMA’s physician members practice medicine in California in all specialties and settings. They regularly pay biennial license fees to the Medical Board in order to maintain an active license to practice medicine in California. CMA’s physician members also are subject to the
The Medical Board is described in the record as “a consumer protection agency responsible for protecting the public through the proper licensing and regulation of California’s heath care professionals and the enforcement of the Mediсal Practice Act. Under the Department of Consumer Affairs ... it licenses physicians and surgeons . . . , investigates complaints against its licensees, and disciplines those found guilty of violating the law.” (See Bus. & Prof. Code, § 2004 [listing Medical Board responsibilities].) Biennial license fees paid by physicians, currently capped at $790, are the Medical Board’s primary source of revenue. (See Bus. & Prof. Code, § 2435, subds. (c) & (d).) Those fees and others collected by the Medical Board are credited to its Contingent Fund. (Bus! & Prof. Code, § 2445; see also, e.g., Bus. & Prof. Code, § 2168.4, subd. (e).) Salaries and benefits of all Medical Board employees are paid solely out of the Contingent Fund, and the Medical Board does not rely on money from the state’s General Fund for any purpose.
The petitiоn challenged the loan from the Contingent Fund to the General Fund on statutory grounds, and on constitutional grounds that have not been renewed on appeal. Defendants argued that the loan was authorized by statute, and that the petition should also be denied because CMA lacked standing or was guilty of laches.
The court determined that CMA had standing and rejected the laches defense, but found no authority that clearly prohibited the loan, and denied the petition.
B. Statutory and Fiscal Background
Defendants contend that the $6 million loan from the Contingent Fund to the General Fund was authorized by Government Code former section 16310, which, in the fall of 2008, provided: “(a) When the General Fund in the Treasury is or will be exhausted, the Controller shall notify the Governor and the Pоoled Money Investment Board. The Governor may order the Controller to direct the transfer of all or any part of the moneys not needed in other funds or accounts to the General Fund from those funds or accounts, as determined by the Pooled Money Investment Board, including the Surplus Money Investment Fund or the Pooled Money Investment Account. All moneys so transferred shall be returned to the funds or accounts from which
CMA contends that the loan from the Contingent Fund to the General Fund was prohibited by Business and Professions Code section 2445, which states: “All moneys paid to and received by the board shall be paid into the State Treasury and shall be credited to the Contingent Fund of the Medical Board of California. Those moneys shall be reported at the beginning of each month, for the month preceding, to the Controller, [f] The contingent fund shall be for the use of the board and from it shall be paid all salaries and all other expenses necessarily incurred in carrying into effect the provisions of this chapter. [][] If there is any surplus in these receipts after the board’s salaries and expenses are paid, such surplus shall be applied solely to expenses incurred under the provisions of this chapter. No surplus in these receipts shall be deposited in or transferred to the General Fund.”
In opposition to the petition, defendants submitted the declaration of Department of Finance (DOF) program budget manager Veronica Chung-Ng, which explained: “Governmental Cost Funds consist of those funds that receive revenues derived from taxes, licenses, and fees. Expenditures of these Governmental Cost Funds represent the cost of operating the State government. There are two major fund types which comprise the Governmental Cost Funds. These two fund types are the General Fund and Special Funds. [][] The General Fund is the main operating fund of the State, consisting of moneys that are not required by law to be deposited into any other fund.” Special funds like the Contingent Fund “are used to account for resources that are legally restricted for particular functions or activities of government.”
Chung-Ng further explained that General Fund and special fund cash is deposited into the Pooled Money Investment Account (PMIA). Most special funds are considered to be “ ‘borrowable’ by the General Fund for daily cash flow purposes,” and the Contingent Fund was among the special funds listed in a May 2008 report from the State Controller as a “borrowable resource[]” for the General Fund. The State Controller’s Office “evaluates the General Fund cash needs” on a daily basis “and determines how much to borrow from the borrowable resources that reside in the PMIA. With certain exceptions,
In May 2008, the Governor announced that California was grappling with a budget deficit of $17.2 billion, and Chung-Ng noted that “[b]y Fall of 2008, the State was facing a severe fiscal and general fund cash crisis.”
In October 2007, the Bureau of State Audits reported that the Contingent Fund had a surplus at the close of its 2006-2007 fiscal year of $18.5 million, a sum sufficient to cover 4.3 months of operating expenditures. By the close of the 2007-2008 fiscal year, the surplus in the Contingent Fund had grown to $23.9 million. Despite deduction of the $6 million loan to the General Fund, a $24.4 million surplus remained at the end of fiscal 2008-2009, an amount that would cover 5.5 months of operations. The Governor’s 2010-2011 budget projеcted Contingent Fund surpluses of $26 million at the end of fiscal 2009-2010, and $23 million at the end of fiscal 2010-2011. In October 2009, the Medical Board projected surpluses of $22.9 million in 2009-2010 and $19.6 million in 2010-2011, covering 5.1 months and 4.3 months of operations, respectively.
Medical Board budget analyst Debbie Titus declared in opposition to CMA’s petition that the loan to the General Fund “has had no material effect on the Board’s ability to perform its statutory obligations of licensing physicians and surgeons and enforcement of the Medical Practice Act.”
Medical Board President Barbara Yaroslavsky declared in support of the petition that the Board “has been informed that the $6 million is anticipated to be returned (in whole or in part) sometimе in fiscal year 2010-11, depending upon the level of reserves in state funds.” DOF principal program budget analyst Kristin M. Shelton declared in opposition to the petition that “on the basis of the most recent review of this loan, the anticipated repayment timeframe is in the 2012-2013 budget cycle. This timeframe reflects the fact that there are significant reserves and projected reserves in the Contingent Fund.”
II. DISCUSSION
A. Scope of Review
“ ‘On appeal following a trial court’s decision on a petition for a writ of mandate, the reviewing court . . . review [s] questions of law independently.
B. Daugherty Decision
The sole relevant reported case is Daugherty v. Riley (1934)
The first appropriation, for reasons we need not detail, could be deemed to have been for the benefit of the depаrtment, but the second could not. The second “appeared] to be an appropriation for a capital expenditure chargeable only against the general fund or some other tax or general revenue fund.” (Daugherty, supra,
At the time Daugherty was decided, former Political Code section 444, the predecessor statute to Government Code section 16310 (see Historical and Statutory Notes, 33 West’s Ann. Gov. Code (2009 ed.) foil. § 16310, p. 31), provided: “The controller must, when either the general fund or the interest
The Daugherty court did not “deny power upon the part of the legislature to transfer a special fund reserve temporarily from one purpose to another under the authority of section 444 of the Political Code or other authority to like effect. But when these diversions are made the transfers are under the section deemed a loan from the special fund to be returned to that fund as soon as funds are available. This right of transfer established by said section 444 is specifically declared not to wаrrant the transfer of any money from any fund so as to interfere in any manner with the objects for which such fund was created.” (Daugherty, supra,
However, “the Appropriation Act of 1931 did not purport to make the transfer as a loan, but it boldly took from the special fund the money necessary for the support and maintenance of the corporation commissioner’s department with no provision for its repayment . . . .” (Daugherty, supra,
In support of this conclusion, the Daugherty court cited the importance of the Division of Corporations to the economy of the state. The court observed that “the functioning of the department has become an essential part of the transaction of business involving large corporate enterprises. ... If the department does not function a paralysis in the business life of the state depending upon its authority to proceed is the inevitable result.” (Daugherty, supra,
The Daugherty case is distinguishable from this case because it involved permanent appropriations, when the General Fund had a surplus, that left the agency unable to function, rather than a loan of money not needed for performance of the agency’s regulatory responsibilities when the General Fund was exhausted. But the dicta in Daugherty about the permissibility of loans under former Political Code section 444, which provided for loans to the General Fund on essentially the same terms as current Government Code section 16310, supports defendants’ position. (Hubbard v. Superior Court (1997)
C. Statutory Arguments
(1) Whether the Statutes Are in Conflict
CMA argues that Business and Professions Code section 2445 prohibits the $6 million transfer to the General Fund because the statute stipulates that money received by the Medical Board is to be “credited to the Contingent Fund,” used only for expenses incurred “under the provisions of this chapter,” i.e., the Medical Practice Act (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 2000 et seq.), and not “deposited in or transferred to the General Fund.” CMA submits thаt we must enforce the statute’s clear language, and refrain from creating an exception for loans like the one in question. (People v. Benson (1998)
Defendants counter that the loan was permissible under Government Code section 16310, which allows money “not needed in other funds” to be
CMA maintains that the loan was prohibited by Government Code section 16310 because it did in fact interfere with objects for which the Contingent Fund was created. CMA acknowledges that one such object is “to provide an account from which the Medical Board draws its operational funds.” But CMA identifies other Contingent Fund purposes with which the loan allegedly interfered, such as “ensuring] that the State does not misappropriate physician license fees for general state use.” The loan also allegedly interfered with the Contingent Fund’s “object of . . . presenting] an accurate measure by which the Medical Board sets physician license fees.” When the loan in question was made, the statute specifying those fees provided that the amount of the fees should be set so as to provide the Medical Board with a reserve for approximately two months of operating expenses. (Bus. & Prof. Code, former § 2435, subd. (h), as amended by Stats. 2006, ch. 223, § 21.) The Bureau of State Audits found in October 2007 that the Contingent Fund reserve exceeded the two-month target, and that the reserve “likely will remain above acceptable levels unless fees are reduced or a refund is issued.” CMA argues that, by reducing the reserve from which such an adjustment would be calculated, the loan to the General Fund violates what it calls “the right of physicians to reduced fees.”
We would grant that the Contingent Fund was created to hold physician license fees, and that the loan at issue could affect the amount of those fees. But it makes no sense to say that a fund has been “created” to set the amount of money to be paid into it, or to prohibit the transfer of money out of it. A fund may be designed with those objects in mind, but they are not reasons for the fund’s existence. The Contingent Fund exists, broadly speaking, to enable the regulation of California physicians. Because the loan has not hindered performance of the Medical Board’s regulatory responsibilities, it has not interfered with the purpose for which the Contingent Fund was “created.”
CMA’s claim that Government Code section 16310 prohibited the loan rests also on amendments to the statute after the loan was made. In February 2009, subdivisions (c) and (d) of section 16310 were added, which state in relevant part: “(c) Except as described in subdivision (d), all monеys in the State Treasury may be loaned for the purposes described in subdivision (a), [f] (d) Subdivision (c) shall not apply to any of the following: [f] ... HD (3) All or part of the moneys not needed in other funds or accounts for pur
“ ‘[I]n the absence of a clear legislative intent to the contrary statutory enactments apply prospectively’ ” (Strauss v. Horton (2009)
CMA does not argue that the 2009 amendments operate retroactively, but submits new subdivision (d)(3) of Government Code section 16310 “help[s] illuminate the overall intent behind” the statute, and “clarifies that the statute squarely prohibits any loans from the Contingent Fund.” But if the statute already accomplished the result CMA advoсates, nothing further was required to provide for it. Consequently, the addition of subdivision (d)(3) is of no assistance to CMA.
Accordingly, Government Code section 16310 and Business and Professions Code section 2445 are in apparent conflict as to the loan. Government Code section 16310 authorized the loan because the state faced exhaustion of the General Fund in a fiscal emergency, and the loan did not impede the Medical Board from performing its regulatory responsibilities. On the other hand, Business and Professions Code section 2445 arguably prohibited the loan because it precluded money in the Contingent Fund from being transferred by budgetary legerdemain to the General Fund, or used for purposes unrelated to the Mediсal Practice Act.
(2) Whether the Statutes Can Be Harmonized.
CMA correctly contends Business and Professions Code section 2445 is a more specific statute than Government Code section 16310. Whereas Government Code section 16310 applies broadly to all “funds or accounts”
The Business and Professions Code section 2445 prohibition against transfer of a Contingent Fund surplus to the General Fund can be harmonized with Government Code section 16310 by construing that prohibition to apply only to permanent transfers and not those that are merely loaned and thereby transferred temporarily. A loan and an outright appropriation are both “transfers,” and Business and Professions Code section 2445 could equally refer to either. The rule that statutes must be harmonized if reasonably possible requires that thе prohibited transfers be construed to refer to permanent appropriations rather than loans in the context of the issues in this case.
This interpretation also reasonably reconciles Government Code section 16310 with Business and Professions Code section 2445’s directive that the Contingent Fund surplus be applied solely to expenses incurred under the Medical Practice Act. A loan to the General Fund results in only temporary use of the surplus for proposes unrelated to the Medical Board’s function. Under the terms of the budgetary loan and Government Code section 16310, the money will ultimately be returned to the Contingent Fund, with interest, for use under the Medical Practice Act. Our conclusion that the statutes сan be harmonized in this manner is consistent with the Daugherty dicta allowing loans to the General Fund under former Political Code section 444 notwithstanding the “trust fund” nature of special funds and their segregation for regulatory purposes. (Daugherty, supra, 1 Cal.2d at pp. 308-309.)
(3) Other Statutes Bearing on the Issue
Defendants’ position is strengthened when we look at statutes that pertain to funds other than the Contingent Fund that expressly prohibit loans, as well as transfers, to the General Fund under Government Code section 16310. Government Code section 16429.3 states “[m]oneys placed with the Treasurer for deposit in the Local Agency Investment Fund by cities,
CMA maintains that it is “misleading” to compare Government Code sections 16429.3 and 99009 with Business and Professions Code section 2445. CMA finds it “not surprising” that those Government Code seсtions would refer to Government Code section 16310, because the latter statute, which was enacted in 1945, had “long [been] on the books” when references to it were included in the other statutes in 1996 and 2003. (Stats. 1945, ch. 120, § 1, pp. 514, 516 [Gov. Code, § 16310]; Stats. 1996, ch. 833, § 8, p. 4415 [Gov. Code, § 16429.3]; Stats. 2003, 1st Ex. Sess. 2003-2004, ch. 13, § 2, p. 7033 [Gov. Code, § 99009].) But CMA submits that because Government Code section 16310 “did not exist” when Business and Professions Code former section 2454, a predecessor statute to current Business and Professions Code section 2445, was enacted in 1937, Business and Professions Code former section 2454 “could [not] have . . . referred] to it.” (Stats. 1937, ch. 399, pp. 1230, 1281; Stats. 1937, ch. 414, § 3, p. 1377 [Bus. & Prof. Code, former § 2454]; see Historical and Statutory Notes, 3A pt. 2 West’s Ann. Bus. & Prof. Code (2003 ed.) foil. § 2445, p. 546.)
But this argument is itself misleading when one looks at the history of Government Code sеction 16310. When Government Code section 16310 was enacted in 1945, it incorporated the provisions of former Political Code section 444, which had been on the books since 1907, without any substantive change. (Stats. 1907, ch. 312, § 1, p. 582; compare Stats. 1909, ch. 292, § 1, p. 450 with Stats. 1945, ch. 120, § 1, pp. 514, 516.) Since former Political Code section 444 had authorized loans to the General Fund on essentially the same terms as Government Code former and current section 16310 for 30 years before Business and Professions Code former section 2454 was enacted, a prohibition against such loans could have been included in the latter statute, when it was enacted, if the Legislature intended to prohibit them. However, language prohibiting transfers from the Contingent Fund was not added to the statute until 1975, and loans from the Contingent Fund have never been expressly prohibited. (Stats. 1975, 2d Ex. Sess. 1975-1976, ch. 1, §§ 24, 24.05, pp. 3965-3966 [amending Bus. & Prof.
CMA seeks support for its position in Government Code section 16320, which provides in relevant part: “(a) Unless otherwise prohibited by law, moneys in the State Treasury may be loaned from one state fund or account to any other state fund or account to address the 2001-02, 2002-03, and 2003-04 fiscal year budgetary shortfalls, subject to all of the following conditions: [f] (1) The loan is authorized in the 2002 Budget Act, legislation enacted in a 2003-04 Extraordinary Session, or the 2003 Budget Act. [f] (2) The terms and conditions of the loan, including an interest rate, are set fоrth in the loan authorization. [][] (3) The loan is considered part of the balance of the fund or account that received the funds for the purpose of accounting and budgeting, including any determination [of the General Fund balance] made pursuant to Section 13307. [][] (4) The loan is not deducted from the balance of the fund or account from which the loan is made for purposes of calculating a fee or assessment, [f] (5) A fee or assessment is not increased as a result of a loan. H] (6) Moneys loaned under this section are not considered a transfer of resources for purposes of determining the legality of the use of those moneys by the fund or account from which the loan is made or the fund or account that received the loan. [][] (b)(1) . . . [T]he Director of Finance shall order the repayment of all or a portion of any [loan inade pursuant to subdivision (a)] if he or she determines that either of the following circumstances exists: [f] (A) The fund or account from which the loan was made has a need for the moneys, [f] (B) There is no longer a need for the moneys in the fund or account that received the loan.”
CMA contends the loan from the Contingent Fund would “probably” have been lawful if it had been made subject to the conditions set forth in Government Code section 16320, but observes that the statute does not cover the fiscal year involved here. However, it does not follow that, because the loan could have been authorized under the terms of Government Code section 16320, it is necessarily prohibited by Government Code section 16310. The issue is whether Government Code section 16310 can be harmonized with Business and Professions Code section 2445, and it is irrelevant that the task might have been easier if we were applying a different statute.
(4) Administrative Construction
The Contingent Fund was deemed by the State Controller’s May 2008 compilation of special funds to be “borrowable” by the General Fund. The list included approximately 100 special funds with total borrowable resources of approximately $9.1 billion as of March 2008. The State Controller’s report cited Government Code section 16310 as the legal authority for budgetary
(5) Policy Arguments
CMA submits that loans like the one from the Contingent Fund are bad policy, basеd primarily on a 2005 report critical of such loans by the staff of the Senate Joint Committee on Boards, Commissions and Consumer Protection entitled “$200 Million in Taxes or $200 Million in Loans?: Cross-cutting Issue for All Boards Under the Department of Consumer Affairs.”
Although we must be mindful of the “consequences that will flow” from our interpretation of Government Code section 16310 (Hospital Committee For Livermore-Pleasanton Areas v. City of Oakland (2009)
In any event, no evidence indicates that the loan in question has compromised the Medical Board’s regulatory mission, or suggests that the Legislature is unconcerned with the loan’s effect on the Medical Board’s operations. To the contrary, the Legislature has called upon the Office of State Audits and
CMA goes so far as to speculate that the loan may contribute to a shortage of doctors in the state. CMA notes that the October 2007 audit of the Medical Board found an $18.5 million Contingent Fund surplus, an “excess in fund balance [that] represented] approximately $88 per licensed physician.” The record shows that the surplus has increased since that time, and the surplus would be even greater but for the $6 million loan to the General Fund. But even if physicians are now paying twice the amount of excess fees that they were in 2007 by virtue of the General Fund loan, we doubt that the $88 charge would cause them to flee the state, and no evidence suggests that it has done so.
(6) Conclusion
To recapitulate, we have determined that Government Code section 16310 can be harmonized with Business and Professions Code section 2445 to permit the loan in question, that other statutes and the administrative construction of Government Code section 16310 support that statute’s application here, and that CMA’s policy arguments are unpersuasive; the loan, in short, was lawful under Government Code section 16310.
In the final analysis, our task is to effectuate “ ‘the apparent purpose and intention of the lawmakers ....’” (Watershed Enforcers v. Department of Water Resources (2010)
The judgment denying the petition for writ of mandate is affirmed.
Margulies, J., and Dondero, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied June 22, 2011, S192936.
Notes
See Web site of the Senate joint committee at <http://www.sen.ca.gov/ftp/SEN/ COMMITTEE/JOINT/SUNSET_REVIEW/_home/pubs.htp> (link to “2005 Crosscutting Issues”) (as of Mar. 30, 2011).
In view of that conclusion, we need not reach defendants’ arguments regarding standing and laches.
