*1327 Opinion
When a public official violates the Hobbs Act, title 18 United States Code section 1951(a), by soliciting and obtaining an extortion payment in exchange for approval of a public contract, that contract runs afoul of Government Code section 1090 1 and may be avoided pursuant to section 1092. 2 Regardless of whether the third party who obtained the public contract is an innocent victim, the public entity is entitled to recover all consideration it paid to the third party. With this holding in mind, we conclude that the trial court properly granted summary judgment in favor of respondent Carson Redevelopment Agency (the Agency) on its complaint to recover $850,000 from appellants Michael and Bertha A. Padilla (the Padillas). The $850,000 was paid to the Padillas through a public contract that was approved and signed only after they paid $75,000 in extortion money to Agapito Diaz Fajardo (Fajardo), the former mayor pro tempore of the City of Carson.
We affirm the judgment entered in favor of the Agency.
FACTS
The Padillas are the owners of a 45-unit senior housing complex known as Camino Senior Village in the City of Carson. In 1994, the Padillas and the Agency signed the Affordable Housing Agreement (the Housing Agreement). It established that the Agency would provide the Padillas rental assistance for six years, “at a rate of not more than $295 per month per unit occupied by a Qualified Tenant, up to a maximum of 22 units.” In exchange, the Padillas agreed to a rental restriction that required them to offer 22 units in Camino Senior Village as low income housing for senior citizens for at least 30 years.
In early 1999, before the rental assistance provision expired, the Padillas asked the Agency to extend the rental assistance another 24 years so it would last as long as the 30-year rental restriction. Also, they wanted the rental assistance to cover all 45 units in Camino Senior Village. In lieu of future *1328 monthly rental assistance, the Agency proposed that the parties enter a new agreement that would require the Agency to loan the Padillas $850,000 at 4 percent to be used for a buydown of their existing mortgage on Camino Senior Village (the Buydown Agreement). Under the terms of the Buydown Agreement, the loan would be forgiven so long as the Padillas cured any defaults on their obligations.
Fajardo told Michael Padilla that he would have to pay $50,000 if he wanted the city council to approve the Buydown Agreement. Fajardo wanted $25,000 up front and another $25,000 after the Buydown Agreement was approved. Michael Pаdilla paid pursuant to Fajardo’s demands. Subsequently, Fajardo solicited a third payment of $25,000 to secure the Agency’s signature on the Buydown Agreement, and Michael Padilla once again paid. 3 Thereafter, the Agency and the Padillas signed the Buydown Agreement. It stated, inter alia, that the Padillas would provide low income housing to seniors age 55 or older in 44 of the Camino Senior Village’s units for at least 24 years.
In 2003, the Agency sued the Padillas for avoidance of the Buydown Agreement pursuant to section 1090; imposition of a constructive trust and an accounting; rescission and restitution based on fraud; and declaratory relief regarding the continuing validity of the Housing Agreement. The Agency sought to recover the $850,000 paid to the Padillas. 4
The Agency moved for summary judgment or summary adjudication with respect to each cause of action. The trial court granted summary adjudication as to the first cause of action to void the Buydown Agreement. After the Agency requested dismissal of the unresolved portions of the complaint, judgment was entered and the Padillas were ordered to pay the Agency $850,000 plus interest.
*1329 The Padillas appealed the judgment.
DISCUSSION
Our review of the trial court’s decision to grant the Agency’s motion for summary judgment is de novо. (See
Merrill
v.
Navegar, Inc.
(2001)
The principal issue in this appeal, the interpretation of section 1090, is a far-reaching one that calls upon us to examine the public policy of the State of California and carefully analyze when, if ever, individuáis can retain consideration paid to them pursuant to a public contract that was secured through payments extorted by a corrupt public official.
According to the Padillas: A public contract is not void under section 1090 unless a public official is financially interested in that contract. When a public official receives a pay-to-play payment of extortion money in exchange for approval of a public contract, section 1090 is not triggered. Although the public official receives an illegal payment, he is not getting paid with public funds through a public contract and therefore does not have a cognizable financial interest in the contract.
Acknowledging case law, and duly considering public policy, our opinion takes a different tack. Section 1090 was designed to рrotect the public; to hold as the Padillas urge would subvert the purpose of section 1090 by giving life to contracts bom of conflicts of interest. Here, there was a conflict of interest because Fajardo voted to approve the Buydown Agreement based on his greed rather than on the due diligence and integrity he owed the City of Carson. As a result, the City of Carson was entitled to recover the $850,000 paid to the Padillas. This result may be harsh for individuals such as the Padillas, but it is necessary to protect the public and encourage people like the Padillas to report peoрle like Fajardo. No one should ever ante up an extortion payment to a public official.
Below, we examine the law and the Padillas’ arguments in detail and explain why the judgment must be affirmed.
1. Section 1090.
As history reveals, there has long been a common law proscription against public officials having a financial interest in contracts created by them in their
*1330
official capacities.
(BreakZone Billiards v. City of Torrance (2000)
The evil to be thwarted by section 1090 is easily identified: If a public official is pulled in one direction by his financial interest and in another direction by his official duties, his judgment cannot and should not be trusted, even if he attempts impartiality. (See
People v. Honig
(1996)
*1331
When section 1090 is transgressed, “the public entity involved is entitled to recover any compensation that it . . . paid under the contract without restoring any of the benefits it. . . received. [Citations.] The contract is against the express prohibition of the law, and ‘ “. . . courts will not entertain any rights growing out of such a contract, or permit a recovery upon quantum meruit or quantum valebat.” ’ [Citations.] This principle applies without regard to the willfulness of the violation. ‘A person who violates section 1090, regardless of whether the violation is intentional, forfeits any rights or interests flowing from the illegal contract.’ [Citation.]”
(Finnegan
v.
Schrader
(2001)
The rule of forfeiture is not an outmoded remedy blind to equity. It is, rather, a remedy that is utilitarian in its design; it recognizes what is equitable for the cоmmunity and necessarily subordinates the individual in a given case. Ultimately, this policy serves all individuals because they comprise our communities and need every guarantee the law can provide that they will be free from the tyranny of corrupt politicians and the burden of contracts tainted by conflicts of interest.
2. Existence of a “financial interest.”
The Padillas tell us that there has not been a published California opinion in over 143 years stating whether a public official who receives an extortion payment to approve a contract has a financial interest in the contract. According to the Padillаs, Fajardo did not have a financial interest or a conflict of interest. For this reason, they contend that there is no basis for applying section 1090. We disagree. In our view, Fajardo had a financial interest in the Buydown Agreement that triggered section 1090. That financial interest was neither remote nor speculative because it created an immediate and palpable conflict of interest; it divided his loyalties between his greed and promise to vote for the Buydown Agreement on one hand, and his duty to the interests of the City of Carson on the other hand.
a. The Hobbs Act.
Before reaching the issue posed by the Padillas, we must first determine whether this case involves extortion. We conclude that it does.
Title 18 United States Code section 1951(a) makes it a crime to affect commerce through extortion. Extortion is defined in title 18 United States Code section 1951(b)(2) as “the obtaining of property from another, with his consent, induced by . . . threatened force ... or fear.” As explained by
United
*1332
States
v.
Greger
(9th Cir. 1983)
The undisputed facts and reasonably deducible inferences 5 suggest that Fajardo exploited the fear of Michael Padilla that without the continuing rental assistance or the proposed mortgage buydown, he and his wife would no longer be able to afford the debt service on the Camino Senior Village.
b. An extortion payment creates an indirect financial interest.
Our task is to interpret section 1090 and analyze whether it was triggered by Fajardo’s act of extorting money from the Padillas. As we recently stated in
Watson Land Co. v. Shell Oil Co.
(2005)
*1333
The Padillas lobby us to restrictively interpret thе phrase “city officers . . . shall not be financially interested in any contract made by them in their official capacity” in section 1090 to mean only that city officers cannot make a public contract and then obtain some kind of benefit that flows from the existence, performance or implementation of that contract. Thus, they essentially encourage us to hold that tainted public contracts escape avoidance under section 1092 as long as bribes, extortion payments or other favors received by the public officials cannot be linked directly to the terms of those tainted public contracts. Courting such a holding, however, flies in the face of case law. “[T]he Legislature was not concerned with the technical terms and rules applicable to the making of contracts, but instead sought to establish rules governing the conduct of governmental officials. [Citation.] Accordingly, those provisions cannot be given a narrow and technical interpretation that would limit their scope and defeat the legislative purpose. [Citations.]”
(Honig, supra,
The Padillas’ rejoinder to the authority against them is the following argument: “[T]he commission of crimes of extortion by public officials do[es] not create . . . prohibited financial interests, automatically voiding agreements between the victims of the extortion and the public entity, because extortion payments . . . flow . . . from the fear created and wielded by the extortionists. The [e]xtortionists do not owe their loyalty to the agreement, which is nothing more than the means to their corrupt ends, or the contracting parties who are their victims.” They cite no law for this proposition, nor could they. Only by trying to revise the law to suit their purposes can they claim that public officials who are extortionists have no conflicts. Suffice it to say, this argument does not match the cases turned up by our research.
It is not the type, size or sourcе of interest that a public official obtains or is promised that matters when applying section 1090. Rather, it is the potential impact of that interest on a public official’s integrity that demands attention. (See
Honig, supra,
On point is
People
v.
Vallerga
(1977)
We conclude that an extortion payment solicited by a public official in exchange for approval of a public contract creates an indirect financial interest. A public official who acts as an extortionist is not acting in the best interests of the public. Instead, he is answering to his own avarice and is wholly unfit to enter into public contracts. Contracts made by such individuals should be challengeable; hence, sections 1090 and 1092 must allow society to reverse the course set by the extortionist and turn back the clock. *1335 This interpretation is consistent with the plain language of section 1090. The phrase “financially interested” broadly encompasses anything that would tie a public official’s fortunes to the existence of a public contract. This interpretation furthers the Legislature’s purpose, which is to regulate the conduct of public officials. To construe the statute narrowly would permit certain categories of schemes and improprieties to go unchecked, a result which would undermine the public’s confidence not only in the government, but in the court system ruling on suсh cases. An important, prophylactic statute such as section 1090 should be construed broadly to close loopholes; it should not be constricted and enfeebled.
3. The disgorgement remedy.
The Padillas castigate the remedy requiring them to disgorge $850,000 on the following grounds: A different remedy must be fashioned for each case involving a violation of section 1090, and the trial court abdicated its duty to consider appropriate options. In this instance, a disgorgement remedy unfairly punishes the victims of extortion. Moreover, the trial court erred by granting a remedy in connection with summary adjudication of the first cаuse of action. That ruling did no more than determine the existence of an impermissible financial interest. Instead of entering judgment, the trial court should have held a trial regarding an appropriate remedy for Fajardo’s violation of section 1090. Based on these points, the Padillas urge us to hold that a disgorgement remedy is not automatic.
These contentions lack merit.
a. Disgorgement is automatic.
The Padillas tell us that Thomson directs trial courts to consider the facts of each case to determine the appropriate remedy. We cannot accede to their interpretation of Thomson. In Thomson, a corporation purchased land from Call, a member of the Albany City Council, and then sold that land to the City of Albany. Due to his financial interest in what was considered a single transaction, Call was found liable for the consideration he received. Also, the City of Albany was permitted to keep the property. (Thomson, supra, 38 Cal.3d at pp. 637-638.) Thomson concluded that the trial court’s remedy was “consistent with a long, clearly established line of cases.” (Id. at p. 647.) Reviewing those cases, the court noted that “the city or agency is entitled to recover any consideration which it has paid, without restoring the benefits received under the contract. [Citations.]” (Ibid.) According to the court, casе law supported strict enforcement of conflict of interest statutes, which was *1336 consistent with “the primary policy concern that every public officer be guided solely by public interest.” (Id. at p. 650.) “Resulting in a substantial forfeiture,” the court indicated, “this remedy provides public officials with a strong incentive to avoid conflict-of-interest situations scrupulously.” (Ibid.)
The court considered whether less severe remedies would have been appropriate based on the fact that Call did not commit fraud and he sought advice (albeit erroneous) from the city attorney.
(Thomson, supra,
As the Padillas state in their briefs,
Thomson
dоes not expressly state that disgorgement of benefits received under a void contract is automatic. However,
Thomson
gave its imprimatur to a long line of cases applying that remedy, and it approved that remedy against Call.
Thomson
considered a flexible rule, but then decided against it for policy reasons after considering the unacceptable ramifications of such a rule. More recently,
Finnegan
held that a public entity is entitled to recover any compensation it paid under a tainted contract without restoring any of the benefits it received.
(Finnegan, supra,
*1337 By focusing on themselves, the Padillas have missed a salient point. The $850,000 paid to them was public money. We have sympathy for their ordeal, and they may be placed in an economic bind by the disgorgement, but their interest must yield to the greater interest of the public.
Our holding sends a message. If a corrupt public official demands an extortion payment in exchange for a public contract, the victim should not pay. Instead, the victim should report the corrupt public official to local, state or federal law enforcement. If the victim pays and the extortion is discovered, the victim will not be permitted to retain any consideration received. The reason is simple. A public contract obtained through an extortion payment is not valid, and no one should believe that it is valid. A bright-line rule is required.
b. The remedy is appropriate.
The Padillas complain thаt they have been unfairly punished. But this is not a punishment. It is a recovery of public money. Moreover, they are in a better position than Call because he lost both his purchase money and his land. The Padillas are in the same position they were in before; they will be the owners of Camino Senior Village, they will have high debt service and they will need financial assistance from the City of Carson. Nothing stops them from going to the City of Carson to work out a contract that is not tainted by a conflict of interest.
c. Judgment was proper.
In the first cause of action for avoidance of the Buydown Agreement, the Agency alleged that it was “entitled to a return of the $850,000.” In its motion for summary judgment or adjudication, it stated, inter alia, that “under state law a public agency that awarded ... a void contract is entitled to a full disgorgement of any benefits.” Once the trial court granted summary adjudication of the first cause of action, the Agency was entitled to recover the $850,000. When the Agency dismissed its second, third and fourth causes of action, nothing else remained to be tried. At that point it was proper for the trial court to enter judgment in favor of the Agency.
The Padillas’ contention that judgment was improper is contingent upon their argument that disgorgement was not automatic and that the trial court had to hold a hearing regarding the appropriate remedy. Because disgorgement was automatic, this last and final contention is moot. 6
*1338 DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed. The Agency shall recover its costs on appeal.
Boren, P. J., and Chavez, J., concurred.
Appellants’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied September 27, 2006, S145650.
Notes
All further statutory references are to the Government Code unless otherwise indicated. Section 1090 provides, in part: “Members of the Legislature, state, county, district, judicial district, and city officers or employees shall not be financially interested in any contract made by them in their official capacity, or by any body or board of which they are members. Nor shall state, county, district, judicial district, and city officers or employees be purchasers at any sale or vendors at any purchase made by them in their official capacity.”
Section 1092 provides: “Every contract made in violation of any of the provisions of Section 1090 may be avoided at the instance of any party except the officer interested therein. No such contract may be avoided because of the interest of an officer therein unless such contract is made in the official capacity of such officer, or by a board or body of which he is a member.”
In their reply brief, the Padillas contend that there was one payment of $50,000 and a second payment of $25,000. Our characterization of the payments comes from the deposition excerpts they attached as exhibit A to opposition to the motion for summary judgment or adjudication. In his deposition, Michael Padilla was asked: “Did you pay him the $50,000 at once?” He replied: “No; [$]25,000 for approving, [$]25,000 after approving, and then .... BO ... he says, upon signing of the contract, that they needed [$]25,000 more for Christmas money.” The Padillas contend that in Michael Padilla’s declaration he states that the first payment was $50,000. He does not state that he paid $50,000 at one time, but he does state that he paid $50,000 prior to approval. When there is a discrepancy between a deposition and a declaration submitted in connection with an opposition to a motion for summary judgment, the deposition controls.
(D’Amico v. Board of Medical Examiners
(1974)
The Padillas filed a cross-action alleging causes of action for reformation of agreement, fraud, rescission of agreement based on fraud, declaratory relief, inverse condemnation, cancellation of instrument and economic duress. Their cross-action is not at issue in this appeal.
Courts are required to consider the inferences from the evidence that might lead to denial of a motion for summary judgment. Code of Civil Procedure section 437c, subdivision (c) provides: “The motion for summary judgment shаll be granted if all the papers submitted show that there is no triable issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law. In determining whether the papers show that there is no triable issue as to any material fact the court shall consider all of the evidence set forth in the papers, except that to which objections have been made and sustained by the court, and all inferences reasonably deducible from the evidence, except summary judgment may not be granted by the court based on inferences reasonably deducible from the evidence, if contradicted by other inferences or evidence, which raise a triable issue as to any material fact.”
We need not reach the other issues raised by the parties.
