*453 Opinion
As аptly stated by the trial judge in his memorandum opinion, “[t]his action involves the latest chapter in the continuing saga of that remarkable governmental development universally known as the ‘Lakewood Plan’.” Pursuant to that plan defendant County of Los Angeles (County) has since 1954 contracted with numerous cities within the cоunty limits — beginning with the City of Lakewood — to furnish them police protection, thereby eliminating the necessity for multiple independent municipal police forces and the needless duplication of cost and effort that such multiple police forces would engender. Some 30 of the County’s 78 cities have сontracts with County for the services of the County sheriff. (These cities are all defendants herein.) Since the start of the plan there has been considerable political dispute over the amounts to be paid by the contracting cities for the county police protection. In 1973 the Legislature еntered the arena with the enactment of Government Code section 51350, here under challenge, providing as follows:
“A county having a population of 6,000,000 or more which provides services through its appropriate departments, boards, commissions, officers or employees, to any city pursuant to contract or as authorized by law, shall charge the city only those additional costs which are incurred in providing the services so contracted or authorized. A county shall not charge a city contracting for a particular service, either as a direct or an indirect overhead charge, any portion of those costs which are attributable to services made available to all portions of the county, as determined by resolution of the board of supervisors, or which are general overhead costs of operation of the county government. General overhead costs, for the purposes of this section, aré those costs which a county would incur regardless of whether or not it provided a service under contract to a city.
“Any determination of general overhead costs shall be subject to court review as to the reasonableness of such determination.”
In essence the statute forbids the County to charge contracting cities for the overhead costs of police protection that the County would incur in any event in the absence of the contracts. The legislative purpose of the statute is set forth in section 2, statutes 1973, chapter 1068, as follows: “It is the intent of the Legislature to encourage intergovernmental contracts which eliminate the need for duplicate facilities, equipment, *454 and personnel, and which thereby reduce the overall cost of government.”
Appellants City of Los Angeles (City) and individual council members and taxpayers of City brought this action as a taxpayers’ suit under Code of Civil Procedure section 526a to enjoin implementation of the act and recover for County the amount represented by reductions in charges to the contracting cities which County has made pursuant to the statute. The trial court renderеd summary judgment for defendants. The points still maintained on this appeal are as follows: (1) Section 51350 is unconstitutional as (a) special legislation and (b) an enactment denying equal protection of the laws to appellants; (2) County has improperly applied the statute retroactively to existing сontracts; (3) a triable issue of fact remains as to whether County abused its discretion in determining the amount of cost reductions.
Facts
Section 51350 of the Government Code was added by chapter 1068 of Statutes 1973, effective 1 Januaiy 1974. At the time of its enactment respondent County was the only county in California with a population greater than 6 million. It provided contract services to 78 cities, including contracts for law enforcement services with the 30 defendant cities here. The contracts for law enforcement services in effect on 1 January 1974, were each for five years ending 30 June 1976, with provisions for termination by еither party at the first of any fiscal year during the term (July 1). In October 1973 the auditor-controller of County recommended that the cost reductions necessary under the statute be made effective 1 January 1974, the effective date of the statute, and made specific recommendations on the nature аnd amount of reductions. The board of supervisors adopted these recommendations on 20 November 1973. Total reduction in charges for six months amounted to an estimated $617,500, or a 7.5 percent reduction. The City-County agreement for Lakewood, the model for all contracts, of which the trial court tоok judicial notice, provided for periodic cost adjustment to reflect changes in salaries of county employees and other changes in costs of services, and it authorized a city to terminate the agreement after written notice of rate increase, on 60 days notice of tеrmination. (Pars. 8 and 10 of agreement.)
One of the assumptions forming the basis for the auditor-controller’s recommendation of cost reduction is that “if contract services program *455 was terminated, the sheriff’s department may continue operations at all stations.” Plaintiff’s challenge this assertion. There was also a finding in the Booz, Allen & Hamilton report prepared for defendant County (a study of equitable methods of pricing law enforcement services by counties) that the contract program comprised 48 percent of the caseload, 41 percent of the population, and utilized 36 percent of the general law patrol and traffic cars of the sheriff’s department.
Constitutional Challenge to Section 51350.
The test of the statute’s validity under either the special legislation or the equal protection challenge is the same, namely, whether there is a rational relationship between the purpose of the enаctment — to encourage police service contracts — and the singling out of Los Angeles County because of its size as the sole county affected by the statute. Numerous cases discussing the special legislation prohibitions of the California Constitution (art. I, § 7; art. IV, § 16) uphold legislation that singles out a pаrticular class, if any rational connection exists between the statutory classification and the statute’s purpose: e.g.,
Great Lakes Properties, Inc.
v.
City of Rolling Hills Estates
(1964)
Legislation applicable solely to Los Angeles County is valid if there is any conceivable state of facts which can reasonably support difference in legislative treatment based on population.
(Board of Education
v.
Watson
(1966)
Retroactive Application.
Appellants argue that a statute is presumed to be nonretroactive, absent express indicia of legislative
*457
intent that it be made retroactive.
(DiGenova
v.
State Board of Education
(1962)
The question here, however, is not strictly one of retroactive application. The cost reductions did not apply retroactively to services already rendered, but rather applied to services rendered after the effective date of the statute. The reductions did apply, of course, to existing contracts. However, those contracts were constantly subject to modification. Although the modification provisions were probably primarily intended to permit County to increase its charges in an inflationary economy, their terms permitted reduction as well. Under those circumstances the application of the statute is not really retroactive. It makes little sense to assume that the legislature intended County continually to modify its charges under the contrаcts without reference to section 51350 until the formal expiration of the existing contract terms on either 1 July 1974, or 30 June 1976 (depending on one’s interpretation of the contract term length).
As the trial court pointed out, since the Legislature was presumably aware that the contracts were subject to regular readjustment of charges, it is unlikely “that the Legislature intended the effectiveness of the legislation to await the end of the contract, or the end of the fiscal year, as the case may be.” Accordingly the trial court found, and we agree, that the only reasonable interpretation of legislative intent here, after considering all pertinent factors, is that the statute was intended to apply to services rendered after its effective date.
*458 Abuse of Discretion in Fixing Reductions. Section 51350 provides for court review of the reasonableness of the board of supervisors’ determination of the amount of cost reductions. Appellants claim the reductions here are not reasonable. Their basis for this claim is that one of the underlying premises of the reduction calculation is the assumption that “if contract services program was terminated, the Sheriff’s Department may continue operations at all stations.” Aрpellants find this assertion inherently incredible in light of the finding in the Booz, Allen & Hamilton report, referred to ante, that the contract program comprises 48 percent of the caseload, 41 percent of the population, and utilizes 36 percent of the general law patrol and traffic cars of the sheriff’s department. They do not assert any facts indicating that operations would terminate at any stations under any conditions, nor do they claim any bad faith, collusion, or malfeasance on the part of the Board in fixing the charges. They do claim that although they have not yet discovered such evidence, they will discover it by the time of trial, and therefore they should not be required to prove their case at the stage of summary judgment.
Although appellants are not expected to prove their case at the summary judgment stage, they must allege a case by way of affidavits of ultimate facts so that the court can determine whеther triable issues of fact exist.
(Stationers Corp.
v.
Dun & Bradstreet, Inc.
(1965)
Judgment for defendants is affirmed. Appellants to bear costs.
Roth, P. J., and Beach, J., concurred.
Appellants’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied October 27, 1977.
