*4 Opinion
The question posed by these consolidated cases is whether a trial court’s order compelling compliance with a legislative subpoena (Gov. Code, § 37104 et seq.) is appealable. We conclude that it is. Accordingly, we reverse the orders dismissing these appeals and remand the cases to the Court of Appeal for further proceedings.
Facts and Procedural History
Government Code section 37104 gives cities the power to issue legislative subpoenas. 1 In 2009, the City of Dana Point (the City) subpoenaed documents from five medical marijuana dispensaries: Dana Point Safe Harbor Collective, The Point Alternative Care, Inc., Beach Cities Collective, Dana Point Beach Collective, and Holistic Health, Inc. (collectively dispensaries). The purpose of the subpoenas was to “gather[] information that could assist the City with its investigation as to whether medical marijuana dispensaries located in the City [were] in compliance with applicable law.” The subpoenas requested documents related to all aspects of the dispensaries’ business activities, including their business licenses, payroll arrangements, and purchasing activities, and information about their members. Though some of the dispensaries partially responded to the subpoenas, all of the dispensaries objected to production of much of the requested information.
When the dispensaries refused to produce the requested documents, the City’s mayor reported that fact to the superior court, as required by the relevant statute. The superior court held a hearing to determine whether the dispensaries were required to comply with the subpoenas. Following the hearing, the court issued a single “Final Ruling” applicable to all five dispensaries. In that document, the court found “that the City’s subpoenas were properly served in the furtherance of a proper legislative purpose” and ordered the dispensaries to comply with the subpoenas, subject to a protective order.
The dispensaries separately appealed the order. The Court of Appeal dismissed the appeals on the ground that the order was not appealable. The dispensaries sought review on the question of appealability. We granted review to resolve a split among the Courts of Appeal on that issue.
*5 Discussion
A. General Principles of Appealability
The right to appeal is wholly statutory.
(Powers v. City of Richmond
(1995)
As we explained in
Morehart v. County of Santa Barbara
(1994)
B. Application
“It long has been recognized that a legislative body may conduct an investigation in order to assist its decisionmaking regarding legislative or appropriative matters.”
(Connecticut Indemnity Co. v. Superior Court
(2000)
Section 37104 provides: “The legislative body may issue subpenas[ 3 ] requiring attendance of witnesses or production of books or other documents for evidence or testimony in any action or proceeding pending before it.” In the event a witness declines to comply with the subpoena, “the mayor shall report the fact to the judge of the superior court of the county.” (§ 37106.) “The judge shall issue an attachment directed to the sheriff of the county where the witness was required to appear, commanding him to attach the person, and forthwith bring him before the judge.” (§ 37107.) “On return of the attachment and production of the witness, the judge has jurisdiction.” (§ 37108.) Refusal to comply with a subpoena may subject the witness to contempt proceedings, in which case the witness has the same rights the witness would have in a civil trial “to purge himself of the contempt.” (§ 37109.)
The City issued subpoenas and obtained compliance orders pursuant to this statutory scheme. Whether those orders are appealable as a final judgment under Code of Civil Procedure section 904.1, subdivision (a) turns on *7 whether they terminate the litigation between the parties, leaving only the issue of compliance or noncompliance. Much of the case law on this question involves administrative subpoenas. They are analogous to legislative subpoenas but issued by administrative agencies. (See, e.g., Gov. Code, §§ 11180-11191.) On the question of whether such compliance orders are appealable, the Courts of Appeal are divided, with the evolving view favoring appealability.
Although this court has yet to weigh in on the issue, we have sometimes assumed without deciding that an order compelling compliance with an administrative subpoena is appealable. (See, e.g.,
Arnett
v.
Dal Cielo
(1996)
In
Gue v. Dennis
(1946)
In the Courts of Appeal, three Second Appellate District decisions have held that orders enforcing administrative subpoenas are not appealable.
(Bishop v. Merging Capital, Inc.
(1996)
*8
Bishop
involved an appeal by Merging Capital, Inc. (MCI), a corporation, and Link 900 Partners (Link), a general partnership, of an order compelling compliance with an administrative subpoena issued by the Department of Corporations (DOC). Although both sides urged the appellate court to treat the order as appealable, the court declined to do so and dismissed the appeal. (Bishop,
supra,
The decisive factor in the court’s conclusion that an order compelling compliance with an administrative subpoena is not appealable was its assertion that MCI and Link had not yet suffered an adverse consequence as the result of the order. “[I]n this case, MCI and Link were ordered to produce documents, they did not comply with that order, and nothing happened. . . . Consequently, any ruling rendered by this court would be in the nature of an advisory opinion. That is to say, if we were to rule in favor of the DOC, we would simply be advising the appellants that, if the DOC pursues contempt proceedings, and the trial court finds MCI and Link in contempt, we will uphold that ruling on appeal. Similarly, our decision in favor of appellants would amount to no more than our advice to the DOC that contempt proceedings will ultimately prove fruitless.”
(Bishop, supra,
Bishop's
analysis was examined and rejected in
City of Santa Cruz v. Patel
(2007)
In reaching this conclusion, the court observed: “A judgment is the ‘final determination of the rights of the parties in an action or proceeding.’ (Code Civ. Proc., § 577.) The statutory scheme at hand provides for an original proceeding in the superior court, initiated by the mayor’s report to the judge, which results in an order directing the respondent to comply with a city’s subpoena. Indeed, the compliance order is tantamount to a superior court judgment in mandamus, which, with limited statutory exceptions, is appeal-able. [Citations.] Whether the matter is properly characterized as an ‘action’ (Code Civ. Proc., § 22) or a ‘special proceeding’ (id., § 23), it is a final determination of the rights of the parties. It is final because it leaves nothing for further determination between the parties except the fact of compliance or noncompliance with its terms. [Citation.]”
(Patel, supra,
Patel
rejected the proposition advanced in
Bishop
that, unless and until there were further proceedings to enforce orders of compliance by way of contempt proceedings, the orders were not final. “The fact that an intransigent witness may be subject to a contempt order does not mean that the order compelling compliance is not final. The normal rule is that ‘injunctions and
*10
final judgments which form the basis for contempt sanctions are appeal-able. . . . The purpose of any judicial order which commands or prohibits specific conduct is to make the sanction of contempt available for disobedience. As we have noted, this fact does not render such an order “nonfinal,” and thus nonappealable.’ [Citation.]”
(Patel, supra,
Patel
was followed by
State ex rel. Dept, of Pesticide Regulation v. Pet Food Express
(2008)
Although not cited in
Pet Food Express
on this point, its conclusion that an administrative subpoena is not equivalent to a discovery order is consistent with
Arnett
v.
Dal Cielo, supra,
Pet Food Express
was followed in
People ex rel. DuFauchard v. U.S. Financial Management, Inc.
(2009)
Thus, every case after
Bishop
has rejected its finality analysis in the context of either legislative or administrative subpoenas. We agree with
Patel, Pet Food Express
and
U.S. Financial Management
that an order compelling compliance with such subpoenas is an appealable final judgment.
6
As noted, “[a] judgment is the final determination of the rights of the parties in an action or proceeding.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 577.) We have repeatedly held that judgments are final when they leave nothing to the party against whom judgment is rendered except to comply.
(Griset v. Fair Political Practices Com., supra,
*12
Moreover, the rule we adopt here is the same rule that applies in federal court.
(Reich v. National Engineering & Contracting Co.
(4th Cir. 1993)
The City advances a number of arguments against finality based on the
potential
for future actions or proceedings. Central to the City’s position is the notion that potential disputes over the scope of the compliance order with respect to particular records preclude deeming the order to be a final judgment. We disagree. The order directs the dispensaries to comply with the subpoenas, thus representing a rejection by the trial court of the various grounds advanced by the dispensaries—like the privacy interests of their customers—for refusing to turn over the records. Whether or not the parties haggle over the existence of a particular document does not undermine the finality of the order. Nor does the possibility that the dispensaries might simply defy the order and persist in refusing to turn over the records.
7
*13
Similarly, the possibility of further proceedings regarding the scope of the protective order does not affect the finality of the order. As noted in
Patel,
“the question of future compliance ... is present in every judgment”
(Patel, supra,
The City also suggests that, because legislative subpoenas often precede lawsuits, a compliance order should be treated like a discovery order in a civil suit, which is not subject to appeal. As noted, both we in the
Arnett
decision and the Court of Appeal in the
Pet Food Express
decision have rejected the analogy between investigative subpoenas and discovery orders.
(Arnett v. Dal Cielo, supra,
Finally, the City argues that the ability of legislative bodies to conduct investigations using subpoenas will be compromised if compliance orders can be appealed, because of the delay that might result from such appeals. The City points out that, because of term limits, the body that issued the subpoena could be reconstituted while the order was on appeal and the new body might not wish to pursue the investigation. The fortuity of changes in the legislative body that issued the subpoena is not relevant to the legal question of whether such orders are appealable; that question turns, not on the tides of politics, but on whether the order is a final judgment, which it is.
In sum, the trial court’s order enforcing the City’s legislative subpoenas was a final judgment subject to appeal under Code of Civil Procedure section 904.1, subdivision (a)(1). 9
*14 Disposition
The orders dismissing the appeals are reversed and the matters are remanded to the Court of Appeal to consider the merits of the appeals.
George, C. J., Kennard, J., Baxter, J., Werdegar, J., Chin, J., and Corrigan, J., concurred.
Notes
Unless otherwise stated, statutory references are to the Government Code.
Code of Civil Procedure section 904.1, subdivision (a) provides: “An appeal, other than in a limited civil case, is to the court of appeal. An appeal, other than in a limited civil case, may be taken from any of the following:
“(1) From a judgment, except (A) an interlocutory judgment, other than as provided in paragraphs (8), (9), and (11), or (B) a judgment of contempt that is made final and conclusive by Section 1222. [!]... [11
“(8) From an interlocutory judgment, order, or decree, hereafter made or entered in an action to redeem real or personal property from a mortgage thereof, or a lien thereon, determining the right to redeem and directing an accounting.
“(9) From an interlocutory judgment in an action for partition determining the rights and interests of the respective parties and directing partition to be made. [][]... [f]
“(11) From an interlocutory judgment directing payment of monetary sanctions by a party or an attorney for a party if the amount exceeds five thousand dollars ($5,000).”
This spelling of subpoena “was, until 1986, the spelling recommended by the Government Printing Office Style Manual. Subpoena, however, is by far the more common spelling and for that reason alone is to be preferred. The form with the digraph ce (*subpoena) is pedantic at best in modern writing.” (Gamer, Gamer’s Modem American Usage (3d ed. 2009) p. 782.)
Barnes v. Molino, supra,
Earlier decisions reaching the same conclusion with respect to administrative subpoenas did so without significant analysis.
(Millan v. Restaurant Enterprises Group, Inc.
(1993) 14 Cal.App.4th
All,
485 [
Accordingly, we disapprove
Bishop v. Merging Capital, Inc., supra,
We reject the City’s claim that deeming the compliance order to be appealable would “clog” the appellate courts because a noncompliant party might also seek review of a subsequent contempt order. The assertion is based on the speculative assumption that parties ordered to comply with an investigative subpoena would refuse to do so in such numbers that their petitions for writ review would create logjams in the appellate courts. Moreover, as noted, if the potential for later contempt proceedings were determinative of whether a judgment or order is appealable, no judgment or order would ever be final for purposes of appeal. This clearly is not the rule.
(Patel, supra,
Even if this subpoena were akin to a discovery request, the appropriate analogy would be to discovery orders ancillary to cases pending in other jurisdictions, which have been held to be final judgments for purposes of appealability.
(Adams
v.
Woods
(1861)
Our holding is limited to the question before us of whether a compliance order is appealable. We do not address the separate and distinct question of whether an appealing party is entitled to a stay of enforcement of the subpoena pending appeal. (See, e.g.,
F.D.I.C.
v.
Gamer
(9th Cir. 1997) 126 E3d 1138, 1142 [reviewing an appeal from an order enforcing an administrative subpoena where a stay was denied];
U.S. v. Judicial Watch, Inc.
(D.D.C. 2003)
