JOHN S. GARRISON, Plaintiff and Appellant, v. BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE UNITED WATER CONSERVATION DISTRICT, Defendant and Respondent.
No. B081999
Second Dist., Div. Six.
July 19, 1995
August 16, 1995
1670 | 36 Cal. App. 4th 1670
Francis & Reed and Richard L. Francis for Plaintiff and Appellant.
Drescher, McConica, Onstot, Schuck & Young and Philip C. Drescher for Defendant and Respondent.
STONE (S. J.), P. J.-John S. Garrison (Garrison) appeals the trial court‘s dismissal of his suit against respondent/defendant Board of Directors of the United Water Conservation District (United), following the court‘s sustaining of United‘s demurrer to Garrison‘s first amended petition for writ of mandate without leave to amend.
We reverse the judgment of dismissal.
Background
United held public hearings in May and June 1993 on the question of compliance with the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA-
Garrison attended the public hearings with his present counsel, Richard L. Francis (Francis). Garrison said nothing at the hearings; however, as an individual Francis objected to United‘s failure to obtain an environmental
Despite Francis‘s objections, United approved the pilot project and adopted a negative declaration on June 9, 1993.
On behalf of himself and the general public, Garrison filed a petition for writ of mandate on July 8, 1993, seeking an order and injunction that United vacate its approval of the pilot project and its adoption of the negative declaration. The petition contained substantially the same grounds Francis had asserted at the aforementioned public hearings.
United demurred to Garrison‘s petition on the ground he had not alleged facts showing exhaustion of his administrative remedies. United claimed that, although Garrison attended the public hearings on the pilot project, he was not on the record as having made a single comment. CEQA requires a petitioner in superior court to have commented at the public hearing. (See our discussion, infra.) United contended Garrison was personally obligated to speak in order to exhaust his administrative remedies.
The trial court sustained United‘s demurrer and granted Garrison leave to amend. Garrison filed his first amended petition for mandamus on November 2, 1993. The only substantial change from the original petition was the allegation of Garrison‘s capacity: “Petitioner, JOHN S. GARRISON, brings this lawsuit as a duly authorized individual member of and in a representative capacity on behalf of, THE COALITION FOR AQUIFER HONESTY, an unincorporated association composed of, among others, Richard L. Francis and John S. Garrison, and formed on or about July 8, 1993.”
United again demurred, contending Garrison and the Coalition for Aquifer Honesty (Coalition) did not exhaust their administrative remedies since the Coalition was wrongfully created as a device to sidestep the exhaustion requirement. It further contended the suit was barred by the statute of limitations since the Coalition became plaintiff after the limitations period provided by
The trial court sustained this demurrer without leave to amend.
United contends Garrison has no standing to bring this appeal. We disagree.
Appeals may be brought only by aggrieved parties. (
Garrison is aggrieved under this definition. Although he was dismissed as an individual party from the original petition for mandamus for his failure to exhaust his personal administrative remedies, nevertheless, he maintained his status as a party of record by filing the amended petition in his name in his representative capacity.
Garrison also fulfills the second requirement as a party directly and injuriously affected by the judgment dismissing the amended petition. Whether suing as an individual or in his representative capacity, Garrison had the same direct interest in the subject matter of this suit, and therefore suffered the same injury from the dismissal of the suit. (9 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (3d ed. 1985) Appeal, § 139, p. 148; Estate of Colton (1912) 164 Cal. 1, 4-5 [127 P. 643].)
Administrative Remedies
The exemption from
The exemption provided for in
Statute of Limitations
United‘s negative declaration was filed June 10, 1993. Garrison‘s original petition for mandamus was filed within the allowable 30-day period on July 8, 1993. The first amended petition was filed after this period expired, in November 1993.
A court may, in the furtherance of justice allow a party to amend any pleading by adding the name of any party. (
The relation-back doctrine applies here. Garrison‘s first amended petition contains the same basic set of facts as his original petition. The notice policy was therefore satisfied since United received notice of the nature of the action within the 30-day limitations period. The change effected by the amendment is one of form, not of substance, and should be allowed in the interests of justice. (See Pasadena Hospital Assn., Ltd. v. Superior Court, supra, 204 Cal.App.3d at p. 1037.)
The trial court reasoned the relation-back doctrine did not apply because the Coalition was an entirely separate legal entity with separate legal rights. This reasoning is erroneous. “A suit is sometimes brought by a plaintiff without the right or authority to sue, and the amendment seeks to substitute the real party in interest. Although the original complaint does not state a cause of action in the plaintiff, the amended complaint by the right party restates the identical cause of action, and amendment is freely allowed.” (5 Witkin, Cal. Procedure, supra, Pleading, § 1150, pp. 567-568.)
United‘s reliance on Bartalo v. Superior Court (1975) 51 Cal.App.3d 526 [124 Cal.Rptr. 370], is misplaced. The original plaintiff was injured by defendant‘s negligence, and filed suit. Thereafter, the law first recognized a spouse‘s cause of action for loss of consortium. The plaintiff and her husband sought to amend her complaint to add husband as an additional plaintiff on a new cause of action for loss of consortium. Husband‘s cause was held barred by the statute of limitations. His addition as a plaintiff did not involve a mere technical defect in plaintiff‘s status, since he was a new party pleading new allegations. Here, in contrast, no new or different obligation by United was alleged in the amended petition. The amended petition merely “substituted” one plaintiff for another on the same cause of action. (5 Witkin, Cal. Procedure, supra, Pleading, § 1151, p. 569.)
The judgment dismissing this suit is reversed. The case is remanded to the superior court for further proceedings.
Gilbert, J., concurred.
YEGAN, J.-I respectfully dissent. The language and effect of the majority opinion defeat the carefully thought-out goal of a short statute of limitations. The Legislature has told groups how to file a California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) challenge and what they must do to have standing. If the majority is correct, the liberal policy for amendment of pleadings may be used to defeat that legislative goal.
In sustaining the first demurrer, the trial court ruled that Garrison had no standing to bring a mandamus petition on behalf of himself or the general public. Garrison thereafter filed a first amended petition alleging that he was suing as a member of the Coalition for Aquifer Honesty (Coalition). Respondent again demurred and the trial court sustained the demurrer without leave to amend.
Garrison and the Coalition filed separate appeals. The Coalition abandoned the appeal and we dismissed it.
The judgment is now final as to the Coalition. That leaves Garrison. The majority say that Garrison is an “aggrieved party” and can appeal on behalf of the Coalition. This may be true in layman‘s terms but not under the law. (
The majority hold that Garrison may reinstate the lawsuit even though he lacks standing to sue as an individual. Not so. The action is time barred.
Although the project has been completed, the majority have revived the CEQA action. This is not what the Legislature had in mind. In the event the negative declaration is overturned by the superior court, how does one “save the environment” from a project that has already been built?
The decision to allow an amendment of the pleadings rests in the sound discretion of the trial court. Without expressly stating so, the majority hold
The majority in one stroke have changed the law as to who is an “aggrieved party,” expanded the relation-back doctrine to give plaintiffs with no standing the right to sue, and have undercut the letter and spirit of the 30-day statute of limitations for CEQA actions. The trial court had it right the first time. Garrison may not use the Coalition as his alter ego to revive the action. I would affirm.
A petition for a rehearing was denied August 16, 1995.
