J.A. JONES CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, Pеtitioner, v. THE SUPERIOR COURT OF ORANGE COUNTY, Respondent; DAI-ICHI KANGYO BANK, LTD., Real Party in Interest.
No. G014974
Fourth Dist., Div. Three.
Aug. 31, 1994
27 Cal. App. 4th 1568
COUNSEL
Aiken, Kramer & Cummings and Bruce G. Herold for Petitioner.
No appearance for Respondent.
Brown & Brown, Howard B. Brown and Ronald J. Mandell for Real Party in Interest.
OPINION
SILLS, P. J.-Felix Frankfurter once made fun of the tendency of courts to look at legislative history rather than the actual words of the statute. “[T]his
The instant writ petition presents a variation on Frankfurter‘s observation. In the wake of this court‘s decision in Halbert‘s Lumber, Inc. v. Lucky Stores, Inc. (1992) 6 Cal.App.4th 1233 [8 Cal.Rptr.2d 298], the Legislature modified the prescribed release forms by which contractors and subcontractors waive mechanics’ lien rights. While the Legislature clearly was “responding” to the decision, reports of Halbert‘s Lumber‘s death are somewhat exaggerated. There is no clear statement in the history of the new legislatiоn that the old (unmodified) forms should be interpreted differently than they were in Halbert‘s Lumber. Nothing in the actual changes in the statutory text makes them retroactive and the Legislature passed up the perfect opportunity to undo Halbert‘s Lumber regarding the old forms: at the same time the Legislature was considering changing the existing release forms, another bill was introduced declaring that the modifications were to “reinforce what the Legislature originally intended.” That particular bill did not pass.
In the face of the actual text of the recent changes-which by their terms operate only prospectively-and the lack of a clear statement from the Legislature that the recent modifications merely clarified, rather than changed, existing law, we conclude that Halbert‘s Lumber remains applicable to the old forms. Having made that determination, the instant writ petition, which depends on the demise of Halbert‘s Lumber as it pertains to those forms, must be denied.
I
In March 1989 J. A. Jones Construction Company agreed to build a beachfront hotel for Waterfront Construction. In return it was to be paid about $29 million. The contract required Jones to send in payment applications for work done the immediately preceding month accompanied by waivers releasing Jones‘s rights to assert mechanics’ liens “through the date” of the applications.
Two lien waivers, signed after construction was substantially completed, concern us now. The first was a “conditional waiver and release upon progress payment,” dated October 17, 1990. It recited that Jones had received a check for some $2.2 million; when the check was paid by the bank, the waivеr would “become effective to release pro tanto any mechanic‘s lien, stop notice or bond right the Undersigned has on the [hotel] to the following extent.” It then said that the release “covers a progress payment for labor,
The second waiver was dated November 8. This document provided that Jones had received about $27.4 million for the “project through 8/15, 1990,” and did thereby “release pro tanto any mechanic‘s lein [sic], stop notice, equitable lien or labor and material bond right that [Jones]” had “to the above extent only” and did “not cover any retention or items furnished after that date.” The waiver further stated that “THIS DOCUMENT IS ENFORCEABLE AGAINST YOU IF YOU SIGNED, EVEN IF YOU HAVE NOT BEEN PAID.”2
There is no dispute that only $5,000 of labor and materials was furnished to the hotel after September 15.
Jones claimed that work changes meant it was owed about $3 million more than the contract price and filed a mechanic‘s lien for an unpaid $1,876,000. Waterfront sued Jones for construction defects, including a subsiding pool, cracked glass, collapsing ductwork and peeling paint. Jones cross-complained to foreclose its mechanic‘s lien, naming Dai-Ichi Kangyo Bank, the construction lender, as one of the defendants. Jones filed a lis pendens on the hotel property in July 1991.
Before judgment could be entered, Waterfront filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy. In June 1993 the bank requested the court to expunge the lis pendens on the theory that $5,000 would secure adequate relief to Jones from any damage resulting from the expungement. (See
The day before the September 10 hearing, the Legislature passed Senate Bill No. 934 (sometimes hereafter referred to as SB 934). Exactly what Senate Bill No. 934 was intended to do is discussed below, but for the moment it is sufficient to note the legislation was aimed at doing something about the state of the law in the aftermath of Halbert‘s Lumber. Armed with this new development Jones brought a motion for reconsideration, arguing that the new legislation showed that Halbert‘s Lumber was sufficiently vulnerable as precedent to justify a larger undertaking (i.e., that Jones had not really waived its right to a mechanics’ lien for most of the unpaid $800,000). Jones even attached the declaration of the author of SB 934, state Senator Quentin Kopp, who declared that “[o]ne of the purposes” of his introducing the bill was his “belief that the court in Halbert‘s Lumber v. Lucky Stores (1992) 6 Cal.App.4th 1233 [8 Cal.Rptr.2d 298], misinterpreted the legislative intent of
The motion for reconsideration was denied, and Jones sought a petition fоr a writ of mandate ordering the trial court to vacate its order expunging the lis pendens and deny the motion or, alternatively, require the undertaking be increased to $1 million. We issued an alternative writ of mandate to consider the matter.
II
In Halbert‘s Lumber a materials supplier furnished a quantity of “glu lam” beams to a jobsite, then signed a release of lien rights and waited a period of time before it billed the subcontractor for the beams. The subcontractor went
Contractors and subcontractors were quick to notice that the rule in Halbert‘s Lumber would force them to be, as a state Senate Judiciary Committee report would later put it, “extremely careful in matching their billing dates to the date of the releases.” Contractors would need to make sure that their “billing practices account and charge for all labor and materials furnished through the specified release date.”3
In response to Halbert‘s Lumber two bills were introduced in March 1993: Assembly Bill No. 1845 by Assemblymember Mickey Conroy (sometimes hereafter AB 1845), and Senate Bill No. 934 by Senator Quentin Kopp. Senate Bill No. 934 was passed in September and signed by Governor Wilson in October. (See Stats. 1993, ch. 1249.)
Jones presses a more sophisticated argument than merely that thе recent legislation should be given retroactive effect. Rather, it contends that the introduction of Senate Bill No. 934 and Assembly Bill No. 1845, both in response to Halbert‘s Lumber, shows that the Legislature originally intended the forms considered in Halbert‘s Lumber to be limited to the extent of the payment actually made. Ergo the release forms in the present case should be read to mean that they do not cover any retention before or after the release, or any extras for which payment has not been received.4
The argument fails, however, because there is no clear statement in the legislative history of SB 934 about what the Legislature originally intended in 1984 when it drafted the language interpreted by Halbert‘s Lumber. If anything, the failure of AB 1845 to pass indicates that the Legislature decided to acquiesce to the Halbert‘s Lumber decision as it applied to the old forms and begin afresh with new ones.
III
The extent to which the intent behind a law is to override the actual words of that law is one of those eternal questions that will always be around to challenge lawyers and jurists. Suffice to say we are obviously not going to resolve it now. What we can do, however, is ascertain a few basic principles applicable to the case at hand.
We start with the two statutes bearing directly on the interpretation of statutes, sections 1858 and 1859 of the Code of Civil Procedure.5 Section 1858 is a simple declaration. “In the construction of a statute or instrument, the office of the Judge is simply to ascertain and declare what is in terms or in substance contained therein, not to insert what has been omitted, or to omit what has been inserted....” (Italics added.)
But the court‘s task is a little more complex than just sticking to the text. Section 1859 directs the court to a consideration of the intent of the Legislature if possible. “In the construction of a statute the intention of the Legislature, and in the construction of the instrument the intention of the parties, is to be pursued, if possible....”
The two statutes could easily collide were it not for those two words “if possible” in section 1859. By putting those escape words in the “intent” statute rather than the “text” statute, it appears that, when push comes to shove, inescapably plain text should prevail. (Or, to be precise, plain text will prevail most of the time-there are a few exceptions, mentioned in passing below, for scrivener‘s errors, absurd results, and results at odds with the unmistakable or clear intent of the Legislature.)
So courts should start, as we did in Halbert‘s Lumber, with the actual language of the statute, and if the text is clear as applied to a given case, and it does not fall into any of the exceptions, stop there. (See Halbert‘s Lumber, Inc. v. Lucky Stores, Inc., supra, 6 Cal.App.4th at p. 1238, аnd authorities cited.) As Oliver Wendell Holmes said, “we do not inquire what the legislature meant; we ask only what the statute means.” (See Leslie Salt Co. v. San Francisco Bay Conservation etc. Com. (1984) 153 Cal.App.3d 605, 614, fn. 11 [200 Cal.Rptr. 575], quoting Holmes, Collected Legal Papers (1920) p. 207.) If there is any “modern trend” in this area, it is more and more to
Ambiguous texts are another matter. If something needs to be added or omitted to determine how the statute should apply in a given case, section 1859 directs the court to the intent of the Legislature in enacting that text. We faced precisely this problem of a hopelessly ambiguous text in Halbert‘s Lumber, Inc. v. Lucky Store, Inc., supra, 6 Cal.App.4th 1233.7 Accordingly, we turned to the legislative history to see if any intent could be discerned to illuminate the ambiguous statute.
It was at that point, according to Jones, that wе erred. If we had perhaps just been a tad more perceptive in reading the legislative history, we might have divined the intent of the Legislature that the release should extend only to actual payment received.
There are those who would say that even in looking at legislative history we were on shaky ground. (E.g., Conroy v. Aniskoff (1993) 507 U.S. 511 [123 L.Ed.2d 229, 238, 113 S.Ct. 1562, 1567] (conc. opn. of Scalia, J.) [“[l]egislative history [is] the equivalent of entering a crowded cocktail party and looking over the heads of the guests for one‘s friends“]; Note, Why Learned Hand Would Never Consult Legislative History Today (1992) 105 Harv. L.Rev. 1005, 1016-1017 (hereafter Learned Hand Note) [arguing that lobbyists and legislators have gotten wise to the judiciary‘s use of legislative history and now try to shape it “for results that could not have won majority support” and therefore any use of legislative history is illеgitimate].)
And we must acknowledge that the criticisms of judicial use of legislative history are formidable indeed: The Constitution does not elevate the bits and pieces that make up any legislative history to the status of law-it reserves that honor only for the text of legislation that has run the gauntlet of the Legislature and the Governor‘s possible veto.8 The members of the Legislature have no opportunity to disapprove legislative history, and the Governor has no chance to veto it.9 Legislative history directly represents only the views of the few actors in the legislative process, including lobbyists and committee staff people, who are intimately involved with particular legislation.10 It is virtually impossible to accurately reconstruct exactly what went on when a legislative body рassed a bill.11 Legislative history has become contaminated by documents which are more aimed at influencing the judiciary after the bill is passed than explaining to the rest of the legislature what the bill is about before it is passed.12 Most basically, the idea that the diverse membership of a democratically elected legislature can ever have one collective “intent” on anything is a myth; if there is ambiguity it is because the legislature either could not agree on clearer language or because it made the deliberate choice to be ambiguous-in effect, the only “intent” is to pass the matter on to the courts.13
Formidable as these criticisms are, they do not warrant a blanket rule against all use of legislative history. For example, there are no good reasons
The real problem, as we discovered in Halbert‘s Lumber, is that reading the tea leaves of legislative history is often no easy matter. Even assuming there is such a thing as meaningful collective intent, courts can get it wrong when what they have before them is a motley collection of authors’ statements, committee reports, internal memoranda and lobbyist letters. Related to this problem are the facts that legislators are often “blissfully unaware of the existence” of the issue with which the court must grapple,15 and, as mentioned above, ambiguity may be the deliberate outcome of the legislative process. In light of these factors, the wisest course is to rely on legislative history only when that history itself is unambiguous. (See Milligan v. City of Laguna Beach (1983) 34 Cal.3d 829, 831 [196 Cal.Rptr. 38, 670 P.2d 1121] [legislative “purpose” controlled where it had been stated in “unmistakable
By looking for a clear statement of intent in the legislative history we avoid the “contamination” problem.16 A clear statement of intent allows a court to reasonably indulge the inference that the individual members of the Legislature may have given at least a little thought to that statement before voting on the bill.17
IV
The legislative history of Senate Bill No. 934 contains no clear statement that the recent changes to the lien release forms prescribed in
The process appears to have begun in early 1993 when representatives from the San Diego chapter of the Associated General Contractors of California wrote to Assemblymember Phil Isenberg proposing legislation “[c]larif[ying]” the lien waiver and release forms.18 The contractors’ representatives saw the “problem” in the wake of Halbert‘s Lumber as one where contractors were straitjacketed into the use of prescribed forms. (“The problem is that . . . contractor[s] cannot modify the release form to protect themselves because the code requires that the form be ‘substantially equivalent.’ “) The “proposed solution” to the “problem” was to amend the forms
In early March 1993, two bills were introduced dealing with the subject of lien waivers. AB 1845 contained a direct textual reference to Halbert‘s Lumber. The preamble of the proposed legislation was admirably plain and to the point. Section 1, subdivision (b) of the bill declared: “[T]he decision in Halbert‘s Lumber, Inc. v. Lucky Stores, Inc. 6 Cal.App.4th 1233 has misapplied the law as it was intended by the Legislature....” Subdivision (c) of section 1 further declared that it was the “intent of the Legislature” to “supersede the holding” in Halbert‘s Lumber and “to reinforce what the Legislature originally intended when it enacted Section 3262 of the Civil Code.” (Italics added.)
By contrast, the other bill, SB 934 introduced by Senator Quentin Kopp, made no reference to Halbert‘s Lumber, contained no urgency clause, and simply revised the lien waiver forms prescribed by section 3262. Senator Kopp‘s author‘s statement characterized the bill as a “modest modification to our current statutory forms.” In particular, the original version of SB 934, as introduced on March 4, 1993, made it clear that the conditional and unconditional waiver forms prescribed in subdivision (d)(1) and (d)(2) of section 3262 released lien rights “only to the extent of the payment stated.”
The result in Halbert‘s Lumber, however, was not without its supporters, primarily lenders and title companies. Senator Kopp received letters from representatives of the California League of Savings Institutions20 and the California Land Title Association21 opposing his bill.
The bill then went to the Assembly, where it was amended, among other things, to drop the phrase “rights passed upon a written contract modification.”25 Because the lien releases did not cover extras, however, the bill faced renewed opposition from lending interests, which continued through the bill‘s passage in the Assembly on a vote of 43 to 20, the Senate‘s approval of the Assembly amendments, and its arrival on the Governor‘s desk in mid-September.26 Governor Wilson signed SB 934 into law on October 11, 1993.
AB 1845 did not pass.
V
In working to pass SB 934 through the Legislature, the bill‘s proponents recognized the issue of what precisely should be released by the lien waiver
The history of the legislation effecting the most recent changes to section 3262 of the Civil Code demonstrates the Legislature‘s “response” to Halbert‘s Lumber was not one of simply declaring that this court got it all wrong and that the old release forms must be interpreted as they were originally meant to be-to provide for releases only to the extent of actual payment. If the Legislature had wanted to do that, it would have passed AB 1845.29 Rather, those who did not like the result in Halbert‘s Lumber acquiesced in a compromise, the end product of which was a set of new forms which, in the zero-sum game of mechanics’ lien releases, tilt in favor of contractors rather than lenders or owners. It is the compromise that the Legislature wanted, not what one set of interests wanted but could not get. (See Easterbrook, The Supreme Court 1983 Term, Foreward: The Court and the Economic System (1984) 98 Harv. L.Rev. 4, 46 [“What Congress wanted was the compromise, not the objectives of the contending interests.“].)
To be sure, there are a number of statements in the legislative history of SB 934-basically lobbyist and sponsor statements-to the effect that
Of course it may still be true that, if it were possible to poll the members of the 1984 Legislature on the point (which it is not), they would say of Halbert‘s Lumber, to paraphrase T. S. Eliot, “That is not what we meant at all. That is not it, at all.” But there was no clear statement of what they did mean either. (See Halbert‘s Lumber, Inc. v. Lucky Stores, Inc., supra, 6 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1247-1249.) Nor is there, as demonstrated above, a clear statement of what they meant then in the history of the most recent legislation.
Senator Kopp‘s declaration in support of Jones does not qualify аs a clear statement. (See In re Marriage of Bouquet (1976) 16 Cal.3d 583, 589 [128 Cal.Rptr. 427, 546 P.2d 1371] [court refused to consider the motives or understandings of individual legislators, including the author of the bill in controversy].) An individual legislator may make a statement that his or her
In the present case, the first form that Jones signed with a release date of September 15, is in critical respects identical to the one construed in Halbert‘s Lumber. Both forms said the release became effective “to the following extent” and then said the release covered a progress payment for various items furnished through a certain date. Like the form in Halbert‘s Lumber, the first form here contains no punctuation to alert the reader that it does not cover “any retention,” “any retention at all,” or, as the new forms clearly put it, “any retentions retained before or after the release date.” Rather the release does not cover “any retention . . . after said date.”32 Again, as in Halbert‘s Lumber, the forms are ambiguous. (The difference is that this time there is precedent construing the meaning of the ambiguous terms.)
The second form, with the August 15 release date, is different in that it uses the phrase “to the above extent only” rather than “to the following extent,” but this is just as ambiguous as the form construed in Halbert‘s Lumber. Like the first form, it is unclear whether the release covers retentions. It also is functionally the same as the form in Halbert‘s Lumber.
The trial court was correct. The releases signed by Jones released its mechanics’ lien rights to everything but the $5,000 beyond its release date. Our decision regarding the continued viability of Halbert‘s Lumber as to the old forms obviates the need to consider the various other points raised by the parties in this writ proceeding. The alternative writ is hereby discharged and the petition of Jones Construction for a writ of mandate is denied.
Wallin, J., concurred.
CROSBY, J., Dissenting. - Halbert‘s Lumber, Inc. v. Lucky Stores, Inc. (1992) 6 Cal.App.4th 1233 [8 Cal.Rptr.2d 298] was an unjust decision at
California Mechanics’ Liens and Other Remedies (Cont.Ed.Bar 1988) section 4.39, pаge 217 states that a subcontractor‘s mechanics’ lien rights “[u]sually . . . are released on a pro tanto basis, i.e., to the extent of the payment and usually only to the date of the document.” (Italics added.) The same volume emphasizes the importance of accompanying a progress payment with “a release of lien, to be executed by the subcontractor, to the extent of the payment.”2 (Id. at § 5.34, p. 257, italics added.) The business and legal communities were entitled to rely on settled dogma. Instead, Halbert‘s Lumber has undoubtedly provided windfalls for many at the expense of materialmen and subcontractors.
I would issue a peremptory writ.
Petitioner‘s application for review by the Supreme Court was denied November 23, 1994. Mosk, J., and Kennard, J., were of the opinion that the application should be granted.
