*452 Opinion
The trial court dismissed a welfare fraud prosecution under Welfare and Institutions Code sections 11483 and 10980
1
because it found that a demand for restitution had not been made prior to the commencement of criminal proceedings. The trial court relied on
People
v.
McGee
(1977)
The People appeal, contending that a prior demand for restitution is no longer necessary in cases of welfare fraud under these cases because of the 1984 amendments to section 11483, and the enactment of section 10980 at that time.
We agree that the older cases are no longer controlling following the 1984 legislation. Accordingly, since the trial court erroneously assumed that a prior demand was required, we reverse its order granting defendant’s motion to dismiss the action.
Facts and Procedural History 2
An eligibility worker for the San Bernardino County Department of Social Services testified at the preliminary hearing that defendant, Theresa Preston, received welfare benefits from 1991 to 1993. Benefits were awarded on the basis of an application from defendant which claimed that defendant’s husband was not residing in her home. The statements were repeated on an application filed on August 5, 1992, and on several monthly eligibility reports.
A welfare fraud investigator investigated information that Mr. Preston was actually living with defendant, and that he had unreported employment income. She also testified that she read defendant a demand for restitution immediately before she arrested defendant. The amount of the alleged loss was approximately $40,000.
Two neighbors also testified that they believed that Mr. Preston was living in defendant’s home during the relevant period.
Defendant was charged with welfare and food stamp fraud in violation of section 10980, subdivision (c)(2), a felony, and six counts of perjury (Pen. *453 Code, § 118) arising from the allegedly false statements on her applications and monthly eligibility reports.
Defendant filed a nonstatutory motion to dismiss the information on grounds that the state was required to seek restitution prior to bringing a criminal action, and that it had failed to do so. As noted above, the trial court granted the motion and dismissed the action.
Sections 10980 and 11483
Since its enactment in 1984, section 10980 has specified penalties for welfare fraud. Defendant was charged under subdivision (c), which provides penalties for obtaining benefits by false statements. Nothing in section 10980 requires a demand for restitution prior to filing charges, or at any other time.
Section 11483 provides: “Except as specified in Section 11483.5, whenever any person has, by means of false statement or representation or by impersonation or other fraudulent device, obtained aid for a child not in fact entitled thereto, the person obtaining such aid shall be subject to prosecution under the provisions of Chapter 9 (commencing with Section 10980) of Part 2. [f] When the allegation is limited to failure to report not more than two thousand dollars ($2,000) of income or resources, or the failure to report the presence of an additional person or persons in the household, all actions necessary to secure restitution shall be brought against persons in violation of Section 10980. The action for restitution may be satisfied by sending a registered letter requesting restitution to the last address at which the person was receiving public assistance.”
It will be noted that nothing in the present statute requires that the restitution demand be made prior to commencement of criminal proceedings. Since defendant finds such a requirement in the cases, we turn to them.
People v. McGee and Other Pre-1984 Cases
In
In re Sands
(1977)
*454
Eight months later, the Supreme Court resolved an issue left open in
Sands,
i.e., whether the failure to seek restitution prior to the institution of a criminal action was a fatal defect when the issue was raised on direct appeal.
(People
v.
McGee, supra,
The court went on to find that the demand requirement was intended to provide protection for individuals accused of welfare fraud, that it should be given mandatory effect, and that failure to follow the prescribed procedure was a basis for challenging the subsequent criminal prosecution.
(People
v.
McGee, supra,
This court had occasion to discuss the issue in 1978. In
People
v.
Jordan, supra,
Other cases in the period from 1977 to 1984 relied on
McGee
to reach similar conclusions. In 1980, our Supreme Court found that the legislative intent to require a request for restitution had been first manifested in 1957,
*455
and “was reiterated in the 1970, 1977, and 1979 amendments to section 11483.”
(People
v.
Jenkins
(1980)
Two years later, in 1982, our Supreme Court considered whether an administrative hearing decision exonerating defendant of welfare fraud collaterally estopped a criminal action for the same alleged misconduct.
(People
v.
Sims
(1982)
Appellate court decisions in this period of time followed
McGee
in various contexts. For example, in
People
v.
Williams
(1980)
In
People
v.
Harper
(1981)
The 1984 Amendments to Section 11483
Prior to 1984, the varying texts of section 11483 supported the conclusion that the Legislature, by reference to the repealed sections 12250 and 12850, *456 intended to continue to incorporate the prior demand requirement into the statute. 4 (See, e.g. Stats. 1983, ch. 1092, § 422, p. 4088.)
In 1984, the Legislature enacted section 10980 and amended section 11483 into its present form. Prior to this change, the crime of “welfare fraud” was punishable under a variety of different statutes, including sections 11054, 11482, 11483 and 14014, as well as Penal Code sections 396, 396.5 and 484. As a result, the same fraudulent act frequently violated several statutes, and was chargeable under more than one of these statutes. The necessity to file complaints under each separate statute led to confusion and unnecessary filing of complaints. (Health & Welf. Agency, Dept. Social Services, Enrolled Bill Rep. (Sept. 17, 1984).) 5
The purpose of section 10980 was to create administrative efficiencies in investigating and prosecuting fraud cases by creating a specific welfare fraud statute under which a single fraudulent act involving more than one welfare program could be prosecuted. (Assem. Office of Research, 3d reading analysis of Sen. Bill No. 2171 (1983-84 Reg. Sess.) p. 3.) Thus, the purpose of the Legislature in enacting section 10980 was to consolidate the various welfare fraud provisions into that section and to eliminate the need to file multiple actions against a recipient who obtained various types of aid by committing a single fraudulent act. (Assem Human Services Com., Minority Rep. (Aug. 28, 1984).)
In accordance with this purpose, the penal provisions of section 11483 were deleted from that section and reenacted in section 10980. The prior reference to sections 12250 and 12850, which had been held to incorporate the prior demand requirement in section 11483, was deleted and replaced by a reference to section 10980.
The remaining, and current, text of section 11483 does not contain any criminal proscriptions, but merely requires that restitution be sought in cases of failure to report not more than $2,000 in income or resources, or the failure to report the presence of an additional person in the household. It specifies that this requirement may be satisfied by the mailing of a registered letter to the last address, but it does not specifically require the mailing or other demand prior to the filing of an action under section 10980.
Appellant therefore contends that the prior demand requirement has been deleted by the Legislature, saying “one is compelled to conclude that the *457 1984 Legislature intended to remove section 11483 from the criminal sphere of welfare fraud and put it back into the civil realm where it had been in the first (1965) place.”
Cases After the 1984 Amendments to Section 11483
None of the cases decided after 1984 discuss the argument that the 1984 amendments to section 11483 deleted the prior demand requirement.
In 1985, a conviction was reversed for failure to comply with the prior demand requirement.
(People
v.
Durrett
(1985)
Nine months later,
McGee
was cited in
People
v.
Tallagua
(1985)
People
v.
Woods
(1986)
In
Madrid
v.
McMahon
(1986)
In
People
v.
Meyer
(1986)
The 1984 amendments were considered in
People
v.
Camillo
(1988)
The conduct there occurred in 1984 and 1985. The penal provisions of section 11483 were still in effect at the commencement of the conduct, while section 10980 was in effect the remainder of the time. The court held the fact irrelevant to the basic issue of whether the Legislature intended persons in her position to suffer felony convictions.
In discussing the legislative history of the 1984 amendments, the court said: “In 1984, the Legislature rearranged the statutory scheme for welfare
*459
fraud, effective on January 1, 1985. (Stats. 1984, ch. 1448.) Summarizing this enactment, the Legislative Counsel noted: ‘Existing law provides for various criminal offenses concerning the receipt of, or the attempt to receive, aid under the Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) program and under the Food Stamp Program. FJQ This bill would modify these provisions by, among other things, applying these offenses to all aid programs, including the AFDC program, the Food Stamp Program, and county aid and relief programs.’ (Legis. Counsel’s Dig., Sen. Bill No. 2171 (1984 Reg. Sess.) Summary Dig., pp. 520-521.) In order to accomplish this objective the Legislature centralized the penalty provisions for welfare fraud into one statute, section 10980, and made it applicable to all welfare programs.”
(People
v.
Camillo, supra,
In another passage, the court says: “The Legislature obviously had multiple purposes when it enacted the 1984 amendments and one was to alter the punishment for welfare fraud. Indeed, it seems self-evident from the very fact that the prior statute governing punishment for welfare fraud has been amended that the Legislature intended to change the existing law.”
(People
v.
Camillo, supra,
However, the court continued to apply
McGee
without fully discussing whether it had been abrogated by the 1984 amendments. It said: “After the decision in
McGee,
the Legislature amended the restitution provisions of the law to require that restitution be requested before prosecution only with respect to persons who failed to report not more than $2,000 in income and resources, or the presence of additional persons in the household. (Stats. 1979, ch. 1170, § 12, p. 4566; Stats. 1979, ch. 1171, § 1, p. 4568. . . .) The fact that the Legislature limited
but did not abrogate
the restitution provisions of the law after the
McGee
interpretation is a clear indication that it intended to adhere to that interpretation in the circumstances where restitution is required.”
(People
v.
Camillo, supra,
In the absence of any reasoning or stated authority, we find the statement that the Legislature did not abrogate
McGee
in 1984 unpersuasive.
(People
v.
Superior Court (Marks)
(1991)
Second, the Legislature had acted, after McGee, to limit the prior demand requirement to only two categories of cases. Since, as discussed above, section 10980 was intended to reach a broader range of welfare fraud than former section 11483, a conclusion that the prior demand requirement was still in effect would substantially broaden the requirement by applying it to all categories of welfare fraud. There is no indication of a legislative intent to broaden the prior demand requirement in this manner.
Third, the deletion of the statutory reference to former sections 12250 and 12850 removes any current statutory underpinning to the argument that the statute requires a prior demand for restitution.
Finally, we note that our Supreme Court recently considered restitution for welfare fraud in
People
v.
Crow
(1993)
Conclusion
In
People
v.
McGee, supra,
The 1984 amendments to section 11483 deleted the reference to former sections 12250 and 12850 and replaced it with a reference to section 10980. Section 10980 does not contain a prior demand requirement.
We hold that this change evidenced a legislative intent to delete the prior demand requirement. Since there is no such requirement in the present text of section 11483, we find that the older cases have been superseded by this statutory change. The trial court therefore erred in enforcing the prior demand requirement stated in
People
v.
McGee, supra,
Disposition
The judgment is reversed.
McKinster, J., and McDaniel, J., * concurred.
Notes
Unless otherwise indicated, all further statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code.
The facts, which are relatively undisputed, are taken from the transcript of the preliminary hearing.
Section 13200 was itself repealed in 1981. (Stats. 1981, ch. 69, § 23, p. 177.)
Appellant analyzes the various amendments to section 11483 prior to 1984. We find it unnecessary to conduct a similar analysis, as appellant’s position ultimately depends on the intent and effect of the 1984 amendments.
We take judicial notice of legislative materials obtained from the California State Archives.
Respondent advances an equal protection argument based on the claim that all other similarly situated welfare fraud defendants have received a restitution demand claim prior to commencement of criminal proceedings, while she did not. We find no merit to this contention, as we have found that, since the 1984 amendments to section 11483, the law did not require a restitution demand prior to commencement of criminal proceedings.
Retired Associate Justice of the Court of Appeal, Fourth District, sitting under assignment by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
