Opinion
Respondents sought mandamus and injunctive relief against appellant City Council of Los Angeles (City Council) and other parties, contending that the City Council improperly approved an ordinance essentially similar to one that the City Council had repealed following respondents’ successful campaign to institute a referendum on it. The trial court granted respondents’ petition. We reverse.
RELEVANT FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On November 22, 2006, the City Council adopted ordinance No. 178082, entitled “Hotel Worker Living Wage Ordinance” (Wage Ordinance). 1 The ordinance set minimum wage standards that exceeded California’s minimum wage requirements for certain hotel workers employed within the Gateway to Los Angeles (Century Corridor) Property Business Improvement District (PBID), which abuts Los Angeles International Airport. Under the ordinance, hotels within the PBID that contained 50 or more guest rooms were obliged to pay at least $9.39 per hour to workers who received health benefits, and at least $10.64 per hour to workers who did not receive health benefits.
The Wage Ordinance was opposed by respondents—who are a group of hotel operators within the PBID and individual taxpayers—and other parties, including the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce (Chamber of Commerce).
2
Whereas respondents
On January 31, 2007, the City Council repealed the Wage Ordinance. On February 21, 2007, it approved ordinance No. 178432, entitled “Airport Hospitality Enhancement Zone Ordinance” (Zone Ordinance). 3 The ordinance designated the area bounded by the PBID as a hospitality enhancement zone, and committed the City of Los Angeles (City) to make a number of improvements within the zone. The City declared that it would perform $1 million in street improvements, conduct a $50,000 study into ways of attracting new businesses, and create a program that would train 120 workers per year for positions in hotels and restaurants; in addition, it promised to investigate a reduction in business taxes, the creatiоn of a new recycling and waste diversion program, and the construction of a convention center and remote hotel check-in facilities.
The Zone Ordinance also set minimum wage requirements for hotel workers identical to those found in the Wage Ordinance, but mandated their implementation by phases, and delayed full implementation until January 1, 2008. In addition, the Zone Ordinance permitted a hotel to avoid the wage requirements if it showed that the requirements were significantly burdensome or that its workers had agreed in a collective bargaining agreement to waive the requirements. The ordinance contained a commitment from the City that it would not impose wage requirements on other businesses absent further study.
On February 28, 2007, respondents filed their petition for mandamus and injunctive relief against the City Council, Frank Martinez, in his official capacity as city clerk of the City of Los Angeles, and Rockard J. Delgadillo, in his official capacity as City Attorney of the City of Los Angeles. The petition contended that the City Council’s conduct in connection with the Zone Ordinance contravened their rights regarding referenda and initiatives under the California Constitution. It also sought an injunction to prevent Martinez from giving effect to the Zone Ordinance by publishing it.
4
On February 28, 2007, Judge Dzintra Janavs issued an alternative writ of mandate and order to show cause, and directed Martinez to refrain from publishing the zone ordinance. Judge Janavs subsequently permitted appellant Unite Here Local 11 (Local 11) to intervene in the
DISCUSSION
Appellants contend that the trial court erred in granting the petition. We agree.
A. Governing Principles
The key issues before us concern whether the City Council properly approved the Zone Ordinance after repealing the Wage Ordinance in the face of respondents’ certified referendum petition. “Thе referendum is the means by which the electorate is entitled, as a power reserved by it under our state Constitution, to approve or reject measures passed by a legislative body. (Cal. Const., art. II, §§ 9, subd. (a), 11 & art. IV, § 1 .. . .)”
(Empire Waste Management
v.
Town of Windsor
(1998)
Shortly after the 1911 amendment, the court in
In re Stratham
(1920)
B. Applicability of the Stratham Rule
Appellants contend that the Stratham rule does not govern the City Council’s actions because the City is a charter city. They argue that the California Constitution does not impose the Stratham rule on charter cities, that charter cities fall outside the scope of Elections Code section 9241, which subjects so-called “general law” cities to the rule, and that the City’s charter itself does not authorize the rule.
In our view, the California Constitution subjects the City Council to the
Stratham
rule. In
Associated Home Builders,
our Supreme Court stated: “Declaring it ‘the duty of the courts to jealously guard this right of the people’ [citation], the courts have described the initiative and referendum as articulating ‘one of thе most precious rights of our democratic process.’ [Citation.] ‘[I]t has long been our judicial policy to apply a liberal construction to this power wherever it is challenged in order that the right be not improperly annulled. If doubts can reasonably be resolved in favor of the use of this reserve power, courts will preserve it.’ [Citations.]”
(Associated Home Builders, supra,
A charter city “is constitutionally entitled to exercise exclusive authority over all matters deemed tо be ‘municipal affairs.’ (Cal. Const., art. XI, § 5.)”
(DeVita v. County of Napa
(1995)
Under these provisions, charter cities cannot deny their citizens the referendum powers reserved in the California Constitution, although charters may properly resеrve broader referendum powers to voters. “ ‘ “The constitutional reservation goes to the full extent expressed by its language. If the charter differs from the constitution in any respect it does not thereby diminish the powers reserved by the constitution. On the other hand, if the powers reserved by the charter exceed those reserved in the constitution the effect of the charter would be to give to the people the additional powers there described.” [Citations.] In other words, as between the provisions of the Constitution and the provisions of a city charter, those which reserve the greater or more extensive referendum power in the people will govern.’ ”
(Rossi v. Brown, supra, 9
Cal.4th at p. 698, quoting
The key issue, therefore, is whether the state Constitution impliedly subjects charter cities to the Stratham rule. Our research discloses that the rule was applied twice in published decisions before the Legislature enacted any statutes bearing on the rule. The first application of the rule involved the City of Los Angeles. In Stratham, the City Council enacted an ordinance in September 1919 barring taxicabs and related businesses from soliciting customers at railroad depots. (Stratham, supra, 45 Cal.App. at pp. 437-438.) Faced with a successful rеferendum petition challenging the ordinance, the City Council repealed it. (Ibid.) In November 1919, the City Council approved a second ordinance dealing with the same subject matter, which it characterized as an emergency measure. (Ibid.) An individual charged with a misdemeanor under the second ordinance filed a writ of habeas corpus, contending that the City Council had identified the ordinance as an emergency measure in bad faith to avoid the operation of the referendum petition. (Ibid.) In denying the petition, the court in Stratham declined to disturb the City Council’s declaration of an emergency. (Id. at pp. 439-441.) Moreover, pointing only to out-of-state case authority, the court applied the rule in question and сoncluded that the ordinances were substantially different. (Id. at pp. 439^440.)
The second application of the
Stratham
rule occurred in
Gilbert,
in which the court again did not examine the rule’s constitutional basis.
(Gilbert, supra,
93 Cal.App.2d at pp. 414-415.) There, the Escondido City Council enacted a business license ordinance in June 1947 that was defeated in a referendum election held in April 1948.
(Ibid.)
In December 1948, the city council enacted a similar ordinance which nonetheless provided—unlike the first ordinance—that the funds collected constituted a tax levy for the city’s current expenses.
(Ibid.)
The court in
Gilbert
rejected a challenge to the second ordinance, reasoning that its status as a tax levy exempted it from the referendum provisions of the California Constitution. (
Shortly after
Gilbert,
the Legislature enacted the predecessor of Elections Code section 9241. (Elec. Code, former § 1772, added by Stats. 1949, ch. 194, § 1, p. 426.) Elections Code section 9241, like its predecessor, applies to “general law” cities.
5
(See Elec. Code, § 9247; Elec. Code, former § 1777, added by Stats. 1939, ch. 26, pp. 49, 98.) The provision, as adopted in 1949 and in its current form, states that a qualified referendum petition stays an ordinance pending a vote on the referendum, and that if the legislative body of a city repeals the ordinance in the face of the
In
Assembly,
our Supreme Court invoked the
Stratham
rule in a context outside the scope of Elections Code section 9241. There, the court confronted challenges to referendum petitions that sought to have election district reapportionment statutes enacted by the Legislature submitted to the voters for their approval.
(Assembly, supra,
30 Cal.3d at pp. 644-645.) After determining that the petitions were valid, the court clarified the consequences
for the Legislature if the statutes were rejected through the referenda: “Since its inception, the right of the people to express their collective will through the power of the rеferendum has been vigilantly protected by the courts. Thus, it has been held that legislative bodies cannot nullify this power by voting to enact a law identical to a recently rejected referendum measure. (See Gilbert[,
supra,]
In view of this authority, the
Stratham
rule must be regarded as an implied element of the constitutional рrovisions reserving the referendum power. Because these provisions are self-enacting, the courts may properly devise procedures necessary to protect the power when the appropriate legislative body fails to establish such procedures. (See
Midway Orchards
v.
County of Butte, supra,
220 Cal.App.3d at pp. 778-779.) Here, the
Stratham
rule was applied to the City prior to the enactment of the predecessor of Elections Code section 9241. Moreover, in
Assembly,
the court relied on
Stratham
in concluding that the Legislature “cannot nullify” the referendum power by enacting legislation essentially similar to that rejected in a referendum, notwithstanding the absence of a constitutional provision expressly addressing such conduct.
6
(Assembly, supra,
Appellants also contend that the discussion of the
Stratham
rule in
Assembly
is dictum, and thus does not constitute authority on the issue before us. We disagree. Our Supreme Court’s dicta, though not binding upon us, command our serious respect.
(Bunch
v.
Coachella Valley Water Dist.
(1989)
Appellants suggest that the Stratham rule is not needed to protect the referendum power because the electors, if dissatisfied with the City Council’s conduct, are free to amend the City’s charter to incorporate the rule or to vote against members of the City Council who seek reelection. In our view, the court in Assembly impliedly rejected the notion that this avenue of expressing dissatisfaction is sufficient to preserve the referendum power, given that the voters in statewide elections are also free to amend the Constitution and discharge members of the Legislature.
Finally, appellants contend that the Stratham rule is inapplicable to charter cities because unlike Elections Code section 9241, the rule does not specify the period of time a charter city is prohibited from adopting the second ordinance after withdrawing the first ordinance. It is unnecessary for us to address this contention, insofar as it seeks full clarification of the pertinent time period. Because the interval between the adoption of the Wage Ordinance and the Zone Ordinance is essentially equal to the analogous interval in Stratham, the situation before us falls squarely under that case. (Stratham, supra, 45 Cal.App. at pp. 437—438.)
C. Analysis of the Ordinances
The remaining issue concerns the application of the
Stratham
rule to the Wage and Zone Ordinances. Under the
Stratham
rule, “[t]he determination whether subsequent legislation is essentially the same begins with a
comparisоn of the terms of the legislation challenged by referendum and the subsequent legislation, focusing on the features that gave rise to popular objection.”
(Lindelli, supra,
In Stratham, the first ordinance enacted by the City Council prohibited taxicabs and other entities from sоliciting patrons near railroad depots and within defined areas of the city, absent consent from the affected railroads and businesses, but exempted carriers who solicited passengers in certain ways from the scope of the prohibition. 8 (See Stratham, supra, 45 Cal.App. at pp. 438-439.) The second ordinance approved by the City Council expanded the areas covered by the prohibition to encompass the solicitation of passengers on boats and other common carriers; it eliminated the exemption for certain forms of solicitation; and it added new prohibitions against the solicitation of “patronage upon any public street in a loud, noisy, boisterous mаnner,” along with other forms of interference with individuals and their baggage. The ordinance also contained a declaration that absent the measure, “the general public, but especially the traveling public . . . arriving in the City ... by rail and otherwise, will be greatly annoyed, inconvenienced and harassed and their comfort, safety, welfare and health endangered . . . .” The court in Stratham held that “the two ordinances differed] from each other, not merely in phraseology, but in substance relating to items of importance,” and that nothing in the second ordinance suggested bad faith. (Id. at p. 440.)
In
Gilbert,
the second ordinance, like the first, imposed a business license assessment, but unlike its predecessor, contained a declaration that it constituted a tax levy for the usual current expenses; moreover,
Again, in
Reagan,
the City Council of Sausalito enacted two ordinances committing it to buy waterfront property from a nonprofit private corporation and then lease a portion of the property to the corporation, which planned to allow recreational аctivities on it.
(Reagan, supra,
In contrast with Stratham, Gilbert, and Reagan, the court reached a contrary conclusion in Martin. There, the City of Sausalito owned waterfront property subject to a lease. (Martin, supra, 176 Cal.App.2d at pp. 116-117.) In April 1959, the City Council of Sausalito adopted an ordinance рermitting a sublease of the property until 2007. (Ibid.) After a referendum petition concerning the ordinance was presented to the city council, it repealed the ordinance and approved a second ordinance identical to the first, except that it terminated the sublease in 2002, changed the rental fee of the lease, and included another parcel of land in the lease. (Id. at p. 120.) The court held that the ordinances were “essentially the same” under the Stratham rule, reasoning that the new features in the second ordinance did not address the objectionable aspects of the first ordinance, which it identified as the character of the sublease. (Martin, at рp. 120-121.) The court stated: “No one will contend that the voters signing the referendum petition were doing so because of the extra five-year period in the terms of the leases. Undoubtedly the voters were concerned with the fundamental principle of the resolutions, namely, the leasing of city property for the commercial purposes specified in the resolutions. That principle was identical in [the resolutions].” (Id. at p. 120.)
Similarly, in
Lindelli,
the town council of San Anselmo passed an ordinance awarding a five-year contract to a waste management company.
(Lindelli, supra,
111 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1102-1103, 1111.) Confronted with a certified referendum petition challenging the ordinance, the town cоuncil set the vote on the referendum for the earliest permissible election date and awarded a one-year interim contract to the waste management company prior to the election.
(Lindelli, supra,
We conclude that the ordinances before us are as distinct as those at issue in
Stratham, Gilbert,
and
Reagan.
Although the referendum petition circulated by respondents does not recite specific objections to the Wage Ordinance, the record contains undisputed evidence establishing that the ordinance was subject to
The Zone Ordinance contains substantive provisions that address the economic burdens of the wage requirements and the potential for their imposition outside the PBID. To offset the effects of higher minimum wage requirements on the affected hotels, the Zone Ordinance creates an “Airport Hospitаlity Enhancement Zone” entitled to various guaranteed economic benefits and enhancements. The City commits to spend $1 million on street improvements in the airport hotel corridor; it grants $50,000 for a market analysis to attract businesses to the zone; and it commits to implement and fund a five-year job training program for hotel and restaurant workers. Moreover, the Zone Ordinance requires the City to complete a series of studies addressing the construction of a conference center, a reduction in business taxes and remote airport check-in facilities, while working with interested businesses to promptly develop a joint recycling and waste diversion program.
In additiоn, the Zone Ordinance mitigates the direct impact of the wage requirements by mandating their implementation in phases, delaying full implementation, and providing exemptions for hotels that find the requirement excessively burdensome. The ordinance also commits the City to conduct a study of the effects of the promised enhancements and the wage requirements, and mandates suspension of the wage requirements of the Zone Ordinance if the study is not completed within a specified period. To alleviate concerns that similar requirements will be imposed elsewhere, the Zone Ordinance prohibits the imposition of such measures outside the zone unless the affected arеa receives benefits comparable to those provided to the airport hotels by the Zone Ordinance. Moreover, the Zone Ordinance prohibits the imposition of any such ordinance absent careful study of its effects on the region and industry affected, followed by public hearings.
In our view, the new features in the Zone Ordinance, on their face, render it “essentially different” from the Wage Ordinance (Stratham, supra, 45 Cal.App. at pp. 439-440). Unlike the analogous ordinances in Martin and Lindelli, which did not address the objectionable features of the initial ordinances, the Zone Ordinance contains provisions that confront the “popular” objections to the Wage Ordinance and attempt tо address them. Because nothing in the Zone Ordinance betrays bad faith, the City Council did not contravene the Stratham rule in approving it.
In reaching the contrary conclusion, the trial court acknowledged the commitments undertaken by the City in the Zone Ordinance, but determined that they were “to a great extent illusory,” and thus “[were] not sufficient to materially change” the aspects of the Wage Ordinance to which the voters objected. These determinations are not supported by the terms of the ordinances, which mark the boundary of judicial review. By its language, the Zone Ordinance is different from the Wage Ordinance in tangible, concrete and significant ways. It is undisputed that the City Council attempted to address the challenges to the Wage Ordinance, and it is undisputed that the Zone Ordinance contains a variety of enhancements—including
Respondents contend that when, as here, the second ordinance contains provisions that are essentially identical to the provisions of the first ordinance that triggered opposition, the second ordinance is necessarily invalid under the
Stratham
test, despite the addition of new provisions. We disagree.
Stratham
itself establishes that two ordinances containing similar provisions
may nonetheless be essentially different when the second ordinance adds new provisions on matters of substance. There, the second ordinance reaffirmed in essentially similar terms the prohibition on the solicitation of patronage found in the first ordinance, and added new provisions that actually broadened the scope of the prohibition, together with a declaration by the City Council regarding the gravity of the matter addressed by the second ordinance,
(Stratham,
supra,
In an apparent effort to distinguish Stratham, respondents contend that in that case the first ordinance, unlike the second, was discriminatory, and that this purported difference was central to the court’s determination that the two ordinances were essentially dissimilar. They thus suggest that because the Wage and Zone Ordinances affect the same class of hotels, they are materially alike. Respondents misread Stratham. The court’s sole reference to the potentially discriminatory nature of the ordinances occurs in its discussion of an unrelated issue, namely, whether the second ordinance was “unconstitutional and discriminatory” because it barred only carriers who lacked written consent from soliciting patronage. (Stratham, supra, 45 Cal.App. at pp. 438-441.) The court concluded that “the terms of the ordinance do not create any unlawful discrimination between persons who have, and others who have not, written consent . . . .” (Id. at p. 440.) Because the two ordinances contained essentially similar provisions regarding consent, the court in Stratham could not have determined that they were different on this basis.
We conclude that the provisions of the Zone Ordinance, taken as a whole, place it squarely within the
Stratham
court’s characterization of a proper second ordinance: the provisions of the Zone Ordinanсe, on their face, are substantial, relate to items of importance, and aim at “avoiding, perhaps, the objections made to the first ordinance.”
(Stratham, supra,
The judgment is reversed. The matter is remanded to the trial court with directions to vacate the orders enjoining appellant Frank Martinez from publishing the zone ordinance and granting the petitiоn for writ of mandate, and to enter a new order denying the petition for writ of mandate. Appellants are awarded their costs on appeal.
Willhite, Acting R J., and Suzukawa,
Respondents’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied April 9, 2008, S160679.
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Notes
Respondents are Dominick Rubalcava, Dorena Knepper, Ten Bialosky, Joseph Czyzyk, Sunstone OP Properties L.L.C. (
The text of the Zone Ordinance (No. 178432) is contained in appendix B.
Under the City’s charter, an
“The powers of a general law city include ‘ “only those powers expressly conferred upon it by the Legislature, together with such powers as are ‘necessarily incident to those
On this matter, the California Constitution provides only that the filing of a referendum petition stays the
Generally
Appellants and respondents submitted considerable evidence bearing on these issues. The trial court sustained appellants’ objections to respondents’ evidence, concluding that its inquiry was limited to an examination of the language of the ordinances. Respondents do
Before the trial court, appellants argued that the City Council incorporated certain elements in the Zone Ordinance in a good faith effort to address objections to the Wage Ordinance, and that it adopted the Zone Ordinance after receiving assurances that it would not be opposed. The trial court concluded that appellants’ showing did not establish that respondents’ conduct
The trial court also concluded that the City Council had acted in bad faith in approving the Zone Ordinance because it was not materially different from the Wage
In view of this conclusion, it is unnecessary for us to address appellants’ contention that Judge Janavs improperly enjoined appellant Frank Martinez from publishing the zone ordinance.
