ORDER
This matter comes before the court upon defendant’s motion for summary judgment. The court heard argument on June 28, 2013. Mark Merin appeared for plaintiffs; Krista Whitman appeared for defendant County of Sacramento. Following hearing, the court allowed brief supplemental filings, after which the matter was submitted. After considering the parties’ briefing and arguments at the hearing, the court GRANTS defendant’s motion for summary judgment.
I. BACKGROUND
On February 8, 2011, plaintiffs Sacramento County Retired Employees Association (“SCREA”), Prestwich, Rogers, Harding, Abernathy, Remson and Flores (collectively “plaintiffs”) filed a putative class action complaint against the County of Sacramento (“County”) on behalf of four subclasses
Plaintiffs allege four causes of action on behalf of themselves and their putative subclasses: 1) violation of the contract clause of Article I, Section 10 of the U.S. Constitution; 2) violation of the contract clause of Article I, Section 9 of the California Constitution; violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution; and 4) violation of the equal protection clause of Article I, Section 7 of the California Constitution. Id.
Defendant filed a motion to dismiss in lieu of an answer on April 1, 2011, arguing there was no express contract, it could not be bound by an implied contract, and it had a rational basis for treating the unionized employees differently. ECF No. 8.
On March 31, 2012,
Defendant filed its answer on April 12, 2012. ECF No. 34.
The parties have stipulated to vacating the deadline for filing a class certification motion pending resolution of the instant motion for summary judgment. ECF No. 47.
II. EVIDENTIARY ISSUES
Under Rule 56 this court may consider only admissible evidence in support of or in opposition to summary judgment. “It is well settled that only admissible evidence may be considered by the trial court in ruling on a motion for summary
A. Defendant’s Request For Judicial Notice
The County has asked the court to take judicial notice of a number of official records, including SCERS resolutions regarding the health insurance subsidies; staff reports to the Board, also on the topic of the health insurance subsidies; and the PERB decisions stemming from the County’s changes to the subsidies. Defendant’s Req. for Jud. Notice, ECF No. 44.
Under Rule 201 of the Federal Rules of Evidence, a court may take judicial notice of an adjudicative fact which “must be one not subject to reasonable dispute in that it is either (1) generally known ... (2) or capable of accurate and ready determination by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned.” Courts have taken judicial notice of a Board of Supervisors’ resolution and of administrative decisions. Merced Irrigation Dist. v. Cnty. of Mariposa,
B. Plaintiffs’ Exhibits
Plaintiffs’ counsel has submitted a number of exhibits attached to his declaration, including a copy of an article from The Sacramento Bee; a report submitted to the County by CPA Richard Green; the United States Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB) Statement 45, referenced in Mr. Green’s report; and literature issued by the County’s Department of Employee Relations and Benefits to new retirees. In addition, counsel reports on the results of questionnaires he mailed to SCREA members in an effort to determine their understanding of the nature of the health insurance subsidy.
The newspaper article plaintiffs offer is hearsay: even if the statement plaintiffs seek to admit satisfies some hearsay exception, the author of the article has not provided a declaration affirming what County Counsel Ryan said. Larez v. City of Los Angeles,
Plaintiffs counsel also attests to the results of a questionnaire he mailed to SCREA members. The results of surveys are not automatically inadmissible; criticisms of the format of the questions or the manner in which the survey was taken generally go to weight, rather than admissibility. See Fortune Dynamic, Inc. v. Victoria’s Secret Stores Brand Mgmt.,
Moreover, even though counsel said he mailed the questionnaire to all the SCREA members he could locate, he does not explain what percentage of County retirees are SCREA members. Accordingly, the fact that 85 percent of those responding believed they were entitled to a lifetime subsidy is of no weight.
III. ANALYSIS
A. Standard
A court will grant summary judgment “if ... there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” FED. R. CIV. P. 56(a). The “threshold inquiry” is whether “there are any genuine factual issues that properly can be resolved only by a finder of fact because they may reasonably be resolved in favor of either party.” Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
The moving party bears the initial burden of showing the district court “that there is an absence of evidence to support the nonmoving party’s case.” Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
In deciding a motion for summary judgment, the court draws all inferences and views all evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. Matsushita,
B. Undisputed Facts
As the admissible facts are generally undisputed, the court refers to the Coun
In 1977, the County’s Board of Retirement
In 1993, the Board of Supervisors issued a resolution that did several things, effective June 30, 1994: it adopted Government Code section 31592.4; changed the funding source for the retirees’ subsidy so it would be paid from excess earnings from the Sacramento County Employees’ Retirement System; noted this arrangement would mean that health care subsidies would remain non-taxable to retirees; and finally resolved it would make annual determinations of the level of the retiree health benefit subsidy, if any. ECF No. 48-1 ¶ 2; ECF No. 44-2 at 18-19; ECF No. 50 ¶ 13. The Board subsequently adopted governing rules for the Retiree Health Care Benefits Program. ECF No. 44-2 at 36-43. Beginning in 1994, the Board adopted a policy to govern eligibility for, and access to, health insurance plans and subsidies for the subsequent year. ECF No. 48-1 ¶ 4.
In 2003, the funding source changed from excess earnings from the SCERS system to allocated charges to County departments. ECF No. 48-1 ¶ 3; ECF No. 44-3 at 83.
In 2006, the Board made changes to the Retiree Medical and Dental Program Administrative Policy, but later rescinded the changes. ECF No. 48-1 ¶ 5.
On June 5, 2007, the Board adopted a Retiree Medical and Dental Insurance Program Administrative Policy for 2008, which provided that those who retired on or before May 31, 2007 would continue to receive the subsidy, but which eliminated the subsidy for all those retiring after May 31, 2007. ECF No. 48-1 ¶ 6; ECF No. 44-4 at 19-20, 26. This change to the policy of providing subsidies to retirees interrupted the practice that had until then been in place for 27 continuous years. ECF No. 50 ¶ 1.
Six unions filed unfair labor practice charges, challenging the County’s failure to meet and confer with union representatives before eliminating the medical and dental insurance subsidy for current employees. ECF No. 48-1 ¶ 6; ECF No. 44-5 at 10. In January 2008, an Administra
On June 10, 2008, while a final PERB decision was pending, the Board adopted its annual Retiree Health Policy for the year 2009, making no eligibility changes. On August 25, 2009, it adopted the Policy for 2010, reducing the subsidy to a maximum of $144 a month. On September 28, 2010, the Board approved the policy for 2011, this time reducing the subsidy to $80.64. ECF No. 48-1 ¶ 9.
For the last twenty years, since 1993, the Board’s Retiree Health Policies have expressly stated that the Retiree Health Program does not create any contractual, regulatory or other vested entitlement to health care benefits; since 2003, the policies also state that subsidies, if provided, are not a vested benefit. ECF No. 48-1 ¶¶ 12-13. In addition, in the years that the subsidies were approved by the Board of Retirement, the resolutions provided the payments would terminate after one year unless extended. ECF No. 48-1 ¶ 14.
In addition, pension payroll inserts mailed from 1983 to 1997 informed retirees about Board action on the subsidies, always observing that extensions of the subsidy were effective for the period of a year. Decl. of Suzanne Likarich & Ex. 45, ECF No. 43-1. From 1983 to 1986, the inserts say “[t]his extension was granted, effective [date], for a period of one year.” ECF No. 43-1 at 1-3. In 1987 and 1989, the inserts say “[t]his extension was approved for a period of one year.... ” Id. at 4-5.
SCREA itself sent periodic newsletters to its members and letters to the Board of Retirement and thereafter to the Board of Supervisors, recognizing that the subsidy “must be reapproved on an annual basis or “respectfully requesting that your Board authorize the continuance of the Health Insurance Premium Subsidy ... and give consideration to increasing the subsidy amount....” ECF No. 43-2 at 56, 62, 64.
C. First and Second Causes of Action
Defendant argues that plaintiffs cannot succeed on a claim under either the state or federal contract clauses because there was no contract between the County and its employees to provide a full health insurance subsidy to employees after their retirement. Def.’s Mem. P. & A, ECF No. 41 at 11.
Plaintiffs argue both that there is an implied contract and implied contractual term, arising from the County’s enactment of the Retiree Premium Subsidy and from “a multitude of acts,” including the County’s practice since 1980 of enacting resolutions providing the subsidy, the county’s intent to use excess earnings to provide a subsidy, the County’s adoption of Government Code section 31592.4 to permit the payment of the subsidy in conformance with the Internal Revenue Code, and the County’s adoption of task force recommendations designed to enhance the County’s ability to guarantee continued subsidies. Pis.’ Mem. P. & A., ECF No. 15 at 9, 16.
i. The Contract Clauses
The constitutions of the United States and California forbid the state from passing laws that impair the obligation of contracts. U.S. CONST. ART. I, § 10, cl. 1; CAL. CONST., ART. 1, § 9. To succeed on the Contract Clause claim, a plaintiff must show that “he or she has a contract with the state, which the state, through its legislative authority, has attempted to impair.” Univ. of Hawaii Prof'l. Assembly v. Cayetano,
The relevant body of case law begins with a suit filed in the Central District by an association of Orange County retirees, challenging that county’s decision to discontinue “pooling” the retirees with active employees to set rates for health care benefits, which ultimately led to higher premiums for the retirees. Retired Emp. Ass’n of Orange Cnty., Inc. v. County of Orange,
The retirees appealed to the Ninth Circuit, which certified the following question to the California Supreme Court: “Whether, as a matter of California law, a California county and its employees can form an implied contract that confers vested rights to health benefits on retired county employees.” See Retired Emp. Ass’n of Orange Cnty. v. County of Orange,
The California Supreme Court’s decision answering the certified question is the first of the cases cited by both parties. In that case, REAOC III, the court concluded:
Although Government Code section 25300 does require that compensation of county employees be addressed in an ordinance or resolution, the statute does not prohibit a county from forming a contract with implied terms, inasmuch as contractual rights may be implied from an ordinance or resolution when the language or circumstances accompanying its passage clearly evince a legislative intent to create private rights of a contractual nature enforceable against the county. Whether an implied term creates vested rights, in the absence of a legislative bar, is a matter of the parties’ intent.
In answering the first question, the court said that “[w]here the relationship [between the county and the employees] is governed by a contract, a county may be bound by an implied contract (or by implied terms of a written contract), as long as there is no statutory prohibition against
In the second part of its opinion, the California Supreme Court rejected the county’s argument that it was impermissible to infer vested rights
After receiving the Supreme Court’s decision, the Ninth Circuit remanded the case to the district court “for further proceedings consistent with the answer provided by the California Supreme Court.” Retired Emp. of Orange Cnty. v. County of Orange,
In another recent case, Harris v. County of Orange,
The Ninth Circuit first opined that “[i]n order to state a claim for a contractual right to the Grant, the Retirees must plead specific resolutions or ordinances establishing that right.” Id. at 1134. It said the retirees had not done so, but had asked the court to take judicial notice of a number of MOUs, two of which were accompanied by board resolutions adopting them. Id. at 1135. The Circuit found these MOUs did not help the retirees satisfy the pleading requirement because “[tjhere are no terms or provisions in the MOUs, or in the Board resolutions adopting them, that guarantee the Grant will continue as the Grant existed in the MOUs in place on the dates of retirements. Further, the referenced MOUs, including those adopted by the Board of Supervisors, contain durational language.” Id. at 1135. Typical of the durational clauses was this language: “This Memorandum of Understanding sets forth the terms of agreement reached ... for the period beginning July 23, 1993 through June 23, 1994.” Id. at 1135 n. 4.
The retirees in Harris argued that the durational terms were “merely generic statements” that should not be considered for purposes of a motion for judgment on the pleadings. The Ninth Circuit disagreed:
“the Retirees have failed to plead facts that suggest that the County promised, in the MOUs or otherwise, to maintain the Grant as it existed on the Retirees’ respective dates of retirement. The Retirees also argue that the durational clause in the MOUs is not an indication of when the terms of the MOUs expire. That may be so, but the durational clause surely cannot be the source of a claim that the benefits survive indefinitely.”
Id. at 1135. The Circuit did find that the district court should have granted the re
The Ninth Circuit returned most recently to the issue of public employee rights in Sonoma County Association of Retired Employees v. Sonoma County,
On appeal, the Circuit began by examining REAOC Ill’s resolution of the certified question and from that distilled the pleading requirements for the claim before it: the “complaint must plausibly allege that the County: (1) entered into a contract that included implied terms providing healthcare benefits that vested for perpetuity; and (2) created that contract by ordinance or resolution.” Id. at 1115.
in. Application of Law to this Case
a. Alleged Express Contract
As noted above, in the complaint, plaintiffs allege “there existed a contract between the COUNTY and its employees (now Plaintiff retirees) to provide a substantial health subsidy to its employees upon their retirement, which constituted deferred compensation during the employment relationship that vested upon retirement.” ECF No. 1 ¶¶ 50, 55 (capitalization in original). In their opposition to the motion for summary judgment, plaintiffs argue there is an implied contract arising from “a multitude of acts.” They acknowledge that the legislation effectuating the subsidy “does not itself expressly provide for indefinite entitlement to the subsidy,” but argue that implied terms can be inferred from evidence derived from experience and practice. ECF No. 48 at 10.
In their Separate Statement of Undisputed Facts, plaintiffs aver that under various contracts between the County and the County-sponsored medical plans, SCERS was required to maintain a minimum level of subsidy for the retirees’ medical coverage. ECF No. 48-2 ¶ 5. They cite to a report provided to the Board of Supervi
b. Retirement Fund Earnings
Next, plaintiffs have presented the declaration of John L. Benbow, who served on the County Board of Retirement from 1980 through 1986 and who avers that the Retirement Board would intentionally underestimate the expected earnings of the retirement fund every year, which then resulted in a surplus when compared to actual earnings, which in turn were used to fund the health insurance subsidy. ECF No. 48-8 ¶¶ 2-4. Benbow avers that he does not know when this practice was discontinued and asserts his belief that the Retirement Board’s actions reflect County policy. ECF No. 48-8 ¶ 6. Plaintiffs have presented no other evidence suggesting that this practice was in fact County policy; nor do they point to any authority that a practice admittedly discontinued at some unknown time gives rise to an implicit promise to fund the subsidy in perpetuity. Moreover, even Benbow describes this method as a matter of policy and says nothing about the Board’s ratification of the practice in ordinance or resolution. See REAOC III,
c. Legislation
Former County Executive Robert E. Smith declares he believes and believed that legislation drafted by the Retiree Health Insurance Task Force and adopted by the Board in 1991 would guarantee retirees’ access to the subsidy and provides a letter expressing that belief; he does not, however, attach the legislation he discussed in that letter. Deck of Robert E. Smith, ECF No. 48-17 ¶ 3. At argument, plaintiffs clarified that the legislation Robert E. Smith referenced was the County’s adoption of the resolution making the provisions of Government Code section 31592.4 operative in the county which, according to the report, would bring the County in compliance with IRS requirements. See ECF No. 44-2 at 2. Plaintiffs have presented nothing else showing that the County’s ultimate determination to make Government Code section 31592.4 operative and Task Force’s examination of ways to fund the premium subsidy “if any” translates to a contractual promise to fund the subsidy in perpetuity. ECF No. 44-2 at 18. Indeed, the Resolution adopting the
Gary Cassady was a member of the Retiree Health Insurance Task Force, which contracted with a consulting group to provide twenty-year cost estimates for retiree health plans. The task force also prepared legislation, which the Board enacted in 1993, effective 1994. Deck of Gary Cassady, ECF No. 48-9 ¶¶2, 4, 6. Although Cassady says he believed that the legislation “would effectively guarantee” the subsidy because it would be drawn from a more stable funding source, the legislation itself says that the Board and its retirement system deem it necessary to comply with federal tax law and “intend to provide the benefits established hereunder without creating any contractual, regulatory or other vested entitlement thereto in present or future retirees, their spouses or dependants.” Compare ECF No. 48-9 ¶ 5 with ECF No. 48-11 at 5. As noted, the resolutions adopted in the wake of this report explicitly deny any intent to create a vested benefit. Mr. Cassady’s declaration does not establish a disputed issue of fact. See Virtusio v. Fina. Indus. Reg. Auth., No. 12-cv-00602 NC,
d. GASB Provisions
In 2006, the County sought the opinion of CPA Richard Green about the impact of Government Account Standards Board (“GASB”) provisions on the retiree health insurance program. Deck of Mark Merin, ECF No. 48-3 ¶ 3. Plaintiffs’ counsel quotes selectively from Mr. Green’s analysis to suggest that the GASB accounting requirements imposed an obligation on the county. In the introduction to the report, however, Green said, “[b]ecause funding the Program requires annual authorization from the County Board of Supervisors and there are no vested benefits associated with the Program nor have the County management made any guarantees or promises to continue the Program, we believe the County does not have a legal obligation to continue the Program.” ECF No. 48-5 at 2. Green concluded that for purposes of accounting and financial statement reporting, the plan exists as a mutual understanding between the County and the retirees. Id. at 3. Even this latter conclusion does not raise a disputed issue of fact as to the County’s intent, as there is no indication in the evidence that Green was authorized to speak for the County. See City of San Diego v. Haas,
e. Retiree Declarations
Plaintiffs have also offered declarations from retirees, who say that they were assured that the subsidy would become vest
f. Recruitment
In addition, Robert T. Smith, who was employed by the County Health Department, notes that it was difficult to recruit medical personnel because of the County’s low salaries and that the subsidy was used as a recruiting tool. Decl. of Robert T. Smith, ECF No. 48-19 ¶¶2-4.
g. Implied Promise
None of the evidence reviewed above creates a disputed issue of material fact on the question whether the County created a contract that provided the subsidy to retirees with an implied term that the subsidy was vested in perpetuity. The undisputed evidence shows that although the Board consistently ordered the subsidy to be paid over a period of time, it did so by adopting a policy, not a MOU or other contract. See REAOC III,
Plaintiffs argue that in Sonoma County, the Ninth Circuit rejected Harris when, as here, a plaintiff relied on implied in fact contract rights. Plaintiffs read Sonoma County in too limited a fashion. In discussing Harris, the Ninth Circuit recognized that “the express terms of the MOUs and resolutions at issue do not establish a specific end date to healthcare benefits, and the Association alleges that the right to healthcare benefits in perpetuity is an implied term of a contract, not an express contractual right.” Sonoma Cnty.,
h. Collective Bargaining
At hearing, plaintiffs argued that the subsidy is a mandatory subject of bargaining. Under California Government Code section 3505, “[t]he governing body of a public agency ... shall meet and confer in good faith regarding wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment with representatives of such recognized employee organizations ... and shall consider fully such presentations as are made by the employee organization ... prior to arriving at a determination of policy or course of action.” See Coachella Valley Mosquito & Vector Control Dist. v. California Public Emp’t. Relations Bd.,
Defendant is entitled to summary judgment on the first and second causes of action.
D. Third and Fourth Causes of Action
Section one of the Fourteenth Amendment provides that no state shall “deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” U.S. CONST, amend. XIV, § 1. Section 7(a) of Article I of the California Constitution provides: “A person may not be ... denied equal protection of the laws.... ” CAL. CONST, art. I, § 7(a). “California courts read the rationality review component [of] the Equal Protection clause contained in Article I, section 7, of the California Constitution as ‘coextensive with its federal counterpart.’ ” Katz v. Children’s Hosp.,
States may “treat different classes of persons in different ways”; however, classifications “must be reasonable, not arbitrary, and must rest upon some ground of difference having a fair and substantial relation to the object of the legislation, so that all persons similarly circumstanced shall be treated alike.” Reed v. Reed,
Here, rational basis scrutiny applies. Nordlinger v. Hahn,
Defendant here argues that the employees covered by the PERB decisions are not similarly situated to the non-unionized employees because the latter group of retirees are former members of unions that challenged the change in benefits and
In the Eleventh Circuit ease of Marshall v. Western Grain Co., Inc.,
[t]he plaintiffs ... seek the opportunity to demonstrate that the defendants were motivated by race ... in making payment of severance benefits, not by the collective bargaining agreement.... Although plaintiffs may be able to show that the employer gave to non-bargaining unit members all of the tangible benefits that were given to bargaining unit members, ... they will not be able to show that the employer’s decisions regarding non-bargaining unit members were restricted by the many intangible considerations inherent in collective bargaining.
Id. at 1171 (emphasis in original); see also Davis v. Ineos ABS (USA) Corp., Civil Case No. 09-773 JGW,
Plaintiffs argue that Marshall is not persuasive, as the Eleventh Circuit distinguished it in National Labor Relations Board, v. United States Postal Service.,
This court thus finds Marshall to have some persuasive force, as long as its pronouncement, that “bargaining unit employees are never similarly situated with non-bargaining unit employees,” is not read as a blanket statement that applies without respect to the facts of a given case. In California, under the Meyers-MiliasBrown Act (“MMBA”), the County has a duty to bargain with employees’ unions before changing wage or working conditions: “ ‘The duty to bargain requires the public agency to refrain from making unilateral changes in employees’ wages and working conditions until the employer and employee association have bargained to impasse....’” Coachella Valley,
While one putative sub-class in this case consists of unionized employees whose unions pursued the action before PERB, both equal protection claims as pled compare the employees whose subsidy was reinstated because of the PERB action to those who did not appear before PERB. The one subclass cannot claim they were denied their right to equal protection given the way the issue is framed in the complaint.
Even if the non-unionized employees were similarly situated, plaintiffs still have not rebutted the County’s showing that the disparate treatment had a rational basis. Under that highly deferential level of review, the County “has no obligation to produce evidence to sustain the rationality of a statutory classification,” because “[t]he burden is on the one attacking the legislative enactment to negative every conceivable basis that might support it.” Heller v. Doe,
Plaintiffs argue generally that the distinction between union and non-union employees was not rational because PERB ordered the County to make all the employees affected by the change whole. ECF No. 48 at 23. This argument is puzzling, for it suggests, without any citation to authority, that the non-unionized employees were somehow in privity with the union members or that PERB had the authority to issue sweeping orders unconstrained by the unfair labor practice before it.
The California Legislature created PERB “to adjudicate unfair labor practice charges: ‘[t]he initial determination as to
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that defendant's motion for summary judgment (ECF No. 40) is GRANTED and this case is CLOSED.
Notes
. Subclass one consists of "[r]etirees who retired before June 1, 2007, and who were not represented by a union before the PERB who are currently receiving a maximum health insurance subsidy off-set of' $80.64 each month.” Compl., ECF No. 1 ¶ 8. Subclass two consists of "[r]etirees who were informed in 2007 that they would need to retire on or before May 31, 2007, in order to be eligible to receive the health insurance subsidy and who did retire prior to June 1, 2007, with the intent to remain eligible for the health insurance subsidy for the duration of their retirement who are now receiving a maximum medical insurance premium off-set for $80.64 each month.” Id. Subclass three consists of "[rjetirees who retired after May 31, 2007, who were not represented by a union before the PERB and who are currently receiving no health or dental insurance subsidy off-set as a result of the changes enacted by the Sacramento County Board of Supervisors.” Id. Subclass four consists of "[rjetirees who were represented by a union before the PERB who are receiving a maximum medical insurance subsidy of $244 each month with an additional $25 subsidy for dental insurance premiums plus 7% interest as a result of the PERB ruling.” Id.
. For a discussion of the relevant series of REAOC cases, see pages 1158-61 below.
. Rule 56 was amended, effective December 1, 2010. However, it is appropriate to rely on cases decided before the amendment took effect, as “[t]he standard for granting summary judgment remains unchanged.” FED. R. CIV. P. 56, Notes of Advisory Comm, on 2010 amendments.
. A county’s Retirement Board is an administrative agency, created by the County Employees Retirement Law of 1937, which is independent from the county itself and which manages a county employee retirement system. Bd. of Retirement of the Kern Cnty. Emp. Retirement Ass'n v. Bellino,
. Plaintiffs dispute this fact, noting that the inserts say that the subsidy is provided subject to annual review by the Board, "the understanding being that the amount of the subsidy might change depending upon the cost of the insurance premiums and the availability of funds for the subsidy.” ECF No. 48-1 ¶ 15. The court quotes directly from representative inserts, finding their language undisputed. To the extent plaintiffs ask the court to draw a particular inference, they have not cited to any evidence supporting the claimed inference and the court thus disregards their claimed dispute. Palila v. Hawaii Dept, of Land & Natural Res.,
. As the County does not argue that there cannot be an implied vested right to health care, this court does not discuss the third part of the California Supreme Court's analysis, answering whether any such implied vested contractual rights can include health benefits.
. A vested right is one that is "already possessed or legitimately acquired,” generally after a person "has rendered services” in reliance on another's representations. Contractual rights arise from the parties’ bargain or are implied by their conduct. Hanford Exec. Mgmt. Emp. Ass’n.,
. The Circuit in the decision cited here addresses only two of the REAOC cases; the decision refers to the Supreme Court decision identified in this order as REAOC III as REAOC II, and to the Circuit’s 2010 decision identified here as REAOC II, as REAOC I.
. The court disregards Robert T. Smith’s statement that employees detrimentally relied on the idea that the subsidy was vested and so did not transfer to jobs with better retirement health benefits. To the extent the statement is within Mr. Smith’s personal knowledge, it is based on hearsay.
. At argument plaintiffs’ counsel asserted that every time the county approved an MOU including the subsidy, this was an implied understanding of the contractual obligation. Plaintiffs have presented no evidence of any MOUs the County adopted, with or without the subsidy. Plaintiffs also claimed that the yearly Resolutions adopting the retirees’ subsidy were probably simply boilerplate, adopted with little thought but have again provided no evidence supporting this claim.
. Plaintiffs also cite to two California federal district court cases they say suggest Marshall is unpersuasive within the Ninth Circuit. See ECF 53 at 2. The court has reviewed both cases, which declined to follow certain other cases relied on in Marshall; those courts’ determinations, however, were based on factual distinctions evident in determining whether or not to certify a class and do not signal that Marshall runs afoul of any established Ninth Circuit precedent. See California State Employees’ Ass’n v. California,
