FREAR STEPHEN SCHMID et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, v. CITY AND COUNTY OF SAN FRANCISCO et al., Defendants and Respondents.
A158861
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT DIVISION FOUR
Filed 2/1/21
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION; (City & County of San Francisco Super. Ct. No. CGC-18-571283)
The story is bracing as history, and deservedly remembered as a cautionary tale, but has nothing to do with the law we are asked to apply in this case, or the facts. The dispute we deal with here is a local version of the controversies over removal of commemorative symbols, generally names and statues of historical figures, that have played out across the country recently. Centrally at issue is an administrative decision made by the San Francisco Board of Appeals (the Board of Appeals or the Board) authorizing the removal of a bronze sculpture known as “Early Days,” which was originally part of a Civic Center monument to the pioneer period of California (the Pioneer Monument).
Appellants Schmid and Briggs, two opponents of the removal, sued the City and County of San Francisco (the City) and affiliated defendants asserting a potpourri of claims, including a claim for violation of their civil rights under the Tom Bane Civil Rights Act (
After the trial court sustained a demurrer without leave to amend, Schmid and Briggs appealed. We conclude the appeal has no merit and shall affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
A. Factual Backdrop and Administrative Proceedings1
Those who frequent the Civic Center area of San Francisco may recall that, adjacent to United Nations Plaza, sited in direct linear alignment with City Hall, there is a bronze statuary monument commemorating the era in which the state of California was founded. Part of a bequest left to the City by the James Lick Trust in 1876, the Pioneer Monument depicts this history in a series of vignettes. It seeks to honor the civic generosity of James Lick and other leading members of the pioneer generation, a group popularly known as the “forty-niners.” When installed and dedicated in 1894 to commemorate the 44th Anniversary of the admission of California to the Union, the Pioneer Monument was originally placed on Market Street near the corner of Grove and Hyde Streets. Designed by the German sculptor Frank Happersberger, it included five groups of iconic figures, one of which was titled “Early Days.”
the day, Willard B. Farwell, described “Early Days” in similar terms. He said it depicted “[t]he padre, fired with zeal and love of holy Church, lifting with tender care the savage from his low estate to walk the pathway of the Christian faith.”2
Public criticism of “Early Days” for displaying a racist attitude toward Native Americans ultimately led to its removal in 2018, but when installed in 1894 the Pioneer Monument was controversial for a different reason. Many pioneers—Lick among them—amassed vast fortunes in the mining and railroad industries and eventually became notable philanthropists.3 But their place in California history and culture was sharply contested in the 1890‘s, when the dedication ceremony took place. In a series of newspaper articles published shortly before the ceremony, several leading clerics were
quoted describing the pioneers as godless, amoral, prone to criminality, and unworthy of commemoration. While lavishing praise on Lick for his many civic contributions, Farwell devoted much of his nearly 10,000-word address to a rebuttal of these “reckless pulpit utterances.”4
Twenty-five years later, charges of racial insensitivity surfaced again, but this time the City acted on them. In December 2017, the Arts Commission applied to the San Francisco Planning Department (Planning Department) for the COA, which it requested on the following terms: It sought authority for the “[r]emoval of the ‘Early Days’ bronze sculptural grouping, which is one out of five existing bronze sculptures on the Pioneer Monument. The sculpture will be removed and prepared for storage by conservation professionals. Storage will occur at an off-site location that provides adequate protection of the sculpture from physical and environmental damage or deterioration.” The COA required that the removal work take place pursuant to permits issued by the San Francisco Department of Building Inspection or other appropriate agencies.
Because the Pioneer Monument is located within a landmarked historic district, the first step in the administrative process took place before the HPC. At a public hearing on February 21, 2018, on the application of the Arts Commission, the HPC took up a motion for issuance of the COA. There is no evidence that anyone at the hearing raised an issue about a perceived need for environmental review. Concurring with the Planning Department‘s staff-level determination that the proposed removal of “Early Days” is categorically exempt from environmental review, the HPC adopted the motion, granting the COA on the terms set forth in the application before the Planning Department and adding some conditions, most pertinently here that “a plaque shall be installed at the site of the Early Days sculpture to explain its removal.” Two weeks later, on March 5, 2018, the Arts Commission passed a resolution authorizing the removal and placement in storage of “Early Days” on the conditions set by the COA, as adopted by the HPC.
Once the COA was finally approved, the City acted immediately to implement it in accordance with the Arts Commission‘s resolution. The removal of “Early Days” took place in the pre-dawn hours of September 14, 2018, when a crew of workers arrived at the site of the Pioneer Monument and removed “Early Days” from its granite base, leaving the other four sculptures intact. “Early Days” was then placed in storage, where it now resides.
B. Complaint, Demurrer and Ruling on Demurrer
Schmid, an attorney, alleges that he is a lifelong resident and taxpayer of the City with an abiding interest in the City‘s civic history. After the removal of “Early Days,” he joined forces with Briggs, who alleges that she too is a San Francisco taxpayer, and together they brought suit in San Francisco Superior Court seeking to overturn the order of the Board of Appeals authorizing removal of “Early Days.”
Pointing to what they claim is “illegal conduct” in approving and carrying out the removal of “Early Days,” Schmid and Briggs named as defendants (1) the City, (2) Tom DeCaigny, the Arts Commission‘s director of cultural affairs at the time of the removal, (3) Scott Atthowe, the contractor who carried out the removal, and (4) Atthowe‘s company, ARG Conservation Services, Inc.5 In their prayer for relief, Schmid and Briggs sought, among other things, an order requiring the restoration of “Early Days” to its original place within the Pioneer Monument.
The operative first amended complaint states four causes of action. First, Schmid and Briggs allege that the City Defendants and the ARG Defendants
Attacking the claims against them by demurrer, the City Defendants and the ARG Defendants argued that neither the form nor substance of any of the four causes of action alleged in the first amended complaint states a viable cause of action. The trial court agreed, sustained the demurrer in its
entirety, and ordered the action dismissed with prejudice, after finding that Schmid and Briggs would likely be unable to cure the defects in their claims. This appeal followed.
II. DISCUSSION
Except for the second cause of action seeking writ relief, which calls for a multi-level standard of review on appeal, as we explain in more detail below (see pt. II.B.1., post), our primary standard of appellate review here is as follows: “We review a trial court‘s ruling on demurrer de novo [citation], giving ‘the complaint a reasonable interpretation, reading it as a whole and viewing its parts in context. [Citations.] We deem to be true all material facts properly pled. [Citation.] We must also accept as true those facts that may be implied or inferred from those expressly alleged.‘” (Mahan v. Charles W. Chan Ins. Agency, Inc. (2017) 14 Cal.App.5th 841, 847.) Bare conclusions devoid of any supporting facts, however, are insufficient to withstand demurrer. (Faulkner v. California Toll Bridge Authority (1953) 40 Cal.2d 317, 329.) And we review the denial of leave to amend following a dismissal on demurrer for abuse of discretion. (Aubrey v. Tri-City Hospital Dist. (1992) 2 Cal.4th 962, 971.)
A. Bane Act Claim
The first cause of action for violation of civil rights alleges that the City Defendants and the ARG Defendants violated the Bane Act by “altering, destroying, desecrating, physically defacing, and mutilating . . . Early Days.” Their theory is that, by blocking “access to fine art and a dedicated public historic resource in a public forum,” the City Defendants and the ARG Defendants infringed their First-Amendment-protected ability to “discuss, appreciate, contemplate, engage and interpret a dedicated piece of fine art”
The trial court correctly ruled that appellants failed to allege facts constituting a cognizable claim under the Bane Act. (
Subdivision (b) of the Bane Act provides, ” ‘If a person or persons, whether or not acting under color of law, interferes by threat, intimidation, or coercion, or attempts to interfere by threat, intimidation, or coercion, with the exercise or enjoyment by any individual or individuals of rights secured by the Constitution or laws of the United States, or of the rights secured by the Constitution or laws of this state, the Attorney General, or any district attorney or city attorney may bring a civil action for injunctive and other appropriate equitable relief in the name of the people of the State of California, in order to protect the peaceable exercise or enjoyment of the right or rights secured.’ ” (Cornell v. City and County of San Francisco (2017) 17 Cal.App.5th 766, 791 (Cornell) [referencing former
” ’ “The essence of a Bane Act claim is that the defendant, by the specified improper means (i.e., ‘threats, intimidation or coercion‘), tried to or did prevent the plaintiff from doing something he or she had the right to do under the law or to force the plaintiff to do something that he or she was not required to do under the law.” ’ ” (Cornell, supra, 17 Cal.App.5th at pp. 791–792.) Assuming without deciding that appellants have adequately alleged the violation of rights amenable to Bane Act enforcement, nowhere does the first amended complaint allege anything that might reasonably be construed as “threats, intimidation or coercion” to violate those rights.
B. Claims for Writ Relief
In the second cause of action for writ relief, Schmid is the sole named plaintiff and the City and DeCaigny are the only named defendants. This claim is alleged in a grab-bag style that is hardly a model of clarity, but we discern two main aspects to it. First, and primarily, Schmid alleges that, on September 13, 2018, “[the City], acting through and by its Board of Appeal[s] issued its final administrative order denying plaintiff‘s appeal.” Second, Schmid alleges that, on September 14, “in a pre-dawn action, [the City] forcefully and by violent means removed the Early Days, desecrating, mutilating and altering it and the Pioneer Monument in the process, and asportated it to and hid it at a secret location.” He alleges that both of these administrative actions—first, the final adjudication affirming the grant of the COA, and second, the implementation of that final administrative decision—were “invalid” and constituted “abuses of authority.”
1. Applicable Standards of Review
”
The scope of the trial court‘s review of administrative decisionmaking under this standard depends on whether the decision under review substantially affects a fundamental vested right: “Where the public agency‘s decision affects a fundamental vested right, the trial court exercises independent judgment in assessing whether the evidence is sufficient to support the agency‘s findings. [Citations.] In such cases, the court conducts a limited trial de novo and ‘abuse of discretion is established if the court determines that the findings are not supported by the weight of the evidence.’ (
On appeal, we too conduct an independent review of the record where a vested right is at stake, but ” [w]hen the standard of review is the substantial evidence test . . . it is presumed that the findings and actions of the administrative agency were supported by substantial evidence. [Citations.] Thus, since the same standard of review applies . . . on appeal as [it] did in the trial court, the burden is on appellant to show there is no substantial evidence whatsoever to support the findings of the Board.’ ” (Young, supra, 10 Cal.App.5th at p. 419.) “Finally, our review is not designed to rectify an imprudent decision by an administrative agency. Administrative mandamus is not to be used to control the discretion of an administrative body, but only to ensure that it was not abused. (See
We evaluate the
2. Claim for Writ Relief Under Code of Civil Procedure Section 1094.5
The trial court correctly rejected Schmid‘s demand for writ relief insofar as he sought a writ of administrative mandamus under
Schmid alleges nothing to support his conclusory allegations that the Board of Appeals acted in excess of its authority or abused its discretion. On the administrative record presented here, the City has demonstrated that section 5.103 of the Charter of the City and County of San Francisco (Charter) authorizes the Arts Commission to “[a]pprove the design and location of all works of art before they are acquired, transferred or sold by the City and County, or are placed upon or removed from City and County property, or are altered in any way.” Similarly, section 4.135 of the Charter confers jurisdiction on the HPC to “approve, disapprove, or modify certificates of appropriateness for work to designated landmarks or within historic districts.” The Board of Appeals, in turn, may uphold or overturn such certificates following a public hearing. (Charter §§ 4.106(b), (d), 4.135.)
Pursuant to the jurisdiction conferred by the Charter, the HPC held a hearing, took evidence, and made a considered decision to issue the COA that was ultimately upheld by the Board of Appeals. The administrative record before the Board of Appeals includes an opinion from the City Attorney that there were no legal impediments to the removal and placement in storage of “Early Days,” together with staff reports analyzing the reasons for removal and its impact on the Civic Center Landmark District as a whole. These staff reports noted “significant” public comment in support of removal, and only “minor” public comment opposing it.) They also took note of the receipt of opinions from knowledgeable professionals (including from multiple scholars
The HPC‘s decision granting the COA, which is incorporated by reference in the first amended complaint, expressly states that its findings are based on consideration of “case reports, plans, and other materials . . . contained in the [Planning] Department‘s case files, . . . testimony and . . . materials from interested parties [received] during the public hearing on the [removal] Project.” Reciting a series of legal conclusions, the first amended complaint alleges that the HPC‘s findings were “nothing but a transparent cloak and subterfuge.” But it offers nothing to overcome the substantial record evidence supporting the COA.7 As pleaded, therefore, the dismissal of
the second cause of action must be affirmed. (Faulkner v. California Toll Bridge Authority, supra, 40 Cal.2d at p. 329 [” [a]llegations that the acts of a commission or board were ‘arbitrary, capricious, fraudulent, wrongful and unlawful,’ like other adjectival descriptions of such proceedings, constitute mere conclusions of law which are not to be deemed admitted by a demurrer“].)
a. Discriminatory Animus
Lacking any basis for a substantial evidence challenge to the Board of Appeal‘s September 12, 2018 decision, Schmid invites us to employ a de novo standard of review based on his assertion that the Board‘s decision to affirm the HPC‘s issuance of the COA was incorrect as a matter of law. We reject that line of attack as well. The most prominent theme in the many legal arguments Schmid puts forth is that the Board‘s decision to uphold the COA discriminated against him, both ethnically as someone of European heritage and based on his views. His premise is that the Board had no authority to engage in invidious discrimination, an unexceptional proposition in the abstract but not one that is supported by specifics alleged in the operative complaint. Schmid insists that he pleaded enough to survive a demurrer,
In the sole case Schmid relies upon for his argument that the Board of Appeals was motivated by discriminatory animus, Masterpiece Cakeshop, Ltd. v. Colo. Civil Rights Comm‘n (2018) 584 U.S. ___ [138 S.Ct. 1719], a member of the Colorado Civil Rights Commission made some comments that showed religious hostility and bias toward a party before it. (Id. at p. 1729.) That did not happen here. No member of the Board of Appeals made any such comments. Nor does Schmid offer any specific facts establishing that the Board‘s decision was in excess of the jurisdiction granted under City law, or that it lacked substantial evidence supporting a decision in favor of the COA. Despite Schmid‘s vigorous opposition, the Board of Appeals had discretion to approve the issuance of the COA so long as its decision was supported by substantial evidence, which this decision was.8
b. Violation of the California Arts Preservation Act
In addition to alleging discriminatory animus, Schmid claims that the approval of a COA by the Board of Appeals authorizing removal of “Early Days” violated his “right to the preservation of fine art.” As support for this alleged right, Schmid cites
45 Cal.App.4th 525, 528–530.) Under
Schmid‘s theory seems to be that any member of the public, on behalf of an artist who created a work of public art, has standing to enforce
c. Violation of Federal Historic Preservation Standards
Schmid next alleges that the City, acting through the Board of Appeals, has “violated federal law (inter alia
Though Schmid only generally alleges the violation of “federal law and guidelines . . . in reference to historic resources” that he has in mind, the HPC, in fact, made a series of findings, citing to specific federal guidelines, in granting the COA. Among other things, the HPC specifically found that (1) “While this project would cause a reduction in the number of bronze sculptural figures on public display as part of the Pioneer Monument, it would not materially alter the character defining features or spatial relationships of the” Civic Center Landmark District; (2) “Historic features, materials
integrity of the site and the surrounding district would remain intact.” And based on these findings, citing Standards 1–3 and 5–10 of the Secretary of Interior‘s Standards for Rehabilitation, the HPC determined that the proposed removal project was consistent with federal law. Schmid omits any discussion of these specific findings and makes no attempt to explain why the overall legal conclusion the HPC drew from them is wrong.
Instead, arguing at a broad level of generality, Schmid suggests that since the COA authorized the removal of “Early Days,” the COA is necessarily a violation of the Secretary of the Interior‘s guidelines because removal is the antithesis of preservation. “It is self-evident from the name Historic Preservation Commission,” he argues, “that it abused its discretion when it failed to preserve, but rather acted to desecrate and materially alter the oldest historic element of the Civic Center Historic District—the Pioneer Monument.” Simple as it seems, the syllogism is incorrect. In the discretionary judgment of the HPC, as upheld by the Board of Appeals, this alteration did not materially detract from the character of the Civic Center Landmark District as a whole. Schmid may disagree, and he may disagree vehemently, but his disagreement is with the Board‘s exercise of discretion, not with a failure to abide by applicable law. We therefore reject his claim that the Board‘s decision to uphold the COA was an abuse of discretion on the ground that it violated federal law.
d. Public Nuisance
Another component of Schmid‘s demand for writ relief under
Schmid‘s attempt to invoke the public nuisance doctrine fails because he does not allege any of the following: (1) that the City, by acting or failing to
e. Violation of the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA)10
The first amended complaint alleges that the City, through the Board of Appeals, “failed its obligation to adhere to CEQA protection for historic resources by refusing to require an [environmental impact report].” (See
The trial court correctly concluded that these allegations state no cognizable claim under CEQA because Schmid did not appeal to the Board of Supervisors the determination by the HPC that the removal of the statue is categorically exempt from environmental review, as required to exhaust administrative remedies under CEQA. (
These two statutory prerequisites may be overlooked, however, if notice of the hearing was defective. (
So far as we have been able to discern from the record, however, Schmid is correct that there was no notice in advance of the February 21 meeting that a categorical exemption from plenary CEQA review might be on the agenda. That implicates our holding in Defend Our Waterfront, supra, 240 Cal.App.4th 570, a case cited by neither party. At issue there was the adequacy of notice for purposes of
But Defend Our Waterfront does not fully resolve the exhaustion issue presented here. A defective HPC hearing notice only relieves Schmid from the requirements of
Schmid ignored these administrative review requirements and presented his CEQA objections only to the Board of Appeals, which had no jurisdiction over a CEQA appeal. In so doing, he failed to exhaust administrative remedies and sacrificed his right to bring a CEQA cause of action. (See Tahoe Vista, supra, 81 Cal.App.4th at pp. 589–594.) Although Schmid did not attend the HPC public hearing, the HPC‘s approval of the COA, and its approval of the CEQA categorical exemption, were appealable within 30 days. (
Finally, Schmid advances the argument that even if the City‘s requirement that he appeal to the Board of Supervisors is valid, he had no obligation to comply because, in light of a resolution passed by the Board of Supervisors in May 2018 agreeing with the HPC‘s issuance of the COA and the Arts Commission‘s COA implementation resolution, such an appeal would have been futile. We are not persuaded. To begin with, while in his opening brief Schmid quotes from a May 2018 Board of Supervisors resolution, the resolution is not in the record. But assuming arguendo such a resolution did issue and is properly subject to judicial notice, the fact the Board of Supervisors agreed as a policy matter with the issuance of the COA says nothing definitive about its views of the appropriateness of a categorical exemption under CEQA. Even if the Board of Supervisors agreed on the merits that “Early Days” should be removed, it may have disagreed as a process matter with the HPC‘s use of a categorical exemption, since, as an elected body, it might have opted for the more robust, and more publicly transparent procedure of requiring an environmental impact report before going forward with the removal. But because the Board of Supervisors was never presented with reasoned arguments addressing the appropriateness of a categorical exemption, we can only speculate about what it would have done. We conclude, therefore, that having failed to appeal the HPC‘s approval of a CEQA categorical exemption to the Board of Supervisors in September 2018 or at any time, Schmid failed to exhaust his administrative remedies.
f. Violation of Trust Duties
In addition to the foregoing claims of discriminatory animus, violation of state and federal statutory law governing preservation of historic resources, creation of a public nuisance, and violation of CEQA, Schmid relies on two theories that the Board‘s decision to uphold the COA violated trust duties. First, he advances an imaginative but flawed claim based on the public trust doctrine. “While the public trust doctrine has evolved primarily around the rights of the public with respect to tidelands and navigable waters, the doctrine is not so limited.’ [Citation.] More than ‘a set of rules about tidelands,’ ’ or ‘a restraint on alienation by the government,’ ’ this doctrine functions ‘largely as a public property right of access to certain public trust natural resources for various public purposes.’ [Citation.]’ [Citation.] Thus, the doctrine protects ‘expansive public use of trust property.’ [Citation.] [[] The range of public trust uses is broad, encompassing not just navigation, commerce, and fishing, but also the public right to hunt, bathe or swim.” ( San Francisco Baykeeper, Inc. v. State Lands Com. (2015) 242 Cal.App.4th 202, 233.) Broad as it is, no court has ever held that this wide range of protected uses extends to viewing public art. We decline to be the first. While we have no doubt that public art is a valuable resource that should be available to all members of the public, it is not a natural resource.
Second, in an attempt to found his legal claim to
3. Claim for Writ Relief under Code of Civil Procedure Section 1085
An additional basis for his demand for writ relief, pleaded in support of a claim for a traditional writ of mandate under
Beyond failure to install the plaque, it is unclear precisely what ministerial duty Schmid sought to enforce. In fact, he expressly sought to prevent installation of the plaque pending preparation of an environmental impact report. “Early Days” has been removed and placed in storage. Clearly, he seeks the reversal of that action—the restoration of “Early Days to [its original place within] the Pioneer Monument“—but as the trial court correctly concluded, “the [Arts Commission] had discretion to remove the statue based on racism and the Court may not interfere with its decision.” The removal work having been completed months before this action was filed, Schmid‘s complaint about violation of permit conditions presented no live controversy that the trial court could have cured, even had such a violation been properly alleged. (In re N.S. (2016) 245 Cal.App.4th 53, 58 [“As a general rule, it is a court‘s duty to decide ’ ” ‘actual controversies by a judgment which can be carried into effect, and not to give opinions upon moot questions or abstract propositions, or to declare principles or rules of law which cannot affect the matter in issue in the case before it.’ ” ’ “].)
C. Claim for Waste of Public Funds
In the third cause of action, Briggs alleges DeCaigny illegally used $150,000 of City funds to remove and store the statue, thereby giving rise to a claim under
A claim under this statute does not lie to attack exercises of administrative discretion and may not be employed to interfere with policymaking. (San Bernardino County v. Superior Court (2015) 239 Cal.App.4th 679, 686 [” ‘[T]axpayer suits are authorized only if the government body has a duty to act and has refused to do so. If it has discretion and chooses not to act, the courts may not interfere with that decision.’ “]; Humane Soc‘y of the United States v. State Bd. of Equalization (2007) 152 Cal.App.4th 349, 356 [“[S]ection 526a has its limits. In particular, the courts have stressed that the statute should not be applied to principally ‘political’ issues or issues involving the exercise of the discretion of either the legislative or executive branches of government.“].)
DeCaigny, as the Arts Commission‘s director of cultural affairs at the time of the removal, wielded the executive discretion to remove works of art that did not fit the Commission‘s vision, per rule 7.3.3 of the Policies and Guidelines for the Civic Art Collection of the City and County of San Francisco. He acted within his discretionary limits as Arts Commission director of cultural affairs when removing the statue, and cannot be sued under
D. Claim for Declaratory Relief
This brings us to the fourth cause of action, the claim for declaratory relief. Schmid and Briggs seek a declaration invalidating the removal of “Early Days” and ordering it returned to its location within the Pioneer Monument, effectively restoring the monument to its original condition. Because this claim adds nothing of substance to the first three pleaded claims other than a demand for a specific form of relief, it fails for the same reasons the preceding three claims fail. In the absence of an actual controversy upon which the court could rule, the demurrer to the fourth cause of action for declaratory relief was properly sustained.
E. Dismissal Without Leave To Amend
Finally, Schmid and Briggs contend the trial court abused its discretion by refusing to grant them leave to amend the first amended complaint to cure the defects for which dismissal was ordered. We think not. Failure to grant leave to amend constitutes an abuse of discretion only if there is a reasonable possibility that the defect can be cured by amendment. (Aubrey v. Tri-City Hospital District, supra, 2 Cal.4th at p. 971.)
Schmid and Briggs contend that, even if their attempt to plead a Bane Act claim fails, the first amended complaint, in substance, alleges a viable claim under
We do not see how. Putting to one side the fact that there appears to be no basis to charge the ARG Defendants with acting under color of law, the fundamental stumbling block to a section 1983 claim against any of the defendants named in this case is that Schmid and Briggs cannot demonstrate they have a viable basis to claim there was a deprivation of federally protected rights. They insist that “the COA and [Arts Commission] Resolution were ethnically and racially motivated in favor of one racial/ethnic group, Native Americans[,] . . . served substantially to suppress freedom of thought, freedom of artistic expression, and freedom of speech[,] and served to discriminate in favor of certain preferred speech over [that of] others.’ ” But as we noted above in addressing appellants’ allegation of discriminatory animus as a basis for writ relief, these charges of racially discriminatory motivation are conclusory and devoid of any specifics that may be attributed to an actual decision maker in the chain of administrative decisionmaking under review. As a result, they are not enough to overcome the presumption of good faith we normally give to official action. (See County of Los Angeles v. Superior Court (1975) 13 Cal.3d 721, 727 [” ’ “The decisions of this court from the beginning lend no support whatever to the assumption that the judiciary may restrain the exercise of lawful power on the assumption that a wrongful purpose or motive has caused the power to be exerted.” ’ “].)
To the extent the HPC chose to exercise its discretion in a manner Schmid and Briggs feel disfavors one group of people or one point of view over another, we need only state the obvious: Governing requires policy choices to be made. And in carrying out those choices, government must speak—and the First Amendment does not constrain what it says. It is settled law that “state action that generates or constitutes government speech, rather than private speech, is regarded as outside the purview of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution.” (Delano Farms Co. v. California Table Grape Com. (2018) 4 Cal.5th 1204, 1222.) “When government speaks, it is not barred by the Free Speech Clause from determining the content of what it says. [Citation.] That freedom in part reflects the fact that it is the democratic electoral process that first and foremost provides a check on government speech. . . . [¶] Were the Free Speech Clause interpreted otherwise, government would not work.” (Walker v. Texas Div., Sons of Confederate Veterans, Inc. (2015) 576 U.S. 200, 207.)
If added to the complaint by amendment, Schmid and Briggs argued, the above facts would provide a basis to demonstrate concerted activity by the City Defendants and the ARG Defendants and shared intent among all defendants to deprive them of their constitutional rights. The trial court was unpersuaded, as are we. Based on repeated insistence by Schmid and Briggs that they had already alleged enough to support the pleaded claims, the trial court concluded that this evidentiary proffer would have added nothing materially new to the first amended complaint. In denying leave to amend to add these factual allegations, or to include the section 1983 theory appellants contend they had already stated implicitly but wished to add expressly, we cannot say the court abused its discretion.
III. CONCLUSION AND DISPOSITION
There is considerable irony to the effort Schmid and Briggs have made here to transform what is, at its core, a matter of cultural grievance into a claim of viewpoint discrimination and infringement of their freedom of expression. In doing so, they seem to overlook the fact that, by their participation in the administrative process that led to the removal of “Early Days,” along with all others with enough interest in the issue to participate, and by their ongoing, vigorous opposition to the removal of “Early Days” in this case, they are contributing to a robust public debate among San Franciscans about the legacy of the Gold Rush era that can be traced back at least 126 years, as the remarks delivered at the dedication ceremony for the Pioneer Monument in 1894 demonstrate. (See pp. 4–5 & fn. 4, ante.)13
It seems abundantly clear to us that, while ensuring the Pioneer Monument will continue to stand as a tribute to the pioneers for laying the foundation of the state we now know, the City decided as a policy matter that one aspect of the pioneers’ founding story—the stain of nativist racism—is no longer worthy of celebration. If Schmid and Briggs wish to change that policy judgment (it is reversible, after all, because “Early Days” was placed in storage, not shattered to pieces), nothing stops them from utilizing the electoral process as a means to continue advocating for their point of view.
The trial court‘s ruling sustaining the defendants’ demurrer to each cause of action in the first amended complaint and ordering dismissal without leave to amend is affirmed. Costs shall be awarded to the City Defendants and the ARG Defendants.
STREETER, J.
WE CONCUR:
POLLAK, P. J.
TUCHER, J.
Trial Court: City and County of San Francisco
Trial Judge: Hon. Cynthia Ming-Mei Lee
Counsel: Law Office of Frear Stephen Schmid and Frear Stephen Schmid for Plaintiffs and Appellants.
Dennis J. Herrera, City Attorney, Kristen A. Jensen and Andrea Ruiz-Esquide, Deputy City Attorneys, for Defendants and Respondents City and County of San Francisco and Tom DeCaigny.
Donahue Fitzgerald, Andrew S. MacKay and Holiday Dreessen Powell, for Defendants and Respondents Atthowe Transportation Co., Inc. and Scott Atthowe.
Smith, Currie & Hancock, Daniel F. McLennon, Marc L. Sherman, and Matthew Volkmann, for Defendant and Respondent ARG Conservation Services.
A158861
