THE INLAND OVERSIGHT COMMITTEE et al., Plaintiffs and Respondents, v. COUNTY OF SAN BERNARDINO et al., Defendants; COLONIES PARTNERS, L.P., Defendant, Real Party in Interest, and Appellant.
No. E058020
Fourth Dist., Div. Two
Aug. 17, 2015
Arent Fox, Stephen G. Larson, Jerrold Abeles and Jonathan E. Phillips for Defendant, Real Party in Interest and Appellant.
Briggs Law Corporation, Cory J. Briggs, Mekaela M. Gladden, Anthony N. Kim; Leibold McClendon & Mann and John G. McClendon for Plaintiffs and Respondents.
Opinion
HOLLENHORST, Acting P. J.—Plaintiffs and respondents The Inland Oversight Committee (IOC) and Citizens for Responsible Equitable Environmental Development (CREED and, together with IOC, plaintiffs), are taxpayer organizations that have brought suit challenging a November 2006 settlement agreement between defendants County of San Bernardino and San Bernardino County Flood Control District (County)1 and defendant, real party in interest, and appellant Colonies Partners, L.P. (Colonies and, together with County, defendants), pursuant to which County paid Colonies $102 million. Plaintiffs seek to have the settlement agreement declared void under state law governing conflicts of interests of government officials, and to force Colonies to disgorge any money already paid pursuant to the agreement.
Now pending before this court are Colonies’s appeal of the denial of its special motion to strike the complaint as a strategic lawsuit against public
In this appeal, Colonies contends that plaintiffs’ single asserted cause of action, for violation of
For the reasons stated below, we find plaintiffs’ action is not subject to an anti-SLAPP motion, because it falls within the public interest exception to the anti-SLAPP statute provided in
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
The November 2006 settlement agreement between County and Colonies, pursuant to which County paid Colonies $102 million, resolved a lawsuit brought by Colonies against County alleging that County had taken 67 acres of Colonies’s land for use as part of a regional flood control facility. That settlement was incorporated into a stipulated judgment, filed January 23, 2007.3
County satisfied its obligation under the settlement agreement and stipulated judgment by issuing judgment obligation bonds, pursuant to a resolution by the San Bernardino County Board of Supervisors. Subsequently, County brought a validation action, and obtained a judgment, dated March 29, 2007, declaring the settlement agreement between Colonies and County, the inverse
In 2010, the San Bernardino County District Attorney’s Office filed a felony indictment accusing William Postmus, a former county supervisor, of (among other things) receiving bribes—disguised as contributions to political action committees (PACs)—from Colonies in exchange for his vote approving the settlement agreement. In March 2011, Postmus pleaded guilty to various bribery-related charges.
In February 2012, plaintiffs filed the present action, and in April 2012, they filed the operative first amended complaint (complaint). The complaint asserts a single cause of action for violation of
In May 2012, Colonies filed its demurrer to the complaint, and in June 2012, filed its anti-SLAPP motion. The demurrer first came on for hearing in June 2012, but the matter was continued pending supplemental briefing. Both Colonies’s demurrer and its anti-SLAPP motion were set for hearing on September 19, 2012; the trial court overruled Colonies’s demurrer, but continued the hearing of Colonies’s anti-SLAPP motion.5
On October 15, 2012, the County filed its demurrer. Both Colonies’s anti-SLAPP motion and County’s demurrer were heard on December 13, 2012; the trial court overruled the demurrer and denied the anti-SLAPP motion.
II. DISCUSSION
Plaintiffs contend their action is not subject to an anti-SLAPP motion because it is protected by the public interest exception to the anti-SLAPP statute,
The Legislature “designed
Here, plaintiffs contend, and Colonies has not disputed, that the first two parts of the
It is undisputed that no public entity has sought to enforce the rights plaintiffs seek to vindicate in their lawsuit. This fact alone is a sufficient basis to conclude the action is “necessary,” within the meaning of the public interest exception. Colonies emphasizes that the County could bring an action to try to recover the $102 million in settlement payments, and is apparently still evaluating whether such an action would be appropriate. But the notion that an action is not necessary, and therefore does not qualify for the public interest exception, if there remains a possibility a public entity might bring an action for the same relief, is contrary to existing appellate authority. (E.g., Tourgeman, supra, 222 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1464-1465 [“the possibility that a public entity might bring a lawsuit to vindicate certain rights does not
Colonies argues that “[p]laintiffs’ claims are legally unsupported and time-barred,” reasoning that “[p]rivate enforcement of meritless and time-barred claims could hardly be deemed ‘necessary.’ ” The merits of plaintiffs’ claims, however, are irrelevant to the present inquiry:
Colonies also asserts that plaintiffs never addressed the issue of necessity in their briefing below, apparently suggesting, without quite stating, that plaintiffs forfeited the issue or at least failed to meet their burden of showing the applicability of the public interest exception. But a section of plaintiffs’ opposition to Colonies’s anti-SLAPP motion entitled “Private Enforcement Is Necessary, with Plaintiffs Bearing a Disproportionate Burden” (boldface omitted), begins with the following argument: “As an initial matter, it is undisputed that there has been no public enforcement for the disgorgement of the money illegally paid under the $102 million agreement. That is precisely what prompted Plaintiffs to bring this action.” While plaintiffs’ briefing below (and in this court) could have been improved with a discussion of the applicable legal authority, the basic argument, grounded in an undisputed fact and the statutory language, was adequately made.
In short, we reject Colonies’s arguments that plaintiffs failed to demonstrate that their action is “necessary” within the meaning of
It bears emphasizing that our conclusion here is that plaintiffs’ claims are the kind of claims the Legislature intended to exempt from the scope of the anti-SLAPP statute when it adopted
III. DISPOSITION
The trial court’s order denying Colonies’s anti-SLAPP motion is affirmed. Plaintiffs are awarded their costs on appeal.
McKinster, J., and Miller, J., concurred.
