Weatherford v. City of San Rafael
Weatherford v. City of San Rafael
Opinion
*1244 In California, concerns about improper government expenditures can give rise to more than just criticism in the public sphere or *1245 complaints to elected officials. Under Code of Civil Procedure section 526a, 1 certain individuals and corporations also have a right to pursue legal actions enjoining wasteful or illegal expenditures by government entities. Whether someone can use this provision to begin a lawsuit depends on whether the person has standing to do so. At issue in this case is whether an individual's standing to sue under section 526a requires the payment of a property tax and-if the payment of a property tax is not required-what types of tax payments satisfy the statute.
What we hold is that section 526a does not require the payment of a property tax. An allegation that the plaintiff has paid an assessed tax to the defendant locality is sufficient under section 526a. Because the superior court and Court of Appeal held that payment of a property tax was required, we reverse and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I.
Plaintiff Cherrity Weatherford resides in the City of San Rafael and the County of Marin. She does not own real property in the city or county, but she lived with her daughter in a rental apartment in San Rafael when she began this lawsuit. 2 On January 9, 2013, Weatherford filed a complaint for declaratory and injunctive relief challenging the manner in which the City of San Rafael and County of Marin enforced Vehicle Code section 14602.6. According to Weatherford, defendants' practice of impounding vehicles without providing adequate notice violates both the state and federal Constitutions. As Weatherford had not been personally *397 subject to this allegedly unconstitutional practice, she averred that she had taxpayer standing under section 526a. According to Weatherford, she had paid sales tax, gasoline tax, water and sewage fees, and "other taxes, charges and fees routinely imposed" in the City of San Rafael and the County of Marin. Her complaint conceded that she had not paid property taxes.
On April 22, 2013, the trial court filed a stipulated order and judgment of dismissal. In the stipulated order, Weatherford cited two prior Court of
*1246
Appeal opinions that contained language suggesting that section 526a requires a plaintiff to pay property taxes to
**277
satisfy the taxpayer standing requirement. (See
Torres v.City of Yorba Linda
(1993)
The Court of Appeal affirmed the judgment of dismissal. Although it reasoned that some plaintiffs might be able to invoke the statute without paying property taxes, it held that an individual plaintiff must be liable to pay a property tax within the relevant locality-or have paid such a tax during the previous year-in order to have standing.
We granted review to address whether section 526a requires an individual to have paid or to be liable for the payment of property taxes in order to have the necessary standing for a taxpayer action.
II.
A.
Section 526a provides, in relevant part: "An action to obtain a judgment, restraining and preventing any illegal expenditure of, waste of, or injury to, the estate, funds, or other property of a county, town, city or city and county of the state, may be maintained against any officer thereof, or any agent, or other person, acting in its behalf, either by a citizen resident therein, or by a corporation, who is assessed for and is liable to pay, or, within one year before the commencement of the action, has paid, a tax therein." At the heart of this case is the question of how to read the phrase "who is assessed for and is liable to pay ... or, has paid, a tax therein"-a phrase in section 526a that we have not previously construed. To answer it, we must begin by considering the statute's language and structure, bearing in mind that our fundamental task in statutory interpretation is to ascertain and effectuate the law's intended purpose. (See, e.g.,
Horwich v. Superior Court
(1999)
The Legislature conditioned taxpayer standing under section 526a by using language strongly implying a limitation on the type of tax contemplated by the statute. The statute begins by describing the type of action and relief available under section 526a, before listing the categories of jurisdictions that may be held liable under the statute. (§ 526a [listing cities and counties, among others].) Within that same sentence, section 526a also defines the persons who are eligible to bring suit: a "citizen resident therein" and a corporation that is "assessed" for and liable to pay or has paid a "tax therein." The statutory language itself thus defines two particular classes of taxpayers that may maintain an action under section 526a, and further specifies the type of tax that they must be liable to pay and where they must pay it.
To further illuminate the scope and significance of section 526a, we consider its
**278
provisions in light of the statute's larger legal context-a context encompassing the evolution of standing in California from its common law roots to its various statutory incarnations. (See, e.g.,
Carsten v. Psychology Examining Com. of the Bd. of Medical Quality Assurance
(1980)
Our standing jurisprudence nonetheless reflects a sensitivity to broader prudential and separation of powers considerations elucidating how and when parties should be entitled to seek relief under particular statutes. While a plaintiff is generally required to have a direct and substantial beneficial interest in order to seek a writ of mandate under section 1086, for example, we have long allowed petitioners to seek relief where " ' "the question is one of public right and the object of the mandamus is to procure the enforcement of a public duty." ' " (
*399
Save the Plastic Bag Coalition v. City of Manhattan Beach
(2011)
Notwithstanding the arguments for broad "public interest" standing, though, we have continued to recognize the need for limits in light of the larger statutory and policy context. For instance, in
Dix v. Superior Court
(1991)
Our decision in Dix thus illustrates the type of analysis required in determining standing's scope under a statutory right to relief. While this *1249 analysis is grounded in the statutory text, the text read in isolation can be insufficient to adequately capture the other prudential and separation of powers considerations that have traditionally informed the outer limits of standing. This sensitivity to the larger context of standing is not only a method to better effectuate the Legislature's purpose in providing certain statutory remedies, but also marks a recognition of the sometimes competing interests at issue when considering whether a party may seek a judicial remedy against government officials.
Section 526a provides a mechanism for controlling illegal, injurious, or wasteful actions by those officials. That mechanism, moreover, remains available even where the injury is insufficient to satisfy general standing requirements under section 367. (See, e.g.,
Blair v. Pitchess
(1971)
Yet because the Legislature's enactment of section 526a marked a departure from the common law approach to taxpayer standing, our case law therefore recognizes both the breadth and corresponding limits of who may bring suit pursuant to section 526a. Prior to the 1909 adoption of section 526a, we held that, as a general matter, taxpayers had "such an interest in the proper application of [public] funds" that they could "maintain an action" to enjoin the illegal expenditure of public funds. (
Winn v. Shaw
(1891)
Notwithstanding the Legislature's apparent objective in enacting section 526a, in
Irwin
we had no choice but to conclude that section 526a's residency requirement was unconstitutional as applied to a nonresident property owner.
Irwin
concerned a comparison between two persons-but only one was a natural as opposed to a corporate person. The
Irwin
plaintiff was a nonresident who paid assessed property taxes for property within the city she sought to sue, but the plain language of section 526a's residency requirement denied her standing to sue. (
**280
Irwin
,
supra
, 65 Cal.2d at pp. 16, 19,
But our conclusion in Irwin addressed a specific constitutional question, and did not reforge section 526a into a statute granting unfettered standing. Notwithstanding our holding in Irwin , our initial observation that section 526a represented a legislative effort to codify a more limited version of the common law right remained valid. We therefore understand section 526a not only as a means for certain people to pursue an action enjoining some expenditures of public funds even when those people have not been injured, but also as a measure narrowing the category of taxpayers *401 that are eligible to commence such actions relative to what the common law allowed.
B.
Section 526a does narrow the category of taxpayers able to sue to enjoin certain expenditures of governmental funds. But the Court of Appeal traveled a step too far when it held that the statute requires individual plaintiffs to pay a property tax. Although we need not delineate the precise outer limits of the statute's operation, we can conclude with confidence that limiting its application to property taxpayers reflects an unduly constrained view of the statute's requirements. To begin, nothing in the statute's language suggests such a cramped conception of taxpayer standing. It is no doubt true that the statute's conception of an "assessed" tax encompasses property taxes. (See
Cornelius
,
supra
, 49 Cal.App.4th at p. 1775,
Nor would it be at all consistent with the statute's "primary purpose" to hold that payment of a property tax is required. (See
Blair
,
supra
, 5 Cal.3d at p. 267,
But because section 526a does not confer unrestricted standing to taxpayers, the question remains: Which taxes are sufficient to establish standing under the statute? The statute allows for suit against governmental entities "either by a citizen resident therein, or by a corporation, who is assessed for and is liable to pay, or, within one year before the commencement of the action, has paid, a tax therein." The parties' principal dispute centers on the term "therein," which can conceivably mean either "in" or "into." (Merriam-Webster's **281 Collegiate Dict. (11th ed. 2004) at p. 1296.) Weatherford argues that all forms of taxes assessed by state and local governments qualify so long as the plaintiff resides in the defendant locality. Defendants, by contrast, argue that a plaintiff must be "assessed for and liable to pay" a *402 tax which the defendant imposes directly onto the plaintiff, and thus that the plaintiff pays directly into the defendant. In developing their theories, the parties cite various state and local taxes that each side contends either do or do not satisfy each side's respective criteria.
Our ability to consider these theories fully, however, is limited by this case's procedural posture. At the trial court, the parties entered into a
*1252
stipulated judgment of dismissal under
Norgart v. Upjohn Company
(1999)
In light of these limitations, we conclude that it is sufficient for a plaintiff to allege she or he has paid, or is liable to pay, to the defendant locality a tax assessed on the plaintiff by the defendant locality. Such an allegation satisfies the more stringent version of the requirement that a tax be paid "therein," and is consistent with prior holdings recognizing taxpayer standing under section 526a. (See
Irwin
,
supra
, 65 Cal.2d at pp. 18-20,
Here, Weatherford alleged in her complaint that she has paid "in and to the City of San Rafael, County of Marin, and State of California" taxes "routinely imposed by municipalities, counties and the state[ ]." But as the parties stipulated to judgment for the purpose of challenging the decisions in Cornelius and Torres , the record is devoid of information regarding which taxes defendants actually impose, or whether Weatherford has, in fact, paid any assessed taxes to San Rafael or Marin County. Under these circumstances, we cannot determine whether the general statements in Weatherford's complaint satisfy the above standard. So we remand to the Court of Appeal with directions to reverse the stipulated judgment and remand to the superior court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
III.
The Court of Appeal erred when it held that payment of a property tax was required under section 526a. The statute's text, context, and broad remedial *1253 purposes preclude such an interpretation. But this case's procedural posture limits our ability to fully consider the parties' other contention about taxpayer standing. We therefore reverse the decision of the Court of Appeal and remand with instructions that the Court of Appeal reverse the stipulated judgment and remand to the superior *403 court for further proceedings consistent with our opinion.
We Concur:
Cantil-Sakauye, C.J.
Werdegar, J.
Chin, J.
**282 Corrigan, J.
Liu, J.
Kruger, J.
CONCURRING OPINION BY CANTIL-SAKAUYE, C.J.
Cantil-Sakauye, C.J.
I concur in the court's decision that the payment of a property tax is not the sole basis, under Code of Civil Procedure section 526a, 1 to confer standing on a party in order to pursue a taxpayer action. I write separately to urge the Legislature to revisit section 526a and amend the statute in a manner that makes clear what kinds of taxes are sufficient to establish standing to sue a particular government entity for alleged wasteful or illegal expenditures.
The provision of section 526a at issue in this matter reads: "An action to obtain a judgment, restraining and preventing any illegal expenditure of, waste of, or injury to, the estate, funds, or other property of a county, town, city or city and county of the state, may be maintained against any officer thereof, or any agent, or other person, acting in its behalf, either by a citizen resident therein, or by a corporation, who is assessed for and is liable to pay, or, within one year before the commencement of the action, has paid, a tax therein ." (Italics added.)
In this single sentence are 87 words parsed by 19 commas. It is not a model of clarity. As this court today acknowledges, the parties dispute the meaning of the italicized language, especially the meaning of the word "therein." As the majority notes, the second word "therein" could mean either "in" or "into." (Maj. opn., ante , 218 Cal.Rptr.3d at pp. 401-402, 395 P.3d at pp. 280-281.) Defendants, the City of San Rafael and the County of Marin, contend the word "therein" in section 526a means "into," which would require payment of a tax "into" the coffers of a city or county, signifying that Weatherford has standing to sue only if she has paid a tax directly into their coffers. Weatherford contends the word "therein" simply means "in," and that, therefore, she need show only that she paid any kind of tax while she resided in the defendant localities. Amici also contend that the statute's commas mean that only unpaid taxes for which an individual is liable must be "assessed"; on this view, Weatherford need not prove she paid a tax directly assessed on her so long as she can prove she paid a qualifying tax in the past.
*1254 This sentence in section 526a was drafted and enacted by the Legislature in 1909. (Stats. 1909, ch. 348, p. 578.) In the 108 years since, it has not been amended. Yet the system of state and local taxation in California has changed dramatically over the last century.
Numerous new taxes have been imposed by state and local governmental entities since 1909. For example, in 1923, the state first enacted the "Gasoline Tax Act" to help defray the costs of maintaining state and local roads and highways. (Stats. 1923, ch. 267, p. 571;
Oswald v. Johnson
(1930)
Following the enactment of section 526a in 1909, the methods by which these taxes are assessed, collected, and distributed by state and local government entities have become increasingly complex. For example, even if a local government entity enacts a local sales tax, such taxes are collected by a state entity, the State Board of Equalization, which then remits the revenues to the local entity. (
City of Palmdale v. Board of Equalization
(2012)
These complex systems of government financing highlight the need for clarity regarding the meaning of section 526a. Even if defendants' interpretation of the word "therein" is correct, these complications concerning how government agencies impose and collect various taxes and how they are ultimately distributed to fund local government entities further cloud the parameters of taxpayer standing under section 526a. This in turn leads to questions such as whether a resident like Weatherford, who pays an otherwise locally imposed tax, is really paying that tax directly into that local government entity, even though the tax is actually imposed or collected by another agency or is diverted *405 for purposes unrelated to that local government.
In order for a law to have its full intended effects and benefits, it should be framed to reflect circumstances as they exist now. If "the primary purpose of section 526a was to give a large body of citizens standing to challenge governmental actions" (
Blair v. Pitchess
(1971)
I Concur:
Liu, J.
CONCURRING OPINION BY KRUGER, J.
Kruger, J.
I agree that taxpayer standing under Code of Civil Procedure section 526a (section 526a ) is not limited to plaintiffs who have paid property taxes in the relevant jurisdiction. Indeed, the parties before us appear to agree on this point: Defendant localities acknowledge that, even as they read section 526a, it confers standing on at least some plaintiffs who pay taxes other than property taxes-for example, hotel guests who pay local taxes on the cost of room rental. (Cf.
In re Transient Occupancy Tax Cases
(2016)
I write separately, however, to call attention to a question that today's decision does not resolve. Defendants argue that the "plain language" of section 526a requires proof that the plaintiff has paid a tax assessed directly against her, and, further, that the tax must be assessed by the defendant localities, rather than by state authorities. The ultimate conclusion may or may not be correct, but the notion that the statute "plainly" imposes a direct-assessment requirement certainly is not.
Section 526a provides that a taxpayer action may be maintained against a local government entity "by a citizen resident therein ... who is assessed for and is liable to pay, or, within one year before the commencement of the action, has paid, a tax therein." As the Chief Justice notes, this century-old provision is not a "model of clarity." (Conc. opn. of Cantil-Sakauye, C. J.,
ante
, 218 Cal.Rptr.3d at p. 403, 395 P.3d at p. 282.) It is certainly possible to read the statute, as defendants do, to confer standing on "two classes of persons who have been assessed for taxes: (1) those who are liable to pay an assessed tax but who have not yet paid, and (2) those who paid an assessed tax within one year before the filing of the lawsuit." But as a grammatical matter, it is equally possible to read the statute to confer standing on any "citizen resident" (1) who is assessed for and is liable to pay a tax therein, or (2) who, within one year before the commencement of the action, has paid, a tax
*406
therein.
1
The first interpretation would eliminate the possibility of standing based on, for example, payment of local sales taxes, which are assessed on retailers, although almost invariably passed through in full to consumers. (See Civ. Code, § 1656.1, subd. (a) [establishing a presumption that a customer agrees to "reimburse[ ]" the retailer for the sales tax if, among other possibilities, the amount of the tax is shown on the customer's receipt];
*1257
Loeffler v. Target Corp.
(2014)
Today's decision, focused as it is on the narrow issue before us, does not address this fundamental interpretive question. Nor does it address the further question whether the statute's reference to the payment of taxes "therein" should be understood in a fiscal sense (did the taxpayer pay the taxes directly to the defendant jurisdiction?) or a geographic one (was the taxpayer physically located in the jurisdiction when she paid state or local taxes?). (See maj. opn.,
ante
, 218 Cal.Rptr.3d at pp. 401-402, 395 P.3d at pp. 280-281.) The answers to these broader questions must lie in broader considerations of the history and purposes of section 526a -a statute designed to give certain persons who have contributed to governmental coffers the ability to challenge governmental expenditures that " 'would otherwise go unchallenged.' " (
Blair v. Pitchess
(1971)
With these observations, I join the court's opinion.
I Concur:
Liu, J.
All subsequent statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure, unless otherwise noted.
After oral argument, Weatherford's attorney informed this court that his client had recently decided to move from Marin County to Washington State. This information has no effect on our analysis of whether section 526a requires the payment of a property tax and-whether or not the case might be thought of as moot in light of this information-we elect to retain it to resolve a potentially recurring question of public importance. (See
People v. Carbajal
(1995)
Because we hold that, as a matter of statutory interpretation, the payment of property taxes is not required under section 526a, we need not reach Weatherford's argument that construing the statute to apply only to property owners violates equal protection.
All further statutory citations are to the Code of Civil Procedure.
To illustrate the point, imagine the Legislature had numbered the clauses and inserted line breaks as follows:
"An action ... may be maintained ... by a citizen resident therein ... who
"[1] is assessed for and is liable to pay, or,
"[2] within one year before the commencement of the action, has paid, a tax therein."
Defendants' proposed reading of the statute, by contrast, would place the imaginary clause numbers and line breaks as follows:
"An action ... may be maintained ... by a citizen resident therein ... who is assessed for and
"[1] is liable to pay, or,
"[2] within one year before the commencement of the action, has paid, a tax therein."
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Cherrity WEATHERFORD, Plaintiff and Appellant, v. CITY OF SAN RAFAEL Et Al., Defendants and Respondents.
- Cited By
- 101 cases
- Status
- Published