Court Opinion

ID: 1086496
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-22 21:47:59.041944+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:21:12.688166
License: Public Domain

Filed 10/22/13

                      CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION*

             IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                             FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                     DIVISION THREE

ALL TOWING SERVICES LLC,

    Plaintiff and Appellant,                        G047336

        v.                                          (Super. Ct. No. 30-2011-00456419)

CITY OF ORANGE et al.,                              OPINION

    Defendants and Respondents.

                 Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, John C.

Gastelum, Judge. Affirmed.

                 Farnell & Norman, Ronald E. Norman and Alicen D. Pittman for Plaintiff

and Appellant.

                 Woodruff, Spradlin & Smart and David A. DeBerry; Wayne W. Winthers,

City Attorney, for Defendants and Respondents.

*       Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rule 8.1105(b) and 8.1110, this opinion is
certified for publication with the exception of part II.B.1.
              All Towing Services LLC (All Towing) appeals from the summary

judgment entered in favor of the City of Orange (city) and its city council members,

Denis Bilodeau, Jon Dumitru, and Fred Whitaker on All Towing‟s conflict of interest

claims arising from the award of a vehicle towing contract. All Towing contends triable

issues of fact prevented summary judgment. As we explain, however, All Towing failed

in its opposition to summary judgment to identify any disputed facts suggesting Whitaker

had a conflict of interest, and as a matter of law the $250 or more in campaign

contributions Bilodeau and Dumitru received in an earlier election cycle do not create a

conflict of interest. We publish our discussion of the latter issue to explain the error of a

contrary statement in BreakZone Billiards v. City of Torrance (2000) 81 Cal. App. 4th
1205, 1227 (BreakZone).

                                              I

                   FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

              In the fall of 2010, the Orange Police Department solicited bid proposals to

perform towing services for the Official Police Towing and Services Storage (OPTS)

program under contract with the city (OPTS agreement, or OPTSA). Under the OPTSA,

the police department calls tow operators on a rotational basis whenever it needs vehicles
towed for police purposes, such as after an accident or as part of a criminal investigation.

According to All Towing, the police department screened and scored the proposals it

received before submitting them to the city council for a final decision and, of the seven

tow companies submitting bids, All Towing earned the third highest score.

              The city alerted the seven companies it would award OPTS towing

contracts at a city council hearing on January 25, 2011, but All Towing regarded the

meeting as a formality “where matters are routinely approved,” and did not appear. All

                                              2
Towing later explained that one of its owners and the person who prepared its bid

proposal, Norma Odeh, did not attend the hearing because she was caring for her mother,

who died four days later. All Towing did not send anyone in her place.

              The city council voted at the hearing to award OPTS contracts to five

towing companies, and All Towing was not among them. The council initially awarded

only four contracts, expressing reservations about one of the bidders, California Coach.

But a California Coach representative addressed the council‟s concerns at the meeting

and, before it adjourned, the council voted 3-2 to award a fifth towing contract to the

company. The council, however, did not execute the contracts immediately.

              All Towing‟s lawyer complained in a letter to the city soon after the council

meeting that two tow operators receiving OPTS contracts had poor qualifications and that

three of the five scored lower than All Towing on the police department‟s screening

criteria. The letter also alleged that at the OPTSA city council meeting “Councilmember

Fred Whitaker mentioned that he had checked the public records and discovered that [All

Towing] had a collection dispute with a large tax provider for the City of Orange (SC

Fuels)” and, “[f]or that reason, Mr. Whitaker . . . disqualif[ied] our client from the

process.” The letter complained that Whitaker failed to disclose he previously had been a
vice president and general counsel for SC Fuels and that when he rejoined his law firm,

Cummins & White, SC Fuels remained one of the firm‟s clients.

              The letter asserted a conflict of interest based on Whitaker‟s association

with SC Fuels, but also explained “Mr. Whitaker was mistaken” in assuming a

connection between SC Fuels‟ debtor and All Towing. The letter explained the debtor on

the SC Fuels lien, American All-Star Towing, was not the same entity as All Towing,

which was only doing business as American All-Star Towing. Counsel explained in a

                                              3
subsequent letter that the original American All-Star Towing had gone out of business in

2009, and All Towing simply purchased its assets at that time, but was not liable for the

SC Fuels debt.

              All Towing‟s letters also explained that purported concerns raised at the

city council meeting about the financial condition of All Towing‟s owners were similarly

misplaced. While an owner of the original American All-Star Towing company, Naji

“Nick” Feghali, was now a manager at All Towing, a bankruptcy court discharged any

individual liability he had on the SC Fuels debt, and All Towing‟s owners and All

Towing itself were “financially strong.” All Towing declared “the personal bankruptcy

of [its] manager . . . was not a reason to disqualify the company.”

              All Towing also complained that “[a]t least 2 councilmembers” received

campaign contributions “from other towing companie[s] who were applying for the

contract.” All Towing claimed the unnamed “councilmembers should not have

participated in the voting.”

              Based on All Towing‟s complaints, the city council agreed to revisit the

OPTS contracts. The city attorney notified the tow operators that had been approved in

the previous hearing that the city council would “be reconsidering its January 25, 2011,
decision to not include [All Towing] on the list of tow contractors” at a new hearing on

February 22, 2011. The letter advised that while the city council “may limit its

discussion to consideration of [All Towing], it is not required to do so. You may want to

have a representative attend the meeting, as the ultimate decision of the City Council may

have an impact on your operation.”

              Whitaker recused himself at the February 22 city council hearing to avoid

any appearance of a conflict involving “one of my firm‟s clients, Cardlock Fuels, a

                                             4
member of the S.C. Fuels companies . . . .” Counsel for All Towing reiterated at the

hearing the concerns All Towing expressed in its letters, explaining again that All

Towing was not the same entity as the former American All-Star Towing (All-Star). In

effect, counsel explained Whitaker had no actual conflict of interest with All Towing

based on his association with SC Fuels, since All-Star and not All Towing had failed to

pay SC Fuels‟ fuel bill, resulting in the lien. All Towing was a different entity that had

simply purchased All-Star‟s assets and, since All Towing had new and different owners

who were financially sound and validly organized as a new limited liability company, All

Towing was not merely a continuation of All-Star under a different name. But All

Towing did not request that Whitaker, now apprised of the true facts, withdraw his

recusal and participate in the hearing.

              All Towing and two of the tow operators who were awarded OPTS

contracts at the January 25 hearing suggested rescinding some of the contracts so that

only a total of four tow operators would tow for the police. Each asserted they should be

among the four.

              After considering the matter, the four remaining city council members

decided not to eliminate any of the five previously approved companies from the OPTS
program. One of the council members then made a motion to include All Towing in the

program, and he was joined by another council member, but council members Bilodeau

and Dumitru voted against expanding the program to six tow operators. Accordingly, the

motion to include All Towing failed on a 2-2 vote. Though All Towing had not wanted

Whitaker included in the vote, All Towing complained that with only four members left

to vote at the rehearing, All Towing labored under the burden of securing 75 percent

                                             5
approval (a 3-1 vote) to secure an OPTS contract, while the other companies at the

January 25 hearing only required a 3-2 vote, or 60 percent approval.

              Within a month of the February 22 rehearing, All Towing filed the present

lawsuit seeking to void the OPTS contracts and enjoin Whitaker, Bilodeau, and Dumitru

from participating in any rehearing. The complaint asserted four causes of action. The

first cause of action against Whitaker and the city asserted Whitaker‟s participation in the

initial hearing in January 2011 violated the Political Reform Act of 1974 (Gov. Code,

§ 81000 et seq.; hereafter “PRA”; all further undesignated statutory citations are to this

code) based on Whitaker‟s alleged “financial interest in the awarding of the OPTS

contract.”

              The second and third causes of action similarly asserted the city, Bilodeau,

and Dumitru violated the PRA‟s provisions against financial conflicts of interest because

Bilodeau and Dumitru each “received campaign contributions of $250.00 or more from at

least two of the six companies other than plaintiff vying for the OPTS Agreement within

just a few months (less than a year)” before the initial January 2011 hearing. According

to the complaint, “These campaign contributions signify that” Bilodeau and Dumitru each

had under the PRA a prohibited “per se . . . financial interest in the awarding of the OPTS
contract.”

              The fourth cause of action asserted Whitaker, Bilodeau, Dumitru, and the

city violated a general “common law conflict of interest” prohibition based on the same

allegations underlying the first three causes of action. All Towing alleged under the

fourth cause of action damages “in excess of two million dollars.”

              The trial court granted All Towing‟s initial ex parte request for a temporary

restraining order in March 2011 but, after a hearing and briefing by the parties,

                                             6
subsequently denied All Towing‟s request for a preliminary injunction, finding it was

unlikely to prevail on the merits.

              Defendants in January 2012 filed their motion for summary judgment or, in

the alternative, summary adjudication. They asserted in their motion they were entitled

to judgment as a matter of law because: (1) it was not foreseeable that a decision on the

OPTS contracts would affect Whitaker‟s financial interest in any manner; (2) any

conceivable conflict was rectified by his subsequent recusal; and (3) the campaign

contributions Bilodeau and Dumitru received and reported in a previous election cycle

did not constitute a conflict of interest under the PRA or common law.1

              All Towing filed its four-page opposition to summary judgment and a

cursory separate statement of facts at the hearing on the motion in April 2012, without

any advance notice to defendants or leave from the court to file a late opposition. The

opposition conceded defendants‟ “basic factual presentation” in its summary judgment

motion was correct, with unimportant quibbles. All Towing‟s opposition did not address

Whitaker at all and instead focused on Bilodeau and Dumitru, arguing the undisputed

campaign contributions they received constituted a conflict of interest.

              The trial court granted defendants‟ summary judgment motion on the merits
instead of faulting All Towing for its late opposition. The court concluded All Towing

failed to raise a triable issue of fact that any of the council members had a conflict of

interest under the PRA or common law and All Towing was required to raise its common

law conflict of interest claim by a petition for a writ of administrative mandamus, which

it failed to do. In any event, the trial court concluded a mandate petition would have

       1      All Towing‟s preliminary injunction request cited public records showing
the disqualifying campaign contributions consisted of $1,000 Bilodeau received from one
of the tow companies in October 2010 and contributions of $250 each that Dumitru
received in 2010.

                                              7
failed because there was no material conflict of interest for any of the council members

and the city council acted reasonably in awarding the OPTS contracts. All Towing now

appeals.

                                                 II

                                          DISCUSSION

A.     Governing Summary Judgment Principles

               Absent a factual dispute, trial is unnecessary. (Aguilar v. Atlantic Richfield

Co. (2001) 25 Cal. 4th 826, 850 (Aguilar) [“The purpose of the law of summary judgment

is . . . to cut through the parties‟ pleadings . . . to determine whether . . . trial is in fact

necessary”].) We review the trial court‟s grant of summary judgment de novo. “In

practical effect, we assume the role of a trial court and apply the same rules and standards

which govern a trial court‟s determination of a motion for summary judgment.” (Zavala

v. Arce (1997) 58 Cal. App. 4th 915, 925.)

               A motion for summary judgment should be granted if the submitted papers

show “there is no triable issue as to any material fact” and the moving party is entitled to

judgment as a matter of law. (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (c).) A defendant meets its

burden of showing a cause of action has no merit if it shows that one or more elements of
the cause of action cannot be established, “or that there is a complete defense to that

cause of action.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (p)(2).)

               If the moving party carries that burden, it “causes a shift, and the opposing

party is then subjected to a burden of production of his own to make a prima facie

showing of the existence of a triable issue of material fact.” (Aguilar, supra, 25 Cal.4th

at p. 850.) A triable issue of material fact exists “„if, and only if, the evidence would

allow a reasonable trier of fact to find the underlying fact in favor of the party opposing

                                                 8
the motion in accordance with the applicable standard of proof.‟ [Citation.] Thus, a

party „cannot avoid summary judgment by asserting facts based on mere speculation and

conjecture, but instead must produce admissible evidence raising a triable issue of fact.

[Citation.]‟ [Citation.]” (Dollinger DeAnza Associates v. Chicago Title Ins. Co. (2011)

199 Cal. App. 4th 1132, 1144-1145.)

B.     The Trial Court Properly Granted Defendants’ Summary Judgment Motion

              All Towing contends disputed issues of material fact on each of its four

causes of action precluded the trial court from granting summary judgment. Summary

judgment is proper only if it disposes of the entire lawsuit. (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c,

subd. (c); Khan v. Shiley, Inc. (1990) 217 Cal. App. 3d 848, 859, fn. 16; cf. Code Civ.

Proc., § 437c, subd. (f) [providing for partial judgment by summary adjudication of

individual causes of action].) Accordingly, we must review whether the trial court

properly concluded defendants were entitled to judgment as a matter of law on each cause

of action. We discuss each cause of action in turn.

       1.     First Cause of Action: Whitaker‟s Alleged Financial Conflict of Interest

              All Towing alleged in its first cause of action that Whitaker had a financial

conflict of interest that precluded him under the PRA from participating in the towing
contract vote. The PRA “precludes an elected official from participating in a decision in

which he has „a financial interest‟ (Gov. Code, § 87100) . . . .” (Woodland Hills

Residents Assn., Inc. v. City Council (1980) 26 Cal. 3d 938, 945-946 (Woodland Hills).)

The parties stipulated for summary judgment purposes that Cardlock Fuels (Cardlock)

and its associated distribution company, SC Fuels, were clients of Whitaker‟s law firm,

and therefore constituted a source of income for Whitaker, thus affecting his financial
interests.

                                             9
              But Whitaker and the city carried their initial burden to show they were

entitled to judgment as a matter of law because no evidence suggested that denying or

awarding All Towing any share of the police towing contract would have any effect on

SC Fuels‟ or Cardlock‟s financial interests, and therefore the contract award had no

discernible “ripple” effect on Whitaker‟s financial interests. All Towing in its opposition

to summary judgment made no argument and presented no facts, disputed or undisputed,

to suggest the towing contract would affect SC Fuels or Cardlock in any manner. Neither

fuel company owned, operated, or had any discernible financial interest in any of the

towing companies under consideration for the towing contract. And by failing to mention

any particulars concerning Whitaker in its summary judgment opposition, All Towing

failed to even suggest any factual basis implicating Whitaker in a conflict of interest

arising from the towing contract vote. Instead, All Towing‟s opposition focused on

Bilodeau‟s and Dumitru‟s alleged conflicts of interest based on receipt of campaign

contributions. But this did not implicate Whitaker in any PRA violations that All Towing

alleged generally in its first cause of action.

              Noting All Towing did not use SC Fuels or Cardlock to fuel its tow trucks,

All Towing now argues on appeal that “if the . . . companies approved for the OPTS[A]
instead of Plaintiff use[d] SC Fuels or Cardlock for [their] fueling needs, SC Fuels and/or

Cardlock” would lose the opportunity for increased fuel sales “if Plaintiff were assigned

the OPTS[A], another fact to be proven at trial.” (Italics added.) Such speculation,

however, comes far too late and in any event is insufficient. On appeal, we must “take

the facts from the record that was before the trial court when it ruled on” the summary

judgment motion. (Wilson v. 21st Century Ins. Co. (2007) 42 Cal. 4th 713, 716-717.)

Moreover, “substantial responsive evidence” is required to oppose summary judgment

                                                  10
and “mere speculation . . . is insufficient to establish a triable issue of fact.” (Sangster v.

Paetkau (1998) 68 Cal. App. 4th 151, 163.) Accordingly, we find unavailing

All Towing‟s further speculation on appeal that “[i]t is also possible that Whitaker

accepted contributions from SC Fuels to keep Plaintiff from the OPTS[A]” and that

Whitaker in an unspecified manner intended his towing vote to curry favor with SC Fuels

or Cardlock.

               All Towing on appeal blames its trial attorney for its inadequate summary

judgment opposition. All Towing asserts the dearth of any facts (or argument)

concerning Whitaker in its opposition is of little import. According to All Towing, when

a party opposes a summary judgment motion, “All that needs to be done at this juncture

is allege that certain facts took place that were illegal, show harm done to the plaintiff,

and ask the court for relief. All of those things have been done here. It is of no concern

whether Plaintiff has any evidence at this point.” According to All Towing, it simply

“needs to go through the discovery process in order to get that proof.”

               All Towing displays a poor grasp of summary judgment practice. Far from

ancillary, evidence could not be more central to summary judgment proceedings.

Allegations alone are not sufficient. The moving party bears an initial burden to move
beyond mere allegations and present evidence sufficient to show it is entitled to summary

adjudication as a matter of law. (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subds. (c) & (f)(2).) Once the

moving party meets that burden, the party opposing summary judgment “„must produce

admissible evidence raising a triable issue of fact. [Citation.]‟ [Citation.]” (Dollinger,

supra, 199 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1144-1145.) “The plaintiff . . . may not rely upon the mere

allegations or denials of its pleadings to show that a triable issue of material fact exists

but, instead, shall set forth the specific facts showing that a triable issue of material fact

                                              11
exists as to that cause of action or a defense thereto.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c,

subd. (p)(2).)

                 Defendants did not move for summary judgment until almost a year after

All Towing filed its complaint, the parties had ample time to conduct discovery, and All

Towing never sought a continuance to conduct further discovery. The trial court has no

discretion to refuse summary judgment when the evidence before it raises no triable

issues of fact (Krasley v. Superior Court (1980) 101 Cal. App. 3d 425, 432), and All

Towing‟s challenge on appeal concerning its first cause of action therefore fails. The

trial court properly resolved the first cause of action on summary judgment absent any

facts in All Towing‟s opposition to suggest Whitaker had a conflict of interest under the

PRA.

       2.        Second and Third Causes of Action: Bilodeau‟s and Dumitru‟s Receipt of
                 Campaign Contributions Allegedly Violating the PRA
                 All Towing alleged in its second cause of action that Bilodeau‟s receipt of

more than $250 in campaign contributions in an earlier election cycle from a company

vying for the towing contract violated the PRA. All Towing alleged the same against

Dumitru in its third cause of action. All Towing contends recent campaign contributions

furnish a basis to state a claim under the PRA against a public official sufficient to

withstand summary judgment. All Towing relies on a statement in BreakZone, supra,
81 Cal.App.4th at p. 1227, that declares categorically: “The Political Reform Act (Gov.

Code, § 81000 et seq.) creates a statutory obligation on the part of a public official to

whom that act applies not to vote on a matter if he or she has received campaign

contributions from a donor aggregating $250 or more within 12 months prior to the time

the decision is made.”

                                               12
              Defendants contend this statement is dictum because no party in BreakZone

alleged a violation of the PRA stemming from campaign contributions. Rather, the

BreakZone plaintiff claimed that campaign contributions totaling $9,000 given to council

members considering the plaintiff‟s request for a variance (conditional use permit)

violated the plaintiff‟s due process right to a fair hearing because the contributors

opposed the variance. The BreakZone plaintiff did not mention the PRA, perhaps

because as a statutory enactment, the PRA does not necessarily follow or define the

contours of constitutional due process.

              On the other hand, the reviewing court in BreakZone presumably turned to

the PRA for a sense of what constitutes fair play in political decisionmaking, and

therefore its discussion of the PRA was relevant to its due process inquiry. But the

BreakZone court devoted little analysis to the PRA, quickly passing over it in a footnoted

conclusion that the act did not apply because the contributions in that case occurred

17 months before the variance hearing, outside “the threshold for application of

section 87103 within 12 months prior to the vote in question.” (BreakZone, supra,

81 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1227, fn. 18.) Such cursory treatment affords little confidence in

the pronouncement about the PRA on which All Towing relies. (See People v. Mendoza
(2000) 23 Cal. 4th 896, 915 [courts “„must view with caution seemingly categorical

directives not essential to earlier decisions‟”]; 16 Cal.Jur.3d (2012) Courts, § 297

[same].)

              Whether the statement in BreakZone that campaign contributions require

recusal under the PRA is dictum or not, it is wrong. The Supreme Court in Woodland

Hills recognized that while the PRA “precludes an elected official from participating in a

decision in which he has a „financial interest‟ [citation], it expressly excludes from the

                                             13
definition of ‘financial interest’ the receipt of campaign contributions.” (Woodland Hills,

supra, 26 Cal.3d at pp. 945-946, fn. omitted, italics added.) It appears BreakZone

assumed in its brief, footnoted discussion of the PRA that the definition of “financial

interest” in section 87103 included campaign contributions as a “Gift” or “Income”

requiring recusal for amounts more than $250 within 12 months of a challenged decision.

To the contrary, however, the PRA‟s definitions of “Gift” and “Income” now and at the

time BreakZone was decided expressly exclude campaign contributions. (§§ 82028,

subd. (b) [“The term „gift‟ does not include: [¶] . . . [¶] (4) Campaign contributions

required to be reported under Chapter 4 of this title”]; 82030, subd. (b) [“Income also

does not include: [¶] (1) Campaign contributions required to be reported under

Chapter 4 of this title”].) As the Supreme Court explained, the PRA “provides for

disclosure of campaign contributions by recipients of contributions rather than

disqualification of recipients from acting in matters in which the recipient is interested.”

(Woodland Hills, at p. 945.)

              The Supreme Court also explained that the PRA exclusion for campaign

contributions serves both practical and constitutional ends. As a practical example, the

court noted: “If a political contribution automatically disqualifies the recipient after his
election from considering and acting on matters in which the contributor has an interest,

the enterprising developer could disqualify all known environmentalists who are running

for municipal office by making nominal contributions to the campaign committees of

such persons. Future applications of the developer could then be judged by a panel from

which all known environmentalists have been disqualified.” (Woodland Hills, supra,

26 Cal.3d at p. 947, fn. 9.)

                                              14
              The Supreme Court further explained that “[t]o disqualify a city council

member from acting on a development proposal because the developer had made a

campaign contribution to that member would threaten constitutionally protected political

speech and associational freedoms.” (Woodland Hills, supra, 26 Cal.3d at p. 946.) For

instance, it would curtail the right of contributors such as “developers, builders,

engineers, and attorneys who are related in some fashion to developers . . . to participate

in the electoral process.” (Id. at p. 947.) Accordingly, the high court concluded that the

PRA in “dealing comprehensively with problems of campaign contribution and conflict

of interest . . . does not prevent a city council member from acting upon a matter

involving the contributor.” (Id. at p. 946.)

              All Towing relies on the fact BreakZone was decided 20 years after

Woodland Hills and has met no published disagreement. Neither of these features

rehabilitates BreakZone‟s erroneous disqualification statement. The practical and

constitutional considerations the Supreme Court noted in Woodland Hills still apply.

Moreover, the PRA‟s express exclusions for ordinary campaign contributions remain

unchanged. (§§ 82028, subd. (b)(4); 82030, subd. (b)(1).) We may not ignore the

express language of a statute. (California Teachers Assn. v. San Diego Community
College Dist. (1981) 28 Cal. 3d 692, 698 [court may not add to or alter the words of a

statute].)

              Significantly, the terms of the PRA reflect the Legislature knew how to

specify it applied to campaign contributions involving public agencies, but not to

decisions by officials in their elected office. Specifically, section 84308 provides, “No

officer of an agency shall accept, solicit, or direct a contribution of more than two

hundred fifty dollars ($250) from any party . . . while a proceeding involving a license,

                                               15
permit, or other entitlement for use is pending before the agency . . . .” But

section 84308, subdivision (a)(3), specifically excludes from the PRA‟s definition of

“agency” those “local governmental agencies whose members are directly elected by the

voters,” which indisputably is the case for city council members like Bilodeau and

Dumitru. As the Supreme Court in Woodland Hills explained, criminal sanctions for

political corruption and the PRA‟s contribution disclosure requirements protect against

bias and any appearance of unfairness. (Woodland Hills, supra, 26 Cal.3d at p. 947.)

Given the foregoing and that the high court more than 30 years ago explained the PRA

“expressly excludes from the definition of „financial interest‟ the receipt of campaign

contributions” (id. at pp. 945-946, fn. omitted), we part ways with BreakZone. Because

the campaign contributions here furnished no basis for a cause of action under the PRA,

the trial court properly granted summary judgment on All Towing‟s attempt under the

PRA to void the city council‟s towing contract decision and disqualify Bilodeau and

Dumitru.

       3. Fourth and Final Cause of Action: Alleged Common Law Conflict of Interest

              All Towing in its fourth cause of action asserted a common law conflict of

interest claim against Whitaker, Bilodeau, and Dumitru. Though not cited by either
party, section 1090 is relevant to All Towing‟s claim. The Legislature in section 1090

and its predecessor statutes codified the common law prohibition against conflicts of

interests involving government officials. Section 1090 predates the PRA by several

decades and continues to coexist alongside it. Section 1090 provides in pertinent part:

“Members of the Legislature, state, county, district, judicial district, and city officers or

employees shall not be financially interested in any contract made by them in their
official capacity, or by any body or board of which they are members.”

                                              16
              The court in Carson Redevelopment Agency v. Padilla (2006)

140 Cal. App. 4th 1323, 1329-1330, traced the common law origins of section 1090. “As

history reveals, there has long been a common law proscription against public officials

having a financial interest in contracts created by them in their official capacities.

[Citation.] In 1951, the Legislature codified the proscription when it enacted

section 1090 to curb conflicts of interest with respect to contracts, purchases and sales

made by public officials.”

              Unlike the PRA, which furnishes a private right of action under which for

“any person residing in the jurisdiction may sue for injunctive relief to enjoin violations

or to compel compliance” (§ 91003) with that statute‟s requirements, section 1090 et seq.

provide simply that a contract in which a public official is interested is void (§ 1092;

Klistoff v. Superior Court (2007) 157 Cal. App. 4th 469, 481 [contract is void, not merely

voidable]) and that the offending official may be fined or imprisoned “and is forever

disqualified from holding any office in this state” (§ 1097). In providing for injunctive

and compulsory relief, the PRA makes improper official action void. Specifically, “[i]f it

is ultimately determined that a violation has occurred and that the official action might

not otherwise have been taken or approved, the court may set the official action aside as
void.” (§ 91003.) But neither the PRA or section 1090 et seq. provide for the $2,000,000

in damages All Towing sought in its fourth cause of action. Indeed, neither contemplates

a damages award, with the PRA providing at most that “[t]he court may award to a

plaintiff or defendant who prevails his costs of litigation, including reasonable attorney‟s

fees.” (§ 91003.)

              The court in BreakZone considered the interesting question whether a

common law cause of action for official conflict of interest survives the enactment of the

                                              17
PRA and section 1090. Woodland Hills did not address the question, but the BreakZone

court noted language predating Woodland Hills suggested an enduring common law

public policy against conflicts of interest. “Thus, in Terry v. Bender [1956]

143 Cal. App. 2d 198, a case in which it was alleged that a public official had a

disqualifying personal interest in a public contract, the court stated: „A public office is a

public trust created in the interest and for the benefit of the people. Public officers are

obligated . . . to discharge their responsibilities with integrity and fidelity. . . . [T]hey

may not exploit or prostitute their official position for their private benefits. When public

officials are influenced in the performance of their public duties by base and improper

considerations of personal advantage, they violate their oath of office and vitiate the trust

reposed in them, and the public is injured by being deprived of their loyal and honest

services. It is therefore the general policy of this state that public officers shall not have a

personal interest in any contract made in their official capacity.‟ [Citation.]”

(BreakZone, supra, 81 Cal.App.4th at p. 1232.) The court in Stockton P. & S. Co. v.

Wheeler (1924) 68 Cal. App. 592, 601, similarly explained long ago that the conflict of

interest “principle has always been one of the essential attributes of every rational system

of positive law . . . .”
               But the BreakZone court aptly cautioned against continued conflict of

interest policymaking through judicial common law, emphasizing: “„Except where the

law clearly provides rules for identification and rectification of what might be termed

conflicts of interest, that is a legislative not a judicial function. [Citations.]‟ [Citation.”

(BreakZone, supra, 81 Cal.App.4th at p. 1233.) Ultimately, the court in BreakZone

determined it did not have to resolve whether a common law cause of action for conflict

of interest retained vitality despite the PRA and section 1090 et seq. We reach the same

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conclusion here. The BreakZone court explained: “While the common law may

recognize the appearance of unfairness, and provide remedies, such as writs of mandate,

for allegations of denial of a fair hearing, BreakZone has not made the necessary record

to invoke those protections, whether they be founded on statute or common law.” (Ibid.)

              The same is true here. In Mike Moore’s 24-Hour Towing v. City of San

Diego (1996) 45 Cal. App. 4th 1294 (Mike Moore‟s), where the city awarded five-year

contracts for vehicle towing similar to the OPTS agreement here, the court explained that

“[a] public entity‟s „award of a contract and all of the acts leading up to the award are

legislative in character.‟” (Id. at p. 1303.) Accordingly, “„[t]he letting of contracts by a

governmental entity necessarily requires an exercise of discretion guided by

considerations of the public welfare,‟” and therefore, “[r]eview of a local entity‟s

legislative determination is through ordinary mandamus under [Code of Civil Procedure]

section 1085.” (Mike Moore’s, at p. 1303.) “„Such review is limited to an inquiry into

whether the action was arbitrary, capricious or entirely lacking in evidentiary support,‟”

but the “test has also been formulated to add an inquiry whether the agency‟s decision

was „contrary to established public policy or unlawful or procedurally unfair.‟” (Ibid.,

italics added.)
              All Towing did not, as the trial court and defendants noted below, file a

mandamus petition (Code Civ. Proc., § 1085) to challenge the city council‟s towing

contract decision. All Towing did not otherwise in its fourth cause of action seek or

mention administrative mandamus. But neither the trial court or defendants have

identified any manner in which this procedural misstep prevented adjudication of the

merits of All Towing‟s claim. For example, All Towing‟s complaint fell within the strict

90-day deadline for challenging local government or agency action by administrative

                                             19
mandamus (Code Civ. Proc., § 1094.6, subd. (b)) and met the mandamus petition

verification requirement (id., § 1086).

              Defendants assert as they did below that treating the complaint as a petition

for mandate did nothing for All Towing to avoid summary judgment because several

rational explanations for the city council‟s towing contract decision meant the decision

could not be called arbitrary or capricious as required for mandamus relief. But this

analysis misses the mark because the mandamus “inquiry [includes] whether the . . .

decision was „contrary to established public policy‟” (Mike Moore’s, supra,

45 Cal.App.4th at p. 1303), and the gravamen of All Towing‟s fourth cause of action was

that a government official‟s conflict of interest violates longstanding common law public

policy.

              Nevertheless, even assuming arguendo as the trial court did that All

Towing‟s complaint may be treated as a mandamus petition, the trial court properly

granted defendants summary judgment. Simply put, as discussed, in opposing summary

judgment All Towing produced no facts, nor even any argument, to suggest Whitaker

suffered any actual conflict of interest concerning All Towing. And as a matter of law

the campaign contributions Bilodeau and Dumitru received do not constitute a conflict of
interest.

              As we explained in upholding summary resolution of All Towing‟s first

cause of action against Whitaker, it is axiomatic that the party opposing summary

judgment “„“must produce admissible evidence raising a triable issue of fact. [Citation.]‟

[Citation.]” (Dollinger, supra, 199 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1144-1145.) This requirement is

black letter law (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (p)(2)) that applies whether the alleged

cause of action is statutory or under the common law. All Towing did not mention

                                            20
Whitaker in its opposition to summary judgment, nor reference any facts concerning him

in its cursory separate statement of facts, and therefore the trial court properly resolved in

a summary fashion not only the first cause of action but the analogous common law claim

against Whitaker in All Towing‟s fourth cause of action.

              Similarly, the remainder of All Towing‟s fourth cause of action alleging

common law conflict of interest against Bilodeau and Dumitru fails for the same reasons

as the second and third causes of action. Specifically, the practical and constitutional

considerations the Supreme Court identified in Woodland Hills also apply here. In other

words, the practical reality that a campaign contribution disqualification rule could be

easily manipulated and abused counsels against finding such a rule in the common law or

adopting it by judicial fiat. All Towing points to no judicial decision or common law

authority establishing such a rule. Adopting such a sweeping rule would also violate the

First Amendment rights of those who wish to participate in the electoral process by

making campaign contributions, as the Supreme Court explained in Woodland Hills.

              In BreakZone, the court contemplated the possibility that a particular

campaign contribution could cross the line into bribery. “We contrast the facts of this

case with one in which it is alleged the campaign contribution is made for an express
promise to act in a particular way in exercising governmental authority with respect to a

particular matter then pending or which may be presented for governmental review and

action at a later date.” (BreakZone, supra, 81 Cal.App.4th at p. 1233.) The court also

“d[id] not foreclose a circumstance in which an earlier governmental action is „rewarded‟

in an illegal manner,” but explained, “No such factual circumstance[s are] alleged in the

instant case.” (Ibid.) The same is true here, and we also observe such factual scenarios

do not necessarily establish a need for a judicially-created common law remedy given the

                                             21
existing criminal sanctions for bribery and political corruption. (Woodland Hills, supra,

26 Cal.3d at p. 947, citing Pen. Code, §§ 67 et seq.; 165.) For all the foregoing reasons,

the trial court properly granted summary judgment and All Towing‟s challenges on

appeal have no merit.

                                            III

                                      DISPOSITION

              The judgment is affirmed. Respondents are entitled to their costs on

appeal.

                                                  ARONSON, ACTING P. J.

WE CONCUR:

IKOLA, J.

THOMPSON, J.

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