Riverside Sheriffs' Assn. v. County of Riverside CA4/2 ( 2016 )


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  • Filed 6/29/16 Riverside Sheriffs’ Assn. v. County of Riverside CA4/2
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for
    publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    RIVERSIDE SHERIFFS’ ASSOCIATION,
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                                           E062836
    v.                                                                         (Super.Ct.No. RIC1312375)
    COUNTY OF RIVERSIDE et al.,                                                OPINION
    Defendants and Respondents.
    APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. Sharon J. Waters, Judge.
    Affirmed.
    Stone Busailah, Michael P. Stone, Muna Busailah and Robert Rabe for Plaintiff
    and Appellant.
    The Zappia Law Firm, Edward P. Zappia, Brett M. Ehman and Gail E. Wise for
    Defendants and Respondents.
    1
    The Riverside County Sheriff’s Department (the Department) had a policy
    regulating its employees’ outside employment activities (the policy), i.e., additional
    employment outside of the Department. In November 2010, the Department revised the
    policy. Those revisions caused the policy to be “changed significantly.”
    In November 2013, the Riverside Sheriffs’ Association (the Association)
    petitioned the trial court for a writ of mandate (Code Civ. Proc., § 1085) ordering the
    Department to revert to the pre-2010 version of the policy, until the Department
    engaged in collective bargaining with the Association regarding the policy revisions,
    and the parties reached an agreement concerning the policy revisions. The trial court
    denied the Association’s writ petition.
    On appeal, the Association contends collective bargaining is required because
    (a) the policy revisions significantly and adversely affected the Association’s members’
    terms and conditions of employment, and (b) the policy revisions are not a fundamental
    managerial decision. Alternatively, if the policy revisions are a fundamental
    managerial decision, then the impact and effects of the policy revisions are subject to
    bargaining. The Association also asserts collective bargaining is required pursuant to
    Government Code section 1126.1 We affirm the judgment.
    1 All subsequent statutory references will be to the Government Code unless
    otherwise indicated.
    2
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    A.     PRIOR POLICIES
    The Department had an outside employment policy that was issued in June 1994.
    In January 2001, the outside employment policy was amended. In 2001, the policy
    provided, in relevant part, full-time employees must have Department approval for
    outside employment. It also reflected approval may be denied or withdrawn if (a) the
    employee’s performance evaluation reflects they are less than competent, or if the
    outside job might impair the employee’s efficiency when working at the Department;
    (b) the outside employment would cause the employee to work in excess of six hours
    when the employee is already scheduled for an eight-hour shift at the Department; or
    (c) the outside employment requires the employee to make use of Department
    equipment, uniform, or identification.
    The 2001 policy also provided the procedure by which employees were to seek
    approval of their outside employment. Employees needed to submit a completed
    application form “through their chain of command to their Division Chief Deputy” “for
    approval or disapproval.” The employee could not commence outside employment
    until receiving approval. The employee was required to reapply for approval “any time
    the conditions of the outside employment activities change from that described in the
    initial request.” An employee would be subject to discipline for engaging in outside
    employment without prior Department approval.
    
    3 B. 2010
     POLICY
    In November 2010, the Department revised the outside employment policy. A
    memo concerning the revision was sent to all personnel and reflected the policy had
    “changed significantly.” The 2010 policy set forth a definition of outside employment.
    It required an employee to obtain approval from the Department prior to commencing
    outside employment. The failure to obtain preapproval could lead to discipline. In
    order to obtain approval, an employee needed to complete an application, give the
    application to the employee’s supervisor, which would “then be forwarded through the
    chain of command to the division chief for consideration.” Employees still needed to
    resubmit an application “any time the conditions of the outside employment activities
    change from that described in the initial request.” Additionally, (1) employees were
    now required to obtain “annual approval for continuing outside employment,” and
    (2) employees approved for outside employment were considered to have agreed “that
    their personal financial records may be requested and reviewed/audited for [a] potential
    conflict of interest pursuant to Government Code Section 3308.”
    The 2010 policy revisions set forth an appeal process should an application for
    outside employment be denied. The policy also explained that permission for outside
    employment “may be revoked or suspended” (1) when the employee’s work at the
    Department is evaluated by a supervisor as being “unsatisfactory” or “below standard,”
    (2) as a “condition of sustained discipline,” (3) when the employee’s conduct or outside
    employment conflicts with the Department’s policies, or (4) when the employee “is
    unable to perform at a ‘full duty’ capacity due to an injury or other condition.”
    4
    The 2010 policy revisions explained activities that would be forbidden as outside
    employment, such as those requiring the use of Department facilities, equipment,
    uniform, or badge. The policy prohibited employees from working as “a private security
    guard, private investigator or other similar private security position.” However, the
    policy set forth procedures for private entities seeking outside security services from
    Department employees. In such a situation, the private entity would need to apply to the
    Department for the outside services. If the request were to be approved, then (1) the
    employees would have to wear their Department uniforms, (2) compensation for such
    outside security services would be “pursuant to normal overtime procedures,” and
    (3) such services would not be subject to collective bargaining. Further, any arrest made
    by an employee during the employee’s outside overtime assignment would still need to
    comply with the Department’s timelines regarding completing reports, and that time
    spent on such reports “shall be considered incidental to the outside overtime
    assignment.”
    The policy also provided that an employee must notify the Department if the
    employee terminates his or her outside employment. Also, the policy indicated
    employees cannot engage in outside employment while using routine sick leave. If an
    employee is on disability leave or modified/light duty, then that employee must notify
    his supervisor in writing of whether or not he plans to continue his outside employment
    while on leave or light duty status. The immediate supervisor will then make a
    recommendation to the Sheriff as to whether such outside employment should continue.
    If the Sheriff determines the outside employment should be discontinued, or if the
    5
    employee fails to notify his supervisor of his intent regarding outside employment, then
    a “notice of revocation of the member’s permit” will be sent to the employee.
    C.     LETTER
    In January 2011, the Association sent a letter to the Riverside County Director of
    Employee Relations. In the letter, the Association demanded Riverside County (the
    County) “comply with the meet-and-confer requirements of the Meyers-Milias-Brown
    Act (‘MMBA’), Government Code §§ 3500-3511.”2 The Association noted the
    MMBA requires the County to meet and confer with the Association on issues of
    wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment. The Association asserted
    the Department violated the MMBA by unilaterally revising the policy in 2010 without
    first meeting and conferring with the Association. The Association demanded the
    County (1) rescind the 2010 revisions to the policy and (2) meet and confer with the
    Association regarding the 2010 revisions to the policy prior to implementing any
    revisions. The Association notified the County that a failure to comply with the
    MMBA would result in the initiation of litigation, possibly including a petition for writ
    of mandate.
    D.     PETITION FOR WRIT OF MANDATE
    On November 1, 2013, the Association petitioned the trial court for a writ of
    mandate. In the petition, the Association asserted the Department, in implementing the
    2  The Meyers-Milias-Brown Act (MMBA) “governs labor-management
    relations at the local government level.” (Claremont Police Officers Assn. v. City of
    Claremont (2006) 
    39 Cal.4th 623
    , 628 (Claremont).)
    6
    2010 revisions, unilaterally created “a change in working conditions, to wit: no longer
    following the long standing policy and practice of allowing [Association] members to
    acquire and maintain secondary employment, [the Department has] acted to interfere
    with, intimidate, restrain, and coerce its members for the exercise of their right under
    Government Code [section] 3502, in that people viewing this situation will believe that
    [the Association] is not able to exercise its right to represent its members in their
    employment relations with [the Department].”
    The Association requested a writ of mandate ordering the Department “not to
    change its policy and practice of allowing [the Association’s] members to acquire and
    maintain secondary employment, absent agreement to do so as part of the collective
    bargaining process.”
    In the Association’s Points and Authorities in Support of the petition, the
    Association explained that an April 2008 Memorandum of Understanding (MOU)
    between the Association and the Department contains a “zipper clause.” The zipper
    clause provides that, during the term of the agreement (April 2008 through January
    2011), “the parties may meet and confer on issues within the scope of representation
    only if they mutually agree to do so.” The zipper clause is meant to “bring[] closure to
    the bargaining process,” such that neither party changes the terms of the agreement
    during the agreement’s effective period.
    The Association asserted that allowing employees to maintain outside
    employment was such a longstanding Department policy that it constitutes “an implied
    condition of employment.” The Association argued that the Department’s decision to
    7
    “depart from this policy and practice” without “indicat[ing] a willingness to meet and
    confer” constitutes a deprivation of the Association’s “right to collective bargaining
    guaranteed in the MMBA and . . . a breach of the current MOU.”
    E.     DEMURRER
    The Department demurred to the writ petition. First, the Department asserted the
    Association had six months to file an unfair labor practices charge under the MMBA,
    and because the Association waited three years to file its petition, the petition was
    untimely. Second, the Department asserted section 1126 mandated the policy (1) be
    adopted, and (2) excluded from collective bargaining.3 Third, the Department
    3   Section 1126 provides: “(a) Except as provided in Sections 1128 and 1129, a
    local agency officer or employee shall not engage in any employment, activity, or
    enterprise for compensation which is inconsistent, incompatible, in conflict with, or
    inimical to his or her duties as a local agency officer or employee or with the duties,
    functions, or responsibilities of his or her appointing power or the agency by which he
    or she is employed. The officer or employee shall not perform any work, service, or
    counsel for compensation outside of his or her local agency employment where any part
    of his or her efforts will be subject to approval by any other officer, employee, board, or
    commission of his or her employing body, unless otherwise approved in the manner
    prescribed by subdivision (b).
    “(b) Each appointing power may determine, subject to approval of the local
    agency, and consistent with the provisions of Section 1128 where applicable, those
    outside activities which, for employees under its jurisdiction, are inconsistent with,
    incompatible to, or in conflict with their duties as local agency officers or employees.
    An employee’s outside employment, activity, or enterprise may be prohibited if
    it: (1) involves the use for private gain or advantage of his or her local agency time,
    facilities, equipment and supplies; or the badge, uniform, prestige, or influence of his or
    her local agency office or employment or, (2) involves receipt or acceptance by the
    officer or employee of any money or other consideration from anyone other than his or
    her local agency for the performance of an act which the officer or employee, if not
    performing such act, would be required or expected to render in the regular course or
    hours of his or her local agency employment or as a part of his or her duties as a local
    agency officer or employee or, (3) involves the performance of an act in other than his
    [footnote continued on next page]
    8
    contended “[o]utside employment policies are not within the scope of representation as
    defined by the MMBA,” and, therefore, the Department is not obligated to meet and
    confer about the policy revisions.
    F.       OPPOSITION TO THE DEMURRER
    The Association opposed the demurrer. The Association asserted there is a
    three-year statute of limitations for filing an unfair labor practices petition under the
    MMBA. In response to the Department’s reliance on section 1126, the Association
    asserted there is a parallel statute, section 19990, which also concerns conflicts of
    interest.4 The Association asserted case law and administrative law concerning section
    [footnote continued from previous page]
    or her capacity as a local agency officer or employee which act may later be subject
    directly or indirectly to the control, inspection, review, audit, or enforcement of any
    other officer or employee or the agency by which he or she is employed, or (4) involves
    the time demands as would render performance of his or her duties as a local agency
    officer or employee less efficient.
    “(c) The local agency shall adopt rules governing the application of this section.
    The rules shall include provision for notice to employees of the determination of
    prohibited activities, of disciplinary action to be taken against employees for engaging
    in prohibited activities, and for appeal by employees from such a determination and
    from its application to an employee. Nothing in this section is intended to abridge or
    otherwise restrict the rights of public employees under Chapter 9.5 (commencing with
    Section 3201) of Title 1.
    “(d) The application of this section to determine what outside activities of
    employees are inconsistent with, incompatible with, or in conflict with their duties as
    local agency officers or employees may not be used as part of the determination of
    compensation in a collective bargaining agreement with public employees.”
    4 Section 19990 provides: “A state officer or employee shall not engage in any
    employment, activity, or enterprise which is clearly inconsistent, incompatible, in
    conflict with, or inimical to his or her duties as a state officer or employee.
    “Each appointing power shall determine, subject to approval of the department,
    those activities which, for employees under its jurisdiction, are inconsistent,
    [footnote continued on next page]
    9
    19990 reflect that policies concerning employees’ conflicts of interest or incompatible
    [footnote continued from previous page]
    incompatible or in conflict with their duties as state officers or employees. Activities
    and enterprises deemed to fall in these categories shall include, but not be limited to, all
    of the following:
    “(a) Using the prestige or influence of the state or the appointing authority for
    the officer’s or employee’s private gain or advantage or the private gain of another.
    “(b) Using state time, facilities, equipment, or supplies for private gain or
    advantage.
    “(c) Using, or having access to, confidential information available by virtue of
    state employment for private gain or advantage or providing confidential information to
    persons to whom issuance of this information has not been authorized.
    “(d) Receiving or accepting money or any other consideration from anyone other
    than the state for the performance of his or her duties as a state officer or employee.
    “(e) Performance of an act in other than his or her capacity as a state officer or
    employee knowing that the act may later be subject, directly or indirectly to the control,
    inspection, review, audit, or enforcement by the officer or employee.
    “(f) Receiving or accepting, directly or indirectly, any gift, including money, or
    any service, gratuity, favor, entertainment, hospitality, loan, or any other thing of value
    from anyone who is doing or is seeking to do business of any kind with the officer’s or
    employee’s appointing authority or whose activities are regulated or controlled by the
    appointing authority under circumstances from which it reasonably could be
    substantiated that the gift was intended to influence the officer or employee in his or her
    official duties or was intended as a reward for any official actions performed by the
    officer or employee.
    “(g) Subject to any other laws, rules, or regulations as pertain thereto, not
    devoting his or her full time, attention, and efforts to his or her state office or
    employment during his or her hours of duty as a state officer or employee.
    “The department shall adopt rules governing the application of this section. The
    rules shall include provision for notice to employees prior to the determination of
    proscribed activities and for appeal by employees from such a determination and from
    its application to an employee. Until the department adopts rules governing the
    application of this section, as amended in the 1985-86 Regular Session of the
    Legislature, existing procedures shall remain in full force and effect.
    “If the provisions of this section are in conflict with the provisions of a
    memorandum of understanding reached pursuant to Section 3517.5, the memorandum
    of understanding shall be controlling without further legislative action, except that if
    such provisions of a memorandum of understanding require the expenditure of funds,
    the provisions shall not become effective unless approved by the Legislature in the
    annual Budget Act.”
    10
    activities are within the scope of representation, i.e., within the scope of collective
    bargaining. The Association argued that section 1126 should be interpreted
    consistently with section 19990 and, therefore, the subject matter of section 1126, i.e.,
    conflicts of interest, is within the scope of collective bargaining.
    The Association argued section 1126 does not prohibit collective bargaining.
    Section 1126, subdivision (d), provides: “The application of this section to determine
    what outside activities of employees are inconsistent with, incompatible with, or in
    conflict with their duties as local agency officers or employees may not be used as part
    of the determination of compensation in a collective bargaining agreement with public
    employees.”
    The Association asserted the plain meaning of section 1126, subdivision (d), is
    that “it prohibits using outside activities, i.e., ‘off duty employment,’ as part of the
    process to determine compensation during collective bargaining.” In particular, it
    restricts agencies “from ‘using off-duty employment as a bargaining tool’ as part of the
    ‘determination of compensation.’” The Association asserted subdivision (d) did not
    prevent collective bargaining over the determination of what outside activities would be
    in conflict with the employees’ duties.
    G.     REPLY TO OPPOSITION
    The Department filed a reply to the Association’s opposition. The Department
    asserted section 1126 applies to local agencies, while section 19990 applies to state
    agencies and, therefore, section 19990 is inapplicable in this case. The Department
    11
    contended the Association ignored differences between the two statutes that would
    cause section 1126 conflict of interest issues not to fall within collective bargaining.
    H.     DEMURRER RULING
    The trial court, in particular Judge Molloy, overruled the Department’s demurrer.
    At the hearing on the demurrer, the trial court concluded (1) a three-year statute of
    limitations applies, and (2) the Legislature included the language about barring
    collective bargaining in section 1126 because it wanted to prevent outside employment
    “from being used as a bargaining chip. . . [¶] [t]o bargain a better deal for the County in
    terms of, okay, we’re not going to let you engage in these outside practices unless you
    accept our deal on just compensation.”
    I.     ANSWER
    The Department filed an answer to the Association’s writ petition. In the
    answer, the Department alleged the Association (1) failed to state facts sufficient to
    constitute a cause of action and (2) failed to comply with filing requirements.
    J.     PREEMPTORY WRIT
    The Association petitioned the trial court for a preemptory writ of mandate
    ordering the Department to rescind the 2010 policy revisions and to cease and desist
    from changing the outside employment policy unless the Department complied with the
    MMBA. The Association raised essentially the same arguments that were raised in
    opposition to the demurrer: (1) section 19990, which concerns conflicts of interest on a
    state level and policies related to those issues have been determined to be subject to
    collective bargaining; (2) section 1126, which concerns local agency conflicts of
    12
    interest, is modeled on section 19990; and (3) section 1126 should be interpreted in
    accordance with section 19990.
    The Department opposed the petition for a preemptory writ of mandate relying
    on the same arguments it raised in its demurrer: (1) section 1126 is distinguishable
    from section 19990; (2) the express language and legislative history of section 1126
    reflects collective bargaining is prohibited; and (3) the MOU excludes the outside
    employment policy from collective bargaining.
    The trial court denied the petition for a preemptory writ of mandate.
    K.     TENTATIVE RULING
    The trial court issued a seven-page tentative ruling. In the tentative ruling, the
    trial court, in particular Judge Waters, concluded (1) although the Association failed to
    explain how the policy affects “wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of
    employment” such that it would fall within the scope of collective bargaining, it was
    “apparent” that some of the 2010 revisions to the policy affect conditions of
    employment; (2) section 1126, subdivision (d), precludes collective bargaining over
    outside employment in connection with determining compensation, but it may still be
    part of the collective bargaining process in terms of negotiating hours and conditions of
    employment; and (3) the “zipper clause” in the MOU does not give the Department the
    authority to make unilateral changes to the status quo.
    The trial court also considered whether the policy amendments were a
    managerial function and, therefore, subject to the meet-and-confer process. The trial
    court found the Association failed to address the issue, and the Department
    13
    “oversimplif[ied]” the issue. The trial court explained that neither party’s argument
    took into account that there is a distinction to be made “between deciding on the policy,
    and the implementation and effects of that decision. Even if the policy decision itself is
    not subject to a duty to meet and confer, the implementation of the policy may well be.”
    The trial court observed that the parties “have made this into an all or nothing
    position—either the entire policy is subject to meet and confer, or none of it is.” The
    court tentatively decided that it would require further briefing from the parties.
    L.     SEPTEMBER HEARING
    On September 26, 2014, the trial court held a hearing on the writ petition. The
    trial court explained, “I’m not seeing this necessarily as an all or nothing. Either every
    aspect related to the outside employment is exempt from bargaining, or all of it has to
    be bargained.”
    The Association argued that supplemental briefing was not necessary because
    the administrative cases interpreting section 19990 reflect the issue of outside
    employment is subject to collective bargaining; because section 1126 is very similar to
    section 19990, the 2010 policy revision, which is based on section 1126, is subject to
    collective bargaining.
    The Department also argued that supplemental briefing was not necessary. First,
    the Department asserted the outside employment policy had never been a topic at past
    collective bargaining negotiations and, therefore, “[i]t’s a [D]epartment policy,” which
    means it is “a management policy, not a negotiated term.” The Department argued that
    the Association’s failure to argue the managerial function issue in its petition was a
    14
    failure of the Association to meet its burden of proof and, therefore, the writ should be
    denied. The Department argued that the Association failed to ask for partial relief or
    that only the effects of the policy should be bargained for. The Department asserted
    that the Association’s failure to ask for partial relief precluded the trial court from
    granting such relief.
    Second, the Department asserted the Association was “relying on an irrefutably
    inapplicable statute.” The Department further argued that the Association was relying
    on administrative law decisions issued by the Public Employment Relations Board
    (PERB), but law enforcement is exempt from PERB, which is why the instant case was
    in court rather than at PERB. Additionally, the Department asserted section 1126,
    subdivision (d), expressly exempted the 2010 policy revisions from being part of the
    collective bargaining negotiations.
    The trial court stated supplemental briefing would not be granted and took the
    matter under submission.
    M.     OCTOBER HEARING
    On October 27, 2014, the trial court held another hearing in the matter because
    the Department had changed its proposed judgment. The trial court explained that the
    original proposed judgment was a simple denial, while the second proposed judgment
    “has a lot more in there than certainly [the trial court] even contemplated.”
    The court continued, “I’ll tell you both, after you rejected my very generous
    offer to allow both of you to do more briefing and you both insisted that from your
    perspective the briefing was adequate, I looked at the petitioner’s argument which was
    15
    based solely and exclusively on Government Code, section 19990 and a PERB case and
    concluded that the statute and case [are] inapplicable because of the suppression issue.
    [¶] I didn’t go to any of the issues raised in the County’s response. You know, you
    wanted a ruling based on the briefing, petitioner had the burden. Petitioner presented
    only one argument, and I rejected that argument.”
    The Department explained it did not understand the trial court’s rationale when it
    drafted the second proposed judgment. The trial court instructed the Department to
    submit a proposed judgment that was a simple denial. The trial court explained, “It’s a
    legal issue and almost doesn’t matter why I ruled. If you’re going to go up to the Court
    of Appeal, they are going to come to their own understanding.” The trial court denied
    the Association’s petition for writ of mandate.
    DISCUSSION
    A.     WRIT OF MANDATE
    As a threshold issue, the Department contends its decision to revise the outside
    employment policy was discretionary, rather than ministerial and, therefore, the policy
    revisions are not the proper subject for a writ of mandate.
    A court may issue a writ of mandate to an agency to compel the performance of
    an act that the law requires to be performed. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1085, subd. (a);
    Gomez v. Superior Court (2012) 
    54 Cal.4th 293
    , 300-301.) “‘To obtain writ relief
    under Code of Civil Procedure section 1085, the petitioner must show there is no other
    plain, speedy, and adequate remedy; the respondent has a clear, present, and ministerial
    duty to act in a particular way; and the petitioner has a clear, present and beneficial
    16
    right to performance of that duty.’” (Zubarau v. City of Palmdale (2011) 
    192 Cal.App.4th 289
    , 305.)
    “‘“A ministerial act is an act that a public officer is required to perform in a
    prescribed manner in obedience to the mandate of legal authority and without regard to
    his own judgment or opinion concerning such act’s propriety or impropriety, when a
    given state of facts exists. Discretion, on the other hand, is the power conferred on
    public functionaries to act officially according to the dictates of their own judgment.”’”
    (US Ecology, Inc. v. State of California (2001) 
    92 Cal.App.4th 113
    , 138.)
    In the Association’s petition, it seeks a writ ordering the Department “not to
    change its policy and practice of allowing [Association] members to acquire and
    maintain secondary employment, absent agreement to do so as part of the collective
    bargaining process.” The Association’s request reflects options. The Department can
    choose to (1) change the policy, if it engages in collective bargaining; or (2) not change
    the policy. Options do not correlate with a writ of mandate because mandate applies
    when the petition seeks to compel a ministerial, not discretionary, act. (US Ecology,
    Inc. v. State of California, supra, 92 Cal.App.4th at p. 138; Levingston v. Retirement
    Board (1995) 
    38 Cal.App.4th 996
    , 1001.)
    In order to remedy this problem, we will construe the Association’s petition as
    seeking only to have the 2010 policy revision rescinded, because the revision violates
    the law. In other words, we will focus on what has happened in the past, as opposed to
    what may occur in the future. With this understanding, the Association is only seeking
    17
    to have the revisions to the policy rescinded, which would be a ministerial action and,
    therefore, the proper subject of a writ of mandate.
    B.     STANDARD OF REVIEW
    “In reviewing a judgment on a petition for writ of mandate under Code of Civil
    Procedure section 1085, we apply the substantial evidence test in assessing the court’s
    factual findings but exercise independent judgment on purely legal issues such as the
    interpretation of statutes.” (Rivero v. Lake County Bd. of Supervisors (2014) 
    232 Cal.App.4th 1187
    , 1193-1194.)
    C.     WAGE, HOURS, AND WORKING CONDITIONS
    1.     CONTENTION
    In the Association’s writ petition, it asserts the 2010 policy revisions must be
    rescinded because the Department imposed the revisions unilaterally.
    2.     COLLECTIVE BARGAINING LAW
    “‘The MMBA applies to local government employees in California. [Citation.]
    “The MMBA has two stated purposes: (1) to promote full communication between
    public employers and employees, and (2) to improve personnel management and
    employer-employee relations. (§ 3500.) To effect these goals the act gives local
    government employees the right to organize collectively and to be represented by
    employee organizations (§ 3502), and obligates employers to bargain with employee
    representatives about matters that fall within the ‘scope of representation’ (§§ 3504.5,
    3505).”’
    18
    “Under the MMBA, a public employer and a recognized employee organization
    have a mutual obligation to meet in person and confer promptly upon either party’s
    request in an endeavor to reach [an] agreement on matters within the scope of
    representation before the public agency’s adoption of its final budget for the coming
    year. [Citations.] The obligation to bargain in good faith requires that the parties ‘must
    genuinely seek to reach agreement.’ [Citation.] The MMBA does not require that the
    parties actually reach an agreement. [Citation.] ‘[A] public employer has the ultimate
    power to reject employee proposals on any particular issue.’
    “Section 3504 defines the term ‘scope of representation’ to include ‘all matters
    relating to employment conditions and employer-employee relations, including, but not
    limited to, wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment, except,
    however, that the scope of representation shall not include consideration of the merits,
    necessity, or organization of any service or activity provided by law or executive order.’
    The California Supreme Court has stated: ‘The definition of “scope of representation”
    and its exceptions are “arguably vague” and “overlapping.” [Citations.] “‘[W]ages,
    hours and working conditions,’ which, broadly read could encompass practically any
    conceivable bargaining proposal; and ‘merits, necessity or organization of any service’
    which, expansively interpreted, could swallow the whole provision for collective
    negotiation and relegate determination of all labor issues to the city’s discretion.”’”
    (Association of Orange County Deputy Sheriffs v. County of Orange (2013) 
    217 Cal.App.4th 29
    , 38-39 (Orange County).)
    19
    The California Supreme Court crafted a three-part test “to determine whether an
    employer’s action is subject to the meet-and-confer requirements of section 3505:
    ‘First, we ask whether the management action has “a significant and adverse effect on
    the wages, hours, or working conditions of the bargaining-unit employees.” [Citation.]
    If not, there is no duty to meet and confer. [Citations.] Second, we ask whether the
    significant and adverse effect arises from the implementation of a fundamental
    managerial or policy decision. If not, then . . . the meet-and-confer requirement applies.
    [Citation.] Third, if both factors are present—if an action taken to implement a
    fundamental managerial or policy decision has a significant and adverse effect on the
    wages, hours, or working conditions of the employees—we apply a balancing test. The
    action “is within the scope of representation only if the employer’s need for
    unencumbered decisionmaking in managing its operations is outweighed by the benefit
    to employer-employee relations of bargaining about the action in question.” [Citation.]
    In balancing the interests to determine whether parties must meet and confer over a
    certain matter [citation], a court may also consider whether the “transactional cost of
    the bargaining process outweighs its value.”’” (Orange County, supra, 217
    Cal.App.4th at p. 40.)
    3.     ADVERSE EFFECT
    We begin with the first step—whether the Department’s 2010 revisions to the
    outside employment policy had a significant and adverse effect on the wages, hours, or
    working conditions of the Association’s members. If it did not have a significant and
    20
    adverse effect, then there is no duty to meet and confer. (Orange County, supra, 217
    Cal.App.4th at p. 40.)
    “The MMBA does not define the phrase ‘other terms and conditions of
    employment.’ (§ 3504.) Courts have construed the phrase ‘wages, hours, and other
    terms and conditions of employment’ to include the transfer of bargaining-unit work to
    nonunit employees, mandatory drug testing of employees, work shift changes, and the
    adoption of a disciplinary rule prohibiting use of public facilities for personal use.”
    (Orange County, supra, 217 Cal.App.4th at pp. 40-41.)
    The last category, regarding disciplinary rules prohibiting personal use of public
    facilities, refers to a case in which firefighters were prohibited from using city facilities
    to wash their personal vehicles while not on duty. (Vernon Fire Fighters v. City of
    Vernon (1980) 
    107 Cal.App.3d 802
    , 806 (Vernon).) The maximum penalty for
    violating the rule was demotion. (Id. at p. 807.)
    a)     Analogy to Overtime
    The Association asserts the 2010 revisions to the policy have adversely affected
    its members because members’ “outside employment opportunities are restricted.” The
    Association implies this restriction is similar to the removal of the opportunity to
    perform overtime work.
    The loss of the opportunity to perform overtime work affects employees’
    workload and compensation and, therefore, that loss has been viewed as an adverse
    effect on “wages, hours and other terms and conditions of employment.” (Dublin
    21
    Professional Fire Fighters, Local 1885 v. Valley Community Services Dist. (1975) 
    45 Cal.App.3d 116
    , 119.)
    In the instant case, the Association provides no explanation of how the 2010
    policy revision has created greater restrictions on outside employment opportunities,
    when compared to the prior (2001) version of the outside employment policy, such that
    employees have been significantly and adversely affected by the revision in a manner
    that would be similar to a loss of overtime opportunities. The Association does not
    quote language from the revised policy or cite to the record in any way so as to
    demonstrate in what way its members may be significantly and adversely affected. Due
    to the lack of record citations and legal analysis, we deem this issue to be abandoned.
    (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.204(a)(1)(B), (C) [provide argument and record citations];
    Regents of University of California v. Sheily (2004) 
    122 Cal.App.4th 824
    , 826, fn. 1.)
    On our own, we have reviewed the 2001 version of the outside employment
    policy and the 2010 revision to that policy. In the 2001 version of the policy, approval
    of outside employment could be denied or withdrawn if “[t]he outside employment
    requires the employee to work in excess of six (6) hours on a day on which they are
    scheduled to work eight (8) hours for the Sheriff’s Department. Employees working
    twelve (12) hour shifts are not permitted outside employment on those days they are
    scheduled to work for the Sheriff’s Department. A maximum of twenty-four (24) hours
    of outside employment per week is allowed.”
    In the 2010 version of the policy, the Department reserved the right to deny an
    outside employment application if “[t]he outside employment requires the employee to
    22
    work in excess of six (6) hours on a day on which they are scheduled to work
    eight (8) hours or four (4) hours on a day on which they are scheduled to work
    ten (10) hours for the Sheriff’s Department. Employees working twelve (12) hour
    shifts are not permitted outside employment on those days they are scheduled to work
    for the Sheriff’s Department. A maximum of twenty-four (24) hours of outside
    employment per week is allowed.”
    In the 2001 and 2010 versions of the statute, 24 hours per week of outside
    employment was permitted. Thus, there was no change in the total amount of hours an
    employee could work outside the Department. As a result, without (1) legal analysis as
    to (a) why the Association believes the policy revision significantly and adversely
    affected its members, and/or (b) how the policy amendments are analogous to a loss of
    overtime opportunities, and/or (2) record citations to provide some direction, we cannot
    decipher the Association’s reasoning on this issue. Accordingly, as explained ante, we
    must regard the issue as having been abandoned. (Grant-Burton v. Covenant Care, Inc.
    (2002) 
    99 Cal.App.4th 1361
    , 1379 [“‘[t]here is no duty on this court to search the
    record for evidence’”]; Landry v. Berryessa Union School Dist. (1995) 
    39 Cal.App.4th 691
    , 699-700 (Landry) [“When an issue is unsupported by pertinent or cognizable legal
    argument it may be deemed abandoned”]; In re S.C. (2006) 
    138 Cal.App.4th 396
    , 410
    [“This is no legal analysis at all. It is simply a conclusion, unsupported by any
    explanation”].)
    b)     Discipline
    23
    The Association contends the 2010 policy revision had a significant and adverse
    effect on the wages, hours, or working conditions of the Association’s members
    because the 2010 revision imposed new disciplinary rules in that “the Department can,
    for the first time, also take away an employee’s opportunity to earn additional income
    through outside employment.”
    The Association does not quote language from the 2010 and 2001 versions of the
    policies, but does provide a record citation to the 2010 version of the policy. We infer
    the Association is referring to the following portion of the 2010 version of the policy:
    “Suspension or revocation of a previously approved outside employment permit may be
    included as a term or condition of sustained discipline . . . .” The 2001 version of the
    policy provided, “Outside employment without Departmental approval subjects the
    employee to Departmental discipline.”
    The 2010 discipline provision is fundamentally different than the discipline
    discussed in the 2001 version of the policy. The 2010 provision allows for approval of
    outside employment to be revoked in connection with any disciplinary matter. The
    2001 version of the policy provided there may be an unidentified form of discipline for
    not following the outside employment policy.
    As explained ante, the adoption of a disciplinary rule imposing a maximum
    penalty of demotion for personal use of public facilities has been held to constitute a
    condition of employment. (Orange County, supra, 217 Cal.App.4th at pp. 40-41;
    Vernon, supra, 107 Cal.App.3d at p. 817.) Accordingly, we will assume the
    disciplinary rule in the 2010 policy revision is a new condition of employment because
    24
    it is a disciplinary rule. It must now be determined whether the Association’s members
    have been affected in a significant and adverse manner by this new condition.
    (Claremont, 
    supra,
     39 Cal.4th at p. 631.)
    The Association fails to explain (1) how there is an effect on its members, and
    (2) if there is an effect, how the effect is significant and adverse. The Association
    implies that, per se, a change to a disciplinary rule causes a significant and adverse
    effect on employees. Contrary to the Association’s position, the determination of
    whether an agency’s action is subject to the meet-and-confer requirements of section
    3505 is largely a factual question. (Fire Fighters Union v. City of Vallejo (1974) 
    12 Cal.3d 608
    , 620-621.)
    Accordingly, it is incumbent on the Association to explain how its members are
    affected, and why the effect is both significant and adverse. In the Association’s
    appellant’s reply brief it cites to the 2008-2011 MOU. The page cited by the
    Association concerns the procedure for arbitration hearings. It then asserts discipline
    can include “‘dismissal, demotion, reduction in compensation, [and] suspension.’” The
    Association writes, “Also, under the new Policy, the Department can now take away,
    through disciplinary action, an employee’s opportunity to earn additional income
    through outside employment.”
    There is no explanation provided with these facts. It appears the Association is
    again arguing that the policy revision constitutes a working condition. However, to the
    extent the Association is trying to show there would be a significant and adverse effect
    on its members, such a showing has not been made or explained. For example, one
    25
    could reasonably look at the addition of the provision concerning loss of outside
    employment as a benefit to the employees. Instead of the harsher disciplinary actions
    of dismissal, demotion, suspension, and reduced pay at the employee’s primary job,
    they can now have a lesser form of discipline—loss of a job where they can, at most,
    work 24 hours per week. The point being, without analysis, we cannot understand why
    or how the Association’s members have been significantly and adversely affected by
    the 2010 policy revision.
    Due to the lack of argument presented on the point, we deem the issue to be
    abandoned. (Landry, supra, 39 Cal.App.4th at pp. 699-700 [“When an issue is
    unsupported by pertinent or cognizable legal argument it may be deemed abandoned”].)
    c)     Miscellaneous
    The Association asserts other aspects of the 2010 revisions concerning working
    conditions, such as (1) an employee on sick leave not being permitted to work at the
    employee’s outside job, and (2) employees have to be rated at “satisfactory” or “meets
    standard” levels in order to obtain and retain outside employment.
    Again, the Association takes a per se approach and fails to explain the issue.
    The Association writes in bold lettering, “‘no discussion is required,’” and concludes
    these various items cause the 2010 revisions to be “a ‘term or condition of
    employment.’” As the trial court aptly observed in its tentative ruling, the parties “have
    made this into an all or nothing position.” The Association’s per se approach to its
    argument has caused it not to analyze the issues as required by Claremont. (Claremont,
    26
    supra, 39 Cal.4th at p. 638 [setting forth the three-part test for determining a particular
    matter is subject to a duty to meet and confer].)
    Contrary to the Association’s position, a discussion of the facts is required. The
    Association needed to prove in the trial court, and explain in this court, why the 2010
    revisions constitute terms and conditions of employment, and how the Association’s
    members have been significantly and adversely affected by the change. Due to the lack
    of analysis and evidentiary support, we deem the issue to be abandoned. (Landry,
    supra, 39 Cal.App.4th at pp. 699-700 [“When an issue is unsupported by pertinent or
    cognizable legal argument it may be deemed abandoned”].)
    d)      Conclusion
    As explained ante, there is only a duty to meet and confer if the agency’s action
    has a significant and adverse effect on the wages, hours, or working conditions of the
    employees. (Orange County, supra, 217 Cal.App.4th at p. 40.) We cannot conclude,
    based upon the briefing, that the 2010 policy revision had a significant and adverse
    effect on the wages, hours, or working conditions of the Association’s members.
    Accordingly, there was not a duty to meet and confer.
    4.     IMPACT AND EFFECTS
    As explained ante, “[e]ven if an employer’s action or policy has a significant and
    adverse effect on the bargaining unit’s wages, hours, and working conditions, the
    employer may be excepted from bargaining requirements under the ‘merits, necessity,
    or organization’ language of section 3504.” (Claremont, supra, 39 Cal.4th at p. 631.)
    This allows “‘employers to make unconstrained decisions when fundamental
    27
    management or policy choices are involved.’” (Id. at p. 632.) However, while the
    employer/agency is not required to bargain over fundamental management decisions, it
    may be required to bargain over the effects of the decision. (Id. at p. 633.) For
    example, “‘an employer has the right unilaterally to decide that a layoff is necessary,
    [but it] must bargain about such matters as the timing of the layoffs and the number and
    identity of employees affected.’” (Id. at p. 634.)
    The Association contends that if this court determines the revisions to the policy
    were management decisions, then the Department should be required to bargain over
    the impact or effects of the revisions. We do not address the merits of this issue
    because the first step of the analysis has not been met—a showing that the revisions
    affected the Association’s members in a significant and adverse manner. (Claremont,
    supra, 39 Cal.4th at p. 631.)
    D.     SECTION 1126
    The Association contends section 1126 (which concerns conflicts of interest
    activities by employees of local agencies) is based on section 19990 (which concerns
    conflicts of interest activities by state employees), and policies concerning section
    19990 activities were determined, in an administrative law case, to be within the “scope
    of representation” and, thus, subject to collective bargaining. (Professional Engineers
    in California Government v. State of California (Water Resources Control Board)
    (1999) PERB Dec. No. 1337-S [1999 Cal. PERB Lexis 39].) Therefore, a policy
    concerning section 1126 activities must also fall within the “scope of representation”
    28
    and be subject to collective bargaining because the parallel laws should be interpreted
    in a compatible manner.
    Statutory interpretation begins with an examination of the statute’s plain
    language. If the plain language is clear—providing an obvious indication of the
    Legislature’s intent—then our analysis stops at that point. If the plain language is not
    clear, for example, it is susceptible to more than one meaning, then we look to extrinsic
    aids to determine the Legislature’s intent, such as legislative history, public policy, the
    purpose of the statute, contemporaneous administrative construction, and the overall
    statutory scheme of which the statute is a part. (Hoechst Celanese Corp. v. Franchise
    Tax Bd. (2001) 
    25 Cal.4th 508
    , 519.)
    Section 1126, subdivision (c), provides: “The local agency shall adopt rules
    governing the application of this section. The rules shall include provision for notice to
    employees of the determination of prohibited activities, of disciplinary action to be
    taken against employees for engaging in prohibited activities, and for appeal by
    employees from such a determination and from its application to an employee. Nothing
    in this section is intended to abridge or otherwise restrict the rights of public employees
    under Chapter 9.5 (commencing with Section 3201) of Title 1.” The plain language of
    subdivision (c) requires that the local agency adopt rules concerning conflicts of
    interest, but does not suggest a procedure for how the rules are to be adopted. It does
    not include or exclude the adoption of the rules from the collective bargaining process.
    Section 1126, subdivision (d), provides: “The application of this section to
    determine what outside activities of employees are inconsistent with, incompatible
    29
    with, or in conflict with their duties as local agency officers or employees may not be
    used as part of the determination of compensation in a collective bargaining agreement
    with public employees.” The plain language of subdivision (d) reflects conflicts of
    interest cannot be determined while simultaneously bargaining over compensation.
    The term “compensation” is not given a statutory definition within the laws pertaining
    to collective bargaining. (§ 3501.) Our Supreme Court has concluded, “The words
    ‘salary’ and ‘compensation’ are, in general usage, interchangeable and are synonymous
    in most definitions. ‘Compensation’ is ‘[t]he remuneration or wages given to an
    employee or, especially, to an officer. Salary, pay, or emolument.” (Treu v. Kirkwood
    (1954) 
    42 Cal.2d 602
    , 609.)
    Given the foregoing rules, the plain meaning of section 1126, subdivision (d), is
    that, during collective bargaining, determining what outside activities present a conflict
    of interest may not occur simultaneously with determining how much money
    employees are paid. For example, an agency could not offer to let employees work as
    private security guards (a conflict of interest) in exchange for lesser pay from the
    agency. In other words, if an activity has been determined to compromise a conflict of
    interest, then that conflict of interest is not open to negotiation in connection with
    compensation—conflicts of interest are not for sale.
    Given this language in the statute, it appears the Legislature contemplated unions
    and agencies possibly bargaining over conflict of interest policies and wanted to limit
    the extent of those negotiations. A long held principle of statutory construction is
    expressio unius est exclusio alterius, which means “the expression of one thing in a
    30
    statute ordinarily implies the exclusion of other things.” (In re J.W. (2002) 
    29 Cal.4th 200
    , 209.) In other words, if “a statute enumerates things upon which it is to operate it
    is to be construed as excluding from its effect all those [things] not expressly
    mentioned.” (Shelby v. Southern Pacific Co. (1945) 
    68 Cal.App.2d 594
    , 599.)
    The Legislature expressly limited collective bargaining from determining
    compensation while simultaneously determining what outside activities constitute a
    conflict of interest. (§ 1126, subd. (d).) By including this limitation, the Legislature
    necessarily left open the opportunity to collectively bargain over other issues related to
    outside employment. For example, unions and agencies could negotiate over issues
    such as the disciplinary action to be taken against employees who violate the conflict of
    interest rules. (See § 1126, subd. (c) [disciplinary rules].)
    Based upon the plain language of section 1126, we conclude the Legislature
    anticipated that aspects of agencies’ conflict of interest rules could possibly be part of
    the collective bargaining process. The statute does not state that conflict of interest
    rules necessarily fall within the scope of representation such that there is an affirmative
    or mandatory duty to bargain about conflict of interest policies. Rather, the plain
    language reflects that, if an agency’s policy should fall within the scope of
    representation, such that collective bargaining occurs over the policy, then the
    determination of what constitutes a conflict of interest cannot be negotiated in
    connection with compensation.
    The Association contends that outside employment policies adopted under
    section 1126 “are mandatory subjects of bargaining”—this appears to be a per se
    31
    argument. Contrary to the Association’s position, there is nothing in the plain language
    of section 1126 mandating bargaining over any and all outside employment policies.
    For example, in the instant case, there is no showing that the policy has created a
    significant and adverse effect on employees, so collective bargaining is not required.
    The only mention of bargaining in section 1126 is the exclusion of determining
    conflicts at the same time as determining pay. That exclusion in no way creates an
    affirmative duty to bargain in all situations. Given that there is no language in the
    statute indicating an intent to create an affirmative duty to bargain, we reject the
    Association’s assertion that policies created under section 1126 per se fall within the
    scope of representation and, therefore, are always mandatory subjects of collective
    bargaining.
    The Association supports its position regarding section 1126 and mandatory
    bargaining by arguing section 19990 is a parallel statute, and administrative law cases
    have interpreted policies created under section 19990 as falling within the scope of
    representation. The Association’s argument is not persuasive because when
    interpreting a statute, one need only resort to construction with other statutes and
    interpretation by administrative law courts if the plain language of the statute is unclear.
    (Hoechst Celanese Corp. v. Franchise Tax Bd., supra, 25 Cal.4th at p. 519.)
    The Association fails to address the first step of the analysis—the plain
    language. As a result, we do not understand why the Association believes the plain
    language of the statute is unclear such that we must move on to the second step and
    look at section 19990 and administrative law cases. As explained ante, in our view, the
    32
    plain language of the statute is clear; therefore, there is no need to consider section
    19990 and administrative law cases. The plain language being that there is not an
    affirmative or mandatory duty to bargain about conflict of interest policies, but should
    such bargaining occur, then the determination of what constitutes a conflict of interest
    cannot be negotiated in connection with compensation.
    The Department contends section 1126, subdivision (d), exempts outside
    employment policies from the collective bargaining process. The Department contends
    that parsing out conflicts of interest in connection with compensation during the
    collective bargaining process would be absurd. (See Upland Police Officers Assn. v.
    City of Upland (2003) 
    111 Cal.App.4th 1294
    , 1304 [plain meaning of a statute does not
    need to be followed if doing so will lead to absurd results].) The Department asserts
    collective bargaining negotiations are complex, and it would be difficult to determine
    whether the parties’ negotiations are touching on conflicts of interest related to
    compensation.
    The Department explains: “For example, in exchange for shorter hours for
    [Association] members, the County might seek concessions on the rate of pay, uniforms
    and certain terms of the outside employment policy. In this scenario, negotiations
    would be diverted into consideration of whether such an exchange was even
    permissible.”
    The Department’s argument fails because it is misunderstanding section 1126,
    subdivision (d). The Department appears to mistakenly believe compensation cannot
    be discussed at all in connection with outside employment activities, which we agree
    33
    would lead to complicated negotiations. However, the plain language of section 1126,
    subdivision (d), is not so broad. Section 1126, subdivision (d), indicates compensation
    shall not be determined when also determining what activities constitute a conflict of
    interest. For example, an agency may not offer to allow employees to serve as private
    security guards (a conflict of interest) in exchange for lesser pay from the agency, i.e.,
    conflicts of interest are not for sale. There need only be a determination of what
    activities constitute conflicts of interest prior to determining compensation. Given the
    limited nature of the exclusion, we are confident that skilled negotiators will be able to
    perform their collective bargaining duties without much added difficulty.
    E.     MOU
    In the Association’s appellant’s reply brief, it asserts the zipper clause of the
    MOU does not permit the Department to make unilateral changes. We infer this is a
    response to the Department’s argument, in its respondent’s brief, reflecting the
    Association waived—in the MOU—its right to negotiate the policy revisions. To the
    extent our inference is incorrect, and the Association is trying to raise a new issue
    concerning the MOU in its appellant’s reply brief, we cannot consider that issue. (City
    of Corona v. Naulls (2008) 
    166 Cal.App.4th 418
    , 425-426.)
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed. Respondents (County of Riverside, Stanley Sniff, the
    Board of Supervisors for the County of Riverside, and the Riverside County Sheriff’s
    Department) are awarded their costs on appeal.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    34
    MILLER
    J.
    We concur:
    McKINSTER
    Acting P. J.
    SLOUGH
    J.
    35
    

Document Info

Docket Number: E062836

Filed Date: 6/29/2016

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021