McGee v. Torrance Unified School District ( 2020 )


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  • Filed 5/29/20
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION EIGHT
    JAMES D. MCGEE,                              B298122
    Plaintiff and Appellant,     (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. YC068686)
    v.
    TORRANCE UNIFIED SCHOOL
    DISTRICT et al.,
    Defendants and Respondents.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los
    Angeles County. Michael P. Vicencia, Judge. Affirmed.
    Carlin Law Group, and Kevin R. Carlin for Plaintiff and
    Appellant.
    Atkinson, Andelson, Loya, Ruud & Romo, Martin A. Hom
    and Jennifer D. Cantrell, for Defendant and Respondent
    Torrance Unified School District.
    Finch, Thornton & Baird, Jason R. Thornton and Daniel P.
    Scholz for Defendant and Respondent Balfour Beatty
    Construction.
    _____________________________
    This appeal is the latest in a series of cases challenging the
    legality of lease-leaseback agreements used by school districts for
    construction and modernization projects. (See California
    Taxpayers Action Network v. Taber Construction, Inc. (2017) 
    12 Cal.App.5th 115
    , 122 (Taber).) Authorized by Education Code
    section 17406, lease-leaseback agreements are used to “contract[]
    for construction or improvement of school facilities. Under a
    lease-leaseback agreement, the school district leases its own real
    property to a contractor for a nominal amount, and the contractor
    agrees to construct school facilities or improve existing facilities
    on the property and lease the property and improvements back to
    the school district. At the end of the lease-leaseback agreement,
    title to the construction project vests in the school district.”
    (Taber, supra, at p. 122.)
    Starting in 2013, taxpayer James D. McGee filed a series of
    three complaints to challenge lease-leaseback agreements
    between the Torrance Unified School District (the District) and
    Balfour Beatty Construction (Balfour) for several schools in the
    district. For the latter two complaints, the California Taxpayers
    Action Network joined him as plaintiff (together referred to as
    McGee). Labeling the complaints as reverse validation actions
    under Code of Civil Procedure section 860 et seq.,1 McGee alleged
    a host of claims to invalidate the agreements. After two previous
    appeals, McGee’s complaints have been narrowed to his causes of
    action for conflict of interest. (McGee v. Torrance Unified School
    District (Jan. 23, 2015, B252570) [nonpub. opn.] (McGee I); McGee
    1     All undesignated statutory citations refer to the Code of
    Civil Procedure.
    2
    v. Balfour Beatty Construction, LLC (2016) 
    247 Cal.App.4th 235
    (McGee II).)
    The trial court entered judgment dismissing the remaining
    conflict of interest claims because the challenged projects had all
    been completed, which it held rendered the reverse validation
    action moot. (See Wilson & Wilson v. City Council of Redwood
    City (2011) 
    191 Cal.App.4th 1559
    , 1579 (Wilson).) McGee argues
    this was wrong because the lease-leaseback agreements were not
    subject to validation; his conflict of interest claims were in
    personam claims separate from his in rem reverse validation
    claims; and the court could have ordered disgorgement as a
    remedy even though the projects have been finished.
    We reject his contentions. The lease-leaseback agreements
    were subject to validation, and his conflict of interest claims
    necessarily challenge the validity of the agreements, regardless of
    label or remedy. Allowing his claims to proceed long after the
    projects have been finished would undermine the strong policy of
    promptly resolving the validity of public agency actions. Because
    the projects were completed, his claims are moot. We affirm the
    judgment of dismissal.
    BACKGROUND
    Between 2012 and 2015, the District and Balfour entered a
    series of lease-leaseback agreements for construction projects
    through Torrance Unified School District Obligation Bond
    Measure Y and Measure Z. Starting in 2013, McGee filed three
    complaints challenging them.
    The first lawsuit challenged the lease-leaseback
    agreements for projects at Hickory Elementary School, Madrona
    Middle School, and North High School. The trial court sustained
    demurrers to the complaint, and on appeal, we affirmed dismissal
    3
    of all claims except conflict of interest. We held that claim was
    sufficiently pled and remanded it to the trial court. (McGee I,
    B252570, 
    2015 WL 301918
    , at pp. *1, *6.)
    The second lawsuit challenged lease-leaseback agreements
    for projects at Tower Elementary School and Riviera Elementary
    School. Again, the trial court sustained demurrers, and again we
    affirmed except for the conflict of interest claim. (McGee II,
    supra, 247 Cal.App.4th at pp. 246–250.) We held McGee had
    standing to bring his conflict of interest claim pursuant to
    Government Code section 1090 and the claim was sufficiently
    pled. (McGee II, supra, at pp. 246–250.)
    The third lawsuit challenged lease-leaseback agreements
    for projects at Torrance High School, Edison Elementary School,
    and Yukon Elementary School. The operative complaint
    contained a single cause of action for conflict of interest.2
    McGee alleged each complaint was “brought in this court as
    a special in rem proceeding” to declare the challenged agreements
    void and invalid. Each complaint’s prayer for relief sought a
    declaration the action was properly brought pursuant to the
    validation statutes for “judicial invalidation” of the lease-
    leaseback agreements. The complaints also sought declarations
    each agreement was void and invalid and requested
    disgorgement of all money paid to Balfour.
    McGee’s conflict of interest claims essentially alleged
    Balfour “had a conflict of interest based on its professional
    program management, construction management, and
    preconstruction services to the District. Plaintiffs allege Balfour
    2     The agreements for the Edison and Yukon schools were
    rescinded in 2015, so they are no longer at issue.
    4
    provided preconstruction services including budgeting,
    development of plans and specifications and that these services
    ‘filled the roles and positions of officers, employees and agents’ of
    the District.” (McGee II, supra, 247 Cal.App.4th at p. 246.)
    The trial court consolidated the cases and held a bench trial
    limited to the mootness issue. The court heard testimony that all
    the projects had been completed. Because that was the only fact
    necessary to decide mootness, the court declined to admit
    stipulated exhibits offered by McGee. The court found McGee’s
    case was an “in rem reverse validation action” filed pursuant to
    section 860 et seq. that was rendered moot by the completion of
    the challenged projects. It entered judgment of dismissal.
    DISCUSSION
    “A case is considered moot when ‘the question addressed
    was at one time a live issue in the case,’ but has been deprived of
    life ‘because of events occurring after the judicial process was
    initiated.’ [Citation.] Because ‘ “the duty of . . . every . . . judicial
    tribunal . . . is to decide actual controversies by a judgment which
    can be carried into effect, and not to give opinions upon moot
    questions or . . . to declare principles or rules of law which cannot
    affect the matter in issue in the case before it[,] [i]t necessarily
    follows that when . . . an event occurs which renders it impossible
    for [the] court, if it should decide the case in favor of plaintiff, to
    grant him any effectual relief whatever, the court will not proceed
    to formal judgment. . . .” [Citations.]’ ” (Wilson, supra, 191
    Cal.App.4th at p. 1574.) The pivotal question in determining
    mootness is “whether the court can grant the plaintiff any
    effectual relief.” (Ibid.) We review the issue de novo when, as
    here, the facts are not disputed. (K.G. v. Meredith (2012) 
    204 Cal.App.4th 164
    , 174.)
    5
    Section 860 enables a public agency to commence an action
    to validate “any matter which under any law is authorized to be
    determined pursuant to this chapter, and for 60 days thereafter.”
    If the agency does not bring a validation action, “any interested
    person may bring an action within the time and in the court
    specified by Section 860 to determine the validity of such matter.”
    (§ 863.) A case brought by an interested person is frequently
    called a “reverse validation” action. (California Commerce
    Casino, Inc. v. Schwarzenegger (2007) 
    146 Cal.App.4th 1406
    ,
    1420, fn. 12 (Commerce Casino).)
    By statute, a validation action “shall be in the nature of a
    proceeding in rem.” (§ 860.) That means “a validation action
    operates against the property, as distinct from an injunction that
    operates against persons. [Citation.] As an in rem proceeding, a
    validation action differs from traditional actions challenging a
    public agency decision; its effect binds the agency and all other
    persons.” (Friedland v. City of Long Beach (1998) 
    62 Cal.App.4th 835
    , 843 (Friedland).)
    An agency need not bring a validation action to validate a
    decision, however. Instead, “ ‘an agency may indirectly but
    effectively “validate” its action by doing nothing to validate it;
    unless an “interested person” brings an action of his own under
    section 863 within the 60-day period, the agency’s action will
    become immune from attack whether it was legally valid or not.’
    [Citations.] As to matters ‘which have been or which could have
    been adjudicated in a validation action, such matters . . . must be
    raised within the statutory limitations period in section 860 et
    seq. or they are waived.’ ” (Commerce Casino, supra, 146
    Cal.App.4th at p. 1420; see § 870, subd. (a).)
    6
    “A key objective of a validation action is to limit the extent
    to which delay due to litigation may impair a public agency’s
    ability to operate financially.” (Friedland, supra, 62 Cal.App.4th
    at p. 843.) To that end, the validation statutes enable a “ ‘
    “speedy determination of the validity of the public agency’s
    action . . . plac[ing] great importance on the need for a single
    dispositive final judgment.” [Citation.] The validating statutes
    should be construed so as to uphold their purpose, i.e., “the acting
    agency’s need to settle promptly all questions about the validity
    of its action.” [Citation.]’ ” (Commerce Casino, supra, 146
    Cal.App.4th at pp. 1420–1421.) They “fulfill the important
    objective of ‘facilitat[ing] a public agency’s financial transactions
    with third parties by quickly affirming their legality.’ [Citation.]
    In particular, ‘ “[t]he fact that litigation may be pending or
    forthcoming drastically affects the marketability of public
    bonds[.]” ’ ” (Id. at p. 1421; see Friedland, supra, at p. 843.)
    Given the public interest in quickly resolving the legality of
    agency decisions, “California law has long recognized that the
    completion of a public works project moots challenges to the
    validity of the contracts under which the project was carried out.”
    (Wilson, supra, 191 Cal.App.4th at p. 1575.) Thus, a reverse
    validation action “may well become moot if the challenged
    redevelopment project is allowed to proceed during the pendency
    of the action.” (Id. at p. 1579.)
    In Wilson, the court dismissed a reverse validation action
    attacking a project and the resolutions authorizing it because the
    project had been completed before final judgment. (Wilson,
    supra, 191 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1575–1576.) The case had been
    pending for five years without explanation, which ran counter to
    the intent of “[v]alidation actions . . . to settle promptly all
    7
    questions about the validity of an agency’s action.” (Id. at
    p. 1580.) The delay was partly attributable to the plaintiff, which
    did not try to stop the project during the lawsuit: “ ‘Since [the
    plaintiff] made no effort to seek preliminary injunctive relief or a
    stay order in order to preserve the status quo, [it] is not in any
    position to complain of the very change in circumstances that [it]
    might have prevented by seeking such relief.’ ” (Id. at p. 1581.)
    As in Wilson, McGee’s reverse validation action was
    rendered moot by the completion of the challenged projects.
    McGee filed his first lawsuit as far back as 2013, and the trial
    court did not dismiss the cases until 2019. During those six
    years, McGee did nothing to stop the projects from moving
    forward while the validity of the lease-leaseback agreements was
    litigated. He tries to explain that choice by claiming he did not
    want to “impair District’s ability to operate” and he had an
    “adequate remedy at law” through disgorgement. Even if true,
    that does not change the fact that the projects were completed.
    As Wilson recognized, this years-long delay destroyed the very
    purpose behind the validation statutes—“to settle promptly all
    questions about the validity of an agency’s action.” (Wilson,
    supra, 191 Cal.App.4th at p. 1580, italics added.) Having sought
    no stay or injunction, he is in no position “ ‘to complain of the
    very change in circumstances that [he] might have prevented by
    seeking such relief.’ ” (Id. at p. 1581.)
    McGee does not seriously dispute the holding in Wilson
    that a reverse validation action becomes moot if the challenged
    project is completed. Instead, he argues his conflict of interest
    claims fall outside Wilson because they were not subject to the
    validation statutes in a number of ways. His arguments are
    unpersuasive.
    8
    First and most fundamentally, McGee contends the lease-
    leaseback agreements themselves are not subject to validation.
    The validation statutes apply “when ‘any other law’ authorizes
    their application.” (Golden Gate Hill Development Co. v. County
    of Alameda (2015) 
    242 Cal.App.4th 760
    , 765–766.) In
    determining whether his claims “fall[] within the boundaries of a
    particular legislative declaration that the validation statutes
    apply, we assess whether ‘ “[t]he gravamen of a complaint and
    the nature of the right sued upon, rather than the form of the
    action or relief demanded . . . ” ’ falls within the language of the
    declaration.” (Santa Clarita Organization for Planning & the
    Environment v. Abercrombie (2015) 
    240 Cal.App.4th 300
    , 308
    (Abercrombie); see McLeod v. Vista Unified School Dist. (2008)
    
    158 Cal.App.4th 1156
    , 1165 (McLeod).)
    Here, the applicable law is Government Code section
    53511, which declares the validation statutes apply to “an action
    to determine the validity of [a local agency’s] bonds, warrants,
    contracts, obligations or evidences of indebtedness.” (Gov. Code,
    § 53511, subd. (a), italics added.) McGee argues the lease-
    leaseback agreements are not “contracts” as the term is used in
    Government Code section 53511. “California courts have read
    [Government Code] section 53511’s reference to ‘contracts’
    ‘narrow[ly]’ to reach only those contracts that ‘are in the nature
    of, or directly relate[d] to a public agency’s bonds, warrants or
    other evidences of indebtedness.’ ” (Abercrombie, supra, 240
    Cal.App.4th at p. 309; see Commerce Casino, supra, 146
    Cal.App.4th at p. 1429.) But contracts “involving financing and
    financial obligations” fall within this provision (Friedland, supra,
    62 Cal.App.4th at p. 843), as do contracts that are “ ‘inextricably
    9
    bound up’ ” with bond funding and financing (McLeod, supra,
    158 Cal.App.4th at p. 1169).
    We previously held Education Code section 17406
    authorizes lease-leaseback agreements without competitive
    bidding. (McGee II, supra, 247 Cal.App.4th at p. 242.) That
    provision has been characterized as providing a method of
    “financing school construction.” (Taber, supra, 12 Cal.App.5th at
    p. 136 [noting Education Code section 17406 provided method for
    “financing school construction,” but did not require school district
    to lack funds in order to enter lease-leaseback agreements].)
    As such, “the use of validation actions is a common practice for
    school construction projects structured as a lease-leaseback
    arrangement.” (Davis v. Fresno Unified School Dist. (2015) 
    237 Cal.App.4th 261
    , 273, fn. 4 (Davis).) Here, the challenged lease-
    leaseback agreements were “funded through Torrance Unified
    School District General Obligation Bond Measure[s].” (See
    McGee II, supra, 247 Cal.App.4th at p. 240 [“The contracts were
    awarded to Balfour and were funded through a general obligation
    bond.”].) Thus, the lease-leaseback agreements involved the
    District’s financial obligations and were inextricably bound up in
    the District’s bond financing, bringing them within the scope of
    “contracts” covered by Government Code section 53511.
    Were there any doubt, McGee’s own treatment of the lease-
    leaseback agreements throughout this litigation demonstrates
    they fall within Government Code section 53511. His operative
    complaints expressly alleged these cases were brought under
    section 863 as in rem actions to invalidate the lease-leaseback
    agreements. That includes his most recent lawsuit, which
    asserted only a conflict of interest claim and yet characterized the
    suit as an in rem proceeding and sought a declaration the lawsuit
    10
    was properly brought as a reverse validation action. McGee filed
    each complaint within the short 60-day statute of limitations for
    reverse validation actions. (§§ 860, 863.) He complied with the
    statutory procedure for service of a reverse validation action by
    publication. (§§ 861, 863.) Co-plaintiff California Taxpayers
    Action Network was not a party to the first complaint, but it filed
    an answer, alleging it had “an interest in the validity of the
    contracts.” It could have only done so as an “interested party”
    subject to jurisdiction by publication of the summons according to
    the validation statutes. (§ 861; see Friedland, supra, 62
    Cal.App.4th at p. 843.)
    Beyond the pleadings, McGee previously argued in the trial
    court the lease-leaseback agreements were subject to validation.
    In opposing motions for judgment on the pleadings, he relied on
    Davis to take the position the lease-leaseback agreements “[a]re
    [s]ubject to [v]alidation” pursuant to Government Code section
    53511 because they “are for the purpose of financing.” He also
    distinguished Abercrombie because the court in that case held the
    challenged contracts were not subject to validation.
    (Abercrombie, supra, 240 Cal.App.4th at pp. 309–310.) McGee
    even went so far as to claim Balfour “cannot dispute lease
    leaseback contracts like the ones at issue here are subject to
    validation actions because [the defendants] have in prior motions
    requested the Court take judicial notice of scores of prior
    validation actions as evidence of the legality of their transaction.
    They can[]not have it both ways.”
    We also previously held McGee had standing to bring his
    conflict of interest claims in part because “this case involved a
    validation action in which the court had authority to set aside
    void contracts.” (McGee II, supra, 247 Cal.App.4th at p. 248.)
    11
    Similarly, other recent appellate decisions evaluating lease-
    leaseback agreements arose in cases brought under the
    validation statutes. (See Taber, supra, 12 Cal.App.5th at p. 122;
    Los Alamitos Unified School Dist. v. Howard Contracting, Inc.
    (2014) 
    229 Cal.App.4th 1222
    , 1225; Davis, supra, 237 Cal.App.4th
    at p. 273, fn. 4.) We are satisfied the lease-leaseback agreements
    fall within Government Code section 53511, bringing them within
    the validation statutes.3
    The centerpiece of McGee’s appeal is his argument the
    conflict of interest claims were in personam taxpayer claims
    brought pursuant to section 526a falling outside the validation
    statutes.4 Section 526a allows a taxpayer to bring “[a]n action to
    obtain a judgment restraining and preventing any illegal
    expenditure of, waste of, or injury to, the estate, funds, or other
    property of a local agency . . . against any officer thereof, or any
    agent, or other person, acting in its behalf.” (§ 526a, subd. (a).)
    “The purpose of section 526a ‘is to permit a large body of persons
    to challenge wasteful government action that otherwise would go
    unchallenged because of the standing requirement.’ [Citation.]
    ‘The essence of a taxpayer action is an illegal or wasteful
    3     Balfour and the District invoke various legal doctrines to
    argue McGee is precluded from asserting this argument due to
    his prior positions in the trial court. We need not rely on those
    principles. McGee’s previous treatment of the lease-leaseback
    agreements is proof enough to support the conclusion the
    agreements are, in fact, subject to the validation statutes.
    4     McGee argues the trial court had personal jurisdiction over
    Balfour and the District because they made general appearances.
    That aspect of personal jurisdiction over the parties is not
    disputed and is not at issue here.
    12
    expenditure of public funds or damage to public property.’ ”
    (McLeod, supra, 158 Cal.App.4th at p. 1165; see Taber, supra, 12
    Cal.App.5th at p. 141.)
    McGee contends he may use section 526a to assert conflict
    of interest claims pursuant to common law and Government Code
    section 1090. “[S]ection 526a is, as a general rule, available to
    taxpayers who wish to challenge government contracts affected
    by financial conflicts of interest,” including pursuant to
    Government Code section 1090. (San Diegans for Open
    Government v. Public Facilities Financing Authority of City of
    San Diego (2019) 
    8 Cal.5th 733
    , 746 (San Diegans).)5
    Government Code section 1090 “ ‘ “codifies the long-standing
    common law rule that barred public officials from being
    personally financially interested in the contracts they formed in
    their official capacities.” [Citation.] Government Code “section
    5      McGee has withdrawn an argument he may independently
    assert a conflict of interest claim pursuant to Government Code
    section 1092, which permits “any party” to avoid a contract that
    violates Government Code section 1090. San Diegans held that
    section does not “create[] a private right of action for nonparties
    to sue to avoid public contracts.” (San Diegans, supra, 8 Cal.5th
    at p. 746.) The District and Balfour go further to argue McGee
    also cannot pursue a section 526a taxpayer claim—which is
    permissible under San Diegans—because he distinguished a case
    in his opening appellate brief on the ground it “involved a CCP
    § 526a action not a GC § 1092 action as is the case here.” His
    opening brief was filed before San Diegans was issued. In his
    reply brief, he argued he could bring his claim pursuant to
    section 526a. The District and Balfour filed supplemental briefs
    addressing San Diegans. Considered against this backdrop, we
    will not treat McGee’s isolated comment as a bar to his reliance
    on section 526a.
    13
    1090 is concerned with ferreting out any financial conflicts of
    interest, other than remote or minimal ones, that might impair
    public officials from discharging their fiduciary duties with
    undivided loyalty and allegiance to the public entities they are
    obligated to serve. [Citation.] Where a prohibited interest is
    found, the affected contract is void from its inception [citation]
    and the official who engaged in its making is subject to a host of
    civil and (if the violation was willful) criminal penalties,
    including imprisonment and disqualification from holding public
    office in perpetuity [citations].” ’ [Citation.] ‘ “[A] contract in
    which a public officer is interested is void, not merely
    voidable.” ’ ” (McGee II, supra, 247 Cal.App.4th at p. 247.)
    While in rem validation actions and in personam taxpayer
    actions are not mutually exclusive, section 526a taxpayer claims
    alleging violations of section 1090 may still fall within the
    validation statutes. (See McLeod, supra, 158 Cal.App.4th at p.
    1167; Regus v. City of Baldwin Park (1977) 
    70 Cal.App.3d 968
    ,
    972.)6 The form of the claim does not govern; we must examine
    “ ‘[t]he gravamen of a complaint and the nature of the right sued
    upon,” in order to determine whether his claims fall within the
    validation statutes. (McLeod, supra, at p. 1165; see Committee
    for Responsible Planning v. City of Indian Wells (1990) 
    225 Cal.App.3d 191
    , 198 [requiring consolidation under validation
    6     McGee argues he timely filed all his claims within the 60-
    day period required by the validation statutes. (McLeod, supra,
    at pp. 1166–1167 [Both in rem and in personam “actions may be
    brought to challenge governmental action if suit is filed within
    the 60-day limitations period for validation actions.”].) Balfour
    does not dispute the issue, so it is not clear why McGee focuses on
    it. We need not address it.
    14
    statutes of all claims that “relate to the same fundamental issue:
    the validity of Indian Wells’ actions”].) The ultimate question is
    whether the claim “go[es] beyond the determination of the
    validity of the challenged matter” or is merely a “request for
    invalidation . . . in other words.” (Katz v. Campbell Union High
    School Dist. (2006) 
    144 Cal.App.4th 1024
    , 1034 (Katz).)
    In McLeod, for example, a taxpayer brought a suit
    pursuant to section 526a to challenge aspects of a school district’s
    measure authorizing the issuance of construction bonds.
    (McLeod, supra, 158 Cal.App.4th at p. 1160.) The taxpayer
    sought declaratory and injunctive relief, but did not plead a claim
    under the validation statutes. (Id. at p. 1163.) The suit was filed
    well beyond the 60-day statute of limitations for a validation
    claim, so the issue was whether the section 526a claim was
    subject to that limitations period or some longer period that
    would have made it timely. The court held the 60-day period for
    filing validation claims applied because the section 526a claim
    attacked a decision that was subject to the validation statutes.
    (McLeod, at pp. 1164–1165.) Recognizing section 526a claims and
    validation claims are not mutually exclusive, the court held the
    taxpayer action “directly challenged the validity of a planned
    bond issuance, and the lack of a prompt validating procedure
    would impair the District’s ability to operate.” (McLeod, at
    p. 1169.)
    The court in Katz reached a similar conclusion. In that
    case, the taxpayer filed a complaint to invalidate a newly passed
    tax and alleged additional claims for a declaration defining a
    term in the new tax provision and for an injunction restraining
    imposition of the tax. (Katz, supra, 144 Cal.App.4th at p. 1029.)
    The publication of the summons was defective under the
    15
    validation statutes, and the court rejected the taxpayer’s
    argument his declaratory and injunctive relief claims were not
    affected because they were not subject to validation. (Id. at
    p. 1033.) The taxpayer’s complaint did “not seek relief unrelated
    to the parcel tax he claims is invalid.” (Id. at p. 1034.) Instead,
    the declaratory relief claim requested the court define the term at
    issue so the tax was valid and the injunction sought to restrain
    levy of the tax, which was “merely a request for invalidation of
    the tax stated in other words.” (Ibid.)
    As in McLeod and Katz, regardless of how McGee
    characterizes his conflict of interest claims or the relief he seeks,
    the gravamen is the invalidity of the lease-leaseback agreements.
    McGee admits he seeks “a finding that the contracts were ultra
    vires, illegal, void, and unenforceable due to a conflict of
    interest.” His complaints alleged as much. A judgment finding
    Balfour violated section 1090 would render the lease-leaseback
    agreements “ ‘void from [their] inception.’ ” (McGee II, supra, 247
    Cal.App.4th at p. 247.) Although McGee focuses on the fact that
    he seeks disgorgement directly from Balfour, any judgment
    ordering disgorgement would require a finding the lease-
    leaseback agreements were void. In other words, the agreements
    would necessarily be invalidated.
    A judgment in McGee’s favor would also undermine the
    very purpose behind the validation statutes. A cloud has hung
    over the challenged projects for years, destroying any hope in
    prompt validation of the underlying lease-leaseback agreements.
    That delay is largely attributable to McGee, who strategically
    chose not to prevent the projects from moving forward. Beyond
    the specific projects here, a judgment in McGee’s favor would
    threaten future projects with the prospect of lawsuits long after
    16
    completion. That would undoubtedly inhibit the District’s ability
    to obtain financing for them. (See Friedland, supra, 62
    Cal.App.4th at p. 843 [“A key objective of a validation action is to
    limit the extent to which delay due to litigation may impair a
    public agency’s ability to operate financially.”].) “ ‘[T]he essential
    difference between those actions which ought and those which
    ought not to come under [the validation statutes] [is] the extent to
    which the lack of a prompt validating procedure will impair the
    public agency’s ability to operate. The fact that litigation may be
    pending or forthcoming drastically affects the marketability of
    public bonds’ ” and likely would have “ ‘a chilling effect upon
    potential third party lenders, thus resulting in higher interest
    rates or even the total denial of credit.’ ” (McLeod, supra, 158
    Cal.App.4th at pp. 1167–1168.)
    Because his conflict of interest claims are subject to
    validation, McGee cannot obtain effective relief through
    disgorgement. He cites Thomson v. Call (1985) 
    38 Cal.3d 633
    (Thomson), but it is distinguishable. That case involved a
    taxpayer challenge to a city’s fully performed real estate
    transaction alleging a violation of Government Code section 1090.
    The court held the city could retain title to the land and recoup
    the purchase price from the councilman with the alleged conflict
    of interest. (Thomson, supra, at pp. 646–647; see San Diegans,
    supra, 8 Cal.5th at p. 737 [citing Thomson to note penalty for
    violating Government Code section 1090 “is substantial: The
    interested official must disgorge any profits earned, and may not
    recover any consideration paid, under the contract”].) Thomson
    did not arise under the validation statutes, so the court did not
    address whether the disgorgement remedy remains available
    17
    when a Government Code section 1090 claim seeks to void a
    completed contract falling within the validation statutes.
    We will follow the reasoning in Wilson. The court in that
    case noted the plaintiff sought relief similar to what McGee seeks
    here—a judgment the challenged actions were “ ‘invalid, illegal,
    void and of no effect’ ” and an order to direct the public agencies
    to “seek reimbursement ‘for all monies illegally and improperly
    spent’ ” on the challenged project. (Wilson, supra, 191
    Cal.App.4th at p. 1567.) McGee points out Wilson did not involve
    direct disgorgement from a private party like Balfour, but Wilson
    did not focus on the precise form of the claims or requested relief;
    it focused on the fact the challenged project had been completed.
    Because “[v]alidation actions are intended to settle promptly all
    questions about the validity of an agency’s action,” the completion
    of the project rendered the action moot. (Id. at pp. 1580–1581,
    italics added.)
    The question McGee raises is whether the lease-leaseback
    agreements were infected by a conflict of interest. If so, the only
    way he can obtain the remedy of disgorgement is with a judgment
    declaring the lease-leaseback agreements were “ ‘void from [their]
    inception.’ ” (McGee II, supra, 247 Cal.App.4th at p. 247.)
    Because the agreements were subject to validation and he seeks
    to invalidate them, the completion of the challenged projects
    rendered his claims moot.7
    7     In light of our conclusion, we need not address McGee’s
    argument the trial court abused its discretion by refusing to
    admit his stipulated exhibits. As the trial court noted, the only
    relevant fact was whether the projects had been finished, which
    was proved through testimony. For the same reason, we deny
    18
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed. Respondents are entitled to
    costs on appeal.
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    BIGELOW, P. J.
    WE CONCUR:
    GRIMES, J.
    STRATTON, J.
    McGee’s request for judicial notice as unnecessary to resolve the
    appeal.
    19
    

Document Info

Docket Number: B298122

Filed Date: 5/29/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 5/29/2020