City of San Jose v. Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Assn. ( 2024 )


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  •          Filed 4/29/24
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    CITY OF SAN JOSÉ,                                    H050889
    (Santa Clara County
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                   Super. Ct. No. 21CV391517)
    v.
    HOWARD JARVIS TAXPAYERS
    ASSOCIATION et al.,
    Defendants and Appellants.
    In this appeal, we consider the application of the constitutional debt limitation to a
    municipality’s constitutional obligation to its employees to make promised pension
    payments and its duty to ensure pension plans have sufficient assets to be actuarially
    sound.
    Article XVI, section 18, subdivision (a) of the California Constitution sets forth
    the constitutional debt limitation applicable to cities. It states in relevant part: “No . . .
    city . . . shall incur any indebtedness or liability in any manner or for any purpose
    exceeding in any year the income and revenue provided for such year, without the assent
    of two-thirds of the voters of the public entity voting at an election to be held for that
    purpose.” (Cal. Const., art. XVI, § 18, subd. (a).)
    This provision, which “mandat[es] balanced budgets” (Rider v. City of San Diego
    (1998) 
    18 Cal.4th 1035
    , 1045 (Rider)), has been part of the California Constitution since
    1879. It was enacted in response to “municipal extravagance” (San Francisco Gas Co. v.
    Brickwedel (1882) 
    62 Cal. 641
    , 642 (San Francisco Gas)) by local governments making
    large capital investments and thereby “creating huge long term debts.” (Compton
    Community College etc. Teachers v. Compton Community College Dist. (1985) 
    165 Cal.App.3d 82
    , 88 (Compton Community College).)
    Courts have identified exceptions to the constitutional debt limitation, including
    the “special fund doctrine” (City of Oxnard v. Dale (1955) 
    45 Cal.2d 729
    , 733 [debt
    limitation not violated by obligations payable solely from a special fund]), obligations
    imposed by law (City of Long Beach v. Lisenby (1919) 
    180 Cal. 52
    , 57 (Lisenby) [debt
    limitation has “no application to cases of indebtedness or liability imposed by law or
    arising out of tort”]), and contingent obligations (Rider, 
    supra,
     18 Cal.4th at p. 1047 [debt
    limitation inapplicable to “multiyear contracts in which the local government agrees to
    pay in each successive year for land, goods, or services provided during that year”
    because each payment is a contemporaneous payment for the property, goods, or services
    rather than an installment payment on a long-term debt]; see also Taxpayers for
    Improving Public Safety v. Schwarzenegger (2009) 
    172 Cal.App.4th 749
    , 763).
    Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association, Citizens for Fiscal Responsibility, and Pat
    Waite (collectively, HJTA) argue that the City of San José (city) violated the
    constitutional debt limitation when its city council adopted a resolution authorizing the
    issuance and sale of bonds, on the condition they result in a savings to the city, to address
    a shortfall in the city’s pension plans. In validation proceedings, the trial court upheld the
    city’s actions against a challenge by HJTA, deciding that the bond issuance falls under
    the obligation imposed by law exception to the debt limitation. HJTA appeals the
    judgment, contending the city’s actions violate the constitutional debt limitation and lack
    statutory authority.
    We affirm the judgment, but our reasoning differs from that of the trial court. We
    decide that under the terms of the challenged resolution, the city has not “incur[red] any
    indebtedness or liability in any manner or for any purpose exceeding in any year the
    2
    income and revenue provided for such year.” (Cal. Const., art. XVI, § 18, subd. (a).)
    Because the city’s actions do not trigger the constitutional debt limitation, we need not
    consider the applicability of its exceptions. We furthermore conclude the city has the
    authority under state law to issue the bonds.
    I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND 1
    San José is a charter city, whose current charter took effect on May 4, 1965. (City
    of San José City Charter, adopted 1965.) 2 The City Council established the city’s current
    Federated City Employees Retirement System (federated plan) in 1975 (San José Mun.
    Code, ch. 3.28, § 3.28.010) and its current Police and Fire Department Retirement Plan
    (police and fire plan) in 1961 (San José Mun. Code, ch. 3.36, § 3.36.010) (collectively,
    the retirement plans or pension plans), pursuant to the city’s authority under the charter.
    (Charter, art. XV, § 1500.)
    Under the retirement plans, pension benefits for individual city employees vary
    based on factors such as age, final salary, years of service, type of retirement, and any
    cost of living adjustments (COLAs). According to the city’s actuarial expert, “[t]he exact
    amount of the pension benefit an active employee will receive upon retirement cannot be
    known until their retirement date, since it depends on their years of service and
    pensionable earnings. The current pension benefits of retirees are known, but their future
    benefits will depend on cost of living and on how long they and their beneficiaries live.”
    The city makes annual contributions (described in the record as the “normal cost”
    or “[c]urrent [o]bligation”) to fund the retirement plans. If the normal cost does not cover
    the present value of providing vested retirement benefits, an unfunded liability arises. An
    unfunded liability is the difference between the present value of future retirement benefits
    that have been earned as of the valuation date and the assets the city has currently set
    1
    We take these undisputed facts from the evidence admitted at the court trial and
    the matters of which the trial court took judicial notice.
    2
    All subsequent charter references are to City of San José City Charter.
    3
    aside to pay for them. (San José Mun. Code, ch. 3.28, § 3.28.960.) According to the
    city’s actuarial expert, an unfunded liability is “often large enough that it is not practical
    for the employer . . . to pay the entire amount all at once. Instead, it is paid over time” or
    amortized. While the city pays the “normal cost” on an annual basis, the “unfunded
    liability” can refer to either the liability for any particular year or the amount of liability
    accumulated over the years as of the valuation date. The “current plan assets” are those
    assets the city has set aside to pay for the retirement benefits as of a particular valuation
    date. The amount of the city’s unfunded liability is based in part on the discount rate, the
    current expected annual rate of return on the city’s investments—estimated in 2020 and
    2021 to be 6.625 percent.
    The city’s actuary calculates annually the amount of the unfunded liability for
    each retirement plan, taking into account a combination of factors, including the
    performance of the city’s investments, city employees’ actual retirement and mortality
    patterns, and changes in actuarial assumptions and methods. The city’s unfunded liability
    has grown not because of increases in promised benefits, but because declining interest
    rates on the expected rate of return on the city’s investments, as well as changes to certain
    assumptions about demographic factors, including mortality and retirement rates, have
    affected the present value of future pension payments. As of June 30, 2020, the total
    unfunded liability was approximately $1,383,387,000 for the police and fire plan and
    $2,099,614,000 for the federated plan.
    In April 2021, 3 the city considered options for paying the unfunded liability to
    return the retirement plans to actuarially sound footings. The city determined that it
    would seek approval by resolution of the issuance of pension obligation bonds. Under
    the plan selected by the city, the city council would not be obligated to issue the pension
    3
    Unless otherwise specified, all dates were in 2021.
    4
    obligation bonds and the timing of any bond issuance would depend on prevailing market
    conditions.
    On October 5, the city passed a resolution which authorized the issuance of
    pension obligation bonds pursuant to Government Code section 53570 et seq. 4 “in a
    maximum principal amount not to exceed that required to refund [(i.e., repay)] the
    [u]nfunded [l]iability, to prepay all or a portion of the city’s annual required retirement
    contribution . . . (the ‘[c]urrent [o]bligation’), and to pay the costs of issuance of such
    [b]onds,” subject to certain conditions. The resolution gave the city discretion to
    determine the final principal amount of the bonds, provided that the aggregate amount of
    the bonds “shall not be greater than the lesser of (a) $3.5 billion or (b) the sum of the
    [c]ity’s [u]nfunded [l]iability and [c]urrent [o]bligation . . . together with the costs of
    issuing the [b]onds” and the issuance of the bonds results in savings to the city. The
    bonds would be issued at a lower interest rate than the current expected 6.625 percent rate
    of return on the city’s investments. The resolution also authorized the issuance of
    additional bonds on similar terms and conditions, as long as they would result in savings
    to the city.
    The resolution authorized the preparation and prosecution of validation
    proceedings 5 pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 860 et seq. to determine the
    validity of the bonds and related agreements. On November 18, in accordance with the
    terms of the resolution, the city filed a complaint for validation with the trial court “to
    determine the validity of the proceedings and obligations relating to the [c]ity’s issuance
    of one or more series of pension obligation refunding bonds, execution of a trust
    4
    Unspecified statutory references are to the Government Code.
    5
    “Validation proceedings are a procedural ‘vehicle’ for obtaining an expedited but
    definitive ruling regarding the validity or invalidity of certain actions taken by public
    agencies.” (Santa Clarita Organization for Planning & Environment v. Castaic Lake
    Water Agency (2016) 
    1 Cal.App.5th 1084
    , 1096.)
    5
    agreement and a bond purchase agreement, and approving additional actions related
    thereto.”
    On December 9, pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 3.1200 et seq. and
    Code of Civil Procedure sections 861 and 861.1, the city filed an ex parte application
    seeking an order to issue, publish, and mail the summons, and to set a deadline for filing
    an answer to the complaint for validation. The following day, the trial court issued an
    order granting the city’s application.
    HJTA filed an answer to the complaint for validation, alleging that the city lacked
    authority to issue the bonds because it had not obtained the approval of two-thirds of its
    voters, is not subject to any “ ‘obligation imposed by law’ ” that would exempt the bond
    issuance from the debt limitation set forth in article XVI, section 18, subdivision (a) of
    the California Constitution, and failed to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of
    action. 6 HJTA asked the court to deny the relief requested in the complaint for validation
    and declare the invalidity of the resolution and the proposed issuance of bonds.
    On February 16, 2023, the trial court entered judgment validating the resolution,
    the issuance and sale of the bonds, and the execution and delivery of the trust agreement,
    the bond purchase agreement, and supplemental and related contracts and agreements.
    The court held that the city is “required under the [c]harter to establish, fund and maintain
    actuarially sound [r]etirement [p]lans,” and, that, to maintain such actuarially sound
    retirement plans, “the [c]ity is required to pay the [u]nfunded [l]iability.” The court
    reasoned that, since the establishment, funding, and maintenance of actuarially sound
    retirement plans are obligations imposed by law, the issuance of the proposed bonds is
    exempt from the constitutional debt limitation set forth in article XVI, section 18 of the
    California Constitution.
    6
    The city filed a motion to strike HJTA’s answer as untimely filed. The trial court
    denied the city’s motion. The timeliness of HJTA is not at issue in this appeal.
    6
    II. DISCUSSION
    HJTA argues the city’s actions violate the constitutional debt limitation provision.
    HJTA maintains that, with the resolution, the city “proposes to incur a debt exceeding the
    current year’s income,” which is unconstitutional absent voter approval. HJTA denies
    that the city already has an obligation to pay the unfunded liability (rendering it a
    preexisting debt), because the unfunded liability is not a fixed dollar amount that is
    currently due and payable. Further, HJTA contends the city lacks statutory authority to
    issue the bonds as refunding bonds because the unfunded liability cannot be characterized
    as “ ‘revenue bonds’ ” under section 53583.
    HJTA argues that issuance of the proposed new bonds would create “new debt”—
    rather than convert existing debt—an action HJTA alleges requires voter approval on the
    grounds that “if there is no obligation imposed by law in the first place, new financing of
    something else is not constitutionally authorized without voter approval.” HJTA
    contends the unfunded liability is not a debt but is merely “an actuarial projection.” It
    characterizes the city’s actions as “prepayment of future pension benefits.”
    The city responds to HJTA’s constitutional claim in two ways. It argues the
    imposed by law exception applies because the city is obligated by the terms of the city
    charter to provide actuarily sound pension plans, which includes paying the unfunded
    liability. Alternatively, the city maintains that the proposed bond issuance does not
    implicate the constitutional debt limitation at all. The resolution authorizing the issuance
    of the bonds states that the bonds can be issued only if they result in savings to the city.
    As the city already owes the unfunded liability to its current and former employees,
    issuance of the bonds merely changes the form of an existing debt and does not
    contravene the constitutional debt limitation. In addition, the city asserts statutory
    authority to issue the bonds under section 53583, subdivision (a).
    7
    A. Legal Background
    1. City Charters
    Under article XI, section 3 of the California Constitution, “a county or city may
    adopt a charter by majority vote of its electors voting on the question.” (Cal. Const.,
    art. XI, § 3, subd. (a).) The Constitution further provides that “[a] charter may be
    amended, revised, or repealed in the same manner.” (Ibid.) “The charter of a
    municipality is its constitution” (Brown v. City of Berkeley (1976) 
    57 Cal.App.3d 223
    ,
    231), and “a charter city may not act in conflict with its charter.” (Domar Electric, Inc. v.
    City of Los Angeles (1994) 
    9 Cal.4th 161
    , 171 (Domar).)
    2. Public Employee Pensions
    Pensions are “ ‘an integral part of the employment contract’ ” (Carman v. Alvord
    (1982) 
    31 Cal.3d 318
    , 332 (Carman)) that “help induce faithful public service and
    provide agreed subsistence to retired public servants who have fulfilled their employment
    contracts.” (Id. at p. 325, fn. 4.) As such, “ ‘pension laws are to be liberally construed to
    protect pensioners and their dependents from economic insecurity.’ ” (County of Orange
    v. Association of Orange County Deputy Sheriffs (2011) 
    192 Cal.App.4th 21
    , 41 (County
    of Orange).)
    “A public employee’s pension constitutes an element of compensation, and a
    vested contractual right to pension benefits accrues upon acceptance of employment”
    (Betts v. Board of Administration (1978) 
    21 Cal.3d 859
    , 863 (Betts)), or “ ‘upon the
    performance of services for a public employer.’ ” (Cal Fire Local 2881 v. California
    Public Employees’ Retirement System (2019) 
    6 Cal.5th 965
    , 985 (Cal Fire).) “While
    payment of these benefits is deferred, and is subject to the condition that the employee
    continue to serve for the period required by the statute, the mere fact that performance is
    in whole or in part dependent upon certain contingencies does not prevent a contract from
    arising, and the employing governmental body may not deny or impair the contingent
    8
    liability any more than it can refuse to make the salary payments which are immediately
    due.” (Kern v. City of Long Beach (1947) 
    29 Cal.2d 848
    , 855 (Kern).)
    A public employee’s pension rights “may not be destroyed, once vested, without
    impairing a contractual obligation of the employing public entity.” (Betts, supra, 21
    Cal.3d at p. 863.) The employee’s vested right “is their reasonable expectation that the
    city would meet its statutory obligations to finance the unfunded liability for past
    accumulated debt.” (Association of Blue Collar Workers v. Wills (1986) 
    187 Cal.App.3d 780
    , 792.)
    Both state and municipal law require that the city’s pension plans be actuarily
    sound. State law provides that “any city may establish a retirement system for its officers
    and employees and provide for the payment of retirement allowances, pensions, disability
    payments, and death benefits, or any of them.” (§ 45301.) Further, it requires that a city
    pension or retirement system “be on a sound actuarial basis.” (§ 45342; see also Valdes
    v. Cory (1983) 
    139 Cal.App.3d 773
    , 785, fn. 5 (Valdes) [observing this statute “requires
    cities which elect to adopt their own retirement system [] do so on a ‘sound actuarial
    basis’ ”].)
    Article XV, section 1500 of the charter, as last amended and approved by the
    voters on November 2, 2010, states that “the [c]ouncil shall provide, by ordinance or
    ordinances, for the creation, establishment and maintenance of a retirement plan or plans
    for all officers and employees of the [c]ity. . . . [T]he [c]ouncil shall not establish any
    new or different plan after November 3, 2010 that is not actuarially sound.” (Charter, art.
    XV, § 1500.)
    Article XV, section 1504 of the charter reinforces this requirement. “Any
    retirement plan or system established for officers or employees of the [p]olice or [f]ire
    [d]epartments shall be actuarially sound.” (Charter, art. XV, § 1504, subd. (c).) In
    addition, article XV-A, section 1508-A, subdivision (a) of the charter, recognizing “the
    interests of the taxpayers and the responsibilities to the plan beneficiaries,” requires all
    9
    pension plans to “be operated in conformance with [a]rticle XVI, [s]ection 17 of the
    California Constitution” (also known as the 1992 California Pension Protection Act),
    including subjecting all plans “to an annual actuarial analysis that is publicly disclosed in
    order to assure the plan has sufficient assets.” Article XVI, section 17, subdivision (e) of
    the California Constitution provides, in relevant part, that “[t]he retirement board of a
    public pension or retirement system, consistent with the exclusive fiduciary
    responsibilities vested in it, shall have the sole and exclusive power to provide for
    actuarial services in order to assure the competency of the assets of the public pension or
    retirement system.”
    The two retirement plans at issue are codified in the city’s municipal code at title
    3, chapters 3.28 et seq. (federated plan) and 3.36 et seq. (police and fire plan),
    respectively. Under both plans, the city’s retirement board is charged with “maintaining
    the actuarial soundness” of the plans consistent with article XVI, section 17 of the
    California Constitution. (See, e.g., San José Mun. Code, ch. 3, §§ 3.28.200.A,
    3.28.350.B, 3.36.540.B.)
    3. Bond Issuance
    Section 53583, subdivision (a) of the Government Code permits any local agency
    to “issue bonds pursuant to this article or any revenue bond law under which the local
    agency is otherwise authorized to issue bonds for the purpose of refunding any revenue
    bonds of the local agency.” 7 Section 53580, subdivision (c) defines “ ‘refunding bonds’ ”
    as “bonds issued to refund bonds.” Section 53550, subdivision (b) defines “ ‘[b]onds’ ”
    as, in relevant part: “[B]onds, warrants, notes or other evidence of indebtedness of a
    local agency.” Section 53570, subdivision (b)(1) defines “ ‘[r]evenue bonds’ ” as, in
    7
    A “ ‘local agency’ ” is defined under section 53580, subdivision (a) as “public
    district, public corporation, authority, agency, board, commission, county, city and
    county, city, school district, or other public entity or any improvement district or zone
    thereof.”
    10
    relevant part: “Bonds, warrants, notes, or other evidence of indebtedness of a local
    agency payable from funds other than the proceeds of ad valorem taxes or the proceeds of
    assessments levied without limitation as to rate or amount by the local agency upon
    property in the local agency.”
    The proceeds of any refunding bonds issued pursuant to article 11 of the
    Government Code “may be applied to the purchase, retirement at maturity, or redemption
    of the bonds to be refunded either at their earliest redemption date or dates, any
    subsequent redemption date or dates, upon their purchase or retirement maturity, or paid
    to a third person to assume the local agency’s obligation to make the payments, and may,
    pending that application, be placed in escrow and invested or reinvested in any
    obligations or securities, and any interest or other increment earned or realized on any
    such investment may be applied to the payment of the bonds to be refunded or to the
    payment of interest on the refunding bonds, as provided in the proceedings of the local
    agency authorizing the issuance of the refunding bonds.” (§ 53584.)
    In addition, article XII, section 1222 of the charter authorizes the city to issue
    revenue bonds “for any purposes other than those specified in [s]ections 1220 [for off-
    street parking or airport facilities] and 1221 [for public utilities] only under and pursuant
    to the laws of the State of California.”
    B. Analysis
    In considering the applicability of article XVI, section 18 to the challenged
    resolution, “we apply the familiar principles of constitutional interpretation, the aim of
    which is to ‘determine and effectuate the intent of those who enacted the constitutional
    provision at issue.’ ” (Silicon Valley Taxpayers’ Assn., Inc. v. Santa Clara County Open
    Space Authority (2008) 
    44 Cal.4th 431
    , 444 (Silicon Valley Taxpayers’ Assn.).) In doing
    so, we “look first to the language of the constitutional text, giving the words their
    ordinary meaning.” (Leone v. Medical Board (2000) 
    22 Cal.4th 660
    , 665.) We review
    11
    questions of constitutional and statutory interpretation de novo. 8 (City of Lafayette v.
    East Bay Mun. Utility Dist. (1993) 
    16 Cal.App.4th 1005
    , 1013.) “[W]e construe [a]
    charter in the same manner as we would a statute.” (Domar, 
    supra,
     9 Cal.4th at p. 171.)
    When reviewing and interpreting a statute, “ ‘our fundamental task [] is to
    determine the Legislature’s intent so as to effectuate the law’s purpose. [Citation.] We
    begin by examining the statute’s words, giving them a plain and commonsense meaning.
    [Citation.] We do not, however, consider the statutory language “in isolation.”
    [Citation.] Rather, we look to “the entire substance of the statute . . . in order to
    determine the scope and purpose of the provision . . . . [Citation.]” [Citation.] That is,
    we construe the words in question “ ‘in context, keeping in mind the nature and obvious
    purpose of the statute . . . .’ [Citation.]” [Citation.] We must harmonize “the various
    parts of a statutory enactment . . . by considering the particular clause or section in the
    context of the statutory framework as a whole.” ’ ” (San Diegans for Open Government
    v. City of San Diego (2015) 
    242 Cal.App.4th 416
    , 428–429 (San Diegans).) “ ‘Where
    uncertainty exists, consideration should be given to the consequences that will flow from
    a particular interpretation.’ ” (Kerollis v. Department of Motor Vehicles (1999) 
    75 Cal.App.4th 1299
    , 1304–1305.)
    1. Constitutional Debt Limitation
    We begin by examining the legal status of the city’s obligation to pay the
    unfunded liability.
    The charter states that the city “shall provide, by ordinance or ordinances, for the
    creation, establishment and maintenance of a retirement plan or plans for all officers and
    employees of the City.” (Charter, art. VX, § 1500.) Article XV-A, section 1508-A of the
    charter, read together with article XVI, section 17 of the California Constitution and
    8
    Although the city asserts there are factual issues in dispute related to the
    accounting standards, we disagree with this characterization and apply de novo review to
    the questions at issue in this appeal.
    12
    section 45342, requires that the city do so on an actuarially sound basis “to assure the
    competency of the assets of the public pension or retirement system.” (Charter, art. XV-
    A, § 1508-A; Cal. Const., art. XVI, § 17, subd. (e); § 45342.) The use of the term “shall”
    in this context describes a legal obligation. (See Wright v. Compton Unified Sch. Dist.
    (1975) 
    46 Cal.App.3d 177
    , 181–182.) Public employees have “a vested right to ‘integrity
    and security of the source of funding for the payment of [pension] benefits.’ ” (Board of
    Administration v. Wilson (1997) 
    52 Cal.App.4th 1109
    , 1136 (Wilson).)
    In approving the charter, the city’s voters enacted the city’s obligation to provide
    actuarially sound pension plans to its officers and employees. On November 8, 2016, the
    voters reaffirmed their support of the city’s retirement plan obligations, including its
    obligation to maintain the plans on an actuarially sound basis, by approving Measure F. 9
    California law has long held that a municipality that has enacted a pension plan
    incurs an obligation, protected by the constitutional contract clause (U.S. Const., art. I,
    § 10, cl. 1; Cal. Const., art. I, § 9), to make pension payments to covered employees. In
    Kern, the California Supreme Court rejected the contention that a city could escape the
    obligation to pay a pension to a city firefighter by repealing the pension provisions before
    the employee was entitled to retire. The court reasoned “there is little reason to make a
    distinction between the periods before and after the pension payments are due. It is true
    that an employee does not earn the right to a full pension until he has completed the
    prescribed period of service, but he has actually earned some pension rights as soon as he
    has performed substantial services for his employer.” (Kern, supra, 29 Cal.2d at p. 855.)
    Our Supreme Court in Kern decided that the city incurred the obligation to pay the
    employee the pension payments in the same way—and at the same time—as it did his
    9
    Measure F amended article XV-A of the charter in accordance with the statement
    of decision in San Jose Police Officers Association v. City of San Jose, et al. (Feb. 20,
    2014, No. 1-12-CV225926) to require voter approval of any increases in employee
    retirement benefits, modify disability retirement benefits, and maintain the retirement
    plans in an actuarially sound manner.
    13
    salary. The employee “is not fully compensated upon receiving his salary payments
    because, in addition, he has then earned certain pension benefits, the payment of which is
    to be made at a future date. While payment of these benefits is deferred, and is subject to
    the condition that the employee continue to serve for the period required by the statute,
    the mere fact that performance is in whole or in part dependent upon certain
    contingencies does not prevent a contract from arising, and the employing governmental
    body may not deny or impair the contingent liability any more than it can refuse to make
    the salary payments which are immediately due. . . . [I]n our opinion it cannot do so at
    any time after a contractual duty to make salary payments has arisen, since a part of the
    compensation which that employee has at that time earned consists of his pension rights.”
    (Kern, supra, 29 Cal.2d at p. 855.)
    In other words, “the receipt of pension benefits is granted constitutional protection
    because the benefits constitute a portion of the compensation awarded by the government
    to its employees, paid not at the time the services are performed but at a later time.” (Cal
    Fire, 
    supra,
     6 Cal.5th at p. 985; Alameda County Deputy Sheriff's Assn. v. Alameda
    County Employees' Retirement Assn. (2020) 
    9 Cal.5th 1032
    , 1077 [“It is the nature of
    pension rights as deferred compensation that caused Kern to hold them protected under
    the contract clause.”].)
    The California Supreme Court in Kern grounded its conclusion that pension rights
    enjoy constitutional protection on the importance of public employee pensions. It
    described that objective as “to induce competent persons to enter and remain in public
    employment.” (Kern, supra, 29 Cal.2d at p. 856.) It added, “It is obvious that this
    purpose would be thwarted if a public employee could be deprived of pension benefits,
    and the promise of a pension annuity would either become ineffective as an inducement
    to public employees or it would become merely a snare and a delusion to the unwary.”
    (Ibid.) Underscoring the special nature of pension obligations in California law, the
    California Supreme Court has identified only three conditions of public employment as
    14
    protected by the constitutional contract clause: pensions, earned salary, and judicial
    compensation. (Cal Fire, 
    supra,
     6 Cal.5th at p. 986.)
    Under these principles of California law, the city has an obligation to pay future
    pension benefits to its current and former employees, who have already earned them. In
    addition, the city has an obligation to maintain its retirement plans “on a sound actuarial
    basis” that assures that the plans have the assets to make such future payments. (§ 45342;
    Cal. Const., art. XVI, § 17, subd. (e).) The city seeks to satisfy this duty by issuing bonds
    that will enable it to fund its unfunded liability in a manner that reduces the city’s costs.
    It is far from obvious that the challenged resolution triggers the constitutional debt
    limitation. After all, that provision applies when a city “incur[s] any indebtedness or
    liability in any manner or for any purpose exceeding in any year the income and revenue
    provided for such year.” (Cal. Const., art. XVI, § 18, subd. (a), italics added.) The
    actions that incurred the city’s existing liability—enacting the pension plans and
    employing the individuals covered by them—have already occurred. Further, the
    unfunded liability in this case arose out of unexpected changes in interest rates and
    market conditions, rendering inadequate the current assets set aside for pension payments
    that have already been earned but have not yet been paid.
    Nevertheless, HJTA asserts that refunding the unfunded liability cannot be a
    legally imposed obligation because financial obligations not payable “today” are not debt.
    In its view, the city’s issuance of the bonds incurs a new debt, which does trigger the
    constitutional debt limitation. For this contention, HJTA relies on the decision in County
    of Orange, supra, 192 Cal.App.4th at page 34.
    In County of Orange, the Second District Court of Appeal considered the legality
    of a county retirement board’s modification of the retirement formula in a manner that
    resulted in higher pension payments for certain public employees. (County of Orange,
    
    supra,
     192 Cal.App.4th at pp. 30–31.) Several years later, the county sued the board to
    rescind the more generous pension terms. The county argued that the board’s earlier
    15
    action violated the constitutional debt limitation because the additional debt exceeded the
    county’s available funds for the year and no exceptions to the constitutional debt
    limitation applied. (Id. at p. 33.) The Court of Appeal rejected the county’s argument,
    ruling that the board’s previous decision to change the pension plan did not incur a
    legally enforceable obligation within the meaning of the constitutional debt limitation.
    (Id. at p. 39.)
    We decide that County of Orange does not control here. In that case, the Court of
    Appeal was asked whether the retirement board’s estimate of the cost of increasing
    pension benefits triggered the constitutional debt limitation. The court decided that it did
    not. It described the $100 million of unfunded liability as “an actuarial estimate
    projecting the impact of a change in a benefit plan, rather than a legally enforceable
    obligation measured at the time of the County’s 2001 resolution approving the 3% at 50
    formula.” (County of Orange, supra, 192 Cal.App.4th at pp. 36–37, italics added.)
    The facts here are materially different. With the challenged resolution, the city
    does not seek to increase pension benefits but instead to issue bonds to provide an income
    stream for a liability it has already incurred. As the California Supreme Court said in
    1896, “merely to fund or refund an existing debt is not to ‘incur an indebtedness or
    liability’ ” within the meaning of the constitutional debt limitation. (City of Los Angeles
    v. Teed (1896) 
    112 Cal. 319
    , 327 (Teed).) “A bond is not an indebtedness or liability—it
    is only the evidence or representative of an indebtedness; and a mere change in the form
    of the evidence of indebtedness is not the creation of a new indebtedness within the
    meaning of the constitution.” (Ibid.)
    Contemporary professional accounting standards support the characterization of
    the unfunded liability as a current debt. The current Government Accounting Standards
    16
    Board (GASB) 10 standards—GASB Nos. 67 and 68, enacted in June 2012— require
    governments to include pension plans’ unfunded liability as a deficit on their balance
    sheets. (See Statement No. 67 of the Governmental Accounting Stds. Bd.: Financial
    Reporting for Pension Plans, an amendment to GASB Statement No. 25, No. 327-B (June
    2012) <https://gasb.org/page/ShowPdf?path=GASBS67.pdf&title=GASBS%2067> [as
    of April 26, 2024], archived at: <https://perma.cc/8TMS-FMWY >; Statement No. 68 of
    the Governmental Accounting Stds. Bd.: Accounting and Financial Reporting for
    Pensions, an amendment of GASB Statement No. 27, No. 327-C (June 2012)
    <https://gasb.org/page/ShowPdf?path=GASBS+68.pdf&title=GASBS%2068> [as of
    April 26, 2024], archived at: <https://perma.cc/RF5B-DETQ>.) 11
    That the city’s obligation to make these pension payments will not occur in a
    single calendar year does not mean that the obligation is not a debt. As our Supreme
    Court observed in Carman, “ ‘The term “indebtedness” has no rigid or fixed meaning, but
    rather must be construed in every case in accord with its context.’ [Citations.] It can
    include all financial obligations arising from contract . . ., and it encompasses
    ‘obligations which are yet to become due as [well as] those which are already matured.’
    [Citation.] We hold that indebtedness as traditionally understood covers obligations
    arising under [the c]ity’s pension plan.” (Carman, supra, 31 Cal.3d at pp. 326–327.)
    When construing whether the city’s decision to transform an existing debt (here,
    the unfunded portion of the future pension payments already earned) into a new form of
    10
    The GASB is “an independent, private-sector organization, that establishes
    accounting and financial reporting standards for state and local governments that follow
    Generally Accepted Accounting Principles” (GAAP). The city follows GAAP.
    11
    In County of Orange, the court relied in part on the now-superseded GASB Nos.
    25 and 27 to reach its conclusion. Under the former provisions, “[w]hile some pension
    liabilities must be reported on the balance sheet, the [unfunded liability was] not one of
    them.” (County of Orange, supra, 192 Cal.App.4th at p. 39.) The current version of the
    standards requires that the unfunded liability be reported as a current deficit on the city’s
    balance sheet.
    17
    indebtedness (the bonds) “incur[s] any indebtedness or liability in any manner or for any
    purpose exceeding in any year the income and revenue provided for such year” (Cal.
    Const., art. XVI, § 18, subd. (a)), we must “ ‘effectuate the intent of those who enacted
    the constitutional provision at issue’ ” (Silicon Valley Taxpayers’ Assn., supra, 44 Cal.4th
    at p. 444).
    The constitutional debt limitation was enacted for the purpose of curtailing
    “municipal extravagance” in the form of unchecked capital investments that resulted in
    large, long-term debt. (Compton Community College, supra, 165 Cal.App.3d at p. 88;
    San Francisco Gas, supra, 62 Cal. at p. 642.) In contrast to disfavored “municipal
    extravagance,” public policy in California encourages pension plans as a means by which
    governments may induce and reward long-term public service to a municipality’s
    citizens. (See Bellus v. City of Eureka (1968) 
    69 Cal.2d 336
    , 351; see also Cal Fire,
    
    supra,
     6 Cal.5th at p. 983.) Likewise, the charter states that the city’s “financial ability to
    provide basic services is essential to the health, safety, quality of life and well-being of its
    residents.” (Charter, art. XV-A, § 1501-A.)
    As our Supreme Court has highlighted, pension benefits for public employees are
    constitutionally protected “because the benefits constitute a portion of the compensation
    awarded by the government to its employees, paid not at the time the services are
    performed but at a later time.” (Cal Fire, supra, 6 Cal.5th at p. 985.) These benefits are
    currently owed, and “may not be destroyed, once vested.” (Betts, supra, 21 Cal.3d at
    p. 863.) The city undoubtedly must pay these pension obligations.
    The city’s ability to manage its pension resources in a financially prudent manner
    forms part of its constitutional contractual obligation to its employees. “[U]nder
    California law there is a strong preference for construing governmental pension laws as
    creating contractual rights for the payment of benefits, and when feasible to do so such
    laws should be construed as guaranteeing full payment to those entitled to its benefits
    ‘with the provision of adequate funds for that purpose.’ ” (Wilson, 
    supra,
     
    52 Cal.App.4th 18
    at p. 1131.) “Actuarial soundness of the [pension] system is necessarily implied in the
    total contractual commitment, because a contrary conclusion would lead to express
    impairment of employees’ pension rights.” (Id. at p. 1133; see also Valdes, supra, 139
    Cal.App.3d at p. 785, fn. 5.)
    We acknowledge that bond issuance carries independent costs. Depending on the
    terms of the bonds, such an additional cost might well trigger the constitutional debt
    limitation. However, under the terms of the challenged resolution, the city may not issue
    the bonds unless they result in a savings to the city. 12
    In fulfillment of its duty under the charter, the city will assess market conditions as
    they evolve to determine whether the issuance of the bonds, and the terms of any such
    issuance, will be financially prudent. The city will be exercising its authority to issue the
    bonds “in a manner tailored to the exigencies of its activities and in the light of the
    practical considerations of the market place.” (Redevelopment Agency v. Shepard (1977)
    
    75 Cal.App.3d 453
    , 459; see also Lisenby, supra, 180 Cal. at p. 60 [noting that “[i]t rests
    entirely with the governing body of the town or city to determine” how to manage its
    indebtedness in light of market trends].)
    In summary, under the terms of the city charter, the city has an obligation to
    provide pensions to city employees and maintain them in an actuarily sound manner. The
    12
    HJTA points out that the city may miscalculate whether the bond issuance will
    result in a savings to the city. But HJTA’s speculative argument based on hypothetical
    circumstances is insufficient to show that the city’s issuance of the proposed bonds will
    result in the incurrence of debt that violates the constitutional debt limitation. (Wilson v.
    L. A. County Civil Service Com. (1952) 
    112 Cal.App.2d 450
    , 452–453 [“ ‘A judicial
    tribunal ordinarily may consider and determine only an existing controversy, and not
    a[n] . . . abstract proposition.’ ”]; Id. at p. 453 [ “ ‘[A]s a general rule it is not within the
    function of the court to act upon or decide a . . . speculative, theoretical or abstract
    question or proposition.’ ”].) If the city errs in its fiscal calculations, it may be vulnerable
    to a constitutional challenge at that time. That issue, however, is not currently before us.
    We are tasked only with examining whether the challenged resolution violates section 18,
    subdivision (a) of the California Constitution.
    19
    unfunded liability in this case consists of pension obligations the city has already
    incurred, the payment of which is constitutionally protected by the contract clause. The
    city has elected to fulfill its contractual commitment to its employees to fund those
    payments in an actuarially sound manner through the issuance of bonds on the condition
    that they result in a savings to the city. Under these circumstances, we decide that, by
    passing the challenged resolution, the city has not “incur[red] any indebtedness or
    liability in any manner or for any purpose exceeding in any year the income and revenue
    provided for such year.” (Cal. Const., art. XVI, § 18, subd. (a).) Therefore, the city is
    not required to seek voter approval before issuing the bonds.
    2. Authority to Issue Bonds as Refunding Bonds to Refund Revenue
    Bonds
    HJTA maintains that, because the unfunded liability cannot itself be characterized
    as “revenue bonds,” the city does not have statutory authority to issue the bonds in
    question as refunding bonds because there are no bonds to refund. The city counters that
    it has statutory authority to issue the bonds under section 53583, subdivision (a).
    Section 53583, subdivision (a) permits the city to “issue bonds for the purpose of
    refunding any [of the city’s] revenue bonds.” Under section 53580, “ ‘refunding bonds’ ”
    are defined as “bonds issued to refund bonds” and “ ‘bonds’ ” are defined as “bonds as
    defined in [s]ection 53550, or revenue bonds as defined in [s]ection 53570.” (§ 53580,
    subds. (b), (c).) “ ‘Bonds’ ” are defined in section 53550, subdivision (b) as “bonds,
    warrants, notes or other evidence of indebtedness” of a city. (Italics added.) Revenue
    bonds are defined in section 53570, subdivision (b)(1) as “[b]onds, warrants, notes, or
    other evidence of indebtedness” of the city. (Italics added.)
    Whether the city has the authority to issue the bonds turns on whether the
    unfunded liability is “evidence of indebtedness” as used in sections 53550, subdivision
    (b) and 53570, subdivision (b)(1). If “evidence of indebtedness” includes the unfunded
    liability, the city has the authority under section 53583 to issue the bonds. As the city has
    20
    not cited any authority other than section 53583 to issue the bonds, if the unfunded
    liability does not qualify as “evidence of indebtedness,” we must conclude the city lacks
    the necessary statutory authority.
    HJTA argues that the phrase “ ‘evidence of indebtedness’ ” is a term of art that
    refers to “written negotiable instruments” (italics added), which would not encompass the
    unfunded liability. In support of this claim, HJTA cites to Civil Code section 1916.5,
    subdivision (b)(5) for the meaning of “ ‘ “[e]vidence of debt,” ’ ” defined therein as “ ‘a
    note or negotiable instrument.’ ” 13 However, Civil Code section 1916.5 limits the use of
    that definition of “evidence of debt” to “this section” (italics added) and states that it is
    “applicable only to a mortgage contract, deed of trust, real estate sales contract, or any
    note or negotiable instrument issued in connection therewith.” (Id., subds. (b)(1), (d).)
    Civil Code section 1918.5 includes the same definition and similarly limits its use to the
    chapter in which it appears, chapter 7.5, which governs mortgage loans. (Id., subd. (a).)
    Therefore, by their own terms, the Civil Code definitions are not applicable here.
    HJTA also relies upon a provision from the Corporate Securities Law of 1968
    (Corp. Code, § 25117). This provision, too, does not directly apply to bonds to fund
    public employee pensions. (See, e.g., Hamilton Jewelers v. Department of Corporations
    (1974) 
    37 Cal.App.3d 330
    , 335.) Nevertheless, our courts have interpreted the definition
    of “evidence of indebtedness” in the corporate security context as “includ[ing] not only ‘a
    promissory note or other simple acknowledgment of a debt owing [but]’ ” also “ ‘all
    contractual obligations to pay in the future for consideration presently received.’ ”
    (People v. Coster (1984) 
    151 Cal.App.3d 1188
    , 1193; see also Hamilton, at p. 334.) City
    employees’ pensions “fall squarely within that definition” (Coster, at p. 1193) since
    pensions are “ ‘an integral part of the employment contract’ ” (Carman, supra, 31 Cal.3d
    at p. 332) and deferred payment for services rendered during employment (Kern, supra,
    13
    This appears to be a typographical error as Civil Code section 1916.5 does not
    contain a subdivision (b)(5). We assume HJTA intended to reference subdivision (d)(5).
    21
    29 Cal.2d at p. 855). Therefore, although not directly applicable, the Corporation Code
    definition does support a broad reading of “evidence of indebtedness.”
    For its part, the city relies on Government Code section 53583 as statutory
    authority to issue the bonds. Section 53583 itself delineates the bond issuance authority
    by referencing two other provisions (sections 53550, subdivision (b) and 53570,
    subdivision (b)(1)). It is these provisions that define bonds as “bonds, warrants, notes or
    other evidence of indebtedness.” (Italics added.)
    Neither of these provisions further defines “other evidence of indebtedness.” The
    Government Code defines the phrase in only one instance, which applies to the sale of
    state bonds under title 1. 14 The only question before us in this appeal is the city’s
    authority to issue bonds, which is addressed in a different title of the Government Code,
    title 5. (§§ 53400–53595.55.) Therefore, the provision applicable to state bonds, too, is
    inapplicable.
    Having examined HJTA’s arguments to the contrary, we conclude that the
    Government Code does not specifically define the phrase “evidence of indebtedness” as
    used in sections 53550, subdivision (b) and 53570, subdivision (b)(1). We therefore give
    the words in the definition “ ‘a plain and commonsense meaning’ ” (San Diegans, supra,
    14
    Section 5700, which applies to title 1, division 6, chapter 9 addressing the sale
    of state bonds, states, “ ‘Bonds’ as used in this chapter means (a) any bonds or other
    evidences of indebtedness issued after the effective date of this chapter by the state or any
    state department, board, agency or authority or (b) any bonds or other evidences of
    indebtedness issued by any joint powers agency created under Chapter 5 (commencing
    with [s]ection 6500) of [d]ivision 7 that are payable from payments made with respect to
    a lease or sale of property to or from the state or any state department, board, agency, or
    authority. For purposes of this chapter, ‘evidence of indebtedness’ includes, but is not
    limited to, certificates of participation or interests in any rental or lease payments or
    installment purchase payments, in an aggregate principal amount exceeding $10,000,000,
    to be made by the state or any state department, board, agency, or authority with respect
    to buildings or other capital improvements.”
    22
    242 Cal.App.4th at p. 428), while considering them “ ‘ “in the context of the statutory
    framework as a whole.” ’ ” (Id. at p. 429.)
    The phrase “other evidence of indebtedness” appears in sections 53550,
    subdivision (b) and 53570, subdivision (b)(1) in a list. “Established canons of statutory
    construction assist us in ascertaining the meaning of a term primarily defined by way of a
    list of examples and the meaning of examples enumerated on such a list.” (Harrod v.
    Country Oaks Partners, LLC (2024) 
    15 Cal.5th 939
    , 952.) Under the doctrine of ejusdem
    generis, “ ‘[w]hen a statute contains a list or catalogue of items,’ ” we “ ‘determine the
    meaning of each by reference to the others, giving preference to an interpretation that
    uniformly treats items similar in nature and scope.’ ” (Friends of Oceano Dunes, Inc. v.
    San Luis Obispo County Air Pollution Control Dist. (2015) 
    235 Cal.App.4th 957
    , 965
    (Friends of Oceano Dunes).)
    In section 53570, subdivision (b)(1) the phrase “other evidence of indebtedness”
    appears at the end of a list that reads “[b]onds, warrants, notes, or other evidence of
    indebtedness.” 15 Black’s Law Dictionary defines the term “bond” in various ways. The
    broadest definition states that “bond” means “[a]n obligation; a promise.” (Black’s Law
    Dict. (11th ed. 2019) p. 218, col. 1.) “[B]ond” is also more narrowly defined as “[a]
    written promise to pay money or do some act if certain circumstances occur or a certain
    time elapses; a promise that is defeasible upon a condition subsequent; esp., an
    instrument under seal by which (1) a public officer undertakes to pay a sum of money if
    he or she does not faithfully discharge the responsibilities of office, or (2) a surety
    15
    Black’s Law Dictionary does not define “evidence of indebtedness,” but, rather,
    refers to the definition of “security” (Black’s Law Dict., supra, at p. 703, col. 1) where
    the phrase appears in the definition of “security” from title 15 of the United States Code
    (Black’s Law Dict., at p. 1626, cols. 1–2), addressing commerce and trade. Title 5 of the
    United States Code, which governs government organization and employees and, thus, is
    arguably of greater relevance to the question before us, does not define “evidence of
    indebtedness.”
    23
    undertakes the responsibility to pay if the public officer so fails.” (Black’s Law Dict., at
    p. 218, col. 1.)
    The term “warrant” is defined as, alternately, “[a] document conferring authority,
    esp. to pay or receive money” and “[a]n order by which a drawer authorizes someone to
    pay a particular sum of money to another.” (Black’s Law Dict., supra, at p. 1901, col. 2.)
    The term “note” is defined as “[a] written promise by one party (the maker) to pay money
    to another party (the payee) or to bearer” that “is a two-party negotiable instrument.”
    (Black’s Law Dict., at p. 1275, col. 2.)
    The terms in the list that precede “evidence of indebtedness,” are similar in that
    each refers to a written promise to pay or a direction to make specified payments. 16
    However, they are not all negotiable—or transferable—instruments. For example,
    warrants are not always transferable. (See, e.g., People ex rel. Barry v. Gray (1863) 23
    Cal.125, 126; A.G. Spalding & Bros. v. Contra Costa County (1936) 
    12 Cal.App.2d 262
    ,
    264; People v. Mares (2007) 
    155 Cal.App.4th 1007
    , 1015.) Moreover, California and its
    cities may use warrants to pay employees’ salaries (see, e.g., Lotts, supra, 13 Cal.App.2d
    at p. 635; Compton Community College, supra, 165 Cal.App.3d at p. 86; City of San
    Diego v. Dauer (1893) 
    97 Cal. 442
    , 443–444), and employees’ pensions constitute an
    element of their compensation (see, e.g., Betts, supra, 21 Cal.3d at p. 863; Cal Fire,
    
    supra,
     6 Cal.5th at p. 985; Westly v. Board of Administration (2003) 
    105 Cal.App.4th 1095
    , 1105–1106 [noting that the state pays retirement funds via warrants]).
    The city’s unfunded liability derives from its pension obligations under the charter
    and municipal code and from its contractual obligations to its employees. These
    promises are written, and the right to payments under them are vested. As a result, they
    16
    In other sections of the Government Code, the phrase “evidence(s) of
    indebtedness” also appears in lists that include all manner of promises, including bonds,
    notes, warrants, contracts, obligations, and judgments. (See, e.g., §§ 1095, 17700,
    25210.6, 43740, 43744, 53511, 53570, 53822.)
    24
    are similar to the other listed items in the relevant definitions of “bonds” and “revenue
    bonds,” using the narrower definition of “bond” denoting a written promise to pay money
    or do some act if certain circumstances occur.
    Legislative history also supports a broader reading of “revenue bonds” than
    HJTA’s narrow interpretation. Section 53570 originally defined “ ‘revenue bonds’ ” as
    “bonds, warrants, notes or other evidence of indebtedness of a local agency denominated
    revenue bonds under any law of this state and payable from funds other than the proceeds
    of ad valorem taxes or the proceeds of assessments levied upon property in the local
    agency.” (Stats. 1972, ch. 531, § 15, p. 919.) The Legislature amended the definition in
    1985 to remove the phrase “denominated revenue bonds under any law of this state,”
    loosening the definition and removing the limitation on the phrase “other evidence of
    indebtedness.” (Stats. 1985, ch. 1033, § 9, pp. 3422–3423.)
    The choice of the broader, more flexible concept of indebtedness over the
    narrower and more restrictive terms of “securities” or “negotiable instruments” in the
    “revenue bonds” definition suggest a legislative intent to broaden a city’s authority to
    refund indebtedness beyond that of refunding of bonds, securities, or negotiable
    instruments. (See, e.g., Carman, supra, 31 Cal.3d at p. 328 [“ ‘[A]ny indebtedness’ can
    include all obligations to pay money, whether or not evidenced by bonds, notes, or
    security.”].) Further, section 53570 was amended only one year after the decision in
    Coster. The Legislature is deemed to be aware of statutes and judicial decisions already
    in existence and to enact or amend statutes in light of them. (River's Side at Washington
    Square Homeowners Assn. v. Superior Court (2023) 
    88 Cal.App.5th 1209
    , 1235.) While
    the statute examined in Coster is not directly applicable, that the opinion concluded
    “ ‘evidence of indebtedness’ ” includes “ ‘all contractual obligations to pay in the future
    for consideration presently received’ ” (Coster, supra, 151 Cal.App.3d at p. 1193),
    supports a broad reading of the phrase in section 53570.
    25
    We conclude that the phrase “other evidence of indebtedness” may include
    unfunded liability as it is understood here, a representation of a city’s deferred obligation
    to pay its employees. Such an interpretation neither renders the other instruments on the
    list redundant, nor makes “evidence of indebtedness” “ ‘markedly dissimilar’ ” to those
    other instruments. (See Friends of Oceano Dunes, 
    supra,
     235 Cal.App.4th at p. 965.)
    The proceeds of refunding bonds issued pursuant to section 53583 “may be
    applied to the . . . redemption of the bonds to be refunded either at their earliest
    redemption date or dates, any subsequent redemption date or dates, upon their purchase
    or retirement maturity, or paid to a third person to assume the local agency’s obligation to
    make the payments.” 17 (§ 53584.) The statute allows the city to issue bonds for the
    purpose of refunding the city’s indebtedness, here, in the form of the unfunded liability,
    and grants the city flexibility with respect to the timing of the refunding of the unfunded
    liability.
    The refunding of the unfunded liability using the proceeds from the refunding
    bonds converts the debt represented by the unfunded liability into debt in the form of
    bonds. Such refunding does not create new debt. 18 As our Supreme Court has
    consistently held, “merely to fund or refund an existing debt is not to ‘incur an
    indebtedness or liability.’ A bond is not an indebtedness or liability—it is only the
    evidence or representative of an indebtedness; and a mere change in the form of the
    evidence of indebtedness is not the creation of a new indebtedness within the meaning of
    17
    “[R]edemption” has been broadly defined as “ ‘[t]he payment of principal and
    unpaid interest on bonds or other debt obligations.’ ” (Carman, supra, 31 Cal.3d at
    p. 327, citing Black’s Law Dict. (5th ed. 1979) p. 1149.)
    18
    The city has indicated that the cost of issuing the bonds will be paid from the
    bond proceeds. This action is authorized pursuant to section 53556, which reads, in
    relevant part: “The designated costs of issuing the refunding bonds may be paid
    by . . . the proceeds of sale of the refunding bonds” or “the interest or other gain derived
    from the investment of any of the proceeds of sale of the refunding bonds.” Section
    53587 gives the city the discretion to include such refunding bond issuance costs in
    determining the amount of refunding bonds to issue.
    26
    the constitution.” (Teed, supra, 112 Cal. at p. 327; see also Lisenby, supra, 180 Cal. at
    p. 59.)
    In Lisenby, the charter city of Long Beach was obligated to pay a judgment to
    persons injured in the collapse of a public building. The city adopted an ordinance to
    provide for the issuance of a bond to refund the indebtedness that resulted from that
    judgment. (Lisenby, supra, 180 Cal. at pp. 54–55.) The city’s mayor and treasurer
    refused to sign the bond on the grounds that doing so would cause the city to incur debt in
    violation of the constitutional debt limitation. (Id. at p. 55.) Our Supreme Court
    disagreed, concluding that the refunding of the city’s existing debt, which arose “by
    operation of law,” is exempt from the constitutional debt limitation. (Id. at p. 59.) In
    reaching this conclusion, the Supreme Court stated, “To ‘fund’ an outstanding debt of a
    municipal corporation which is payable presently or at short periods is to convert such
    indebtedness into a more permanent form with an extended time of payment and with
    interest which is regular and which may also be reduced. The usual method of ‘funding’
    such a debt is by the issuance of bonds.” (Ibid.) The debt represented by the judgment
    was converted to a debt represented by the bond obligations.
    For the reasons explained above, we have decided that the debt the city seeks to
    refund already exists, in the form of the unfunded liability. The issuance of bonds will
    refund and convert the existing debt into a different form. We conclude the city has this
    authority under section 53583, subdivision (a), and we reject HJTA’s arguments to the
    contrary.
    III. DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed. Respondents are awarded costs on appeal. (Cal. Rules
    of Court, rule 8.278(a)(1).)
    27
    ______________________________________
    Danner, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    ____________________________________
    Greenwood, P. J.
    ____________________________________
    Bromberg, J.
    H050889
    The City of San Jose v. Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association et al.
    Trial Court:                              Santa Clara County Superior Court
    Trial Judge:                              Hon. Sunil R. Kulkarni
    Counsel for Defendants and                Jonathan M. Coupal
    Appellants Howard Jarvis Taxpayers        Timothy A. Bittle
    Association, Citizens for Fiscal          Laura E. Dougherty
    Responsibility and Pat Waite:             Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Foundation
    Counsel for Plaintiff and Respondent      Allison E. Burns
    The City of San Jose:                     Brian P. Forbath
    Gregory J. Maestri
    Stradling Yocca Carlson & Rauth
    H050889
    The City of San Jose v. Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association et al.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: H050889

Filed Date: 4/29/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 5/15/2024