Jobs & Housing Coalition v. City of Oakland ( 2021 )


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  • Filed 12/30/21
    CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION*
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    JOBS & HOUSING COALITION et
    al.,
    Plaintiffs and Respondents,       A158977
    v.                                          (Alameda County
    CITY OF OAKLAND,                            Super. Ct. No. RG19005204)
    Defendant and Appellant.
    A group of Oakland citizens placed a proposed special parcel tax on the
    November 2018 ballot (Measure AA), and officials with appellant City of
    Oakland (City) prepared ballot materials, which included statements that the
    measure needed two-thirds of the vote to pass. After Measure AA received
    62.47 percent of the vote, the Oakland City Council determined that only a
    majority of the vote was actually needed for passage, and it declared the
    measure enacted. A coalition of stakeholders brought this postelection,
    reverse-validation action against the City, seeking to invalidate the
    enactment. The trial court ruled in favor of the coalition on its motion for
    judgment on the pleadings, finding that Measure AA failed because it needed,
    but had not secured, two-thirds of the vote. The court also found that the
    enactment of the measure based on less than a two-thirds vote of the
    Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1105(b) and 8.1110, this
    *
    opinion is certified for publication with the exception of parts II.A. and II.C.
    1
    electorate would amount to a “fraud on the voters” because the ballot
    materials had stated a two-thirds vote was needed.
    We reverse. In the nonpublished portion of our opinion, we join our
    colleagues in Divisions Four and Five of this court, and in the Court of
    Appeal for the Fifth Appellate District, in holding that a citizen initiative
    imposing a special parcel tax, such as Measure AA, is enacted when it
    receives a majority of the vote. In the published portion of our opinion, we
    further hold that Measure AA cannot be invalidated on the basis of the ballot
    materials’ voting-threshold statements because the statements did not
    concern the measure’s substantive features, were not alleged to be
    intentionally misleading, and cannot override the law governing the
    applicable voting threshold.
    I.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL
    BACKGROUND
    We recount the facts as they were alleged in the complaint.1 A group of
    Oakland citizens submitted a petition to place an initiative on the
    November 2018 ballot to approve a parcel tax to fund programs for early
    childhood education and college readiness. The initiative appeared on the
    ballot as Measure AA, seeking to add “The Children’s Initiative of 2018” to
    the City’s charter.
    The official ballot materials prepared by the City Attorney’s Office
    stated the measure was for a “special parcel tax” and that a two-thirds vote
    1 In reviewing a trial court’s ruling on a motion for judgment on the
    pleadings we, like the trial court, accept as true a complaint’s factual
    allegations and give them a liberal construction. (Gerawan Farming, Inc. v.
    Lyons (2000) 
    24 Cal.4th 468
    , 515–516.)
    2
    was necessary for it to pass. The City Auditor’s analysis likewise stated the
    measure would go into effect “if adopted by two-thirds of voters.”
    A majority of Oakland voters, 62.47 percent, voted in favor of
    Measure AA in the November 2018 general election. Although the measure
    fell short of two-thirds approval, the Oakland City Council declared that the
    measure had nonetheless passed (Elec. Code, § 15400). The council’s
    resolution declaring the passage of Measure AA suggested that uncertainty
    had arisen whether a majority or two-thirds vote was necessary. The
    resolution listed five other measures that had passed, and after each of their
    “yes” vote totals, the resolution stated, “(Passed).” By contrast, following the
    “yes” vote totals for Measure AA, the resolution stated, “(Passed/Fail),” with
    the word “Fail” having been struck out.
    Respondent Jobs and Housing Coalition is a nonprofit business
    advocacy group. It along with others who would be subject to the tax filed
    this reverse-validation action (Code Civ. Proc., § 863) against the City to
    invalidate Measure AA as an illegal special tax because it had not received
    two-thirds of the vote supposedly required by Propositions 13 and 218.
    According to the complaint, the City Council’s action appeared to be an
    “attempt[] to exploit speculation surrounding” a 2017 Supreme Court
    decision, California Cannabis Coalition v. City of Upland (2017) 
    3 Cal.5th 924
     (California Cannabis). Respondents also alleged that by declaring after
    the election that the measure passed by majority vote when the ballot
    materials had stated a two-thirds vote was needed, the City engaged in a
    “post hoc bait-and-switch” that “create[d] a patent and fundamental
    unfairness that amount[ed] to a violation of due process.” Finally,
    respondents alleged that the City and supporters of Measure AA were
    3
    estopped from claiming after the election that less than a two-thirds voting
    threshold governed its enactment.
    Respondents also named as defendants “ALL PERSONS INTERESTED
    in the matter of Measure AA.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 863.) After no interested
    party responded to the complaint following service by publication, the trial
    court entered a default judgment and ordered that interested-person
    defendants were barred from contesting the claims in the validation
    complaint.
    Both sides (the City and respondents) filed motions for judgment on the
    pleadings. The trial court first granted respondents’ motion. It concluded
    that Propositions 13 and 218 mandated a two-thirds vote to pass
    Measure AA. It further concluded that the City was barred from enforcing
    the measure because voters had been told that passage required a two-thirds
    vote, and allowing the measure to go into effect with fewer votes would
    amount to “a fraud on the voters” under Hass v. City Council (1956)
    
    139 Cal.App.2d 73
    , 76.
    The trial court then denied the City’s motion for the same reasons it
    granted respondents’ motion. In its order, it also concluded that respondents
    had adequately alleged a cause of action for equitable estoppel because, had
    they known before the election that the City would take the position after the
    election that Measure AA needed only a majority of votes to pass, they could
    have exercised a preelection remedy to challenge the ballot materials’ voting-
    threshold statements.
    The City appealed from the subsequent judgment declaring
    Measure AA invalid and permanently enjoining the City from enforcing it.
    The Council on State Taxation filed an amicus brief in support of
    4
    respondents, and two official proponents of Measure AA filed an amicus brief
    in support of the City.
    II.
    DISCUSSION
    We review de novo the trial court’s order granting respondents’ motion
    for judgment on the pleadings and denying the City’s motion for judgment on
    the pleadings. (Gerawan Farming, Inc. v. Lyons, 
    supra,
     24 Cal.4th at p. 515;
    Estate of Dayan (2016) 
    5 Cal.App.5th 29
    , 38–39.)
    A. As a Citizen Initiative, Measure AA Needed a Simple Majority
    Vote to Pass.
    1. General Overview.
    The California Constitution contains the people’s initiative power “to
    propose statutes and amendments to the Constitution and to adopt or reject
    them.” (Cal. Const., art. II, § 8, subd. (a).)2 The initiative power likewise
    “may be exercised by the electors of each city or county.” (Art. II, § 11,
    subd. (a).) Since the power was added to the state Constitution in 1911,
    “courts have consistently declared it their duty to ‘ “jealously guard” ’ and
    liberally construe the right so that it ‘ “be not improperly annulled.” ’ ”
    (California Cannabis, supra, 3 Cal.5th at p. 934.) “A defining characteristic
    of the initiative is the people’s power to adopt laws by a majority vote.” (City
    and County of San Francisco v. All Persons Interested in Matter of
    Proposition C (2020) 
    51 Cal.App.5th 703
    , 709 (Proposition C).)
    Though citizens have long had the power to place tax initiatives on the
    ballot as they did here, the general power to raise taxes has been restricted
    through further amendments to the Constitution. The question presented
    2All unspecified references to articles are to the California
    Constitution.
    5
    here is how those amendments affect, if at all, the ability to pass a special3
    parcel tax by majority vote.
    The first significant amendment restricting the power to impose
    property taxes was Proposition 13, which was passed in 1978 and added
    article XIII A of the California Constitution. (Kennedy Wholesale, Inc. v.
    State Bd. of Equalization (1991) 
    53 Cal.3d 245
    , 248–249 (Kennedy
    Wholesale).) Under section 3 of that article, “[a]ny change in state statute
    which results in any taxpayer paying a higher tax must be imposed by an act
    passed by not less than two-thirds of all members elected to each of the two
    houses of the Legislature.” (Art. XIII A, § 3, subd. (a).) In Kennedy
    Wholesale, our Supreme Court rejected an interpretation of section 3 as
    granting the Legislature the exclusive power to raise taxes. (Kennedy
    Wholesale at p. 249.) Thus, Proposition 13 did not limit the people’s initiative
    power to raise taxes. (Kennedy Wholesale, at p. 253.)
    In 1996, five years after Kennedy Wholesale was decided, voters passed
    Proposition 218, which added articles XIII C and XIII D to the California
    Constitution. (California Cannabis, supra, 3 Cal.5th at pp. 936, 939.)
    “ ‘Proposition 218 allows only four types of local property taxes: (1) an ad
    valorem property tax; (2) a special tax; (3) an assessment; and (4) a fee or
    charge. (Cal. Const., art. XIII D, § 3, subd. (a)(1)-(4); see also [id.], § 2,
    subd. (a).)’ ” (Apartment Assn. of Los Angeles County, Inc. v. City of Los
    Angeles (2001) 
    24 Cal.4th 830
    , 837.) The proposition made clear what
    Proposition 13 did not, that a local government could impose a special
    assessment only with a two-thirds vote. (Apartment Assn. at pp. 836–837;
    3 A special tax is one whose proceeds are earmarked for a specific
    project or purpose, as opposed to a general tax, whose revenue goes into a
    general fund for general governmental purposes. (Johnson v. County of
    Mendocino (2018) 
    25 Cal.App.5th 1017
    , 1028.)
    6
    art. XIII C, § 2, subd. (d).) As for general taxes, article XIII C, section 2,
    subdivision (b) provides that “[n]o local government may impose, extend, or
    increase any general tax unless and until that tax is submitted to the
    electorate and approved by a majority vote” at a “regularly scheduled general
    election.” California Cannabis held that this limitation on “local
    government” did not restrict the ability of citizens (as opposed to
    governmental entities) to impose taxes by initiative and that such an
    initiative may thus appear on the ballot at a special election. (Id. at pp. 930–
    931.)
    This case implicates three different sections added by Propositions 13
    and 218: article XIII A, section 4 (Proposition 13); article XIII C, section 2,
    subdivision (d) (Proposition 218); and article XIII D, section (3),
    subdivision (a)(2) (Proposition 218). Respondents argued, and the trial court
    agreed, that under those provisions Measure AA failed to pass because it did
    not receive two-thirds of the vote. The City maintains that while these
    provisions prohibit local governments from imposing special parcel taxes
    through initiatives that receive less than a two-thirds vote, they do not
    restrict the power of citizens to impose on themselves such taxes through
    initiatives that receive a simple majority vote.
    Since the trial court issued its ruling, our colleagues in Division Four
    analyzed the relevant provisions and adopted the City’s position. (City and
    County of San Francisco v. All Persons Interested in the Matter of
    Proposition G (2021) 
    66 Cal.App.5th 1058
     (Proposition G); Proposition C,
    
    supra,
     
    51 Cal.App.5th 703
    .) We now join with our colleagues in Division Five
    of this court and a panel of the Fifth Appellate District in following Division
    Four’s reasoning. (Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Assn. v. City and County of San
    7
    Francisco (2021) 
    60 Cal.App.5th 227
     (Howard Jarvis); City of Fresno v.
    Fresno Building Healthy Communities (2020) 
    59 Cal.App.5th 220
    .)
    2. Proposition 13’s Article XIII A, Section 4 Does Not
    Impose a Supermajority Requirement on Citizen
    Initiatives.
    Article XIII A, section 4, which was added by Proposition 13, provides
    that “Cities, Counties and special districts, by a two-thirds vote of the
    qualified electors of such district, may impose special taxes on such district,
    except ad valorem taxes on real property or a transaction tax or sales tax on
    the sale of real property within such City, County or special district.”
    Respondents argued, and the trial court agreed, that Measure AA required a
    two-thirds vote under this section.
    We come to a different conclusion by adopting the rationale of
    Proposition C. In that case, two groups challenged a special tax for homeless
    services passed by 61 percent of San Francisco voters. (Proposition C, 
    supra,
    51 Cal.App.5th at p. 708.) The court held that section 4 did not constrain the
    power of voters to approve citizen initiatives by majority vote. (Proposition C,
    at p. 721.) “[W]hen read in harmony with article II’s reservation of the
    initiative power and in light of the evidence of voter intent . . . , article XIII A,
    section 4 is no[t] . . . ambiguous. . . . ‘[A]ny doubts with respect to the right of
    the people to adopt legislation governing taxes through the initiative process
    should have been laid to rest by . . . Kennedy Wholesale.’ ” (Ibid., quoting
    Rossi v. Brown (1995) 
    9 Cal.4th 688
    , 708.) “Section 4 requires governmental
    entities to gain the approval of a supermajority of voters before imposing a
    special tax. It does not repeal or otherwise abridge by implication the
    people’s power to raise taxes by initiative, and to do so by majority vote. Any
    such partial repeal by implication is not favored by the law, which imposes a
    8
    duty on courts to jealously guard, liberally construe and resolve all doubts in
    favor of the exercise of the initiative power.” (Proposition C, at p. 721.)
    In contending that Proposition C was wrongly decided, respondents
    repeat arguments that were raised and rejected in Proposition C: that
    recognizing the voters’ right to impose on themselves a special tax through an
    initiative receiving a simple majority vote is inconsistent with Kennedy
    Wholesale and California Cannabis, that two appellate court decisions issued
    before California Cannabis (City of Dublin v. County of Alameda (1993)
    
    14 Cal.App.4th 264
     & Altadena Library Dist. v. Bloodgood (1987)
    
    192 Cal.App.3d 585
    ) are controlling, and that the common understanding is
    that Propositions 13 and 218 apply to citizen initiatives. (See Proposition C,
    
    supra,
     51 Cal.App.5th at pp. 715–721; see also Proposition G, 
    supra,
    66 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1070–1074 [declining to reconsider Proposition C and
    reaffirming its holdings].) Because we agree with Proposition C, we likewise
    reject these arguments.
    3. Proposition 218’s Article XIII C, Section 2,
    Subdivision (d) Does Not Impose a Supermajority
    Requirement on Citizen Initiatives.
    The trial court also relied on article XIII C, section 2, subdivision (d),
    added by Proposition 218, in concluding that Measure AA needed a two-
    thirds vote to pass. This section provides that “[n]o local government may
    impose, extend, or increase any special tax unless and until that tax is
    submitted to the electorate and approved by a two-thirds vote.” The trial
    court acknowledged, but declined to extend, California Cannabis’s holding,
    which distinguished initiatives sponsored by local government entities from
    those sponsored by voters. That case involved article XIII C, section 2,
    subdivision (b), which was also added by Proposition 218. The section
    requires that a “local government” sponsored initiative to increase a general
    9
    tax be submitted to the voters at “a regularly scheduled general election for
    members of the governing body of the local government.” The question in
    California Cannabis was whether a citizen initiative could be placed on the
    ballot of a special election, instead of a general election. The court concluded
    that it could, interpreting section 2, subdivision (b)’s reference to “local
    government” to limit the scope of the section to initiatives sponsored by
    governmental entities, but not to initiatives sponsored by citizens.
    (California Cannabis, supra, 3 Cal.5th at pp. 930–931.) The trial court here
    believed that California Cannabis’s distinction between government- and
    citizen-sponsored initiatives was limited to section 2, subdivision (b), and did
    not apply to section 2, subdivision (d). Accordingly, the court ruled that
    section (2), subdivision (d)’s two-thirds voting requirement applied to citizen
    initiatives, such as Measure AA.
    Proposition C rejected this analysis. (Proposition C, supra,
    51 Cal.App.5th at pp. 721–724.) It noted that section 2, subdivision (d), like
    section 2, subdivision (b), refers to “local government” and contains no
    indication that it was meant to impose a restriction on the people, as opposed
    to local government entities. (Proposition C, at p. 723.) “[T]he California
    Cannabis court reviewed official ballot materials pertaining to
    Proposition 218 and found no evidence that Proposition 218 was intended to
    ‘rescue voters from measures they might, through a majority vote, impose on
    themselves.’ ” (Id. at p. 724, quoting California Cannabis, supra, 3 Cal.5th at
    p. 940.) Again, we agree with Proposition C and reject respondents’
    arguments that it was wrongly decided. (Accord Proposition G, 
    supra,
    66 Cal.App.5th at p. 1071; Howard Jarvis, supra, 60 Cal.App.5th at pp. 230–
    231; City of Fresno v. Fresno Building Healthy Communities, supra,
    59 Cal.App.5th at p. 226.)
    10
    4. Proposition 218’s Article XIII D, Section 3,
    Subdivision (a)(2) Does Not Impose a Supermajority
    Requirement on Citizen Initiatives to Add Parcel
    Taxes That Will Be “Assessed” on Property Owners.
    The trial court also concluded that a different provision added by
    Proposition 218—article XIII D, section 3, subdivision (a)(2)—separately
    mandated a two-thirds vote to pass Measure AA. That section provides that
    “[n]o tax, assessment, fee, or charge shall be assessed by any agency upon
    any parcel of property” except if it is a “special tax receiving a two-thirds
    vote.” The trial court concluded that this provision applied to Measure AA
    because it would require the City to “assess” a parcel tax. Proposition G
    rejected this interpretation of section 3, subdivision (a)(2) (Proposition G,
    supra, 66 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1074–1075), and we agree with its reasoning.
    As did the trial court in considering Measure AA, the party who
    challenged the parcel tax in Proposition G maintained that article XIII D,
    section 3, subdivision (a)(2) imposes a two-thirds vote requirement for any
    tax that is “assessed by any agency,” and is thus distinguishable from taxes
    that may be “imposed” by citizen initiative. (Proposition G, 
    supra,
    66 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1065, 1074–1075.) Specifically, the challenger argued
    that “because this constitutional provision uses the word ‘ “assessed” ’ ” the
    two-thirds vote threshold applies because local agencies are barred “from
    collecting a special tax, even one proposed by a citizens’ initiative, unless the
    tax has been approved by a two-thirds vote.” (Id. at p. 1075.)
    Respondents here likewise contend that there is a “critical distinction”
    between the “assessment” and the “imposition” of a tax because an
    “assessment” involves administrative actions beyond merely legislating a tax
    increase. Proposition G rejected this interpretation because Proposition 218
    defines “[a]ssessment” as “any levy or charge upon real property by an agency
    for a special benefit conferred upon the real property.” (Art. XIII D, § 2,
    11
    subd. (b), italics added; Proposition G, 
    supra,
     66 Cal.App.5th at p. 1075.)
    Because the article did not adopt a technical definition of “assessment,” the
    court looked to the word’s ordinary meaning: “Pursuant to one dictionary
    definition, ‘assess’ means ‘to subject to a tax, charge, or levy,’ or ‘to impose (as
    a tax) according to an established rate.’ (See Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate
    Dict. (10th ed. 2001) p. 69.) With this definition equating ‘assess’ and
    ‘impose,’ [any] ‘critical’ distinction evaporates.” (Proposition G, at p. 1075.)
    Proposition G emphasized, as had previous courts analyzing
    Propositions 13 and 218’s effect on the initiative power, that “nothing in the
    text of article XIII D or its context supports the conclusion that article XIII D,
    section 3(a) constrains the initiative power. . . . ‘Without a direct reference in
    the text of a provision—or a similarly clear, unambiguous indication that it
    was within the ambit of a provision’s purpose to constrain the people’s
    initiative power—we will not construe a provision as imposing such a
    limitation.’ ” (Proposition G, supra, 66 Cal.App.5th at p. 1076, quoting
    California Cannabis, supra, 3 Cal.5th at p. 931.) We agree with and adopt
    Proposition G’s analysis.
    5. Measure AA Is an Authorized Special Parcel Tax.
    Finally, we reject an alternate ground for affirmance that respondents
    raise for the first time on appeal. They contend that if we accept the City’s
    arguments that Proposition 13’s article XIII A, section 4 and
    Proposition 218’s article XIII D, section 3, subdivision (a) do not apply to
    taxes proposed by citizen initiative, it follows that “the voters cannot enact a
    flat special parcel tax at all” because such a tax would be a constitutionally
    impermissible non-ad valorem property tax. This argument was also raised,
    and rejected, in Proposition G, and we once again adopt the court’s reasoning.
    (Proposition G, supra, 66 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1076–1078.)
    12
    The California Constitution provides that “[a]ll property is taxable and
    shall be assessed at the same percentage of fair market value” or an
    authorized standard other than fair market value. (Art. XIII, § 1, subd. (a).)
    “This provision establishes the general rule that property taxes in California
    must be ad valorem,” at least when they are “general” taxes to be used for
    general governmental purposes. (Proposition G, 
    supra,
     66 Cal.App.5th at
    p. 1076; City of Oakland v. Digre (1988) 
    205 Cal.App.3d 99
    , 110.) Before
    Proposition 13, “the only mode of property taxation extant in California was
    the ad valorem property tax.” (Valley Baptist Church v. City of San Rafael
    (2021) 
    61 Cal.App.5th 401
    , 417.) “Following the passage of Proposition 13, a
    new type of constitutionally authorized property-related taxation was
    recognized–the non-ad valorem special property tax.” (Id. at p. 419; see also
    Heckendorn v. City of San Marino (1986) 
    42 Cal.3d 481
    , 483 [special parcel
    tax was non-ad valorem and thus not prohibited by Proposition 13]; accord,
    Borikas v. Alameda Unified School Dist. (2013) 
    214 Cal.App.4th 135
    , 158,
    fn. 27 [Proposition 13 does not prohibit non-ad valorem special tax].)
    Like Measure AA, the tax at issue in Proposition G “impose[d] a flat
    annual tax on each parcel of real estate in San Francisco without regard to
    the value of the property, and so [wa]s not an ad valorem tax; it [wa]s a
    parcel tax.” (Proposition G, 
    supra,
     66 Cal.App.5th at p. 1076.)
    Propositions 13 and 218 both expressly permit the approval of a parcel tax as
    a “special tax” earmarked for a special purpose if approved by two-thirds of
    the electorate. (Arts. XIII A, § 4 & XIII D, § 3, subd. (a)(2); Neilson v. City of
    California City (2005) 
    133 Cal.App.4th 1296
    , 1308 [Proposition 218]; City of
    Oakland v. Digre, supra, 205 Cal.App.3d at p. 104 [Proposition 13].)
    Proposition 218 specified that such a special tax could be assessed “upon a[]
    parcel of property.” (Art. XIII D, § 3, subd. (a)(2).)
    13
    Like respondents here, the party challenging the parcel tax in
    Proposition G argued that if Propositions 13 and 218 did not apply to citizen
    initiatives, then the tax was prohibited under article XIII, section 1 because
    it was not an ad valorem tax. (Proposition G, 
    supra,
     66 Cal.App.5th at
    p. 1076.) The court rejected this argument, holding that article XIII,
    section 1 does not apply to special parcel taxes enacted by citizen initiative.
    “[The challenger] relies on precedents that construe article XIII, section 1 to
    prohibit a parcel tax that is a general tax [citations], ignoring cases in which
    a parcel tax that is a special tax survives constitutional challenge.”
    (Proposition G, at p. 1076.) After recognizing that prior reported cases
    involved initiatives approved by a two-thirds vote, the court pointed out that
    the initiatives in those cases were initiated by local government entities
    (which are restricted by Proposition 218), not by citizens (who are not).
    (Proposition G, at p. 1077.)
    Proposition G explained that the constitutional analysis differs for
    citizen initiatives. “[T]he constitutional provisions [that those prior reported]
    cases construe must also be harmonized with the initiative power reserved to
    the people in articles II and IV. [Citation.] We know that ‘the people’s power
    to propose and adopt initiatives is at least as broad as the legislative power
    wielded by the Legislature and local governments.’ (California Cannabis,
    supra, 3 Cal.5th at p. 935.) Moreover, ‘procedural requirements imposed on
    the Legislature and local governments do not similarly constrain the
    electorate’s initiative power without evidence that such was their intended
    purpose.’ (Ibid.) Although ‘neither the Legislature nor the voters may enact
    a law of a nature that exceeds a limitation on the state’s lawmaking power,
    such as the right of free speech,’ the electorate need ‘not generally follow
    “legislative” procedures when exercising the initiative power.’ (Kennedy
    14
    Wholesale, 
    supra,
     53 Cal.3d at p. 252 & fn. 5.) Such legislative procedures,
    superfluous to the initiative process, include the requirement for a two-thirds
    vote. (California Cannabis, supra, 3 Cal.5th at p. 942; [citation].) Thus, just
    as article XIII, section 1 does not prohibit a local government from adopting a
    special parcel tax with voter approval, so it cannot prevent the people,
    exercising their initiative power, from adopting an identical tax.”
    (Proposition G, 
    supra,
     66 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1077–1078.)
    Proposition G harmonized its conclusion with the purposes of
    Propositions 13 and 218, stating that to conclude that parcel taxes could be
    put forth by local governments but not the electorate “would be to construe
    Proposition 13 and Proposition 218 as having expanded local government’s
    authority to tax property. . . . [Article XIII A,] section 4 ‘was intended to
    circumscribe the taxing power of local government.’ [Citation.] And when
    California voters subsequently passed Proposition 62, we added to the
    Government Code this directive: ‘Article XIII A . . . shall [not] be construed
    to authorize any local government or district to impose any general or special
    tax which it is not otherwise authorized to impose.’ (Gov. Code, § 53727,
    subd. (a).) [The challenger’s] construction of article XIII, section 1, as
    prohibiting parcel taxes even when they are framed as special taxes, creates
    a conflict with this directive.” (Proposition G, 
    supra,
     66 Cal.App.5th at
    p. 1078.)
    In short, Proposition G stands for the proposition that the people have
    retained their power to enact by a majority vote citizen initiatives for non-ad
    valorem special taxes. Because we agree with Proposition G and adopt its
    reasoning, we reject respondents’ argument.
    15
    B. Enacting Measure AA on a Majority Vote Despite Different
    Statements in Ballot Materials Did Not Violate Due Process or
    Amount to a Fraud on Voters.
    Having agreed with the City that Measure AA needed only a majority
    of the vote to pass, we turn to consider respondents’ alternative argument
    that, in light of the ballot materials’ statements that the measure needed
    two-thirds of the vote to pass, the City Council’s resolution declaring that the
    measure passed with only a majority vote was an “about face [that] violate[d]
    due process.” (Capitalization modified.) While we acknowledge the critical
    importance of true and impartial ballot materials, we cannot conclude there
    was a due process violation under the circumstances surrounding
    Measure AA. The ballot materials’ statements were not alleged to be
    intentionally misleading and were made when the governing law was
    uncertain. The statements cannot supplant the constitutional standards
    governing an election’s voting threshold. If they could, government officials
    who prepare ballot materials would yield too much power to control the
    outcome of elections. A measure needing a majority vote cannot be
    invalidated after receiving such a vote simply because its ballot materials
    incorrectly identify a higher voting threshold, just as a measure needing a
    16
    supermajority vote cannot be enacted by a majority vote simply because its
    ballot materials incorrectly identify the lower voting threshold.4
    Respondents’ arguments can be viewed in two ways. By maintaining
    that the City Council was obligated to enforce the ballot materials’ two-thirds
    voting-threshold statements even if those statements were wrong, the
    arguments suggest a postelection challenge to the accuracy of the ballot
    materials. And by maintaining that the City Council was bound by the ballot
    materials’ voting-threshold statements regardless of their accuracy, the
    arguments suggest a direct challenge to the council’s postelection conduct.
    Either way, we are unpersuaded.
    1. Measure AA Cannot Be Invalidated Under Due
    Process Principles on the Basis that the Ballot
    Materials Were Inaccurate.
    As we have said, voters are entitled to be given a true and impartial
    summary of initiative measures, one that is “not argumentative or likely to
    create prejudice for or against the measure.” (Amador Valley Joint Union
    High Sch. Dist. v. State Bd. of Equalization (1978) 
    22 Cal.3d 208
    , 243; see
    Elec. Code, §§ 9280 [City Attorney must “prepare an impartial analysis of the
    measure showing the effect of the measure on the existing law and the
    operation of the measure”], 9051, subd. (c) [under § 10403, subd. (a)(2), city
    4 When questioned at oral argument whether it was respondents’
    position that a measure needing a supermajority vote could be enacted by a
    majority vote simply because its ballot materials incorrectly identified the
    lower voting threshold, respondents’ counsel stated that such ballot materials
    would be subject to a preelection challenge. In response, the City’s counsel
    pointed out that no such preelection challenges were made to the ballot
    materials accompanying San Francisco’s propositions that were the subject of
    Proposition C, Proposition G, and Howard Jarvis (post, fn. 6). In none of
    those cases did the courts rely on the ballot materials’ statements that the
    measures needed a majority vote to pass as independent reasons to enforce
    the measures as valid enactments.
    17
    must “give a true and impartial statement of the purpose of the measure in
    such language that the ballot title and summary shall neither be an
    argument, nor be likely to create prejudice, for or against the proposed
    measure”]; Oakland Mun. Code, § 3.08.200.) “The main purpose of these
    requirements is to avoid misleading the public with inaccurate information.”
    (Amador Valley, at p. 243.)
    “Generally, a challenge to ballot materials must be made before an
    election. Indeed, a postelection challenge to ballot materials is not permitted
    by the Elections Code.” (Owens v. County of Los Angeles (2013)
    
    220 Cal.App.4th 107
    , 123 (Owens).) Here, however, respondents’ postelection
    challenge to prevent the enforcement on Measure AA is grounded on the
    ballot materials’ statements. The provisions of the Elections Code “do [not]
    provide a statutory bases ‘to attack the outcome of an election based on
    deficiencies in the impartial analysis’ of a ballot measure after the election,”
    as “[e]nforcing the requirements for an impartial analysis of a ballot is a
    preelection activity.” (Denny v. Arntz (2020) 
    55 Cal.App.5th 914
    , 921; accord,
    Friends of Sierra Madre v. City of Sierra Madre (2001) 
    25 Cal.4th 165
    , 192.)
    While postelection challenges to ballot materials cannot be brought
    under the Elections Code, “California appellate courts have recognized the
    ‘possibility’ that an impartial analysis of a county measure or other ballot
    materials can be so misleading and inaccurate ‘that constitutional due
    process requires invalidation of the election.’ ” (Owens, supra,
    220 Cal.App.4th at p. 123.) At the same time, “courts have set a ‘very high’
    bar [citation] for litigants to successfully mount” such a challenge. (Ibid.)
    Indeed, Owens noted that “no California appellate court, to our knowledge,
    has invalidated an election on this basis.” (Ibid.) This high bar is “for good
    reason. . . . ‘California law makes it hard to overturn elections. The reasons
    18
    are fundamental. Voters, not judges, mainly run our democracy. It would
    threaten that core tenet if one person who did not like the election result
    could hire lawyers and with ease could invalidate an expression of popular
    will.’ ” (Id. at pp. 123–124.) The “idea that by ‘constitutionalizing’
    deficiencies in voter summaries you can undo an election is really quite
    antithetical to the democratic process.” (People ex rel. Kerr v. County of
    Orange (2003) 
    106 Cal.App.4th 914
    , 933.)
    Thus, evaluating “how much process is due in a local, direct
    decisionmaking context—where the complained-of irregularities consist of
    omissions, inaccuracies or misleading statements in the ballot materials—
    will depend on whether the materials, in light of other circumstances of the
    election, were so inaccurate or misleading as to prevent the voters from
    making informed choices. In conducting this inquiry courts should examine
    the extent of preelection publicity, canvassing and other informational
    activities, as well as the substance or content of such efforts. The ready
    availability of the text of the ordinance, or the official dissemination and
    content of other related materials, such as arguments for or against the
    measure, will also bear on whether the statutory noncompliance rendered the
    election unfair. Finally, courts should take into account the materiality of
    the omission or other informational deficiency. Flaws striking at the very
    nature and purpose of the legislation are more serious than other, more
    ancillary matters.” (Horwath v. East Palo Alto (1989) 
    212 Cal.App.3d 766
    ,
    777–778 (Horwath).)
    In Horwath, a city attorney failed to prepare an impartial analysis of a
    proposed rent-stabilization ordinance by not discussing a rent rollback that
    would go into effect upon the measure’s enactment. (Horwath, supra,
    212 Cal.App.3d at pp. 770–772.) After the measure passed, landlords sought
    19
    a writ of mandate barring its enforcement. (Id. at pp. 769, 771.) In rejecting
    the owners’ challenge, Horwath held that a successful challenge to the
    measure would require an elector to show that “ ‘the result would have been
    different without [the wrongful] influence—i.e., [the misinformation]
    prevented the expression of the majority will.’ ” (Id. at pp. 774–775.)
    According to the court, the landlords could not bring such a challenge because
    they were not electors of the city that enacted the measure and had not
    “offered any proof that the deficient impartial analysis in fact affected the
    outcome of the vote.” (Id. at p. 775.) After finding that the failure to disclose
    the rent rollback “f[ell] somewhere in between a minimal defect and one
    going to the core character and purpose of the proposed legislation,” the court
    concluded that the impartial analysis “was [not] so egregious as to raise a
    presumption of unfairness,” since other information about the ordinance had
    been properly disclosed, there had been preelection publicity about the
    rollback, and the full text of the proposed ordinance had been available. (Id.
    at p. 779.) The court held that the owners had failed as a matter of law to
    establish a constitutional violation. (Ibid.)
    In advancing their due process argument here, respondents do not
    analyze the Horwath factors.5 They insist that Horwath was a
    “fundamentally different case[]” because it involved “a sin of omission”
    instead of “a sin of commission.” We see this as a difference without a
    5 Instead, they rely on two federal cases that involved challenges to the
    handling of absentee ballots. (Roe v. Alabama (11th Cir. 1995) 
    43 F.3d 574
    ,
    583 [certifying question to state supreme court about state law affecting
    absentee ballots without deciding constitutional question]; Griffin v. Burns
    (1st Cir. 1978) 
    570 F.2d 1065
    , 1076 [where state supreme court ruled that
    absentee ballots were not permitted in primary elections and invalidated
    votes of people told they were permitted to vote absentee, “the election itself
    becomes a flawed process”].)
    20
    distinction. Respondents’ due process argument is based on the premise that
    the ballot materials were inaccurate, and respondents have offered nothing to
    explain why the way in which the inaccuracy arose—by failing to include a
    point as occurred in Horwath or by including an inaccurate point as occurred
    here—affects the analysis.
    We therefore apply the Horwath factors and conclude that Measure AA
    cannot be invalidated on due process grounds. To begin with, other than the
    voting-threshold statements, Measure AA’s ballot materials provided
    extensive, and unchallenged, information about the substantive content and
    effect of the measure. Voters were informed that 62 percent of the tax would
    be used to expand access to early childcare and education, 31 percent would
    be used to “reduce disparities in postsecondary education outcomes,” and
    seven percent would be used for oversight and accountability costs
    established by the measure. Voters were also informed that a new
    accountability officer would be added to City staff to oversee programs funded
    by Measure AA, and they were provided with a description of the officer’s job
    responsibilities and authority. And they were informed that the tax would
    generate around $30 million in revenue each year, would be imposed through
    fiscal year 2048–2049, could be increased by the City Council on certain
    criteria, and would include exemptions for some low-income and other
    qualifying households. In short, it is undisputed that voters were given true
    and impartial information about the substance of the proposed tax and how
    and where the proceeds would be distributed. In contrast, the ballot
    materials’ voting-threshold statements did not strike “at the very nature and
    purpose of the legislation” but concerned an important, but “more ancillary
    matter[].” (Horwath, supra, 212 Cal.App.3d at pp. 777–778.)
    21
    Furthermore, the ballot materials’ voting-threshold statements were
    made when there was legal uncertainty about the applicable voting threshold
    for citizen’s initiatives for special parcel taxes. Respondents themselves
    acknowledge that “Proposition 13 is one of the most litigated (non-criminal)
    laws in California.” And in recent years, cities facing citizen-initiated tax
    initiatives have not had a clear-cut answer on the governing vote threshold.
    (See, e.g., California Cannabis, supra, 3 Cal.5th at p. 956 (dis. opn. of Kruger,
    J.) [noting that majority’s opinion could be construed to mean that “from here
    on out, special taxes can be enacted by a simple majority of the electorate”].)
    Not surprisingly, cities have taken different positions on the voting threshold
    needed for citizen-initiated tax measures. On one hand, for example,
    Fresno’s city council referred to a two-thirds vote threshold in its resolution
    placing a citizen tax initiative before the voters in November 2018, though
    the city took a neutral position in proceedings to implement the measure
    “and indicated it would defer to the court’s guidance.” (City of Fresno v.
    Fresno Building Healthy Communities, supra, 59 Cal.App.5th at pp. 229–
    230.) In San Diego, the San Diego City Attorney advised voters that a two-
    thirds vote was necessary for a citizen-initiative hotel tax placed on the
    March 2020 ballot. On the other hand, the ballot materials sent to San
    Francisco voters regarding the taxes at issue in Proposition G and Howard
    Jarvis (in advance of the June 2018 election), and Proposition C (in advance
    of the November 2018 election) stated the measures required a simple
    majority to pass.6 (Proposition G, 
    supra,
     66 Cal.App.5th at p. 1065; Howard
    6 Respondents’ unopposed request for judicial notice of the San Diego
    ballot materials is granted. On its own motion, the court takes judicial notice
    of the San Francisco ballot materials after having provided the parties notice
    and an opportunity to object, which no party did. (Evid. Code, §§ 455,
    subd. (a), 459, subd. (c).)
    22
    Jarvis, supra, 60 Cal.App.5th at p. 231; Proposition C, supra, 51 Cal.App.5th
    at p. 708.) Given this uncertainty, we cannot conclude that it was
    fundamentally unfair for Oakland officials to express in the 2018 ballot
    materials that Measure AA would require two-third of the vote to pass, then
    later take a different position.
    2. Measure AA Cannot Be Invalidated as a “Fraud on
    the Voters.”
    Respondents more forcefully argue that the City Council’s declaration
    enacting Measure AA on a majority vote when the ballot materials stated
    that a two-thirds vote would be required amounted to a fraud. They describe
    the City Council’s action as “game-playing” and “cynically revers[ing] course
    after the fact.” And they characterize the City’s position that it did not
    engage in fraud as “astonishing,” “astounding,” and “wholly undemocratic.”
    While we agree that the ballot materials’ incorrect voting statements were
    lamentable, we cannot agree that respondents sufficiently alleged fraud by
    the City.
    As did the trial court, respondents rely on the 1956 case of Hass v. City
    Council, supra, 
    139 Cal.App.2d 73
    , which includes forceful, yet ultimately
    undefined and unhelpful, language, and is distinguishable. In Hass, the
    Palm Springs City Council held a special election for an ordinance to change
    the boundary lines for council districts. (Id. at p. 74.) Both the ballot and the
    proposed ordinance itself stated that the redistricting would proceed if three-
    fourths of voters voted in favor of the ordinance. (Id. at pp. 74–75.) Because
    the ordinance received a majority, but less than three-fourths, vote, the city
    council declared that the ordinance had failed. (Id. at p. 75.) Three
    appellants sued to have the city council nonetheless adopt the ordinance, but
    the trial court and the appellate court rejected their claims. (Ibid.)
    23
    The appellants in Hass argued that the ordinance was legally adopted
    by a majority vote because state law did not compel a three-fourths vote for
    redistricting. (Hass v. City Council, supra, 139 Cal.App.2d at p. 75.) But the
    appellate court concluded that whatever law governed the voting procedure,
    “it would seem to follow logically and legally that the matter should be
    submitted to the voters on that basis, or at least that the voters should not be
    deceived or misled in that respect. After the election has been decided by the
    voters on the basis of the proposed ordinance submitted to them, the result
    should not be declared void by the body charged with the duty of canvassing
    the votes on the ground that a different rule should have been followed and a
    different proposition submitted.” (Id. at pp. 75–76.) The voters in Hass “were
    asked to vote on the basis that a three-fourths vote was required, and the
    result of the election did not meet the requirement set forth in both the
    proposed ordinance and the ballot.” (Id. at p. 76.) The court concluded that
    “[i]t would be a fraud on the voters” to force the adoption of an ordinance
    after electors “voted upon an ordinance submitted to them upon a definite
    condition,” one that was (unlike in this case) requested by the signers of the
    initiative petition placing the ordinance on the ballot. (Ibid., italics added.)
    On those facts, Hass ruled that the trial court properly exercised its
    discretion in denying the appellants their request to implement the
    redistricting ordinance. (Id. at pp. 76–77.) The case does not, as respondents
    claim, stand for the broad principle that a proposition “will not be considered
    adopted” if it passes by a smaller majority than what was stated in ballot
    materials.
    Respondents point out that Hass observed that “[i]t may well be that
    many voters who were not entirely convinced as to the wisdom of adopting
    that [council redistricting] ordinance were willing to agree to it in the event
    24
    that three fourths of the voters desired to make that change.” (Hass v. City
    Council, supra, 139 Cal.App.2d at p. 76.) This conjecture has less relevance
    here because Measure AA, unlike the measure in Hass, did not include a
    voting threshold in its text. But even accepting that incorrect statements in
    ballot materials might affect some voters, we disagree that this possibility
    rendered the enactment of Measure AA a fraud on the voters.
    Respondents discount the fact that in Hass the voting threshold was in
    the text of the proposed ordinance and not just, as here, in the ballot
    materials.7 We presume that voters are familiar with the language of a
    proposed ordinance, “have duly considered it, and have voted intelligently.”
    (Monette-Shaw v. San Francisco Bd. of Supervisors (2006) 
    139 Cal.App.4th 1210
    , 1219.) A voting threshold identified in ballot materials cannot
    supplant the law governing the applicable voting threshold, while a voting
    threshold expressed in a measure itself establishes the applicable law for that
    measure.
    Respondents asked the trial court to rule as a matter of law that the
    City Council’s action declaring Measure AA enacted on a majority vote
    amounted to a fraud on voters. Hass did not define the phrase “fraud on the
    voters,” but fraud generally requires an intentional misrepresentation. The
    “actual fraud” necessary to set aside a contract, for example, is defined as
    “[t]he suggestion, as a fact, of that which is not true, by one who does not
    believe it to be true.” (Civ. Code, § 1572, subd. 1, italics added.) The cases
    cited by respondents all involve such verifiably untrue statements. (Peery v.
    7We are aware of only two published cases that cite Hass, and one of
    them distinguished it on the basis that the initiative in Hass contained
    “express language . . . which required approval by three-fourths of the voters.”
    (Santa Barbara County Taxpayer Assn. v. Board of Supervisors (1989)
    
    209 Cal.App.3d 940
    , 948, italics added.)
    25
    City of Los Angeles (1922) 
    187 Cal. 753
    , 769 [“fraud would be wrought” if city
    were to dispose of bond issues at less than value approved by voters, which
    was “one of the essential conditions upon which” the bond issues were
    obtained]; Skinner v. City of Santa Rosa (1895) 
    107 Cal. 464
    , 476–477
    [enjoining sale of bonds on terms that did not substantially comply with those
    voted on]; San Francisco Forty-Niners v. Nishioka (1999) 
    75 Cal.App.4th 637
    ,
    639 [prohibiting the qualification of an initiative measure for ballot where
    initiative petition contained “objectively inaccurate information and
    calculated untruths that substantially mislead and misinform a reasonable
    voter”]; Concerned Citizens v. City of Carlsbad (1988) 
    204 Cal.App.3d 937
    ,
    940, 943 [upholding the refusal to enact proposition that received fewer votes
    than competing proposition where measure specifically stated that the one
    receiving more votes “shall prevail”; to hold otherwise “would disenfranchise
    all those Carlsbad residents who voted for both propositions on the premise
    that only one would be enacted”].)
    By contrast, the voting-threshold statements in Measure AA’s ballot
    materials must be viewed in a context of an evolving legal landscape
    surrounding citizens’ initiatives for special parcel taxes. While the City
    Attorney and Auditor were incorrect in stating in the ballot materials that
    Measure AA required two-thirds of the vote, respondents did not allege that
    these officials acted with a fraudulent intent, nor can we ascribe such an
    intent to them. (See Orcilla v. Big Sur, Inc. (2016) 
    244 Cal.App.4th 982
    , 1008
    [elements of fraud, including the intent to induce reliance on a known falsity,
    must be plead with specificity].)
    C. Respondents Have Not Stated a Cause of Action for Estoppel.
    Having concluded that Measure AA required only a majority vote to
    pass and that the City Council’s declaration that it passed did not violate due
    26
    process principles or amount to a fraud on the voters, we turn to the
    appropriate disposition. We essentially have found that the trial court erred
    in granting respondents’ motion for judgment on the pleadings. But the trial
    court also denied the City’s motion for judgment on the pleadings. In doing
    so, it concluded that respondents had adequately alleged a cause of action for
    equitable estoppel. We disagree that Measure AA can be invalidated on such
    a theory.
    Respondents’ complaint alleged that the City is estopped from arguing
    that a majority voting threshold governs because of the two-thirds voting-
    threshold statements contained in the ballot materials. On appeal, they
    renew this theory, arguing that the City is estopped from challenging the
    two-thirds voting-threshold statements because it failed to challenge the
    statements before the election.8
    True enough, parties may not seek to invalidate an election by raising
    alleged errors that could have been addressed beforehand. (E.g., McKinney v.
    Superior Court (2004) 
    124 Cal.App.4th 951
    , 954 [challenge to eligibility of
    write-in candidate should have been brought before the election]; Kilbourne v.
    City of Carpinteria (1976) 
    56 Cal.App.3d 11
    , 12–13, 16–17 & fn. 1 [city
    councilmember whose surname was missing one letter on ballot could not
    8  The trial court took a different approach. It concluded that
    respondents adequately alleged that they detrimentally relied on the ballot
    materials prepared by the City Attorney: “Specifically, [respondents] allege
    that if they had known the City would later contend (contrary to the
    information contained in the ballot materials prepared by the City Attorney)
    that Measure AA only needed a simple majority vote to pass, [respondents]
    would have had a pre-election remedy to challenge any such statements in
    the voting materials.” But even if this were true, it does not follow that
    respondents can pursue this cause of action in the context of an election
    contest because it is impossible to know whether any preelection challenge
    would have been successful given the legal uncertainty we have highlighted.
    27
    invalidate results on that basis where preelection remedies existed; in dicta,
    court said estoppel would bar relief since candidate “knew or should have
    known of the error” in sufficient time to have it corrected].) But here, the
    City is attempting to do the opposite: it is defending against an effort to
    invalidate a measure that received nearly 63 percent of the vote.
    Again, the vote threshold required to pass a special parcel tax was
    legally uncertain at the time Measure AA was presented to voters. To
    invalidate an otherwise lawfully passed measure would apply “the
    ‘fundamentally undemocratic nature of the requirement for an extraordinary
    majority’ ” (Proposition C, supra, 51 Cal.App.5th at p. 718) simply because
    local government officials included statements identifying the wrong voting
    threshold in the ballot materials. Respondents do not otherwise list the
    elements of a cause of action for estoppel or explain why it should apply in an
    election contest. We conclude under these circumstances that respondents’
    estoppel cause of action fails as a matter of law, and the trial court therefore
    should have granted the City’s motion for judgment on the pleadings.
    III.
    DISPOSITION
    Respondents’ unopposed request for judicial notice filed on December 2,
    2020, is granted.
    The judgment is reversed. The trial court is directed to enter a new
    order denying respondents’ motion for judgment on the pleadings and
    granting the City’s motion for judgment on the pleadings. Appellant City of
    Oakland shall recover its costs on appeal.
    28
    _________________________
    Humes, P.J.
    I CONCUR:
    _________________________
    Sanchez, J.
    Jobs & Housing et al. v. City of Oakland A158977
    29
    Jobs & Housing et al. v. City of Oakland A158977
    CONCURRENCE OF BANKE, J.
    I concur in the disposition. The outcome in this case and other recent
    cases holding citizen initiative tax measures are not subject to the
    requirements of Proposition 13 and Proposition 218—City and County of San
    Francisco v. All Persons Interested in the Matter of Proposition G (2021)
    
    66 Cal.App.5th 1058
    , Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Assn. v. City and County of
    San Francisco (2021) 
    60 Cal.App.5th 227
    , City and County of San
    Francisco v. All Persons Interested in the Matter of Proposition C (2020)
    
    51 Cal.App.5th 703
    , City of Fresno v. Fresno Building Healthy Communities
    (2020) 
    58 Cal.App.5th 884
    —is compelled by our Supreme Court’s decisions in
    California Cannabis Coalition v. City of Upland (2017) 
    3 Cal.5th 924
    , Rossi v.
    Brown (1995) 
    9 Cal.4th 688
    , and Kennedy Wholesale, Inc. v. State Bd. of
    Equalization (1991) 
    53 Cal.3d 245
    . Under Auto Equity Sales, Inc. v. Superior
    Court (1962) 
    57 Cal.2d 450
    , we must, of course, follow the high court’s rulings
    undergirding its decisions in these cases. I nevertheless share the concerns
    voiced by Justice Kruger in her concurring and dissenting opinion in
    California Cannabis Coalition, in which Justice Liu concurred. It has come
    to pass, as Justice Kruger predicted, that “[i]f a local tax enacted by voter
    initiative is not a tax ‘impose[d]’ by ‘local government,’ ” as the majority held,
    “then from here on out, special taxes can be enacted by a simple majority of
    the electorate, as long as proponents can muster the necessary quantum of
    support to require” placement on the ballot. (California Cannabis Coalition,
    at p. 956 (conc. & dis. opn. of Kruger, J.).)
    _________________________
    Banke, J.
    1
    Trial Court:     Alameda County
    Trial Judge:     Hon. Ronni MacLaren
    Counsel:
    Barbara J. Parker, City Attorney, Maria Bee, Assistant City Attorney,
    Jennifer Logue, Supervising City Attorney; Hanson Bridgett LLP, Adam W.
    Hofmann and David C. Casarrubias for Defendant and Appellant.
    Olson Remcho, LLP, James C. Harrison, Karen Getman and Omar El-Qoulaq
    for Jorge Lerma and George Holland, Sr. as Amicus Curiae on behalf of
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Nielsen Merksamer Parrinello Gross & Leoni LLP, James R. Parrinello and
    Christopher E. Skinnell for Plaintiffs and Respondents.
    Eversheds Sutherland (US) LLP, Timothy A. Gustafson, Eric J. Coffill and
    Alexandra Louderback for Council on State Taxation as Amicus Curiae on
    behalf of Plaintiffs and Respondent.