Anderson v. County of Orange CA4/3 ( 2014 )


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  • Filed 3/20/14 Anderson v. County of Orange CA4/3
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    JACK ANDERSON et al.,
    Plaintiffs and Appellants,                                        G047161
    v.                                                            (Super. Ct. No. 30-2010-00376368)
    COUNTY OF ORANGE et al.,                                               OPINION
    Defendants and Respondents.
    Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, David R.
    Chaffee, Judge. Reversed.
    Law Offices of Joel W. Baruch, Joel W. Baruch and Nikki Fermin for
    Plaintiffs and Appellants.
    Lynberg & Watkins, Norman J. Watkins, S. Frank Harrell, and Alexandru
    D. Mihai for Defendants and Respondents.
    *               *               *
    1
    In 2009, plaintiffs were terminated from their senior positions with the
    Orange County Sheriff’s Department (the Department). Sheriff Sandra Hutchens
    characterized the terminations as layoffs necessitated by budget cuts following the recent
    economic downturn. Plaintiffs sued the County of Orange (the County), Hutchens, and
    County Executive Officer Thomas Mauk under a variety of legal theories. Defendants
    were granted a judgment of dismissal based in large measure on a successful motion for
    summary adjudication. We reverse the judgment of dismissal. The order granting
    defendants’ motion for summary adjudication is reversed with regard to plaintiffs’ causes
    of action based on alleged violations of the Public Safety Officers Procedural Bill of
    2
    Rights Act (POBRA or the Act), Government Code section 3300 et seq. The order
    granting defendants’ motion for summary adjudication with regard to the causes of action
    for contempt and breach of contract is affirmed.
    LEGAL BACKGROUND
    The heart of plaintiffs’ case is that the County violated POBRA. POBRA
    applies to all “public safety officer[s]” (as defined in § 3301), up to and including police
    chiefs serving at the pleasure of local officials. (Gray v. City of Gustine (1990) 
    224 Cal.App.3d 621
    , 625-627.) POBRA recognizes that the employment of public safety
    officers, even by local governments, is “a matter of statewide concern.” (§ 3301.) “[T]he
    plain purpose of the Act is to assure the provision of effective law enforcement services
    throughout the state by maintaining stable employment relations between . . . public
    safety officers and their employers.” (Burden v. Snowden (1992) 
    2 Cal.4th 556
    , 566.)
    1
    Plaintiffs include Jack Anderson, John Davis, Brian Cossairt, Deana
    Bergquist, and Robert Eason.
    2
    All statutory references are to the Government Code, unless otherwise
    stated.
    2
    “The various procedural protections provided by POBRA ‘balance the public interest in
    maintaining the efficiency and integrity of the police force with the police officer’s
    interest in receiving fair treatment.’” (Mays v. City of Los Angeles (2008) 
    43 Cal.4th 313
    ,
    320.)
    Public safety officers may sue their employers in superior court for
    perceived violations of the Act. (§ 3309.5, subd. (c).) “In any case where the superior
    court finds that a public safety department has violated any of the provisions of this
    chapter, the court shall render appropriate injunctive or other extraordinary relief to
    remedy the violation and to prevent future violations . . . .” (§ 3309.5, subd. (d)(1).)
    When malicious violations of POBRA are proven, a public safety department may also be
    held liable for actual damages, attorney fees, and civil penalties up to $25,000 per
    violation. (§ 3309.5, subd. (e).)
    3
    Only one of the varied rights provided by the Act is directly at issue here:
    “No punitive action . . . shall be undertaken by any public agency against any public
    safety officer . . . without providing the public safety officer with an opportunity for
    administrative appeal.” (§ 3304, subd. (b).) For purposes of the Act, “punitive action
    3
    The Act “provides in substance that all public safety officers shall have the
    following rights: To engage in political activity while off duty and out of uniform or to
    abstain from such activity (§ 3302, subd. (a)); to seek election to a school board (§ 3302,
    subd. (b)); that interrogations of officers under investigation be conducted in the manner
    indicated (§ 3303); to not be subject to punitive action or denied promotion because of
    the lawful exercise of the rights granted under the Act and have the opportunity of an
    administrative appeal (§ 3304); that no adverse comment shall be placed in an officer’s
    personnel file unless the officer is given the opportunity to read and sign the instrument
    containing the adverse comment (§ 3305); that the affected officer shall have 30 days in
    which to respond to such adverse comments (§ 3306); to not be compelled to submit to a
    polygraph examination (§ 3307); to not be required to make financial disclosures, with
    certain specified exceptions (§ 3308); and that an officer’s locker shall not be searched
    except under specified circumstances (§ 3309).” (Gray v. City of Gustine, supra, 224
    Cal.App.3d at pp. 625-626; see also § 3312 [added to the Act in 2002 to protect officers
    against punitive action for wearing pins or other items depicting the American flag,
    except in specified circumstances].)
    3
    means any action that may lead to dismissal, demotion, suspension, reduction in salary,
    written reprimand, or transfer for purposes of punishment.” (§ 3303.) Defendants posit
    that being laid off for economic reasons is not a punitive action entitling an officer to an
    administrative appeal. (See White v. County of Sacramento (1982) 
    31 Cal.3d 676
    , 683,
    fn. 4 (White) [dictum suggesting “the right to an administrative appeal provided by
    section 3304 . . . does not apply where police officers are laid off as part of a mass
    reduction in personnel due, for example, to budgetary constraints”].) Plaintiffs disagree
    (cf. Riverside Sheriffs’ Assn. v. County of Riverside (2009) 
    173 Cal.App.4th 1410
    , 1426
    [termination is “per se punitive” even in context of involuntary disability retirement]),
    and note that even if White accurately states the law with regard to POBRA, they were
    not terminated as part of a mass, rule-based layoff but instead were individually selected
    for termination out of the ranks of senior officers (most of whom were retained).
    Assuming (as the trial court did) that POBRA applies to the termination of
    plaintiffs’ employment, the key question is whether defendants complied with their
    obligation under section 3304, subdivision (b). “Section 3304 requires only that an
    opportunity for administrative appeal be provided. It does not specify how the appeal
    process is to be implemented. [Citation.] The details of administrative appeal under
    section 3304, subdivision (b) are left to be formulated by the local agency.” (Binkley v.
    City of Long Beach (1993) 
    16 Cal.App.4th 1795
    , 1806; see § 3304.5 [“An administrative
    appeal instituted by a public safety officer under this chapter shall be conducted in
    conformance with rules and procedures adopted by the local public agency”].) But not
    every procedure offered by a local agency is sufficient to qualify as a section 3304,
    subdivision (b), “administrative appeal.” (Giuffre v. Sparks (1999) 
    76 Cal.App.4th 1322
    ,
    1328-1332 [procedures outlined in memorandum of understanding between locality and
    police officer union were insufficient]; Runyan v. Ellis (1995) 
    40 Cal.App.4th 961
    , 965-
    967 [same].)
    4
    FACTS
    As a result of a complicated procedural history (discussed in further detail
    below), the factual material underlying the court’s grant of summary adjudication was not
    all submitted in the usual manner (i.e., as part of the motion and opposition papers). The
    court provided the parties with an opportunity to submit additional briefing and evidence
    after the initial hearing. For now, we ignore the source and timing of the factual material
    in order to present a straightforward, coherent account of the relevant facts. The facts set
    forth herein are for the most part undisputed, with the exception of the defense witnesses’
    description of their own intentions.
    Background Information Pertaining to the Parties
    Plaintiffs were longstanding employees of the Department. As of 2009,
    each of the plaintiffs served in high-level positions with the Department: Anderson,
    4
    assistant sheriff; Davis, assistant sheriff; Cossairt, captain; Bergquist, captain; and
    Eason, captain.
    Sandra Hutchens assumed the position of sheriff in June 2008 and has
    served continuously in her post since that time. Hutchens promptly hired three former
    colleagues to serve in high profile positions: John Scott as undersheriff, Michael
    Hillmann as assistant sheriff, and Lee McGown as a paid consultant. These hires cost the
    County more than $600,000 in salaries alone on an annual basis. Although Hillmann
    served in the same assistant sheriff position as plaintiffs Anderson and Davis, he earned
    $3 more per hour.
    Each of the plaintiffs had run-ins with the new administration. Hutchens
    and Scott criticized Anderson’s performance on several occasions. Anderson was read
    4
    Anderson briefly served as “Acting Sheriff” in 2008, following the
    resignation of former Sheriff Michael Carona.
    5
    5
    his Miranda rights during one December 2008 interview at which Scott was present;
    Anderson was subsequently provided with verbal counseling by Scott concerning a
    perceived violation of Department policy. Davis had personality and policy disputes with
    Scott and Hillmann. On one occasion, Hutchens asked Cossairt about his association
    with former Sheriff Carona. On another occasion, Cossairt was informed by an assistant
    to Hutchens that he should cease a project using funds Hutchens wished to access for
    other purposes. Cossairt did not stop the project because of its necessity. Bergquist was
    transferred and came into conflict with her new supervisor. Eason was transferred to a
    new position following a policy dispute with Hutchens and Scott.
    The Termination of Plaintiffs
    The fiscal year 2009-2010 budget approved by the Orange County Board of
    Supervisors required $28 million in cuts to the Department budget. Based on revenue
    projections available to Hutchens in September 2009, the Department was required to
    prepare for an additional $60 million in cuts in fiscal year 2010-2011.
    Scott sent a July 9, 2009 e-mail to division commanders outlining the
    development of a strategic financial plan for fiscal year 2010-2011. In this e-mail, Scott
    disclosed that the “Executive Command . . . ‘Tentatively’ approved a re-organization that
    consolidates the existing commands into fewer executives at the top, cutting two
    Assistant Sheriffs and six Captains from the current organization.”
    The County’s Personnel and Salary Resolution (PSR) states the following
    under the heading “Order of Layoff”: “A. When a reduction in the work force is
    implemented, each Agency/Department Head shall determine, subject to CEO approval,
    which employees are subject to layoff based on the needs of the organization. [¶] B. In
    considering which employees shall be subject to layoff, consideration shall be given to
    5
    Miranda v. Arizona (1966) 
    384 U.S. 436
    .
    6
    knowledge and skills related to organizational need and the employee’s performance.”
    The PSR requires the County to provide at least 14 days written notice of layoff to the
    affected employee. The PSR also provides a general grievance procedure, pursuant to
    which County employees could contest the application of the layoff procedure. The
    general grievance procedure provides three levels of review: (1) Immediate Supervisor;
    (2) Agency/Department Head; and finally, (3) Human Resources Director (available in
    limited cases, including “an interpretation or an application of the” PSR). The general
    grievance procedure is instigated only by the prompt submission of a grievance by an
    employee. In contrast, the disciplinary procedures in the PSR provide for pre-
    disciplinary notice and a hearing, as well as the right to appeal, in cases of termination for
    cause. Hutchens was required to follow the PSR in implementing a reduction in the
    Department’s work force.
    In August 2009, Hutchens and Scott told plaintiffs that they would be laid
    off as a result of their commands being consolidated with the commands of others,
    including recent Hutchens’ hires Scott and Hillmann. Plaintiffs were not explicitly
    offered a hearing or administrative appeal of their termination at that time.
    On September 24, 2009, Hutchens transmitted a formal one-page
    termination letter to each plaintiff. The letters began by citing the economic difficulties
    faced by the Department. The letters represented that “[t]he decision of who would be
    laid off was made as a result of what functions could be eliminated and/or combined
    without directly impacting our core mission. These layoffs were not based on
    performance; they were based on the elimination or consolidation of functions and were
    6
    made solely because of our current financial situation.” The letters released each
    6
    Hutchens declared under penalty of perjury that “[t]he paramount
    consideration that [she] applied in making position cuts” in September 2009, including
    those of plaintiffs, “was ensuring the continued safety of Orange County’s residents.
    Based on my public safety analysis, certain top command positions were eliminated and
    others were asked to take on the responsibilities of the eliminated positions (in addition to
    7
    plaintiff from their employment effective October 9, 2009. The letters concluded with
    the following statement: “You are entitled to a Liberty Interest Hearing. To exercise this
    right and request a hearing, you must notify Carl Crown, Human Resources Director, . . .
    in writing, within fourteen (14) calendar days from the date of this notification.”
    The Hearings (Or, More Accurately, the Lack Thereof)
    None of the plaintiffs actually participated in the liberty interest hearing
    offered by Hutchens in the termination letters. According to his declaration, Anderson
    “did not ask for the ‘liberty interest’ hearing” for a mixed bag of reasons, including his
    belief that such a hearing was not an appropriate forum for his concerns, the perceived
    futility of the hearing, his lack of information at the time about the true reasons for his
    termination, and his need to retire to receive benefits to support his family. Davis
    likewise explained he did not think a hearing would be fruitful based on the stated reason
    for his termination. Davis noted that had he known at the time of the allegedly true
    reason for his dismissal (i.e., “perceived performance deficiencies or misconduct issues”),
    he “would have asked for an appeal to reverse the decision.”
    Cossairt attested that he “did not ask about a ‘liberty interest’ hearing since
    I understood it was for a ‘name clearing’ and I had been told that I did not do anything
    wrong.” Cossairt stated at his deposition that he did not “believe that there was anything
    that a liberty interest hearing would help me with, getting my job back, doing anything
    else.” Bergquist explained her lack of participation at a hearing as stemming from her
    understanding that the hearing would not apply to her and she felt compelled “to retire in
    order to help support [her] family.” Bergquist testified at her deposition that she did not
    schedule a hearing in part because her termination letter contained no negative statements
    about the quality of her work.
    the work they already performed).”
    8
    Eason contacted human relations to set up a hearing. Eason requested
    information about his alleged misconduct prior to the hearing. Eason never received any
    information about whether something negative about him had influenced the decision to
    terminate his employment. Eason testified at his deposition that the County human
    resources “people . . . were willing to do it. There was some scheduling issues and other
    little things like that, but I never got the impression they didn’t want to meet.” Eason
    never participated in a hearing. Eason did not know what he would say at the hearing.
    “How can I go in to address something I don’t know what it is other than what I think it
    is? How can I go in and say it’s because I didn’t agree with this or that or the other
    thing?”
    Crown, the County’s human resources director, intended to serve as the
    individual conducting the hearings offered in the termination letters. According to his
    declaration, it was Crown’s intent “to listen to any issue(s) raised by Plaintiffs in the
    event they chose to contact [his] office. It was my intent to permit Plaintiffs free range to
    raise any issue(s) of their choosing at the hearings offered them — including any
    grievances Plaintiffs might have had regarding their employment with the County.”
    “Had any of the Plaintiffs attended the hearing offered them and raised any of the
    allegations they now raise in this case, it would have been my practice to contact County
    Counsel and seek legal advice as to the County’s obligations, if any, under the applicable
    law. Again, I did not have the opportunity to hear Plaintiffs’ allegations because they
    never voiced them to me at the administrative hearing I planned to conduct.”
    7
    Another terminated Captain, Christine Murray, inquired about the liberty
    interest hearing and communicated with plaintiffs about her efforts. Murray asked
    several questions by e-mail of human resources employee Bob Leys, including whether
    she could have representation at the hearing (“Yes”), whether she should obtain evidence
    7
    Murray is not a plaintiff in this case.
    9
    (“Please consult with your representative”), and whether she should submit materials in
    writing (not necessary, but “helpful to submit . . . something in writing at the hearing”).
    Leys answered (by e-mail) Murray’s question about whether she could present witnesses
    with the following response: “No. This is not an evidentiary hearing so witnesses are not
    necessary.” Murray did not actually attend a hearing.
    In a declaration, Leys attested that at the time of his e-mail, his “only
    knowledge of her employment situation was that Ms. Murray was being laid off for
    budgetary reasons alone. If Ms. Murray were to simply express displeasure at the
    County’s budgetary shortfall at her hearing, I saw limited value in witness testimony and
    advised Ms. Murray of that fact in my October 1, 2009 email.” “At the time I wrote my
    October 1, 2009 email to Ms. Murray, she had not voiced her present position to me (i.e.,
    that, in her mind, she was being discharged for performance-based reasons). If Ms.
    Murray had expressed this position to me before I wrote my October 1, 2009 email, it
    would have been my practice to consult with County Counsel for an appropriate response
    which satisfied pertinent legal obligations. If standard office procedure was followed, the
    final call from the Human Resources Department on what form Ms. Murray’s hearings
    would take would be made by my supervisor, Mr. Carl Crown.”
    Post-termination Events
    One day after the effective date of the terminations, Hutchens held an off-
    site leadership retreat. A powerpoint presentation at the retreat included slides suggesting
    a key to improving the Department was getting the right people “on the bus” and the
    wrong people “off the bus”; one slide included a picture of a bus with photographs
    inserted of the remaining Department leadership (including Hutchens in the driver’s seat).
    Another slide included two cartoons with the captions “Ship of Fools” and “Car of
    Idiots.”
    10
    A February 2010 email from Hutchens to the Department stated in relevant
    part that “[t]he leadership that preceded me failed to keep this department in step with
    modern law enforcement. In particular, they neglected to implement structures of
    accountability and risk management to safeguard those who put their lives on the line.”
    At a March 2010 voter forum, Hutchens responded “no” to a question concerning
    whether she would bring Anderson back to the Department.
    PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    Operative Complaint
    In the operative complaint (filed in December 2010) plaintiffs alleged 10
    8
    causes of action, but only seven of the causes of action are pertinent on appeal. The first
    five causes of action consisted of the five plaintiffs’ respective claims that the County
    violated the Act in connection with their termination.
    In the seventh cause of action, plaintiffs Anderson and Davis sought a
    finding of contempt against Hutchens and Mauk for their alleged failure to comply with
    an injunction entered in a different case brought under the Act respecting the validity of
    at-will employee waivers of rights under the Act. In the eighth cause of action, plaintiffs
    Cossairt, Bergquist, and Eason asserted breach of contract against the County.
    8
    In the sixth cause of action, plaintiffs Anderson and Davis averred they
    were wrongly terminated in violation of public policy by the County. The court sustained
    a demurrer to the sixth cause of action and this ruling is not challenged on appeal.
    Plaintiff Bergquist alleged gender discrimination against the County in the ninth and
    tenth causes of action. The court granted summary adjudication on the ninth cause of
    action and Bergquist voluntarily dismissed the tenth cause of action. Bergquist does not
    challenge the dismissal of these causes of action on appeal.
    11
    Defendants’ Motions for Summary Judgment and/or Summary Adjudication
    On June 10, 2011, defendants filed a motion for summary judgment or in
    the alternative summary adjudication. Defendants asserted that various governmental
    immunities precluded liability pursuant to all relevant causes of action because the
    terminations were driven by discretionary budgetary decisions. (See §§ 815.2, 820.2.)
    Defendants also asserted the breach of contract cause of action was meritless because
    public employment is held by statute rather than contract. Plaintiffs filed opposition
    papers designed to defeat the motion filed by defendants.
    The court accepted the parties’ stipulation to continue the summary
    judgment hearing to January 13, 2012, and the trial date to February 21, 2012. Plaintiffs
    filed amended opposition papers on December 22, 2011, and defendants filed their reply
    papers on January 6, 2012.
    On November 4, 2011, defendants filed a second motion for summary
    judgment or summary adjudication, noticed for January 27, 2012. This second motion
    argued the POBRA claims were entirely without merit because POBRA does not apply to
    layoffs. Relatedly, defendants argued that plaintiffs needed to take part in the hearings
    offered by the County to raise their contention that the economic justification for their
    layoffs was a pretext.
    The court ordered the second motion off calendar as not in compliance with
    Code of Civil Procedure section 437c. The court cited both the impropriety of filing
    serial summary judgment motions and the untimely nature of the second motion in
    relation to the trial date.
    Initial Ruling and Invitation for Additional Briefing
    The parties argued the (first) motion on January 13, 2012, and the matter
    was taken under submission. On January 26, 2012, the court denied the motion with
    regard to the POBRA causes of action based on the affirmative defenses of governmental
    12
    and legislative immunity (i.e., the grounds on which the pending motion was filed). But
    the court also addressed the issues explicitly raised in defendants’ second motion.
    Although the court found “triable issues of fact regarding whether the decision to lay-off
    plaintiffs was a ‘dismissal’ under § 3303,” the court concluded four of the plaintiffs’
    POBRA claims failed as a matter of law because those four plaintiffs failed to take part in
    the hearing offered by the County. The court justified its decision to address the so-
    called merits of the POBRA claims by referencing the evidence in plaintiffs’ opposition
    papers that they had been offered the opportunity to participate in hearings and did not do
    so. The court excluded Eason from this analysis because there was not yet evidence in
    the record that Eason “specifically abandoned the hearing.” The court also granted
    summary adjudication as to several other causes of action, including the contempt and
    breach of contract causes of action.
    Plaintiffs filed an ex parte request to continue the trial date, which the court
    granted by continuing the trial to April 9, 2012. In the course of requesting the
    continuance, plaintiffs apparently criticized the court’s grant of summary adjudication.
    The court’s minute order granting the continuance addressed this criticism: “Plaintiffs’
    accusation that this Court made some [rogue], unsupportable ruling on a matter not
    briefed or even triggered by the ‘first’ [motion] is unfounded. As pointed out in the
    [order granting summary adjudication], it was the plaintiffs, in opposition to that motion,
    who submitted declarations and exhibits demonstrating defendants’ compliance with
    POBRA by offering a liberty interest hearing. This Court is free to consider all papers
    submitted — for or against the motion — in assessing the existence of any triable issues.
    [Citations.] Even facts not contained in the moving party’s separate statement can be
    considered when granting summary judgment. [Citations.] Exercising this discretion is
    most appropriate when the evidence favoring the moving party is submitted by the party
    opposing the motion.”
    13
    “So, lest there be any doubt, this Court did not consider the ‘second’
    stricken [motion], and did not rule on the motion in some fantasy vacuum. It ruled on the
    motion with evidence submitted by the plaintiffs, which just so happened to hurt the
    plaintiffs.”
    “That being said, it was evident during oral arguments, and even more so
    now, that both sides would have submitted additional evidence on the merits of the
    POBRA claim had time and circumstances permitted. On the one hand, if the ‘liberty
    interest’ hearing to be offered by the defendants was indeed illusory, perhaps the spirit, if
    not the letter, of POBRA was left wanting. On the other hand, if the hearing to be offered
    would have been satisfactory, and Eason abandoned his option, perhaps even Eason’s
    claim fails. After all, neither side wants to absorb the cost of a trial on matters which
    could be resolved pre-trial. Both sides have indicated that deposition testimony and
    declarations exist to shed light on this very discrete issue.” The court then invited the
    parties to submit additional papers (including a 10-page memorandum of points and
    authorities from plaintiffs, 10-page response from defendants, and six-page reply from
    plaintiffs) to address the POBRA issue at a new March 2, 2012 hearing.
    Order Granting Summary Adjudication and Final Judgment of Dismissal
    After the parties submitted their additional briefing and accompanying
    evidentiary material, the court held the scheduled hearing. The court then issued a
    lengthy order analyzing all of the issues and ultimately granting summary adjudication on
    the POBRA causes of action (including Eason’s, based on newly received evidentiary
    material), the contempt cause of action, and the breach of contract cause of action.
    The court observed as to the POBRA causes of action, “[t]he problem here,
    which this Court finds to be insurmountable, is that Plaintiffs’ election not to proceed
    with the Department’s offer of a ‘liberty interest’ hearing relegated all the material
    questions (what would it look like?, what would happen?, could the layoff decision be
    14
    overturned?) to the world of pure imagination. Obviously, the appropriate course of
    action would have been to accept the invitation for a ‘liberty interest’ hearing (whatever
    that may have entailed) and make the best record possible. Then, either a more formal
    hearing would have taken place with witnesses and a stenographer, or some ‘final’
    decision would have been made; but either way Plaintiffs could have established with
    clarity what they were being offered. With clarity on this point being established,
    Plaintiffs might have then had sufficient grounds to pursue both a POBRA claim and a
    mandamus claim (to give the judicial branch an opportunity to actually overturn the
    ‘layoff’ decision). [Citation.] As it presently stands, however, there will never be any
    competent evidence from which this — or any other court — could faithfully determine
    whether the ‘liberty interest’ hearing would have been the functional equivalent of an
    ‘administrative appeal’ of the layoff decision. [Citation.] Thus, compliance or
    noncompliance is forever relegated to the world of speculation and conjecture, as is
    Plaintiffs’ suggestion that presenting evidence would have been futile.”
    Once Bergquist voluntarily dismissed her surviving cause of action with
    prejudice, the court entered a judgment of dismissal.
    DISCUSSION
    “The standard of review on a motion for summary judgment or summary
    adjudication is familiar. A defendant meets his or her burden in a summary adjudication
    motion ‘by negating an essential element of the plaintiff’s case, or by establishing a
    complete defense, or by demonstrating the absence of evidence to support the plaintiff’s
    case.’ [Citations.] ‘We review questions of law as well as orders granting summary
    adjudication under the de novo standard of review.’ [Citation.] Likewise, the
    interpretation of a statute presents a legal question we review independently.” (Angelica
    Textile Services, Inc. v. Park (2013) 
    220 Cal.App.4th 495
    , 504.)
    15
    As an initial matter, plaintiffs assert the court wrongly granted summary
    adjudication on grounds not raised in the pending motion and based on evidence not
    submitted in defendants’ moving papers. But “[t]he trial court may grant summary
    judgment on a ground not specifically tendered by the moving party, so long as the
    opposing party has notice of and an opportunity to respond to that ground.” (Bacon v.
    Southern Cal. Edison Co. (1997) 
    53 Cal.App.4th 854
    , 860; see Juge v. County of
    Sacramento (1993) 
    12 Cal.App.4th 59
    , 63-64, 69-70 [defendant moved for summary
    judgment based in part on government immunity but court was within its discretion to
    grant summary judgment on causation element not argued in moving papers].) As set
    forth above in our discussion of the procedural history of the case, plaintiffs were
    afforded ample opportunity by the court to respond to the issue relied on by the court in
    granting summary adjudication on the causes of action under the Act. “To require the
    trial court to close its eyes to an unmeritorious claim simply because the operative ground
    entitling the moving party to summary judgment was not specifically tendered by that
    party would elevate form over substance and would be inconsistent with the purpose of
    the summary judgment statute.” (Juge, at p. 69.)
    Moreover, evidence submitted by the party opposing summary judgment
    may provide the basis for granting summary judgment. (See, e.g., Laabs v. City of
    Victorville (2008) 
    163 Cal.App.4th 1242
    , 1267-1268, fn. 14; Villa v. McFerren (1995) 
    35 Cal.App.4th 733
    , 751.) We therefore reject the notion that procedural impropriety
    occurred and proceed to our de novo review of the court’s summary adjudication rulings.
    16
    Court Erred in Summary Adjudication of POBRA Claims
    We turn first to plaintiffs’ POBRA claims. Notwithstanding the “layoff”
    label, plaintiffs claim the County took “punitive action . . . without providing the[m] with
    an opportunity for administrative appeal.” (§ 3304, subd. (b).) Logically, the first
    9
    question to address is whether the layoffs were in fact “punitive.” But the court
    concluded it could not resolve as a matter of law the question of whether the layoffs were
    “punitive” and therefore subject to POBRA. As the court observed, “[i]f at day’s end it is
    determined that [these] particular [layoffs were] not pretextual, then the POBRA claims
    fail ab initio.” Defendants do not argue the court was mistaken in finding a triable issue
    as to the “punitive” nature of the layoffs (at least on the record before it), and we
    therefore assume for purposes of this appeal that the layoffs were “punitive.”
    The court granted summary adjudication as to the POBRA claims based on
    the Department’s offer of a liberty interest hearing and plaintiffs’ failure to participate in
    the offered hearing after being notified of their respective terminations. To sum up the
    pertinent facts: (1) the Department was faced with severe budget cuts in 2009; (2) in
    selecting employees for layoffs, the Department (acting through Hutchens) was required
    to utilize a subjective methodology (i.e., evaluate the “needs of the organization,”
    considering employee knowledge, skills, and performance) rather than an objective
    methodology (e.g., seniority); (3) the Department terminated plaintiffs; (4) the
    9
    Facially, plaintiffs’ terminations were layoffs, proximately caused by
    severe budgetary cutbacks. According to defendants, these were not disciplinary
    terminations. This raises the possibility that no “punitive action” was taken against
    plaintiffs and no “administrative appeal” was therefore necessary under section 3304,
    subdivision (b). (See White, supra, 31 Cal.3d at p. 683, fn. 4 [dictum suggesting “the
    right to an administrative appeal provided by section 3304 . . . does not apply where
    police officers are laid off as part of a mass reduction in personnel due, for example, to
    budgetary constraints”]; Esparza v. County of Los Angeles (9th Cir. June 12, 2013, No.
    11-56523) 2013 U.S. App. Lexis 11817 [POBRA did not entitle peace officers “to
    continued employment or administrative appeal hearings when” their entire department
    was eliminated].)
    17
    Department characterized these employment actions as layoffs necessitated by economic
    conditions; (5) the Department offered plaintiffs a liberty interest hearing, the specific
    purpose or scope of which was not clear given the circumstances or the contents of the
    termination letters; (6) a full, evidentiary hearing before an individual empowered to
    make factual findings contrary to those of Hutchens was not envisioned by the human
    resources employees tasked with conducting the hearings; (7) nor did the PSR explicitly
    set forth a process whereby a laid off employee could obtain an evidentiary hearing based
    on an accusation of pretext; (8) plaintiffs were instructed to request their hearing within
    14 days (i.e., prior to their scheduled date of separation), but it is unclear whether a
    hearing could have actually proceeded before the plaintiffs’ last day of work; (9)
    plaintiffs (some of whom inquired about the hearing and any possible charges made by
    the Department) all ultimately declined to participate in the offered hearings; (10)
    plaintiffs subsequently sued the County for its alleged failure to provide an opportunity
    for an administrative appeal under section 3304, subdivision (b); and (11) there is
    evidence before this court of various policy and personality disputes between Hutchens
    (and/or her leadership team) and each of the plaintiffs.
    The process contemplated and offered by the Department, at least according
    to the e-mail by human resources representative Leys, would have fallen short under both
    the PSR and POBRA in the context of a termination (or even lesser punishment) based on
    alleged misconduct or poor performance. In such circumstances, “section 3304 has been
    held to require that the officer be afforded an evidentiary hearing before a neutral fact
    finder.” (Giuffre v. Sparks, supra, 76 Cal.App.4th at p. 1329; id. at p. 1332 [officer
    issued written reprimand and punitive transfer to position with less pay as a result of
    alleged violation of department policy].) “The ‘opportunity’ for an administrative appeal
    necessarily implies that such a hearing comport with standards of fair play and due
    process. Obviously, the ‘opportunity’ is a sham if the administrative body is biased,
    predisposed or otherwise prejudiced.” (Doyle v. City of Chino (1981) 117
    
    18 Cal.App.3d 673
    , 684.) A section 3304, subdivision (b), evidentiary hearing usually
    includes “sworn testimony, cross-examination of witnesses, and presentation of argument
    by the public agency to which the officer could respond,” as well as the imposition of the
    burden of proof on the public agency. (Los Angeles Police Protective League v. City of
    Los Angeles (2002) 
    102 Cal.App.4th 85
    , 92-94; cf. James v. City of Coronado (2003) 
    106 Cal.App.4th 905
    , 912-913 [in case involving placement of written memoranda in
    employee file pertaining to alleged minor misconduct, court “rejects the notion that as a
    matter of law every administrative appeal . . . must afford the officer an opportunity to
    confront and cross-examine witnesses”].) The officer is not required to file “a formal
    grievance to invoke the right to a full evidentiary hearing.” (Giuffre, at p. 1332.) Instead,
    a full evidentiary hearing is “part of the administrative appeal process” that must be
    followed “to satisfy due process and section 3304.” (Ibid.)
    It is less clear what must be offered to officers under POBRA when they
    are told they have been laid off for economic reasons. We therefore turn to a discussion
    of the due process clause and its application to terminated government employees.
    POBRA rights and constitutional due process rights may be “coextensive” in some
    instances. (Baggett v. Gates (1982) 
    32 Cal.3d 128
    , 138, fn. 13; see Riveros v. City of Los
    Angeles (1996) 
    41 Cal.App.4th 1342
    , 1359 [POBRA administrative appeal serves “very
    nearly the same purpose for the hearing mandated by due process requirements”].)
    Indeed, “when . . . ‘the scope of administrative appeal hearing is not prescribed by
    personnel rules, agency regulations, memoranda of understanding, or customary agency
    practices, the adequacy of the appeal procedure afforded must be measured according to
    constitutional due process principles.’” (James v. City of Coronado, supra, 106
    Cal.App.4th at p. 910.)
    Our federal and state Constitutions prohibit the deprivation of “life, liberty,
    or property, without due process of law.” (U.S. Const., 5th & 14th Amends., § 1; Cal.
    Const., art. I, §§ 7, 15.) Some public employment arrangements confer to certain public
    19
    employees (those deemed permanent or tenured) a “property” interest in their jobs. (See
    Skelly v. State Personnel Bd. (1975) 
    15 Cal.3d 194
    , 206-207 (Skelly); Duncan v.
    Department of Personnel Administration (2000) 
    77 Cal.App.4th 1166
    , 1175 (Duncan).)
    In such cases, “the state must comply with procedural due process requirements before it
    may deprive its permanent employee of this property interest by punitive action.”
    (Skelly, at p. 208.) A so-called Skelly pre-termination hearing requires, at a minimum,
    “notice of the proposed action, the reasons therefor, a copy of the charges and materials
    upon which the action is based, and the right to respond, either orally or in writing, to the
    authority initially imposing discipline.” (Id. at p. 215.) “A tenured public employee is
    ‘entitled to a very limited hearing prior to his termination [for disciplinary reasons], to be
    followed by a more comprehensive post-termination hearing.’” (Holmes v. Hallinan
    (1998) 
    68 Cal.App.4th 1523
    , 1531; Duncan, supra, 77 Cal.App.4th at p. 1176 [“of
    course, a public employee is entitled to a full evidentiary hearing after the disciplinary
    action is imposed”]; but see Coleman v. Department of Personnel Administration (1991)
    
    52 Cal.3d 1102
    , 1119-1123 [employee deemed to resign because he was absent without
    leave for more than five days was entitled to pre-termination hearing but not post-
    10
    termination hearing].)
    Due process rights even apply to at-will public employees. “A public
    agency may constitutionally ‘employ persons subject to removal at its pleasure.’” (Lubey
    v. City and County of San Francisco (1979) 
    98 Cal.App.3d 340
    , 345-346.) But if the
    probationary or otherwise at-will “employee’s job termination, or dismissal, is based on
    charges of misconduct which ‘stigmatize’ his reputation, or ‘seriously impair’ his
    opportunity to earn a living [citation], or which ‘might seriously damage his standing or
    associations in his community[,]’” the employee is entitled to an opportunity to clear his
    10
    In their briefs and in oral argument at the trial court, plaintiffs repeatedly
    assert their right to a Skelly-type hearing as provided in the PSR for disciplinary
    terminations.
    20
    or her name. (Id. at p. 346.) These hearings are often referred to as liberty interest
    hearings (see, e.g., Shuer v. County of San Diego (2004) 
    117 Cal.App.4th 476
    , 484), to
    clarify that the employee does not have a property interest in his or her job. Instead, the
    terminated employee has a liberty interest in pursuing future employment without the
    burden of an unfounded finding of misconduct by a public employer. “The mere fact of
    discharge from public employment does not deprive one of a liberty interest.” (Williams
    v. Department of Water & Power (1982) 
    130 Cal.App.3d 677
    , 684.)
    Due process is an elastic concept and does not mean the same thing in
    every case. “The balance of three factors determine what process is constitutionally due:
    The private interest affected by the official action, the risk of an erroneous deprivation of
    the interest through the procedure used and the probable value of other or additional
    procedural safeguards, and the government’s interest.” (Holmes v. Hallinan, supra, 68
    Cal.App.4th at p. 1531.)
    Applying this three-factor balancing test, courts have concluded that
    principles of due process apply differently to layoffs. Pre-termination hearings are not
    required by due process when it is “undisputed that the layoffs were imposed for
    budgetary reasons.” (Alameda County Management Employees Assn. v. Superior Court
    (2011) 
    195 Cal.App.4th 325
    , 349 (Alameda County).) As to the private interest, “just as a
    resignation carries no stigma [citation], neither does a layoff.” (Duncan, supra, 77
    Cal.App.4th at p. 1181.) “[A] layoff is the result of financial exigency, not the actions of
    a particular employee, good or bad.” (Ibid.) Moreover, “[t]he opportunity to be heard in
    a reduction in force situation would be meaningless since there are no charges to which to
    respond.” (Franks v. Magnolia Hosp. (N.D. Miss. 1995) 
    888 F.Supp. 1310
    , 1315
    (Franks).) With regard to the risk of an erroneous deprivation, “[i]n contrast to
    disciplinary matters, which usually focus on the actions of a single employee, a layoff is
    based on the ‘big picture’ — an extensive, time-consuming examination of a department
    or agency from top to bottom. [Citation.] That examination produces data from which
    21
    the layoff decision is made.” (Duncan, supra, 77 Cal.App.4th at p. 1181.) The use of
    budget figures and set rules for layoff order (e.g., seniority) also reduces the risk of an
    erroneous selection of an employee for termination. (Id. at pp. 1181-1182.) Finally, the
    government has a “significant interest in taking quick steps to resolve its economic woes”
    and it would be unduly burdensome “to conduct pre-layoff hearings for [numerous]
    employees in the midst of a financial crisis.” (Id. at pp. 1182-1183.)
    Of course, form is not substance, and the “layoff” label does not necessarily
    reflect the reality of a termination decision. California courts have suggested that a pre-
    termination hearing may be required when “the layoff is pretextual.” (Duncan, supra, 77
    Cal.App.4th at p. 1183, fn. 12; see also Alameda County, supra, 195 Cal.App.4th at p.
    350 [“‘a pretext for a personal agenda to terminate [the] employee’”].) But the California
    cases recognizing this possibility did not involve arguably pretextual layoffs that could
    have triggered the need for Skelly hearing procedures. In Alameda County, supra, 
    195 Cal.App.4th 325
    , it was undisputed that (1) the public employer experienced a budget
    reduction of approximately $6 million; (2) it selected a group of 72 employees (including
    plaintiffs) for layoff based on the objective criteria of seniority; and (3) the employer
    accurately calculated seniority and chose the correct employees for layoffs based on its
    personnel policies. (Id. at p. 334, 351.) In Duncan, supra, 
    77 Cal.App.4th 1166
    , the
    plaintiff did not even argue his demotion (in lieu of layoff) fell within the pretext
    exception. (Id. at p. 1183, fn. 12.) This concession was made with good reason, as the
    evidence established that the public employer faced a financial crisis and was forced to
    layoff numerous employees pursuant to established criteria, including seniority. (Id. at
    pp. 1170-1172.) Although the relevant statute governing layoffs at the Department of
    Insurance allowed consideration of employee efficiency in specified circumstances,
    Duncan specifically noted that “neither side contends that [employee’s] efficiency or job
    performance influenced the layoff decision.” (Id. at p. 1182, fn. 10.)
    22
    An example of a case in which an employee with a property interest in his
    job contested a layoff as pretextual is Levine v. City of Alameda (9th Cir. 2008) 
    525 F.3d 903
    . There, Levine responded to his layoff notice by writing “a letter in which he
    requested a pretermination hearing regarding his lay off. Levine believed that the layoff
    was a pretext and that he was being terminated because [the city manager] disliked him.”
    (Id. at p. 905.) The city refused to provide Levine with a hearing under his union contract
    procedures, but offered a meeting with human resources “to discuss procedures and
    retirement benefits.” (Ibid.) The Ninth Circuit affirmed the district court’s grant of
    summary judgment to Levine, holding Levine’s due process rights had been violated.
    (Id. at pp. 905-906.) Levine was entitled to a full evidentiary hearing before a neutral
    fact finder, not merely a meeting with a human resources employee. (Ibid.)
    Pretext cases might arise when “either one position or very few positions
    were eliminated, and all of the terminated employees were the focus of a pretextual
    elimination.” (Franks, 
    supra,
     888 F.Supp. at pp. 1315-1316.) The instant case has some
    of the hallmarks of a pretext case. It does not involve massive layoffs based on fixed
    rules such as seniority. A relatively small number of senior employees (six) were
    11
    terminated in this specific round of layoffs.      Moreover, Hutchens was not bound in her
    selection of employees for termination by seniority rules.
    If the trier of fact ultimately determines the layoffs were in fact pretextual,
    i.e., punitive, we agree with plaintiffs there is a triable issue of fact whether the process
    offered by the County complied with section 3304, subdivision (b), of POBRA. As
    previously noted, the PSR layoff procedure lends itself to potentially pretextual layoffs
    by its empowerment of Hutchens with broad discretion untethered to objective criteria.
    11
    The record before the court does not include evidence as to how the
    remainder of the budget shortfall was handled by Hutchens. In their second summary
    judgment motion, which was stricken by the court and therefore not considered in the
    court’s ruling, defendants presented evidence suggesting the Department laid off 40
    employees, not just six employees.
    23
    After only six employees (including five plaintiffs) were selected for termination, they
    were then offered liberty interest hearings. As explained above, liberty interest hearings
    are typically held for probationary employees seeking to clear their names as a result of
    terminations for cause, not for experienced senior employees who are laid off for the
    stated reason of budget cuts. The termination letters provided plaintiffs with no guidance
    as to what liberty interest hearings encompassed and no indication that a Skelly-type
    hearing would be available if plaintiffs were to raise a claim of bad faith against Sheriff
    Hutchens. Regardless of whether it was the County’s intention to do so, the offer of a
    liberty interest hearing arguably misled plaintiffs (who had a limited amount of time to
    decide what to do about their terminations) about their rights and how to exercise their
    rights. Neither the termination letters nor the PSR provided a roadmap to plaintiffs as to
    how they might contest a pretextual layoff.
    The trial court, however, concluded it was plaintiffs’ obligation to engage
    in the process offered by defendants, and to therein make their allegations of pretext.
    Had they done so, the court reasoned, defendants may well have offered a POBRA
    compliant hearing. The court held that plaintiffs’ failure to pursue a meeting with a
    human resources representative “forever relegated to the world of speculation and
    conjecture” whether the Department had complied or not complied with POBRA.
    We see the matter somewhat differently. If it is ultimately determined that
    the layoffs were indeed pretextual, that would mean, at a minimum, that the Department
    did not advise plaintiffs of the “real” reason for their layoffs. The “real” reason for the
    layoffs would be known only by the decision maker or makers in the Department, and
    only they would know whether the layoff was in fact a “dismissal” under POBRA’s
    definition of a “punitive action” (see § 3303), and not a layoff as advertised. With that
    presumed knowledge, the Department would have been obligated to offer a POBRA
    compliant evidentiary hearing. Under that scenario, plaintiffs cannot be faulted for not
    pursuing an ill-defined right to an ill-defined hearing, not in compliance with either the
    24
    PSR or POBRA. While the court did not use the word “waiver,” instead resting its
    decision on the need for “speculation and conjecture” to determine what would have
    happened if plaintiffs had pursued the liberty interest hearing, that reasoning essentially
    predetermines that plaintiffs were at fault for creating the speculation, rather than
    defendants being at fault for creating the ambiguity. The court’s analysis should have led
    it to conclude there is a triable issue of fact. “Generally, ‘waiver’ denotes the voluntary
    relinquishment of a known right. But it can also mean the loss of an opportunity or a
    right as a result of a party’s failure to perform an act it is required to perform, regardless
    of the party’s intent to abandon or relinquish the right.” (Platt Pacific, Inc. v. Andelson
    (1993) 
    6 Cal.4th 307
    , 315.) Here, assuming pretext, there is no evidence plaintiffs’ right
    to a full evidentiary hearing was known by them, nor were they required to attend a
    meeting with a human resources representative to discuss unknown issues.
    We conclude the trial court erred in granting summary adjudication as to
    the POBRA causes of action. Again, assuming these layoffs were “punitive” and
    resolving all triable issues of fact in favor of plaintiffs, the County was obligated to
    provide plaintiffs with an adequate opportunity for a meaningful administrative appeal.
    (§ 3304, subd. (b).) We decline to hold that the termination letters and other
    communications to plaintiffs concerning their terminations met that obligation as a matter
    of law.
    Court Correctly Granted Summary Adjudication of Contempt Claim
    Buried under a heading in their opening brief on appeal labeled “In
    General,” plaintiffs Anderson and Davis contend the court erred by granting summary
    adjudication as to their cause of action for contempt of court. As assistant sheriffs,
    Anderson and Davis had signed “at-will waivers” as a condition of employment. This
    document states that the signatory agrees he “may be terminated by the Sheriff[] at any
    25
    time without notice, cause or rights of appeal or the right to reduce to a lower level
    position.”
    In Jaramillo v. County of Orange (2011) 
    200 Cal.App.4th 811
     (Jaramillo)),
    this court (affirming the trial court) held that an Orange County Assistant Sheriff
    (Jaramillo) had not waived his POBRA right to an administrative appeal by signing an at-
    will employment agreement. (Id. at pp. 814-815, 822-825.) The judgment affirmed by
    this court included a provision which plaintiffs characterize as an injunction against the
    County requiring it to include language in its at-will employment waivers expressly
    excluding POBRA rights from the waiver.
    We decline to decide whether the court erred by dismissing the contempt
    cause of action. Plaintiffs “forfeited it by failing to brief it properly under a separate
    heading [citation]; and . . . the [plaintiffs] forfeited it by failing to provide adequate legal
    analysis [citation].” (300 DeHaro Streeet Investors v. Department of Housing &
    Community Development (2008) 
    161 Cal.App.4th 1240
    , 1257; see Cal. Rules of Court,
    rule 8.204(a)(1)(B) [Each brief must “State each point under a separate heading or
    subheading summarizing the point, and support each point by argument and, if possible,
    by citation of authority”].) The judgment is presumed correct, and it is appellant’s
    affirmative burden to show error. (Walling v. Kimball (1941) 
    17 Cal.2d 364
    , 373.)
    Plaintiffs have failed to meet this burden. They simply reference the cause of action and
    baldly assert that the court erred. Accordingly, we affirm the summary adjudication in
    12
    favor of defendants on the contempt cause of action.
    12
    During our review of the record, we noted that the supposed September 10,
    2009 injunction in the Jaramillo case does not directly order the County to do anything.
    Instead, it orders “Plaintiff’s counsel . . . to prepare an injunction directed to the County
    of Orange as follows: [County is required to exclude POBRA rights from at will
    employment agreements with peace officers].” Thus it appears counsel was ordered to
    “prepare an injunction,” but we have not found any evidence in the record establishing
    the existence of an injunctive order directed to the county.
    26
    Court Correctly Granted Summary Adjudication of Breach of Contract Claim
    Plaintiffs Cossairt, Bergquist, and Eason conceded in their opposition
    papers that their cause of action for breach of contract was fatally flawed, citing Supreme
    Court case law. (See Miller v. State of California (1977) 
    18 Cal.3d 808
    , 813 [“it is well
    settled in California that public employment is not held by contract but by statute and
    that, insofar as the duration of such employment is concerned, no employee has a vested
    contractual right to continue in employment beyond the time or contrary to the terms and
    conditions fixed by law”].) These three plaintiffs asked the court to treat the motion as
    one for judgment on the pleadings as to the breach of contract cause of action, then grant
    plaintiffs leave to amend the complaint to include a request for a writ of mandamus
    requiring the County to honor plaintiffs’ rights under the “PSR and under Skelly . . . for
    an evidentiary hearing to both contest the dismissal and to have the opportunity to reverse
    the decision.” The court, accepting plaintiffs’ concession that the breach of contract
    action was impermissible under the circumstances, instead granted the motion for
    summary adjudication and denied plaintiffs’ request to amend the complaint as a result of
    “unjustified delay and presumed prejudice to Defendants.”
    In their appellate briefs, plaintiffs again concede they pleaded the wrong
    cause of action but claim (in a conclusory fashion) their allegations should allow a
    mandamus action. Plaintiffs do not actually argue or cite authority on appeal for the
    proposition that the court erred in acting as it did, however. We treat this contention as
    forfeited. (See 300 DeHaro Street Investors v. Department of Housing & Community
    Development, supra, 161 Cal.App.4th at p. 1257.)
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment of dismissal is reversed. The order granting defendants’
    motion for summary adjudication is reversed with regard to the POBRA causes of action
    27
    (first through fifth causes of action), and the court is directed to enter a new order
    denying the motion on those causes of action. The order granting defendants’ motion for
    summary adjudication on the causes of action for contempt and breach of contract
    (seventh and eighth causes of action) is affirmed. Plaintiffs shall recover their costs on
    appeal.
    IKOLA, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    O’LEARY, P. J.
    MOORE, J.
    28