Untitled California Attorney General Opinion ( 2018 )


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  •                   TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
    OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
    State of California
    XAVIER BECERRA
    Attorney General
    _________________________
    :
    OPINION                    :                 No. 17-601
    :
    of                     :               April 11, 2018
    :
    XAVIER BECERRA                   :
    Attorney General                :
    :
    CATHERINE BIDART                   :
    Deputy Attorney General            :
    :
    ________________________________________________________________________
    Proposed relator, the CITY OF DIXON, applies to this office for leave to sue
    proposed defendant DEVON MINNEMA, Dixon city council member from the city’s
    District 4, in quo warranto to oust him from that office on the ground that he did not
    reside in District 4 at all times required by state law.
    CONCLUSION
    Proposed relator does not raise a substantial question of law or fact that warrants
    initiating a judicial proceeding, and allowing the proposed quo warranto action to
    proceed would not serve the public interest. Proposed relator’s application for leave to
    sue in quo warranto is therefore DENIED.
    1
    17-601
    ANALYSIS
    Proposed relator the City of Dixon (City) is a general law city with a city manager
    form of government.1 As such, eligibility to be a council member requires continuous
    residence in the represented City district from the time nomination papers2 are issued.3
    Here, the City requests leave to sue proposed defendant Devon Minnema (Minnema) in
    quo warranto4 under Code of Civil Procedure section 803 to challenge his right to hold
    the office of city council member from the City’s District 4.
    Specifically, the City alleges that Minnema is ineligible to hold office because he
    did not reside in District 4 on August 2, 2016, the date on which he obtained his
    nomination papers, and also questions his residence in District 4 from that date and
    continuing through his election to the council in November 2016. For the reasons
    discussed below, we find that the City’s allegations do not raise a substantial legal or
    factual issue that would warrant the initiation of a quo warranto lawsuit.
    Quo warranto
    A party granted leave to sue from the Attorney General may bring a lawsuit in the
    name of the People of the State of California “against any person who usurps, intrudes
    into, or unlawfully holds or exercises any public office . . . .”5 In considering whether to
    1
    See Gov. Code, § 34851 (authorizing city manager form of government).
    2
    See Elec. Code, §§ 10220 (setting forth process for nominating candidates by voters’
    signing nomination papers) & 10227 (prescribing process for issuing nomination papers
    for signature).
    3
    Gov. Code, § 34882; 83 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 181, 183 (2000) (proposed defendant
    ineligible to retain office if he or she resided outside of district when elected);
    79 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 243, 245 (1996) (“in the absence of statutory expression to the
    contrary, a residence requirement for election remains as a condition to the continued
    right to hold office”), quoting 75 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 26, 28 (1992).
    4
    Latin for “by what authority,” quo warranto was originally a writ used by English
    monarchs to challenge a royal subject’s claim to an office or franchise supposedly
    granted by the Crown. (California Attorney General’s Office, Quo Warranto (1990), p. 1,
    available    at     https://oag.ca.gov/sites/all/files/agweb/pdfs/ag_opinions/quo-warranto-
    guidelines.pdf [as of March 29, 2018].) Quo warranto has evolved into a statutory
    proceeding to determine, among other things, whether a person is entitled to hold a
    particular public office. (Id. at p. 3.)
    5
    Code Civ. Proc., § 803. The statute also authorizes the Attorney General to bring
    2
    17-601
    grant leave to sue, we must determine whether (1) there is a substantial issue of fact or
    law warranting a judicial resolution, and (2) allowing the proposed quo warranto action to
    proceed would serve the overall public interest.6 Our analysis is guided by the principle
    that a “chief object in requiring leave is to prevent vexatious prosecutions, and the rule is
    inflexible that there must be affidavits so full and positive from persons knowing the facts
    as to make out a clear case of right in such a way that perjury may be brought if any
    material allegation is false.”7
    Applicable law concerning “legal residence” or “domicile”
    In this context, the residence of a public official or candidate for public office
    means his or her legal residence, also referred to as domicile8—which is in turn defined
    as a person’s fixed habitation where he or she intends to remain, and intends to return to
    whenever absent.9 While a person may have multiple residences, a person may have one
    domicile only at any given time.10 Thus, a domicile “cannot be lost until another is
    gained.”11 To change domicile, it requires a “union of act and intent.”12
    Because a determination of domicile is based not only on physical conduct, but
    also intent, the requirement that a substantial showing be made before we authorize
    judicial resolution is particularly pertinent.13 The determination of domicile is a mixed
    question of fact and law which may involve many factors, such as acts and declarations
    such a suit directly.
    6
    87 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 30, 31 (2004) (explaining that we make no final judgment on
    the merits but “a substantial showing must be made before we will authorize a judicial
    challenge to a person’s right to hold public office”); 83 
    Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen., supra
    , at
    p. 182 (2000).
    7
    8 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 221, 222 (1946), quoting Lamb v. Webb (1907) 
    151 Cal. 451
    ,
    456.
    8
    Walters v. Weed (1988) 
    45 Cal. 3d 1
    , 7; 72 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 8, 11 (1989).
    9
    Elec. Code, § 349, subd. (b); Gov. Code, § 244, subd. (a) (“It is the place where one
    remains when not called elsewhere for labor or other special or temporary purpose, and to
    which he or she returns in seasons of repose”).
    10
    Elec. Code, § 349, subd. (b); Gov. Code, § 244, subd. (b).
    11
    Gov. Code, § 244, subd. (c).
    12
    Gov. Code, § 244, subd. (f).
    13
    87 
    Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen., supra
    , at p. 31.
    3
    17-601
    by the official, his or her mailing address, voter registration, car registration, tax returns,
    and where a homeowner’s or renter’s credit is taken, but the critical element is intent.14
    The parties’ contentions and our analysis of the evidence
    Minnema resided outside of the City’s District 4 before July 27, 2016. Prior to
    that date, Minnema, at 21 years of age, resided in the City’s District 3, with roommates,
    in his mother and stepfather’s home, while they lived in Texas for fourteen months. On
    July 26, 2016, Minnema learned from the District 3 incumbent council member that the
    member would seek reelection that fall; upon learning of this, Minnema stated that he
    would move to District 4, so as not to run against the District 3 incumbent. The parties
    do not dispute these preliminary facts. What is disputed, however, is the question where
    Minnema resided when he obtained his nomination papers on August 2, 2016, through
    his election a few months later.
    On the one hand, Minnema has stated under penalty of perjury that he moved to
    District 4 on July 27, 2016, and has resided in District 4 ever since. Specifically, he
    states that he moved on that date to 1320 Revelle Court, and then on September 19, 2016,
    to 1205 Valley Glen, both of which are locations within District 4.15
    On the other hand, the City alleges in its application for quo warranto that
    Minnema did not reside in District 4 from the time he obtained his nomination papers
    through his election. In response to doubts expressed to the City about Minnema’s
    residence, the City hired an investigator to look into the matter, and its allegations here
    are largely based upon its investigator’s report.
    As to the Revelle Court address, the City relies on unsworn statements made by
    neighbors to its investigator that they did not see Minnema or his vehicle there (although
    the investigator’s report also indicates at least one neighbor occasionally saw Minnema
    and his vehicle there during the relevant period), and a sworn affidavit from Revelle
    14
    See, e.g., 99 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 74, 76–77 (2016); 85 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 90, 93
    (2002); 73 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 197, 209–210 (1990); 72 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 15, 22 (1989);
    72 
    Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen., supra
    , at p. 14. As discussed below, we have been presented with
    evidence that includes Minnema’s declaration (specifically, an affidavit of residence),
    mailing address, voter registration, and other items, such as affidavits by witnesses and
    copies of rental receipts.
    Although outside the time period raised in the City’s application for leave to sue,
    15
    Minnema also states that he moved to 1115 Bello Drive, which is also in District 4, on
    May 15, 2017.
    4
    17-601
    Court neighbor Fermin Rubio, who stated he did not observe Minnema living on Revelle
    Court but was “confident” that he would have if that had been the case. The City further
    disputes Minnema’s Revelle Court residency because it was temporary, because
    Minnema was still seen at his mother and stepfather’s home in District 3 during this time
    period, and because Minnema’s former roommates at the District 3 home told the
    investigator that Minnema moved from there to the Valley Glen address without
    mentioning the intervening Revelle Court address. The City also alleges that Minnema
    produced no physical evidence of his presence at Revelle Court and rebuffed its requests
    for an affidavit of residence.
    As to the 1205 Valley Glen address, the City disputes Minnema’s residence at this
    location in large part because he claims to have resided in its garage, which lacks a
    bathroom.16 The City also alleges that Minnema and his mother contacted a property
    manager during the relevant period, urgently seeking housing for Minnema in District 4.
    The City’s investigator, however, found that Minnema initially resided at 1205 Valley
    Glen on a periodic basis, but concluded that the timing of his move there was unclear due
    to contrasting witness statements, the lapse of time, and the lack of a traditional lease.
    The investigator also generally concluded it was likely that Minnema stayed the night at
    multiple residences after his conversation with the District 3 incumbent.
    In his sworn response to the City’s application for quo warranto, Minnema
    maintains that on July 27, 2016, the day after learning that the District 3 incumbent
    would seek reelection, he began formally residing at 1320 Revelle Court, where his aunt
    and uncle live, in District 4, and moved numerous boxes of his belongings there.
    Minnema also maintains that on September 15, 2016, he moved to 1205 Valley Glen,
    owned by his friend’s mother, from whom he rented the garage space, while continuing
    to look for more suitable housing.
    With his response, Minnema provided his signed affidavit of residence in District
    4 that the City had previously requested. He also provided a copy of a post office
    confirmation dated August 2, 2016, showing his address change to 1320 Revelle Court,
    and his voter registration and nomination papers—both processed on August 2, 2016, and
    signed under penalty of perjury—which list his address as 1320 Revelle Court. Minnema
    updated his voter registration on September 19, 2016, to show his address as 1205 Valley
    Glen.
    16
    Neither party otherwise addresses the potential legal implications—for example,
    building and safety violations—of such a living arrangement, and we see no need to do so
    to determine the issue before us.
    5
    17-601
    In addition to his affidavit, change-of-address confirmation, voter registration, and
    nomination papers, Minnema also provided sworn affidavits by his uncle, mother,
    stepfather, and former roommates, as well as copies of rental receipts, text messages with
    his aunt, and communications with friends and potential landlords documenting his
    search for housing in District 4.
    The affidavit from Minnema’s uncle, signed October 4, 2016, states that Minnema
    resided at 1320 Revelle Court since June 1 of that year. No affidavit by Minnema’s aunt
    was provided, but a copy of Minnema’s text messages with her corroborate his
    arrangements to stay at the Revelle Court house in a fully-furnished bedroom.17 Because
    Minnema asserts that he resided on Revelle Court for only about a month and a half, until
    other accommodations could be found, we would not expect much physical evidence to
    exist of his residence there. But in addition to his uncle’s affidavit and text messages
    with his aunt, Minnema also provided a copy of a bill in his name sent to him at the
    Revelle Court address during the relevant period. He also provided a copy of a picture of
    him, dated August 15, 2016, with his aunt and uncle’s pets whom he helped take care of
    during one of the weeks he was there while his aunt and uncle were in Hawaii. And the
    City investigator’s report includes a copy of Minnema’s public Facebook post, dated
    August 2, 2016, in which he replies “Revelle Court” to a question of where he lives.
    As to the City’s allegation that he was still seen at the home of his mother and
    stepfather in District 3 after July 27, 2016, Minnema attributes this to his property-
    management duties at that address while his mother and stepfather were away in Texas
    until they returned in September of 2016. With regard to his former roommates’
    statements to the City’s investigator that Minnema moved from the District 3 address to
    “Valley Glen” (without mentioning the intervening Revelle Court address), the
    roommates explain under oath that they were not referring to the specific address of 1205
    Valley Glen, but to the Valley Glen subdivision in which Revelle Court is located.
    We next turn to the affidavit from Minnema’s father. He attests that, on July 27,
    2016, the day after Minnema confirmed that the District 3 incumbent was running for
    reelection, he helped Minnema move several boxes and a bookshelf to 1320 Revelle
    Court, and then on September 15, helped him move those items and a box spring and
    mattress to 1205 Valley Glen. The affidavit states that on both occasions, they used
    Minnema’s father’s pickup truck, due to problems with Minnema’s and his mother’s
    17
    We note that, as the City points out, there is a discrepancy in dates between
    Minnema’s uncle’s affidavit and his own: His uncle states that Minnema resided at 1320
    Revelle Court since June 1, while Minnema states he resided there from July 27 through
    mid-September of 2016. To address the discrepancy, Minnema explains that he began
    formally residing there on July 27, but first made the arrangements back in June.
    6
    17-601
    vehicles. The affidavit also states that, during the week of September 1, 2016, Minnema
    left his vehicle at his father’s residence (which is located outside of District 4) while
    Minnema visited his mother and stepfather in Texas, accounting for the vehicle’s absence
    from Revelle Court for one of the weeks he resided there.18
    Minnema’s mother and stepfather also attest that, near the end of September, they
    helped Minnema move the rest of his belongings to the 1205 Valley Glen garage space,
    and witnessed on multiple occasions his messy living space there. An affidavit from a
    resident of the room above the garage at 1205 Valley Glen attests that Minnema moved
    into the garage space in September. Minnema also provided copies of text messages
    arranging to rent that space, along with rental receipts that cover the period between mid-
    September of 2016 through mid-May of 2017. And, according to the City’s own
    investigation, a few neighbors corroborated seeing Minnema’s vehicle nearby, as did the
    property owner and her son (both of whom lived there).
    As to Minnema’s refusal to voluntarily comply with the City’s requests for a
    signed affidavit of residence, we believe that his refusal to the City has little significance
    because he provided it with his response, along with his sworn statements of residence on
    his nomination papers and voter registration.19
    Finally, we address the City’s argument that, notwithstanding the issue of
    Minnema’s physical presence at his claimed residences, Minnema lacked the intent to
    permanently reside in District 4 so as to establish his domicile there. Specifically, the
    City asserts that Minnema’s alleged residences were temporary, not permanent, and that
    he sought to establish residence in District 4 solely to run for office. Minnema maintains
    that he intended his move to District 4 be permanent, and points to his previous ties to the
    district, including his attendance at public schools and church, and his service on a
    downtown association, within the district. In our view, Minnema’s documented
    communications of his search for housing in the district during the relevant period
    support his sworn stated intent to remain there.20
    18
    Minnema’s travel to Texas during the week of September 1, 2016, is corroborated
    by affidavits by Minnema’s mother and stepfather, as well as a copy of Minnema’s flight
    itinerary. As he was away for one week of the short period he allegedly resided on
    Revelle Court, it would be unsurprising for neighbors not to have seen him there
    (although the investigator’s report indicated at least one had done so).
    19
    See 73 
    Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen., supra
    , at pp. 197, 199 (official permitted to challenge
    entity’s ouster of official for allegedly not residing in district, despite the fact that official
    had not provided affidavit of residence to ousting entity that had requested it).
    20
    Likewise, the City’s allegation that Minnema and his mother contacted a property
    7
    17-601
    In any event, the City’s challenge to Minnema’s intent is misplaced. Even though
    Minnema’s living space at the Valley Glen address was a garage, a domicile need not be
    a traditional place of residence, so long as it is a place of fixed habitation.21 And there is
    no requirement for an intent to permanently remain at a particular dwelling; instead, what
    matters is the intent to permanently remain in the district.22 It is of no consequence that
    Minnema sought residence in District 4 to run for office, and made temporary moves
    within the district while establishing a domicile there: Moving to an electoral district in
    order to run for office in that district does not defeat the intent for domicile, nor do
    temporary moves within the district.23 Again, it is the intent to remain within the district
    that matters.24 We believe that Minnema’s actions, which “speak louder than words,”25
    are consistent with and reflect his stated intent, and that the City has presented
    insufficient evidence to cast doubt upon that intent.
    After carefully considering all of the evidence presented, we find that no
    substantial showing has been made that would warrant the initiation of a quo warranto
    action on the question of Minnema’s residency.26 In sum, the City’s challenge is based
    on scant, ambiguous, circumstantial, and largely unsworn evidence—as opposed to the
    direct, sworn statements of action and intent (and supporting documentation) that
    Minnema has provided. In general, “ambiguities concerning the right to hold public
    manager during the relevant period, urgently seeking housing for Minnema in District 4,
    is consistent with his stated desire to find more suitable housing and supports the element
    of intent to remain in the district.
    21
    See Collier v. Menzel (1985) 
    176 Cal. App. 3d 24
    , 31 (finding that public park, while
    not legally designated as a place for camping, can qualify as the place of fixed habitation
    for domicile, because it is a physical area where a person can sleep and otherwise use as a
    dwelling place).
    22
    DeMiglio v. Mashore (1992) 
    4 Cal. App. 4th 1260
    , 1269–1270 (explaining that
    permanency and intention to remain “have nothing to do with the actual dwelling,” and a
    person “could be domiciled in one town all his or her life and have many residences,
    some obviously temporary”).
    23
    
    Id. at pp.
    1267, 1269–1270.
    24
    See 
    ibid. 25 See 85
    Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen., supra
    , at p. 93, quoting Estate of Lagersen (1959) 
    169 Cal. App. 2d 359
    , 366.
    26
    See 72 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 63, 69 (1989) (our role is to determine whether there is a
    fact or question of law that should be determined by a court).
    8
    17-601
    office should be resolved in favor of eligibility.”27 We recognize that the parties offer
    competing scenarios here, but we have broad discretion in ruling on quo warranto
    applications, and the presence of an arguable or debatable issue does not necessarily
    establish that the issue is a substantial one, much less that the dispute warrants judicial
    resolution in a quo warranto action.28 In light of the evidence presented to us, we
    perceive no substantial question of law or fact that would warrant a judicial examination
    of the issue whether Minnema was domiciled in District 4.29 And, given our analysis, we
    27
    72 
    Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen., supra
    , at p. 23, citing Helena Rubenstein Internat. v. Younger
    (1977) 
    71 Cal. App. 3d 406
    , 418.
    28
    See Rando v. Harris (2014) 
    228 Cal. App. 4th 868
    , 880-882 (relator’s arguable
    interpretation of City Charter provision did not automatically elevate claim into a
    substantial question of law or fact for purposes of determining the appropriateness of quo
    warranto, let alone demonstrate an “extreme and indefensible abuse of discretion” in
    denying application); 96 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 48, 49 (2013); see also City of Campbell v.
    Mosk (1961) 
    197 Cal. App. 2d 640
    , 650 (“We do not believe . . . that the debatable issue
    inevitably produces the quo warranto. Indeed, the Attorney General’s exercise of
    discretion is posited upon the existence of a debatable issue. . . . The crystallization of an
    issue thus does not preclude an exercise of his discretion; it causes it. . . . The exercise of
    the discretion of the Attorney General in the grant of such approval to sue calls for care
    and delicacy. Certainly the private party’s right to it cannot be absolute; the public
    interest prevails”).
    29
    At most, the City’s allegations might support a finding that Minnema had multiple
    residences, which are permissible. (See Fenton v. Bd. of Directors of the Groveland
    Community Services Dist. (1984) 
    156 Cal. App. 3d 1107
    , 1114; Lowe v. Ruhlman (1945)
    
    67 Cal. App. 2d 828
    , 833 [“It is elementary that a person may have a residence separate
    from his domicile”]; 75 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 287, 289 (1992) (finding it is “not probatively
    significant” that proposed defendant “has purchased or moved to a residence outside the
    district, since an individual may well have multiple residences as that term is commonly
    understood and as distinguished from the concept of domicile.”) Where facts indicate a
    person has two residences, the question of which one is the legal residence is a matter of
    intent. (Sherman v. Reynolds (1927) 
    83 Cal. App. 403
    , 406–07; Chambers v. Hathaway
    (1921) 
    187 Cal. 104
    , 106.) As we have explained, we do not believe the City has
    presented sufficient evidence to cast doubt on Minnema’s stated intent to be domiciled in
    District 4.
    We note that our conclusion here is consistent with those we have reached in
    comparable prior opinions where the facts were “conflicting and equivocal toward
    establishing the domicile of the proposed defendant” but found “insufficient to grant
    leave to sue in quo warranto . . . .” (79 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 21, 27 (1996), quoting 73
    
    Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen., supra
    , at p. 197.) In one instance, for example, where it was alleged
    9
    17-601
    further conclude that it would not serve the public interest to perpetuate, or expend scarce
    judicial resources on, such an inquiry.30 For the reasons discussed above, the application
    for leave to sue in quo warranto is DENIED.
    *****
    that an official did not reside in his district, his declaration of intent recited supporting
    facts and included voter registration, mail delivery, and unequivocal affidavits attesting to
    his presence at his address within the district. (8 
    Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen., supra
    , at pp. 221–
    223.) The proposed relator offered unverified allegations that the official’s car
    registration and postal address were outside of his district, that his utility usage at his
    residence outside the district was normal, while such usage at his residence within the
    district was minimal, and that he sought additional gas from the rationing board to cover
    his commute from his out-of-district address. (Id. at p. 223.) We denied leave to sue
    because the proposed relator’s evidence, weighed against the official’s direct evidence,
    was not persuasive. (Ibid.; see also, e.g., 75 
    Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen., supra
    , at p. 289; 72
    
    Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen., supra
    , at pp. 70–71 [weighing “very strong direct evidence” of
    “intent versus only some circumstantial evidence to the contrary” to conclude such
    circumstantial evidence fell short of justifying quo warranto action to challenge
    domicile]; 72 
    Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen., supra
    , at pp. 22–23.)
    30
    99 
    Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen., supra
    , at p. 81.
    10
    17-601
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 17-601

Filed Date: 4/11/2018

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/12/2018