Wednesday, June 5, 2024

JUST IN: Sixth District Court of Appeal Rules in Favor of Palo Alto Firefighters, Invalidating Measure D and Ordering the City to Restore Interest Arbitration for Employment Disputes

    On June 3, 2024, the Sixth District Court of Appeal issued a published decision vindicating the bargaining rights of the Palo Alto Firefighters, IAFF Local 1319 over the City’s effort to repeal binding interest arbitration to resolve impasses in negotiations for fire and police employees. The appellate court previously held the City must meet and consult with the union in good faith before submitting a repeal initiative to the voters, but remanded the issue of remedy holding the Attorney General must approve a Quo Warranto action to invalidate a voter initiative.  (City of Palo Alto v. Pub. Emp. Rels. Bd, 5 Cal. App. 5th 1271 (2016)) The trial court refused to invalidate the repeal despite finding the City unlawfully exercised its right to place a ballot measure before the voters.  On this second appeal, the appellate court invalidated the initiative, holding the trial court abused its discretion in not providing this remedy which restores the parties to the status quo.  Kathleen Mastagni Storm argued this appeal.

Case Background

    Over a decade ago, the City of Palo Alto repealed binding interest arbitration from the City Charter through a ballot Measure. The matter was litigated at PERB, as the City refused to meet and consult over the impasse procedure changes. Local 1319 prevailed and PERB found it was an unfair labor practice. The City then appealed the decision to the Sixth District Court of Appeal (Sixth DCA). The Court of Appeal upheld PERB’s decision, but remanded the case to PERB to modify its remedy. PERB initially invalidated the Measure, but the Appellate Court found that remedy violated the separation of powers doctrine, as PERB cannot order a city to take a legislative act. PERB’s modified order voided the City’s act of placing the Measure on the ballot.

    After PERB’s decision became final, the City refused to restore the binding interest arbitration procedures, forcing Local 1319 to seek leave to sue on behalf of the State of California in a Writ in Quo Warranto. The writ is an ancient process by which the court can declare a government entity exercised or held a franchise unlawfully and invalidate the act. Here, the City unlawfully placed Measure D before the electorate and Local 1319 sought to invalidate the measure. The Attorney General’s office granted leave to sue on behalf of the State of California because there is a statewide interest in enforcing the MMBA, ensuring ballot measures are enacted correctly and ensuring stable employer-employee relations. 

    Local 1319 prevailed at the trial court, but the judge refused to order Measure D invalidated. Rather, enforcement of Measure D was stayed until the parties met and consulted in good faith. Then, the City could act on its repeal of interest arbitration from the Charter. In order to challenge the remedy, Local 1319 appealed the decision back to the Sixth DCA. Here, the question presented to the Sixth DCA concerned whether a successful challenge to a municipal charter provision requires invalidation and whether the trial court abused its discretion in issuing its selected remedy. Local 1319 argued Code of Civil Procedure section 809 required invalidation, that invalidation was the only way to give meaning to PERB’s decision voiding the Measure, and that it was the only way to restore the status quo and place the parties on a level playing field. 

Sixth District Court of Appeal on Reversing Trial Court Judgment

    The Court of Appeal agreed with Local 1319 and ordered the trial court’s judgment be reversed, interest arbitration be restored to the Charter and Measure D be invalidated. The Court of Appeal noted that the trial court attempted to balance competing factors, including the will of the voters, but failed to give sufficient weight to PERB’s and the Attorney General’s judgment that uniform compliance with the meet and confer requirements of the Meyers-Milias Brown Act are matters of statewide public importance.  The Sixth DCA found consideration of the local electorate over the statewide importance of municipal compliance with the MMBA was erroneous, and the trial court abused its discretion in refusing to invalidate Measure D. The Sixth DCA highlighted that electors lack the power to ratify a defective ballot measure. 

    The Court of Appeal also found the trial court did not give sufficient weight to PERB’s underlying determinations, including that the failure to meet and consult was a per se violation and the traditional remedy is restoration of the status quo. The Sixth DCA noted that the “MMBA’s meet and confer provisions do not dictate the substance of a municipality’s labor provisions, but they do mandate that municipalities follow a process that includes consultation with affected organizations.” And the Court highlighted what Local 1319 pointed out, “the public has an interest in ensuring charter amendments are validly enacted in accordance with the law and securing stable employer-employee relations.” The Sixth DCA determined invalidation was necessary to restore the status quo and allow the parties to bargain on a level playing field if the City decided to try and repeal binding interest arbitration in the future.

    This is a huge victory for Local 1319, labor unions statewide, and PERB. The decision reaffirms PERB’s authority to effectively remedy MMBA violations and should stand to deter other municipalities from engaging in similar behavior — circumventing their obligation to meet and confer by submitting the matter directly to the voters. 

    This is the first published appellate decision on this issue where a writ in quo warranto was granted in California invalidating a ballot measure passed in violation of the Meyers Milias Brown Act (MMBA). Brian Rice, President of California Professional Firefighters called this, “A historic win for Firefighters across California.  Measure D in Palo Alto was one of the foundational attacks on public safety employees over a decade ago. The legal overturning of Measure B in San Diego a few years ago and now Measure D in Palo Alto are sentinel decisions for the California Firefighters.”  

    Joseph Penko, President of Local 1319 noted “the Palo Alto Firefighters felt strongly in 2011, and feel just as strongly today, that binding arbitration is an important tool for ensuring fair negotiations since striking is not an option in the fire service. Palo Alto’s decision to ignore the procedures set forth by law in revoking our rights was a miscarriage of justice. We are grateful that the courts have finally recognized that and restored our binding interest arbitration.”

For more information, please see our previous blog post on this case, located here. 

Partner Kathleen Mastagni Storm and Senior Associate Joshua Olander represented Local 1319 throughout this litigation and Kathleen argued the case in March of this year.


Watch Kathleen Mastagni Storm's March 14, 2024 Oral Argument in the 
Sixth District Court of Appeal using the above link.