Tesla V Alameda County Complaint
Tesla V Alameda County Complaint
Tesla V Alameda County Complaint
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Complaint for Injunctive and Declaratory Relief – Case No. 4:20-cv-03186
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3 protecting the Californians in their jurisdictions. The State stepped in to ensure California’s
4 response was clear, uniform, and coordinated using state-wide regulations. On some issues, that
5 meant establishing baseline policies, and on others, it meant choosing the policy across the state.
6 2. The Governor’s March 20, 2020 stay-at-home order sought to balance the need to
7 protect Californians from infection against the need to maintain Californians’ access to vital
8 supplies and services. In so doing, the Governor chose the policy on one issue: businesses
9 classified by the federal government as “critical infrastructure” are essential to Californians and
11 3. The Order was clear on this point: “I order that Californians working in these 16
12 critical infrastructure sectors may continue their work because of the importance of these sectors
13 to Californians’ health and well-being.” This purpose was to “establish consistency” and that
14 “the supply chain must continue, and Californians must have access to such necessities as food,
15 prescriptions, and health care.” This was not a state-level baseline inviting county innovation
16 above and beyond a minimum; this is an order that certain essential businesses shall be permitted
17 to remain open statewide to provide essential goods and services to all Californians.
20 subsequent) conflicting pronouncements controlled over the state-wide order. Alameda County
21 thus arrogated to itself the power to force closure of businesses that the state government had
22 ordered could remain open because they are federally-defined “critical infrastructure” serving
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2 Alameda County has simultaneously maintained and publicized a FAQ that expressly describes
8 6. What is more, the County has asserted that violations of its orders carry criminal
9 penalties, even though it lacks statutory or other legal authority to do so. Thus, Alameda County
10 has not only created a legal quagmire by wrongly declaring that its own orders trump the state-
11 level orders, it has threatened jail time and significant fines for businesses and individuals that do
12 not comply, even where they are clearly authorized by the State Order to continue critical
13 infrastructure activities.
14 7. To be clear, Alameda County is not using the “existing authority of local health
15 officers” to supplement a baseline set by the State, issuing policies “more restrictive than” or “in
16 addition to” that baseline, as referenced in a May 4, 2020 Order. The County is making rules
17 that directly contradict and undermine the policy announced by the Governor in his Orders.
18 8. Alameda County’s power-grab not only defies the Governor’s Order, but offends
19 the federal and California constitutions. First, the County’s order violates the Due Process
20 Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment because it fails to give reasonable notice to persons of
21 ordinary intelligence of what is forbidden under the law. By prohibiting what the Governor’s
22 Order expressly permits, the County’s Order puts businesses deemed critical to the nation’s
23 wellbeing by the federal and state governments between a rock and a hard place—unable to
24 discern what the applicable law permits, under threat of criminal prosecution. This is precisely
25 the dilemma the Due Process Clause’s requirement of fair notice seeks to avoid, particularly
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https://covid-19.acgov.org/index.page.
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1 where, as here, there is no procedure for Plaintiff even to challenge the County’s determination
2 that it is not an essential business that may continue operations under the County’s Order.
5 Clause. Even as at least one neighboring county is allowing car manufacturing to resume,
6 Alameda County continues to insist—in violation of the Governor’s Order and against reason—
7 that what is permitted in a neighboring county will endanger the public health if permitted to also
8 occur within Alameda County borders. Furthermore, even as Alameda County itself declares
9 businesses like Tesla essential, it somehow simultaneously insists, without rational explanation,
11 10. Third, a county may only “make and enforce within its limits . . . ordinances and
12 regulations not in conflict with general laws.” Calif. Const., art. XI, § 7. By purporting to
13 override an express order of the Governor of California, Alameda County has far exceeded its
14 ambit under the California Constitution. In sum, the County’s Orders threaten not only to close
15 businesses supplying critical infrastructure, thereby violating multiple federal and state
16 constitutional principles, but also to jail people pursuant to criminal statutes that simply do not
17 apply here. To that extent, the County’s Orders should be declared void and without legal effect.
18 THE PARTIES
19 11. Plaintiff Tesla, Inc., is a corporation organized under the laws of Delaware, with
25 pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1331 (federal question) because this action involves interpretation of the
26 Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S.
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1 Constitution (U.S. Const. amend. XIV) and because the action seeks to prevent Defendants from
4 (4) to redress the deprivation, under color of any State law, statute, ordinance, regulation, custom
5 or usage, of any right, privilege, or immunity secured by the Constitution, and to secure equitable
6 or other relief under any Act of Congress providing for the protection of civil rights.
7 15. This Court has supplemental jurisdiction over Plaintiff’s state law claim pursuant
8 to 28 U.S.C. § 1367(a) because Plaintiff’s state claim is so related to its federal claims that they
9 form part of the same case or controversy under Article III of the United States Constitution.
10 16. Venue is properly vested in this Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1391 because all
11 defendants reside in this district and most of the conduct that underlies this action occurred in the
14 18. The relief requested is authorized pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 2201 and 2202
15 (declaratory judgment), 28 U.S.C. § 1651(a) (injunctive relief), and 42 U.S.C. § 1988 (right to
17 SUBSTANTIVE ALLEGATIONS
18 I. THE GOVERNOR’S STAY-AT-HOME ORDER
19 19. On March 4, 2020, California Governor Gavin Newsom declared a state of
21 20. Subsequently, on March 19, 2020, Governor Newsom signed Executive Order
22 N-33-20 (the “Governor’s Order”). The Governor’s Order directs all residents “to immediately
23 heed the current State public health directives,” including an order of the state public health
25 21. The Governor’s Order “order[ed] all individuals living in the State of California
26 to stay home or at their place of residence except as needed to maintain continuity of operations
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2 federal government has identified 16 critical infrastructure sectors whose assets, systems, and
3 networks, whether physical or virtual, are considered so vital to the United States that their
5 public health or safety, or any combination thereof.” Governor Newsom therefore “order[ed]
6 that Californians working in these 16 critical infrastructure sectors may continue their work
8 22. As noted above, the Governor’s Order linked to a federal website identifying the
9 “16 critical infrastructure sectors.”2 Three of those sixteen sectors are relevant to this litigation:
10 (i) “Transportation Equipment Manufacturing,” which includes “Vehicles and Commercial Ships
12 includes “Electric Motor Manufacturing”; and (iii) the “Energy Sector.” Governor Newsom also
13 reserved the authority to “designate additional sectors as critical in order to protect the health and
15 23. The Governor’s Order explained that it sought “to establish consistency across the
17 24. The State of California created a “Frequently asked questions” regarding the
18 Governor’s Order. One question asks, “How does this order interact with local orders to shelter
19 in place? Does it supersede them?,” to which the State responded, “This is a statewide order.”
20 Another asks whether an individual who “run[s]/work[s] at an exempted business” must “get an
21 official letter of authorization from the state to operate,” to which the State responded, “No.”
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Identifying Critical Infrastructure During Covid-19, Cybsersecurity & Infrastructure Security
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Agency, https://www.cisa.gov/identifying-critical-infrastructure-during-covid-19 (last revised
27 Apr. 28, 2020).
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1 The State went on to clarify that a “business or organization . . . in the list of exempt sectors . . .
2 may still operate” without “any specific authorization from the state to do so.”3
5 the Interim Health Officer of Alameda County, Dr. Pan, issued a shelter-in-place order (“First
6 County Order”). In bold text, beneath the date, the First County Order warned that “[v]iolation
8 both.” Under the First County Order, “[a]ll businesses with a facility in the County, except
9 Essential Businesses . . . are required to cease all activities at facilities located within the County
11 encouraged to remain open.” The First County Order listed 21 different “Essential Businesses,”
12 including “Essential Infrastructure,” but did not reference or incorporate the list of “16 critical
13 infrastructure sectors” that the Governor’s Order would incorporate three days later. Finally, the
14 First County Order “request[ed] that the Sheriff and all chiefs of police in the County ensure
16 26. After the Governor’s Order was issued, Dr. Pan issued a second shelter-in-place
17 order superseding the First County Order (“Second County Order”). Like the First County
18 Order, the Second County Order conspicuously warned that “[v]iolation of or failure to comply
19 with this Order is a misdemeanor punishable by fine, imprisonment, or both,” and listed the
20 criminal statutes that, as discussed herein, simply do not apply. Although largely similar to the
21 list of “Essential Business” in the First County Order, the Second County Order added six
23 “[b]icycle repair and supply shops,” various real estate professionals, and various types of
24 landscaping professionals, among others. Again, the Second County Order did not reference or
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Stay Home Order: Frequently Asked Questions, California Coronavirus (COVID-19)
27 Response, https://covid19.ca.gov/stay-home-except-for-essential-needs/ (last visited May 6,
2020).
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1 incorporate the list of “16 critical infrastructure sectors,” which the Governor’s Order by then
3 27. The Second County Order referenced the Governor’s Order, characterizing it as
5 County Order purported to “adopt[] in certain respects more stringent restrictions addressing the
6 particular facts and circumstances in this County.” According to the Second County Order,
7 “Where a conflict exists between this Order and any state public health order related to the
8 COVID-19 pandemic, the most restrictive provision controls.” In support of that assertion, the
9 Second County Order cited only one statute: “California Health and Safety Code section
10 131080.” California Health and Safety Code § 131080, however, does not allow a County
11 Health Officer to override a statewide order. Instead, it simply provides: “The [California
12 D]epartment [of Public Health] may advise all local health authorities, and, when in its judgment
13 the public health is menaced, it shall control and regulate their action.”
14 28. Finally, on April 29, 2020, Dr. Pan issued a third shelter-in-place order (“Third
15 County Order”). “[I]n light of the progress achieved in slowing the spread of COVID-19 in the
16 County of Alameda,” the Third County Order “allow[ed] a limited number of additional
17 Essential Business to resume operating.” The Third County Order largely reiterated the
18 assertions in the Second County Order regarding Alameda County’s authority to adopt “more
19 stringent restrictions,” but it added for the first time: “[T]o the extent any federal guidelines
20 allow activities that are not allowed by this Order, this Order controls and those activities are not
21 allowed.” Again, the Third County Order did not reference or incorporate the list of “16 critical
22 infrastructure sectors” that the Governor’s Order had already ordered may remain open.
23 29. Although the County interprets its Third Order to mean otherwise, the County’s
24 COVID-19 “Frequently Asked Questions” ostensibly authorizes both battery and electric vehicle
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1 Yes, this is permissible construction activity and must comply with the Construction
Project Safety Protocols in Appendix B of the Order. Businesses may also operate to
2 manufacture distributed energy resource components, like solar panels.4
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4 30. Critically, this allowance for the “manufacture [of] distributed energy resource
6 defined by the Public Utility Commission (the state agency solely charged with regulating
7 distributed energy), “distributed energy resource technology” includes both electric vehicles and
8 batteries: “For purposes of this section, ‘distributed resources’ means distributed renewable
9 generation resources, energy efficiency, energy storage, electric vehicles, and demand response
10 technologies.” PUC § 769(a); see also, e.g., In the Matter of the Application of Pac. Gas & Elec.
11 Co. for Approval of Its Elec. Vehicle Infrastructure & Educ. Program (U39e)., No. 15-02-009,
12 2017 WL 1743098 (Apr. 27, 2017) (explaining that the definition of “’distributed resources’
13 includes EVs).
14 31. Through its own guidance, Alameda County has expressly recognized and
15 publicized that “businesses may . . . operate to manufacture” batteries and electric vehicles.
16 Inexplicably, however, the Third Order as well as County officials have simultaneously insisted
17 that Tesla must remain shuttered, thereby further compounding the ambiguity, confusion and
20 32. Further, while the County has issued all three of its Orders under threat of
21 criminal punishment, citing Health and Safety Code Section 120295 and Penal Code Sections
22 148(a)(1) and 69, none of those statutes have any relevance here. Section 120295 makes it a
23 crime to violate “Section 120130 or any section in Chapter 3.” Of the cited provisions, however,
24 only a handful impose obligations on individual citizens, as opposed to health officials, and only
25 where a health officer orders either “quarantine” or “isolation,” neither of which is applicable
26 here. The former applies only to persons known to have been “exposed to a communicable
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https://covid-19.acgov.org/index.page.
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1 disease” and the latter only to “infected persons.” To the contrary, Plaintiff’s workers would be
2 those without known exposure or infection. Penal Code Section 148 only applies to a person
3 willfully resisting, delaying, or obstructing a public official. If Penal Code Section 148 were to
4 make merely going to work a crime, that would re-write those Health and Safety Code sections
5 that carefully made some violations criminally enforceable and others not. Further, such an
6 interpretation would expand criminality to a myriad of other rules and regulations where the
7 legislature chose to impose civil penalties only: noncompliance with any civil law that a public
8 official is charged with enforcing would now become criminal in nature. The only other criminal
9 statute cited by the County is Penal Code Section 69, but that applies only to deterring or
10 resisting a public official from performing his or her duties by means of threats, force, or
11 violence.
14 the second and third stages of California’s “four-stage framework . . . to allow Californians to
15 gradually resume various activities” (“The Governor’s Reopening Order”). The Governor’s
16 Reopening Order directed the State Public Health Officer to “establish criteria and procedures
17 . . . to determine whether and how particular local jurisdictions may implement public health
18 measures that depart from the statewide directives,” specifically “measures less restrictive than
19 any public health measures implemented on a statewide basis.”
20 34. The Governor’s Reopening Order also states that it should not be “construed to
21 limit the existing authority of local health officers” to adopt “more restrictive” or “addition[al]”
22 measures” (emphasis added). Under existing law, “[a] county or city may make and enforce
23 within its limits all local, police, sanitary, and other ordinances and regulations not in conflict
24 with general laws.” Cal. Const. art. XI, § 7 (emphasis added). And when, as here, the Governor
25 exercises the State’s “police power” during a state of emergency, the Governor’s “orders and
26 regulations shall have the force and effect of law.” Cal. Gov’t Code §§ 8567, 8627.
27 Accordingly, the Governor’s Reopening Order only allows counties to act within their “existing
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1 authority”—that is, to adopt measures that are consistent with the Governor’s orders or that
2 address matters on which the Governor’s orders are silent. But it does not, and cannot be read to,
3 allow a county to override an express permission in the Governor’s Order to continue to the
8 36. After the First County Order was issued, Plaintiff continued to operate the Tesla
9 Factory in the good-faith belief that it was exempt from the shelter-in-place order since its
10 operations clearly fell within multiple federally declared critical infrastructure sectors. At the
11 same time, Plaintiff encouraged any employees who felt sick or uncomfortable coming to work
12 to stay at home.
13 37. Subsequently, on March 17, 2020, Defendant Sheriff Ahern announced on Twitter
14 that Plaintiff was “not an essential business as defined in the Alameda County Health Order” and
16 38. Plaintiff nevertheless continued to operate its plant in accordance with the federal
17 and state governments’ guidance. The Tesla Factory and other facilities in Alameda County
18 manufacture electric cars, electric motors, and energy storage products. Tesla’s Alameda County
19 operations thus encompass three of the federal critical infrastructure sectors: (i) “Transportation
21 (ii) “Electrical Equipment, Appliance, and Component Manufacturing,” which includes “Electric
22 Motor Manufacturing”; and (iii) the “Energy Sector.” Plaintiff therefore continued to operate the
25 faith effort to reach a mutually agreeable resolution. Although Plaintiff believed it had the right
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27 Alameda County Sheriff (@ASCOSheriffs), Twitter (Mar. 17, 2020, 7:49 PM),
https://twitter.com/acsosheriffs/status/1240062681635123201?s=21.
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1 to continue operating, on March 19, 2020, Plaintiff decided to stop operations at the Tesla
3 40. Although the Governor’s Order expressly permits the operation of the Tesla
4 Factory, Plaintiff has attempted in good faith to negotiate a settlement with Alameda County to
5 allow its plant to reopen and begin producing critical federal infrastructure. Nevertheless,
6 Defendants continue to take the position that the Tesla Factory is not an “Essential Business”
7 under the Third County Order and therefore may not reopen, regardless of the express
13 41. Plaintiffs incorporate by reference and re-allege each and every allegation set
15 42. The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment provides that “[n]o State
16 shall . . . deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.” A State
17 “violates this guarantee by taking away someone’s life, liberty, or property under a criminal law
18 so vague that it fails to give ordinary people fair notice of the conduct it punishes, or so
19 standardless that it invites arbitrary enforcement.” Johnson v. United States, 135 S. Ct. 2551,
20 2556 (2015).
21 43. Because the Third County Order directly contradicts the Governor’s Order, it fails
22 to provide sufficient notice of which actions will potentially subject Plaintiff to the criminal
23 penalties it incorrectly seeks to apply. Specifically, although the Governor’s Order allows all
24 businesses operating in federal critical infrastructure to continue operating, the Third County
25 Order purports to restrict the operation of many of these businesses. It would therefore be
26 unclear, at best, to any person of ordinary intelligence what the Governor’s Order and the Third
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1 44. In addition, the Third County Order would purport to impose criminal liability on
2 Plaintiff and its employees should they simply follow the Governor’s directive that they “may
3 continue their work because of [its] . . . importance to Californians’ health and well-being.” Yet,
4 as alleged above, none of the statutory provisions cited in the County Order actually authorizes
6 businesses and their employees uncertain as to whether they may nonetheless be wrongfully
8 45. Because the Third County Order also contradicts Alameda County’ own
9 substantive guidance, in its FAQ, indicating that businesses like Tesla’s in fact qualify as
10 essential, no reader of ordinary intelligence could reasonably ascertain that continuation of such
12 46. In addition, Alameda County has violated the Due Process Clause insomuch as it
13 fails to provide any meaningful procedure for challenging its determination that a business is
14 non-essential, either pre or post deprivation of Tesla’s constitutional right to use of its property.
15 Logan v. Zimmerman Brush Co., 455 U.S. 422, 432-33 (1982). Instead, the County simply
16 announced by Tweet that Tesla’s operations were not essential, without any formal process.
17 47. Plaintiff respectfully seeks a declaration that the Third County Order violates the
22 48. Plaintiffs incorporate by reference and re-allege each and every allegation set
24 49. When those who appear similarly situated are nevertheless treated differently, the
25 Equal Protection Clause requires at least a rational reason for the difference, to ensure that all
26 persons subject to legislation or regulation are indeed being ‘treated alike, under like
27 circumstances and conditions.’” Engquist v. Ore. Dep’t of Agr., 553 U.S. 591, 602 (2008).
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1 50. Yet, Tesla is permitted, and continues, to operate its factory and other facilities in
2 neighboring San Joaquin County. There is no rational basis for this disparate treatment of two
3 neighboring Tesla facilities both operating in federal critical infrastructure sectors, and the Order
4 does not attempt to offer one. Indeed, many of Tesla’s employees at its Fremont factory reside
5 in San Joaquin County. Nor does any substantial difference in the COVID-19 infection rate
6 justify this disparity: San Joaquin County has experienced an infection rate of 79.3 cases per
7 100,000 people and a death rate of 3.7 deaths per 100,000 people as of May 7, 2020, which is
8 substantially similar to the infection rate of 114.6 per 100,000 people and death rate of 4.2 per
9 100,000 people as of the same date in neighboring Alameda County.6 This disparate treatment is
11 51. What is more, the County has required Tesla to shutter despite announcing its
12 substantive position, spelled out in its own FAQ, that businesses manufacturing the products
13 Tesla manufactures should and may remain open. By shuttering Tesla in contradiction of its own
14 publicly-stated rationale and definition for reopening specified businesses, Alameda County is
15 acting irrationally and trying to shutter Tesla in sui generis fashion irreconcilable with Alameda
17 52. Plaintiff respectfully seeks a declaration that the Third County Order violates the
23 54. Under article XI, section 7 of the California Constitution, “A county or city may
24 make and enforce within its limits all local, police, sanitary, and other ordinances and regulations
25 not in conflict with general laws.” Under this provision, a “State Law is in conflict with or
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27 See California Coronavirus Map and Case Count, N.Y. Times, https://nyti.ms/2X0DtZd (last
updated May 7, 2020).
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1 preempts local law if the local law duplicates, contradicts, or enters an area fully occupied by
2 general law, either expressly or by legislative implication.” First Resort, Inc. v. Herrera, 860
4 55. Further, section 131080 of the California Health and Safety Code provides, “The
5 [California D]epartment [of Public Health] may advise all local health authorities, and, when in
6 its judgment the public health is menaced, it shall control and regulate their action.”
7 56. Moreover, California law vests the Governor with substantial additional authority
8 to control the response to state-wide emergencies. Section 8627 of the California Government
9 Code provides, “During a state of emergency the Governor shall, to the extent he deems
10 necessary, have complete authority over all agencies of the state government and the right to
11 exercise within the area designated all police power vested in the state by the Constitution and
12 laws of the State of California in order to effectuate the purposes of this chapter. In exercise
13 thereof, he shall promulgate, issue, and enforce such orders and regulations as he deems
14 necessary, in accordance with the provisions of Section 8567.” Under section 8567(a) of the
15 Government Code, the Governor’s “orders and regulations shall have the force and effect of
16 law.”
17 57. The Governor’s Order incorporates an order of the State Public Health Officer
18 and Director of the California Department of Public Health which expressly “order[s] that
19 Californians working in the[] 16 critical infrastructure sectors may continue their work because
21 58. The Tesla Factory manufactures electric cars, electric motors, and storage
22 devices. The Tesla Factory therefore operates in three of the federal critical infrastructure
25 Manufacturing,” which includes “Electric Motor Manufacturing”; and (iii) the “Energy Sector.”
26 Under the Governor’s Order, Plaintiff is expressly allowed to continue operations at the Tesla
27 Factory.
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1 59. The Third County Order nevertheless contradicts the Governor’s Order and
2 purports to restrict the conduct of businesses operating in the federal critical infrastructure
3 sectors. In addition, because Plaintiff does not qualify as an “Essential Business” under the
4 Third County Order, the Third County Order purports to prohibit Plaintiff from operating its
5 Fremont Factory. The Third County Order therefore directly contradicts the Governor’s Order to
6 the extent it restricts the operation of business operating in the federal critical infrastructure
7 sectors.
8 60. Plaintiff respectfully seeks a declaration that to the extent the Third County Order
9 contradicts the Governor’s Order by purporting to foreclose Tesla from operating as federal
10 critical infrastructure, it violates article XI, section 7 of the California Constitution, and section
11 131080 of the California Health and Safety Code, and thus is void and unenforceable.
15 against Plaintiff;
17 Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, that the Third County Order violates the Due Process Clause as
18 applied to Plaintiff because it fails to provide fair notice of what the law requires;
19 C. Issue a declaratory judgment, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2201, California
20 Constitution, art. XI, § 7, and California Health and Safety Code § 131080, that the Third County
21 Order is void to the extent it is inconsistent with the provisions of the Governor’s Order
22 expressly allowing the continued operation of the federal critical infrastructure sectors;
23 D. Award reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988; and
24 E. Award such other relief available under the law that may be considered
25 appropriate under the circumstances, including other fees and costs of this action to the extent
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2
/s/ Alex Spiro
3 QUINN EMANUEL URQUHART & SULLIVAN, LLP
4 Alex Spiro (pro hac vice to be filed)
51 Madison Avenue, 22nd Floor
5 New York, New York 10010
Telephone: (212) 849-7364
6 Email: [email protected]
7 Derek L. Shaffer (Bar No. 212746)
8 1300 I Street NW, Suite 900
Washington, DC 20005
9 Telephone: (202) 538-8123
Email: [email protected]
10
Kyle K. Batter (Bar No. 301803)
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555 Twin Dolphin Drive, 5th Floor
12 Redwood Shores, California 94065
Telephone: (650) 801-5000
13 Email: [email protected]
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1 ATTESTATION
2 I, Kyle K. Batter, am the ECF User whose ID and password are being used to file this
3 Complaint for Injunctive and Declaratory Relief. In compliance with Civil Local Rule 5-1(i)(3),
8 Kyle Batter
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or
(U.S. Government Not a Party)
and
(Indicate Citizenship of Parties in Item III)
(specify)
(See instructions):