Beard v. Webb

169 P. 927, 35 Cal. App. 332, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 332
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 19, 1917
DocketCiv. No. 1762.
StatusPublished

This text of 169 P. 927 (Beard v. Webb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beard v. Webb, 169 P. 927, 35 Cal. App. 332, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 332 (Cal. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

It appears that petitioner is an optometrist duly qualified and licensed to practice as such under the laws of the state of California; that on March 17, 1916, the board of education of the city of Sacramento employed petitioner as such optometrist, at a salary of one thousand six hundred dollars a year, to examine pupils of the public schools of said city in order to discover any visual defects of said pupils in order that such defects, if existing, might be corrected; that petitioner ever since has been and now is so employed, and has fully performed all services required of him by reason of such employment; that respondent during all of said time has been and is now the county superintendent of schools of Sacramento County; that on or about the twenty-eighth day *333 of July, 1917, said board of education of the city of Sacramento made its order upon said Caroline M. Webb, as such county superintendent, to draw her requisition upon the county auditor of said county for the payment of the salary due petitioner for the month of July, 1917, for services performed under said employment, but respondent refused, and ever since has refused, to draw said requisition; that similar action was taken by said city board of education on August 30, and September 30, 1917, but respondent likewise refused, and still refuses, to honor either of said orders for requisitions. The prayer is, therefore, for a writ of mandate to direct respondent to forthwith draw her requisition on the county auditor for the sum of $399.99 for payment of the salary due petitioner for services performed as such optometrist for the months of July, August, and September, 1917.

The facts are not in dispute. The whole controversy is as to the authority of the city board of education to employ an optometrist to perform such services. The solution of the question depends upon the construction of chapter 598 of the Statutes of 1909 (Stats. 1909, p. 908), being “an act to provide for health and development supervision in the public schools of the state of California,” considered in connection with subdivision 21 of section 1617 of the Political Code, approved subsequent to the approval of said chapter 598. Section 1 of said act provides: “Boards of school trustees and city boards of education are hereby authorized to establish health and development supervision in the public schools of this state and to employ an examining staff and other employees necessary to carry on said work and to fix the compensation for the same. Whenever practicable the examining staff for health and development supervision in the public schools of the state shall consist of both educators and physicians.” Section 2 enumerates the purposes of supervision, one of them being “to secure the correction of developmental and acquired defects of both pupils and teachers which interfere with health, growth and efficiency, by complete physical examination. Said examination shall occur annually or as often as may be determined by the board of school trustees or city board of education.” Section 3 provides for the qualifications of the examining staff. The said subdivision of the Political Code authorizes the boards of education “to give diligent care to the health and physical development of pupils, *334 and where sufficient funds are provided by district taxation, to employ properly certificated persons for such work.”

The contention of respondent seems to be (1) that under said act of 1909 the board of education is empowered to employ only an examining staff consisting of educators and physicians and employees thereof, and that the board has no authority to employ anyone else, independently of an educator or physician, to contribute to the health and development of the pupils and teachers of the public schools, although the special work for which such person is employed may be foreign to the services usually and properly performed by an educator or physician, and (2) that a board of education must carry out and execute all the purposes of health work as defined in said act or be precluded from doing any such work at the expense of the district.

In considering the first of these propositions it is to be observed that the statute provides not that “the board is hereby authorized to employ an examining staff and employees, ’ ’ but the adjective other precedes the word “employees.” According to the established and accepted meaning of the word “other,” used as an adjective, we must reach the conclusion that the “examining staff” áre employees of the board in the same class as are the other employees contemplated by the statute. In other words, the board of education is not limited to the employment of an examining staff with the authority in that staff to employ assistants to aid in the work,, but unless we are to depart from the plain significance of the language employed, we must hold that the legislature has authorized the board to employ an examining staff and the same authority is conferred to employ other suitable persons to carry out the purposes of the statute. Discretion is vested in the board—and wisely so—to employ an examining staff cmd other suitable persons if needed, or to employ simply an “examining staff” or other persons qualified to contribute to the health and development of the pupils. There is no language in the act, as we understand it, which compels the conclusion that no one can be employed by the board for such purpose except the examining staff. Nor is the employment of such staff an essential prerequisite to the employment of some other person for work which does not naturally fall within the province of an educator or physician. The legislature has seen fit, it is true, to prescribe the qualifications of *335 the examining board, and has omitted to specify the qualifications of “other” persons who may be employed for health supervision. That circumstance, however, does not, we think, militate against the position of petitioner herein. It can readily be understood why some special qualifications might be required of an examining staff having general supervision of the whole range of physical and mental activity and development, and none be prescribed for other employees such as dentists and optometrists whose license under state authority and reputation in their profession would afford sufficient guaranty for faithful and efficient service.

The language of said section of the Political Code also favors the contention of petitioner herein. These acts of the legislature must, of course, be construed together so as to give effect if possible to both. It was clearly the intention of the legislature in the enactment of the later statute to provide for the employment of any professional man whose services might be needed to promote the health of the pupils. This statute certainly contemplates the employment of specialists such as' dentists and optometrists. But if the qualifications of an examining staff as provided in the other act are to be required, it is easy to be seen that the primary purpose of the law might be defeated, for physicians and educators would not be qualified to do the particular work required for the health of the pupil.

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Bluebook (online)
169 P. 927, 35 Cal. App. 332, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beard-v-webb-calctapp-1917.