California School Employees Ass'n, Tustin Chapter No. 450 v. Tustin Unified School District

55 Cal. Rptr. 3d 739, 148 Cal. App. 4th 510, 2007 Daily Journal DAR 3378, 2007 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 2670, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 341
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 27, 2007
DocketG037118
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 55 Cal. Rptr. 3d 739 (California School Employees Ass'n, Tustin Chapter No. 450 v. Tustin Unified School District) 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
California School Employees Ass'n, Tustin Chapter No. 450 v. Tustin Unified School District, 55 Cal. Rptr. 3d 739, 148 Cal. App. 4th 510, 2007 Daily Journal DAR 3378, 2007 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 2670, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 341 (Cal. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion

FYBEL, J.

Introduction

When a classified school district employee is on disability leave for five months or less, the employer school district may not, under Education Code section 45196, deduct from the absent employee’s salary an amount exceeding the sum “actually paid a substitute employee employed to fill his position during his absence.” (Ed. Code, § 45196.) (All further statutory references are to the Education Code unless noted.) As an alternative, the school district may maintain a policy of crediting regular classified employees with additional working days per year of paid sick leave. (§ 45196.)

Joan Featherstone is a classified employee of the Tustin Unified School District (School District). While she was on temporary disability leave, the School District, pursuant to its long-standing practice, assigned some of her work hours to other classified employees and deducted their pay from her salary. The California School Employees Association and its Tustin Chapter No. 450 (together, the CSEA) challenged that practice on the ground those employees were not substitute employees because they were already employed by the School District and, hence, were not employed to replace Featherstone while she was temporarily absent. The superior court concluded section 45196 permitted the deductions and denied the CSEA’s petition for writ of mandate.

*514 The CSEA’s appeal presents the issue whether a substitute employee under section 45196 includes a currently employed, classified employee who is assigned the absent employee’s hours or tasks. Section 45103 defines “substitute employee” as “any person employed to replace any classified employee who is temporarily absent from duty.” (§ 45103, subd. (d)(1).) We conclude the term “substitute employee,” as used in section 45196 and defined in section 45103, means a person hired for the purpose of filling in for a temporarily absent employee. The term “substitute employee” does not include a current, classified employee who is assigned—voluntarily or involuntarily— the absent employee’s hours or tasks. The School District did not adopt section 45196’s alternative scheme for compensating temporarily disabled employees. Thus, aS'We explain, neither section 45196 nor the statutory scheme as a whole permitted the School District to deduct from Featherstone’s salary the amount paid to its currently employed, classified employees who had been assigned Featherstone’s job responsibilities.

In addition, we find no merit in the School District’s laches, estoppel, and unclean hands arguments, and reject the School District’s challenge to the CSEA’s standing to seek prospective relief on behalf of employees other than Featherstone. Accordingly, we reverse and remand with directions to enter judgment in the CSEA’s favor.

Facts

The School District employs both certified (credentialed) and classified (noncredentialed) employees. Featherstone is employed by the School District in the classified position of nutrition services assistant I.

The CSEA is a labor union organized to represent employees in their relations with public school employers. The CSEA is the exclusive representative of a unit of classified employees employed by the School District. Because Featherstone is a classified employee, the CSEA represents her in her employment relations with the School District, and she is a member of the CSEA’s bargaining unit.

In May 2003, the School District placed Featherstone on a five-month disability leave of absence. Because Featherstone is not scheduled to work during the summer, her leave of absence ended, and she returned to work, in January 2004.

*515 Since 1978, the School District has maintained a practice of offering some or all of the hours made available by a classified employee’s disability leave of absence to other regular classified employees willing to work additional hours. When other qualified employees from the same job classification are not available to accept the hours made available by the disability leave of absence, the School District hires nonemployee substitutes to work the absent employee’s hours. The School District deducts from the wages of a classified employee on disability leave the amount paid to the current employee or hired substitute who worked the absent employee’s hours. On any given day of absence, the total amount deducted does not exceed the amount of the absent employee’s pay for that day.

The School District maintains a roster of nonemployees who are eligible to serve as substitutes in the classification of nutrition services assistant II, but does not maintain a roster of nonemployee substitutes for the classification of nutrition services assistant I. When a nutrition services assistant I is on disability leave, the School District prefers to use other employees of the same classification to replace the absent employee.

For each day that Featherstone was absent on disability leave, the School District deducted from her pay the hourly rate of, times the hours worked by, the person working her hours. .Nine different people worked Featherstone’s hours while she was on disability leave. Six of those persons were School District employees with the classification of nutrition services assistant I. They voluntarily accepted the additional work normally assigned to Featherstone to supplement their income. The other three were nonemployees from the School District’s roster of substitutes for the classification of nutrition services assistant II, a lower classification than nutrition services assistant I. The School District deducted from Featherstone’s pay the amounts paid both to the existing classified employees and to the hired substitutes who worked her hours. (Featherstone does not dispute the deduction of the amounts paid to the three substitutes hired from the School District’s roster.)

Featherstone’s employment is covered by a collective bargaining agreement between the School District and the CSEA. Article 7, section 7.9 of the collective bargaining agreement provides that when the covered employee is absent from work on disability leave for five months or less, “there shall be deducted from the salary due the bargaining unit member the amount actually paid to a substitute employee.” The collective bargaining agreement defines “substitute employee” as “any person employed to replace any classified employee who is temporarily absent from duty.”

*516 Proceedings in the Superior Court

In August 2005, the CSEA filed a claim with the School District pursuant to Government Code section 905. After the School District denied the claim, the CSEA filed a petition for writ of mandate (the Petition) pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 1085 requesting the superior court to compel the School District, its governing board, superintendent, and director of personnel services “to pay Ms. Featherstone and other similarly situated classified employees their full salary and benefits for any day during the five months on which the District does not actually pay a substitute employee to perform their work.” The Petition alleged: “Classified employees are not substitutes.

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55 Cal. Rptr. 3d 739, 148 Cal. App. 4th 510, 2007 Daily Journal DAR 3378, 2007 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 2670, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/california-school-employees-assn-tustin-chapter-no-450-v-tustin-unified-calctapp-2007.