California School Employees Ass'n v. Oakland Unified School District

141 Cal. App. 3d 624, 190 Cal. Rptr. 464, 1983 Cal. App. LEXIS 1555
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 5, 1983
DocketCiv. No. 47825
StatusPublished

This text of 141 Cal. App. 3d 624 (California School Employees Ass'n v. Oakland 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 v. Oakland Unified School District, 141 Cal. App. 3d 624, 190 Cal. Rptr. 464, 1983 Cal. App. LEXIS 1555 (Cal. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

[626]*626Opinion

RATTIGAN, J.

Appellant California School Employees Association (CSEA) is a statewide organization of classified employees of public school districts. The members of its Oakland chapter No. 1 (chapter) include classified employees of respondent Oakland Unified School District (District) who work as security officers. Acting on their behalf, and joined by one of them, CSEA and the chapter petitioned the superior court for a writ of mandate and related relief based on the District’s alleged failure to comply with provisions of the Education Code which require certain classified employees of public school districts to be paid “compensation” in lieu of “holidays” which they “lose” when the holidays fall outside their workweek. The issue joined on the pleadings in the action reflected opposing interpretations of the statutory provisions as they apply to undisputed facts. The superior court adopted the District’s interpretation and entered a judgment denying relief. The petitioners appeal from the judgment.

The Pleadings

Appellants commenced the action by filing a “. . . Petition For Writ of Mandate (CCP § 1085)” in which they were named as CSEA, the chapter, and Ralph T. Seal. The respondents named in the petition were the District, its governing board, and the individual members of the board “in their representative capacities as members . . . .” Appellants alleged in a single cause of action as follows:

CSEA is a nonprofit corporation which represents more than 130,000 “California classified school employees.” CSEA and the chapter were “currently the exclusive representative of a bargaining unit of security officers” who were employed by the District and were “affected by the actions complained of herein. ...” CSEA and the chapter brought the action “as the exclusive representative of said affected employees . . . .”

Appellant Ralph T. Seal is a security officer employed by the District. He is also “representative” of 16 named individuals who “are or have been security officers . . . and are personally and adversely affected by the illegal actions herein complained of.” The District required the named security officers (described as “petitioner employees”) to work “four-consecutive-day workweeks in accordance with Education Code Section 45132.”1 They had [627]*627been required to work 9.375 hours per day, four days per week, from 1971 until November 30, 1978, and ten hours per day, four days per week, since December 1, 1978, “without regard to the occurrence of holidays or substitute holidays. ” Throughout these periods, the District had “violated the . . . Education Code by incorrectly computing and underpaying [the] petitioner employees for work performed during weeks which include one or more work holidays.”

The allegations of the petition which developed the alleged “violations” are not readily intelligible because they are made in a chronological context of “grievance” and related proceedings in which the “petitioner employees” had allegedly pursued their administrative remedies between 1971 and 1978. We therefore describe the issue of statutory interpretation as the parties argued it to the trial court from undisputed facts, as follows:

Section 45203 provides that classified employees of a school district are entitled to designated “paid holidays,” and that an employee who is required to work on any such holiday shall be paid two and one-half times his or her regular daily pay (i.e., straight time plus so-called “holiday premium pay” of time and one-half) for that day.2 Section 45206 provides in effect that a classified employee who works an irregular workweek established according to law, and who consequently “loses a holiday to which he or she would otherwise be entitled” (i.e., where a holiday falls outside the actual workweek), shall receive either (1) “a substitute holiday” or (2) “compensation in the amount to which the employee would have been entitled” if the holiday had fallen within the workweek.3

[628]*628The parties agree that each of the “petitioner employees” is reached by section 45206 because of the four-day workweek the District exacts pursuant to section 45132 (see the text at fh. 1, ante), and that each is accordingly entitled to a “substitute holiday” or to the alternative “compensation” when a holiday falls outside that workweek. The District has in fact elected not to give any such employee a “substitute holiday,” but to pay him or her the alternative “compensation” in money. Pursuant to the District’s interpretation of section 45206, it fixes the amount of the alternative “compensation” at one day’s regular pay (i.e., straight time) and pays that amount to the affected employee. Appellants contend that section 45206 requires the payment of alternative “compensation” in one and one-half times that amount (i.e., holiday premium pay of time and one-half).

After reciting the substance of the foregoing, appellants alleged that they had exhausted their administrative remedies; that the “ [petitioner employees have been denied compensation to which they are entitled by statute in amounts to be proven at . . . trial”; and that appellants had “no adequate plain or speedy remedy at law other than . . . mandate.” In the prayer of thé petition, they requested a peremptory writ of mandate commanding respondents “to take all action necessary to comply with . . . Section 45206 . . .”; that the “petitioner employees be awarded damages in the amount of statutory backpay entitlements since April of 1971 as proved at the time of trial,” plus interest; and for their costs of suit and general relief.

The petition was accompanied by a noticed “Motion For Peremptory Writ Of Mandate” in which appellants in effect requested the trial court to issue a peremptory writ in the first instance. Respondents filed a return in which they admitted the material operative facts alleged in the petition but denied the violations of law charged to them.

The cause was orally argued at a hearing conducted on appellants’ motion for the issuance of a peremptory writ of mandate. No evidence was received, and the matter was submitted on the undisputed facts alleged in the petition. Upon the submission, the trial court ordered from the bench that the petition was denied and that respondents were to recover their costs of suit.4 The court subsequently entered a formal judgment in which it ordered the petition “denied and dismissed” and awarded respondents their costs. This appeal followed.

[629]*629 Review

In a case which involved the language of present section 45203 (see fn. 2, ante) when it appeared in a predecessor statute (former § 13656), a Court of Appeal held that a classified employee who was required to work on one of the specified holidays was entitled to compensation in time off or in money, and that the employing school district was entitled to choose between the two alternatives. (California School Employees Assn. v. New Haven Unified School Dist. (1979) 91 Cal.App.3d 919, 921-922, 924 [154 Cal.Rptr. 479].) The court also held that the rate of compensation in either event was “time and one-half” (i.e., one and one-half days off with pay or the payment of a day’s wage plus one-half) because this was provided by the “clear language of the statute.” (Id., at p. 922.)

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

People v. Shirokow
605 P.2d 859 (California Supreme Court, 1980)
Moyer v. Workmen's Compensation Appeals Board
514 P.2d 1224 (California Supreme Court, 1973)
In Re Marriage of Smethurst
102 Cal. App. 3d 494 (California Court of Appeal, 1980)
California School Employees Ass'n v. New Haven Unified School District
91 Cal. App. 3d 919 (California Court of Appeal, 1979)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
141 Cal. App. 3d 624, 190 Cal. Rptr. 464, 1983 Cal. App. LEXIS 1555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/california-school-employees-assn-v-oakland-unified-school-district-calctapp-1983.