City and County of San Francisco v. Hyatt

125 P. 751, 163 Cal. 346, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 416
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 26, 1912
DocketS.F. No. 5988.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 125 P. 751 (City and County of San Francisco v. Hyatt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City and County of San Francisco v. Hyatt, 125 P. 751, 163 Cal. 346, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 416 (Cal. 1912).

Opinion

LORIGAN, J.

This is a petition for a writ of mandate and involves particularly the validity of a rule of the state board of education providing a minimum of four hours as the attendance necessary in the elementary schools of this state to constitute a school day’s work in the matter of the apportionment of the state school funds to the different school districts.

Preliminary to quoting the rule adopted by the board and as bearing on the question of its validity, certain sections of the Political Code must be referred to.

Section 1532 of that code, subdivision 4 thereof, requires the state superintendent “to apportion.the state school fund” and “in apportioning said fund he shall apportion to every county and to every city and county two hundred fifty dollars for every teacher determined and assigned to it on school census by the county or city and county school superintendent for the next preceding school year, as required of the county or city and county school superintendent by the provisions of section 1858 of this code, and after thus apportioning two hundred and fifty dollars on teacher or census basis, he shall apportion the balance of the state school fund to the several counties or cities and counties according to their average daily attendance as shown by the reports of the county or city and county school superintendents for the next preceding school year.”

This section 1858, referred to in said section 1532, as it stood prior to the session of the legislature of 1911, read as follows:—

“The school superintendent of every county and city and county must apportion all state and county school moneys for the primary and grammar grades of his county or city and county as follows:
*348 “1. He must ascertain the number of teachers each school district is entitled to by calculating one teacher for every district having seventy or a less number of census children and one additional teacher for each additional seventy census children, or fraction of seventy not less than twenty census children, as shown by the next preceding school census.” Provision is further made that any moneys remaining after the apportionment on the census basis, should be apportioned to the several districts in proportion to the average daily attendance for the preceding school year.

This section was amended in 1911 (Stats. 1911, p. 527), and as now in effect reads, as to the apportionment of all state and county school moneys by the school superintendent of every county and city and county for the elementary .grades therein as follows:

“1. He must ascertain the number of teachers each school district is entitled to by calculating one teacher for every district having thirty-five or a less number of units of average daily attendance and one additional teacher for each additional thirty-five units of average daily attendance, or fraction of thirty-five not less than ten units of average daily attendance as shown by the annual school report of the school district for the next preceding school year; and two additional teachers shall be allowed to each district for every seven hundred units of average daily attendance, etc.”

At the same session a new subdivision was added to this section as follows:

“5. Units of average daily attendance wherever used in this section shall be construed to be the quotient arising from dividing the total number of days of pupils’ attendance in the schools of the district by the number of days school was actually taught in the district. A school day is hereby construed and declared to be that portion of the calendar day or night in which school is maintained and in which one-twentieth of the work of a school month may be performed. The attendance of pupils present less than one-fourth of any day shall not be counted for that school day and pupils present for one-fourth of a day or for more than one-fourth of a day shall be counted as present for one-fourth of a day, one-half of a day, three-fourths of a day, or for a whole day, as the case may be. ’ ’

*349 Subsequent to the taking effect of these amendments to section 1858 the state board of education adopted the following rule, the validity of which is the main point in controversy:

“The School Day: Computing Average Daily Attendance.
“The minimum school day for any school sharing in state funds on a basis of average daily attendance shall consist of not less than four hours of actual work and attendance exclusive of recesses. Each school day shall be divided into four approximately equal parts. One-fourth of a day’s attendance shall consist of actual work and attendance for not less than one hour, exclusive of recesses; one-half of a day’s attendance shall consist of actual work and attendance for not less than two hours exclusive of recesses; three-fourths of a day’s attendance shall consist of actual work and attendance for not less than three hours, exclusive of recesses. In no event shall attendance by any individual on one calendar day be construed as more than one day’s attendance. The word hour as used in this rule means a sixty minute hour. This rule shall govern the computation of average daily attendance in day and evening elementary and high schools, polytechnic, industrial, agricultural, and all other schools drawing state money on a basis of average daily attendance.”

The powers of the state board of education as far as involved here are enumerated in section 1521 of the Political .Code:

“The powers and duties of the state board of education are as follows:
“1. To adopt rules and regulations not inconsistent with the laws of this state for its own government and for the government of the public schools and district school libraries.

The substantial allegations of this petition for a writ of mandate are that under the law, respondent state superintendent is required to give, and has always heretofore given, in computing the average daily attendance in elementary schools consisting of day and night schools, for the purpose of determining the annual apportionment of state school funds thereto, credit to the elementary night schools on an equal basis with the elementary day schools, making no discrimination between them 5 that he has calculated a night session of such night., schools as being equivalent of. a . day session for *350

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 P. 751, 163 Cal. 346, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-and-county-of-san-francisco-v-hyatt-cal-1912.