French v. Board of Education

128 P.2d 722, 54 Cal. App. 2d 148, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 332
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 24, 1942
DocketCiv. No. 2862
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 128 P.2d 722 (French v. Board of Education) 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
French v. Board of Education, 128 P.2d 722, 54 Cal. App. 2d 148, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 332 (Cal. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

BARNARD, P. J.

The petitioner applied for a writ of mandate to compel the respondent to recognize her alleged status as a permanent teacher and to pay her salary for a period of time within the school year 1941-1942 during which she had not been assigned to a teaching position. Respondent’s answer admitted that she had formerly held permanent status as a teacher in said district and alleged that this status had been terminated by her resignation. After a trial the court found in favor of the respondent finding, among other things, that petitioner’s permanent status had been terminated by [150]*150her resignation, which was voluntary and not procured by fraud, coercion or duress. From the judgment which followed the petitioner has appealed.

There is no dispute as to the material facts. In 1934, the appellant was and for some years had been a teacher in respondent district with permanent tenure. She and her husband were living in San Diego but during the preceding school year her husband had been employed as a teacher at Lakeside, some 21 miles from San Diego. During the summer of 1934, appellant and her husband approached the respondent with the request that the husband be given work as a probationary teacher in respondent district. They were informed that it was the policy of the respondent board not to give initial employment as teachers to a husband and wife at the same time. After some discussion, an understanding was arrived at between the parties for the purpose of enabling the husband to substitute himself for the appellant as the member of the family having permanent status in said district. To this end, and in order to maintain her permanent status until her husband acquired tenure, it was understood and agreed that the husband would be employed on the condition that the appellant would take annual leaves of absence during his probationary period, and that she would resign her position as a permanent teacher if and when he acquired tenure. Incidentally, it appears that the appellant was suffering from tuberculosis for several years from and after 1934, although she testified that she did not know that she had this disease until December of that year.

Pursuant to this agreement, the terms of which were set forth in letters exchanged between the parties, the husband taught in this district the next three years, and each year the appellant was granted a leave of absence upon her written application in which she mentioned the understanding. For some reason which does not appear in the record the husband was not reemployed for the school year 1937-1938. During that year the appellant was assigned to a half-time teaching position upon her written request in which she said: “My physician says that it must be in the morning as he would like me to rest in the afternoons.” Beginning with the next year, however, the understanding previously arrived at was reinstated by mutual consent and the appellant took annual leaves of absence and her husband was employed as a probationary teacher for the three school years between July, 1938. and June. 1941.

[151]*151In March, 1941, the respondent’s superintendent wrote to the appellant notifying her that her leave of absence would soon expire and requesting information as to whether or not she was planning to teach the next year. She called on the superintendent and was told by him that she would have to resign because her husband was on the list to be made permanent and that if she did not resign he would not hire her husband. She replied that she did not want to resign and was told that she could either go back to teaching or that she could resign and that her husband would be employed. Some days later, after further discussions with her and with her husband, she sent in her written resignation to take effect “at such time as my husband is made permanent” and in which she also said: “I am resigning because my husband would not become permanent unless I resign.” This was accompanied by a letter to the respondent board in which she stated that she was tendering her resignation as a teacher; that she was resigning “to insure my husband’s permanent status, upon request of the superintendent”; that “I wish my resignation to become effective at such time as my husband is made permanent”; and that “I do not want to sever relationships with the schools and I hope the board will reconsider my reemployment as a teacher.”

After discussing this resignation the board instructed one of its members to talk the matter over with Mr. and Mrs. French and her father. This he did and at this conversation this board member asked the appellant if she really intended to resign and if there were any strings attached to the resignation. She replied that she wanted to resign, that she wanted to be sure that her husband would get tenure, and that she intended to stop teaching at any rate upon her husband’s getting tenure. When the board member asked her why she sent the resignation in in that form she replied: “I wanted to be sure my husband will have permanent status.” After some further discussion along this line she expressed a desire to occasionally do some work if called upon and this board member told her that he did not see why this could not be done after a time although, as he testified, he made no promises to her.

Her written resignation was dated April 28, 1941, and it was accepted by the respondent at a board meeting on May 6, 1941, and at the same meeting the appellant’s husband was employed for the next year and he began his work in September, 1941, thus attaining permanent status. On September [152]*15210, 1941, the appellant wrote to the respondent stating that she was in good health and requesting an assignment to teach, naming her preference as to schools. She was not assigned as siich teacher and this proceeding followed.

The appellant contends that the findings to the effect that she had resigned her position are not supported by the evidence for the reason that the evidence discloses that the purported resignation was void and ineffectual for any such purpose. No eases are cited which are particularly helpful. The appellant cites Dutart v. Woodward, 99 Cal. App. 736 [279 Pac. 493], and states that the facts therein cannot be distinguished from those in the instant case. In that case it was held that a teacher with a permanent status could not be penalized for marrying by transferring her to a position in a distant tuberculosis sanitarium. We see no similarity, factually or with respect to the principles involved, between the two cases.

The first point specifically presented is that “the resignation was invalid as against public policy. ” It is first argued that appellant’s resignation was based wholly upon the consideration that her husband be employed as a teacher; that the qualifications of the appellant or of her husband played no part in the matter; that teachers are supposed to be selected wholly upon their qualifications; and that the respondent board acted contrary to our educational ideals and violated its duty to the public in thus making a “deal” for the employment of a teacher without regard to his qualifications. It in no way appears that the husband’s qualifications were not considered, and it was arranged so that the appellant could retain her status until he proved that his qualifications justified his being retained long enough for him to acquire tenure.

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Bluebook (online)
128 P.2d 722, 54 Cal. App. 2d 148, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/french-v-board-of-education-calctapp-1942.