Grigsby v. King

260 P. 789, 202 Cal. 299, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 348
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 20, 1927
DocketDocket No. S.F. 11578.
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 260 P. 789 (Grigsby v. King) 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
Grigsby v. King, 260 P. 789, 202 Cal. 299, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 348 (Cal. 1927).

Opinion

LANGDON, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment against her in an action brought to restrain the members of a board of school trustees “from attempting to deprive plaintiff of her position as a permanent teacher in the schools of the city of Napa.”

*302 The trial court denied relief upon three grounds: (1) Injunction will not lie for a breach of contract for the performance of personal services, (2) section 1609, article -VII, of the Political Code, known as the “Teacher's Tenure Act,” if interpreted to give plaintiff the standing of a permanent teacher under the facts of this ease, is unconstitutional as denying the right to employer and employee of contracting for a definite, specific period of time, and (3) said section of the Political Code is unconstitutional because it is an unjust discrimination against a class of schools and of teachers.

• It is to be observed that the last session of the legislature amended this section so as to obviate all question of an objection thereto upon the last ground above stated. Prior to such amendment, the sections involved in our inquiry were as follows:

• “Sec. 1609. Boards of School Trustees . . . shall have power and it shall be their duty:
“Second—To employ teachers as provided in part fifth . . . teachers may be elected on or after May second for the next ensuing school year and each teacher so elected shall be deemed re-elected from year to year, except as hereinafter specified; . . .
“Fifth—To employ, as teachers, only persons who hold legal certificates for teaching ... to serve as substitutes, probationary or permanent teachers. . . .
“(e) To classify as substitute teachers those persons employed as teachers from day to day for less than one school year. . . .
“ (d) To classify as probationary teachers those persons employed as teachers for the school year, and who have not been classified as permanent teachers . . . such classification to be made at the time of employment, and thereafter in the month of July of each school year.
“ (e) To classify as permanent teachers all persons who shall have been successfully employed as teachers by the district for two consecutive school years at the time of classification; provided, also> that the two years of successful service shall have been performed in a district employing at least eight teachers under a principal who shall devote at least two hours per day to supervision in the school or *303 schools under his control. Such classification shall be made at the end of the two years of such employment.
“ (h) To dismiss substitute teachers at any time. . . .
“ (i) To dismiss probationary teachers during the school year for cause only, as in the ease of permanent teachers, except that on or before the tenth day of June in any year the governing board may give notice in writing to a probationary teacher that his services will not be required for the ensuing year. . . .
“(j) To dismiss permanent teachers, principals or supervisors of special subjects . . . only for one or more of the following causes, after a fair and impartial public hearing. Causes for dismissal are. . . .
“It is hereby provided, however, that whenever it becomes necessary to decrease the number of permanent teachers employed by a school district ... on account of the discontinuance of a particular kind of teaching service . . . the governing board may dismiss such teacher or teachers at the end of the school year . . . the teacher or teachers so dismissed shall be the teacher or teachers engaged in the type of teaching work so discontinued.”

The defendants are trustees of a school district employing at least eight teachers under a principal devoting more than two hours per day to supervision in the school or schools under his control. The plaintiff had been successfully employed as a regular teacher in said district for three consecutive years. Toward the end of the third year defendant board attempted to dismiss her by letter without holding any hearing or making any charges against her. The complaint set forth these facts and prayed for injunctive and general relief.

In holding this section violative of state constitutional provisions contained in article IV, section 25, and article I, section 11, and also in article I, section 21, and the fourteenth amendment to the constitution of the United States, the trial court proceeded upon the theory that teachers as a class were the subjects of legislation, and that a discrimination within that class was apparent. We think that in the section of the Political Code under construction the legislature was plainly dealing with boards of trustees as a class, investing them with powers not other *304 wise possessed and providing the limitations and restrictions to be attached to the exercise of such powers.

Furthermore, a board of school trustees, being neither a natural nor an artificial person, does not enjoy the same natural privileges and constitutional rights as do such persons. Such a board is merely an administrative agency created by statute and invested only with the powers expressly conferred, subject to the limitations thereto attached by the legislature. As aptly stated by counsel, it is anomalous that the board of trustees should claim powers granted to it by statute, and only by statute, and attack as unconstitutional the limitations imposed upon those powers by the same statute.

Title III of the Political Code is entitled “Education,” and chapter III thereof bears the caption “Public Schools.” This chapter is divided into twenty-one articles, each with its appropriate subtitle. Article VII is entitled “Boards of Trustees of School Districts and City Boards of Education” and is divided into twenty-three sections. Section 1603 deals with boards of trustees with respect to membership; the following section deals with new districts and the following section deals with vacancies. The succeeding sections prescribe the powers and duties of said boards with respect to various matters, section 1609, the subject of our particular examination, dealing with the power of said boards with reference to employees and with particular reference to teachers.

Part second of the section, above quoted, empowers the board to employ teachers as provided in part fifth. Part fifth empowers the board to employ persons to serve as substitutes, probationary or permanent teachers. The power to employ imports the power to fix the term of and so end the employment. The power to employ in classes necessarily implies the power to determine who shall be employed in each class, i. e., to classify. If this were the entire content of the enactment, the board would then have plenary power in three particulars—to employ, to classify, and to dismiss teachers. But further provisions appear in the act which modify and limit the power conferred by imposing a duty with respect to its exercise.

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Bluebook (online)
260 P. 789, 202 Cal. 299, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grigsby-v-king-cal-1927.