Jefferson Classroom Teachers Ass'n v. Jefferson Elementary School District

137 Cal. App. 3d 993, 187 Cal. Rptr. 542, 1982 Cal. App. LEXIS 2194
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 9, 1982
DocketCiv. 48810
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 137 Cal. App. 3d 993 (Jefferson Classroom Teachers Ass'n v. Jefferson Elementary 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
Jefferson Classroom Teachers Ass'n v. Jefferson Elementary School District, 137 Cal. App. 3d 993, 187 Cal. Rptr. 542, 1982 Cal. App. LEXIS 2194 (Cal. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

Opinion

MILLER, J.

Jefferson Classroom Teachers Association (hereinafter Association) and certain certified teachers appeal from a judgment denying their motion for summary judgment and granting Jefferson Elementary School District’s (hereinafter District) cross-motion for summary judgment.

Association and District entered into a collective bargaining contract on February 6, 1978. Article IV section A(l)(e) of the contract reads; “Extended Leave for Illness or Accident. When an employee has exhausted all other leaves, vacation, and compensatory time and continues to be disabled by illness or accident, whether or not the illness or accident arises out of or during the course of employment with the District; the employee shall, for the period of disability of five (5) months or less, receive the difference between the cost of the substitute and the normal salary that would be paid the employee, providing that in no instance shall an absent certificated employee receive less than fifty percent (50%) of the regular salary during the leave of absence. The school *995 district shall make every reasonable effort to secure the services of a substitute employee for each of the days of absence under this paragraph.”

After the parties entered into the contract, several of the teachers in the District, having used up all of their regular sick leave, were absent because of illness or injury. The teachers received no salary for these absences and Association, on their behalf, filed a grievance in the matter.

After the grievance was denied by District through all levels, the matter was submitted to an arbitrator, pursuant to provisions in the contract. The arbitrator’s advisory decision ruled that District, by failing to pay teachers who were absent because of a “noncontinuous” illness or accident after having used up their regular sick leave, was in violation of article IV section A(l)(e) of the contract. The arbitrator’s advisory decision was rejected by District’s governing board on November 29, 1978.

Thereafter, Association and the aggrieved teachers filed a complaint for declaratory and injunctive relief and for money due and owing against District. District’s position at trial was that the proper construction of article IV section A(l)(e) is that payment of the reduced salary rate should go only to those teachers who are absent because of an illness or injury of an extended or protracted nature, continuing past the point in time at which the employee’s sick leave is exhausted.

In its opposition to Association’s motion and its cross-motion for summary judgment, District argued that prior to the contract between the parties, Education Code section 44977, 1 and its predecessor section 13467, contained the only reference to the amount and manner of payment for an extended leave of absence, that is, leave in addition to the 10 days of sick leave allowed each year by section 44978. The extended leave provisions of sections 44977 and 13467 had always been interpreted by District to cover extended illnesses. In the three-year period from 1973 until July 1976, the district was administered by ten different business administrators and superintendents. In 1976 the superintendent noted that the district had an inordinate amount of Friday and Monday absenteeism. He discovered that a payroll clerk, due to lack of direction from a rapidly changing administration, had been granting to any and all employees who exhausted their 10 days of sick leave extended illness pay under the extended leave code provision. The superintendent terminated that practice by notifying the teachers that he had instructed the payroll department to grant extended illness pay only to those employees who were absent because of an illness or injury of a protracted nature continuing past the point in time at which the employee’s regular paid sick leave was exhausted.

*996 Thereafter, during contract negotiations, the initial proposal of Association contained a provision 2 designed to reinstate the payroll clerk’s practice and enhance it with a guaranteed minimum differential pay. In essence, the proposal called for unlimited use of extended disability pay and a guaranteed minimum of 50 percent of regular salary to protect the absent employee against high-salaried substitutes. District submitted a counterproposal 3 which was intended to reaffirm and clarify its interpretation of the extended leave code provisions, that is, to compensate employees only for illnesses of an extended, continuing nature and then only in an amount equal to the difference between the cost of substitute teacher and the normal salary that would be paid the employee.

District eventually acceded to Association’s request for a guaranteed minimum of 50 percent differential pay in return for the inclusion of language limiting extended disability pay to extended illnesses and injuries only. The result was article IV section A(l)(e) which retains the “and continues to be disabled” terminology that is here in dispute.

Based on written and oral arguments the trial court determined that “the language of the agreement is to provide for economic protection to [plaintiffs] from extensive losses due to extended absences, after use of normal sick leave, for a period of up to five months. Such absences are for illnesses or accidents which are continuous in time or effect, and do not include absences for other sporadic illnesses or accidents during that five month period.”

On appeal Association contends that section 44977 4 grants all public school teachers the right to receive differential pay for illness and accident leave dur *997 ing the first five months following the exhaustion by the teacher of his or her regular sick leave, whether or not such illness or accident be “continuous” with the illness or accident for which the teacher had used up his or her regular sick leave. 5 Thus, District’s construction of the challenged contract provision and the lower court’s endorsement of that construction violates a statutorily guaranteed right to receive differential pay.

Association presents certain hypothetical situations which, under District’s construction of the contract provision, would produce absurd results. For instance, teacher A has the flu for 10 working days. Thereafter, he is involved in an automobile accident. Given District’s construction of the contract provision, A would be ineligible for differential pay. On the other hand, teacher B has the flu for nine working days. She then has an accident and uses her 10th sick leave day under section 44978. Teacher B is eligible for differential pay. Association contends that section 44977 does not admit of such distinctions.

District takes the position that article IV section A(l)(e) is valid since the fifth paragraph of section 44977 provides that a district has the right “to make any reasonable rule for the regulation of accident or sick leave.

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Bluebook (online)
137 Cal. App. 3d 993, 187 Cal. Rptr. 542, 1982 Cal. App. LEXIS 2194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jefferson-classroom-teachers-assn-v-jefferson-elementary-school-district-calctapp-1982.