Miller v. Chico Unified School District Board of Education

597 P.2d 475, 24 Cal. 3d 703, 157 Cal. Rptr. 72, 1979 Cal. LEXIS 280
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 27, 1979
DocketS.F. 23937
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 597 P.2d 475 (Miller v. Chico Unified School District Board of Education) 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
Miller v. Chico Unified School District Board of Education, 597 P.2d 475, 24 Cal. 3d 703, 157 Cal. Rptr. 72, 1979 Cal. LEXIS 280 (Cal. 1979).

Opinions

Opinion

TOBRINER, J.

— On February 27, 1976, defendant Chico Unified School District Board of Education, notified plaintiff Hal R. Miller, Jr., principal of Bidwell Junior High School, of his reassignment to a teaching position for the following school year. Plaintiff has instituted the present mandamus proceeding, seeking reinstatement to his post as principal on the ground that the school board’s action fails because it does not comply with sections 44031 and 44664 of the Education Code. (Former §§ 13001.5, 13489.)1

Under section 44031, school district employees must be given notice of, and opportunity to comment upon, derogatory information in their personnel files “which may serve as a basis for affecting the status of their employment.” Section 44664 provides a method for frequent “evaluation and assessment” of certificated employees, and mandates the “employing authority” to notify an employee in writing in the event of the employee’s unsatisfactory performance. The trial court below found that the school board had not met the requirements of sections 44031 and 44664 before reassigning plaintiff. Nevertheless, the court held that compliance with either provision “is not a prerequisite to reassignment of a principal to a [707]*707teaching position within a school district,” and hence denied plaintiff’s petition for mandate to compel his reinstatement.

We conclude that the trial court correctly rejected plaintiff’s claim under section. 44664, although, unlike the trial court, we reach that conclusion on the ground that the school board substantially fulfilled the evaluation and counseling requirements of that provision. We additionally hold, however, that the trial court erred in its treatment of plaintiff’s contention under section 44031. As we explain, pursuant to that section a school administrator must be permitted to review and comment on derogatory written material compiled and maintained by a school district even though the material has not been properly placed in his personnel file. A school board cannot avoid the requirements of section 44031 by putting derogatory written material in another file not designated “personnel file” and by such a process of labelling prevent the administrator from reviewing and commenting upon allegations directed against him.

Moreover, in order to enforce the mandate of section 44031, we construe the provision to prohibit a school board from basing any employment decision on its analysis of derogatory information unless the board has notified the employee of such derogatory information and has afforded him an opportunity to comment upon it. In the instant case, the school board apparently did improperly consider some such derogatory information in reaching its decision to reassign plaintiff. Because the trial court did not decide whether the improper material was a crucial element in the board’s decision, we remand the case to the trial court for that determination.

1. The underlying facts.

Plaintiff has been an employee of defendant school board since 1948. In 1958, the school board promoted plaintiff to principal of Bidwell Junior High School. Plaintiff holds general elementary, general secondary, and general administrative credentials.

Pursuant to procedures that the school board adopted in 1973, administrators in the school district are “formally evaluated” annually; as the school board’s published “Certified Evaluation Handbook” states, section 44664 prescribes “legal details” of the evaluation process. Associate Superintendent Don A. Cloud evaluated plaintiff in June 1973, and the school board entered the resulting uniformly favorable “certifi[708]*708coted personnel evaluation report,”2 signed by Cloud and by plaintiff, in plaintiff’s personnel file.

During the following school year, the board solicited comments from the Bidwell staff regarding various aspects of Bidwell school management; the board placed a compilation of the mostly critical returns in plaintiff’s personnel file.3 In June, at the end of the 1973-1974 school year, the school board conducted plaintiff’s second evaluation, and placed the report in plaintiff’s personnel file. While including several suggestions for improvement on plaintiff’s part, the report generally approved plaintiff’s performance.4

In April 1975 the school board established a “Timetable for Evaluating Leadership Function at Bidwell Junior High School.” The timetable, a copy of which was placed in plaintiff’s personnel file, noted that the “Superintendent’s recommendation for 1976/77 school year” would be submitted to the board by February 1976. An attached memorandum from Dr. Cloud to plaintiff described recent “concerns” focused on “the leadership that is being exercised at Bidwell,” and enumerated various “major areas . . . which need to be improved.”5

Plaintiff’s most recent evaluation report, compiled in June 1975 for the 1974-1975 school year, noted “Hal’s friendly and sincere attitude as he has worked with us through the years,” but referred to specific criticisms previously documented to emphasize “that improvement is needed at the principalship level.” During the first half of the 1975-1976 school year, plaintiff’s supervisors frequently conferred with plaintiff and exchanged a [709]*709series of memoranda with him monitoring, among other things, plaintiff’s direction of school curriculum, management of school budget, and selection of Bidwell staff.

On February 27, 1976, the school board notified plaintiff by letter of his reassignment to a teaching position to commence July 1, 1976.6 The school board enclosed a copy of a December 23, 1975, memorandum from Dr. Cloud to Superintendent Robert J. Jeffries recommending plaintiff’s reassignment, a statement of 14 reasons for the reassignment,7 “together with an attachment which fully documents the reasons and is listed as Exhibit A.” Plaintiff’s current dispute with the school board centers on certain of the documents in exhibit A; although exhibit A contained plaintiff’s past evaluation reports and other items culled from plaintiff’s personnel file, it also disclosed to plaintiff for the first time 20 confidential memoranda by Dr. Cloud criticizing plaintiff’s conduct as principal (the Cloud memoranda).

On March 1, 1976, the school board requested plaintiff’s cooperation in his fourth annual Stull evaluation report, but plaintiff refused on advice of counsel. Plaintiff accepted the board’s invitation, however, for a hearing “for the purpose of determining whether [plaintiff was] accorded due process. . . .” At the hearing on April 27, 1976, plaintiff and his attorney responded to the information contained in exhibit A. On May 20, 1976, the board unanimously decided that plaintiff had not been denied due process “by the manner in which [plaintiff] was notified of the Board’s decision to reassign [him] from [his] present position as Principal of Bidwell Junior High School to a teaching position in the Chico Unified School District for the 1976-77 school year.”

On June 18, 1976, plaintiff filed a petition for writ of mandate to compel the school board to rescind his reassignment.

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Bluebook (online)
597 P.2d 475, 24 Cal. 3d 703, 157 Cal. Rptr. 72, 1979 Cal. LEXIS 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-chico-unified-school-district-board-of-education-cal-1979.