Mt. Diablo Unified School Dist. v. Clayton Valley Charter High School

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 1, 2021
DocketA158195
StatusPublished

This text of Mt. Diablo Unified School Dist. v. Clayton Valley Charter High School (Mt. Diablo Unified School Dist. v. Clayton Valley Charter High School) 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
Mt. Diablo Unified School Dist. v. Clayton Valley Charter High School, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 10/1/21 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FOUR

MT. DIABLO UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT, Plaintiff and Respondent, A158195

v. (Contra Costa County CLAYTON VALLEY CHARTER Super. Ct. No. MSC15-00574) HIGH SCHOOL, Defendant and Appellant.

CLAYTON VALLEY CHARTER HIGH SCHOOL, A158202 Plaintiff and Appellant, v. (Contra Costa County Super. Ct. No. MSN16-1356) MT. DIABLO UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT, Defendant and Respondent.

Clayton Valley Charter High School (the charter school) appeals from a judgment resolving a dispute with Mt. Diablo Unified School District (the district) concerning the “facilities costs” for which the district may properly charge the charter school. Under regulations adopted by the State Board of Education (the state board), charter schools are responsible for ongoing operations and maintenance at facilities they use; school districts are responsible for major maintenance and capital improvements; and a district

1 may charge a charter school a pro rata share of its “facilities costs.” (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 5, 1 §§ 11969.4, 11969.7.) The regulations require a district to tabulate certain districtwide “facilities costs” and derive a per-square-foot amount to charge charter schools in the district. A district may include in “facilities costs” funds spent on “plant maintenance and operations” and funds contributed to specified accounts, such as its ongoing and major maintenance account (OMM account), but may not include “any costs that are paid by the charter school, including . . . costs associated with ongoing operations and maintenance.” (§ 11969.7.) The parties here originally disputed whether the district may include in chargeable “facilities costs” general fund revenues contributed by the district to its OMM account and disbursed from that account to pay costs for “maintenance.” For the first year at issue, the charter school contended that its pro rata share of facilities costs, excluding maintenance costs paid with funds from the OMM account, was $27,000; the district’s calculations, including these costs, yielded a pro rata share of $309,000. 2 The difference between these two was the dispute raised by the pleadings and briefed by the parties; however, the trial court sua sponte adopted an unprecedented view of the regulation advanced by neither party. It held that neither the costs of maintenance nor of operations should be excluded, so that “facilities costs” includes all districtwide costs paid by a district for plant maintenance and operations, even if the funds did not pass through the OMM account, and even if a charter school itself pays the costs of operations and maintenance at its own site. The trial court’s unprecedented view, now defended by the district and amici curiae, would

1All undesignated section references are to title 5 of the California Code of Regulations. 2 All dollar amounts in this opinion are rounded to the nearest $1,000.

2 require the charter school in this case to pay all operations and maintenance costs of its own plus a share of such costs for all schools in the district, which would raise the charter school’s pro rata share for the first year at issue to more than $1.1 million. While the text of the regulations is ambiguous and, in part, self- contradictory, the regulatory history and the statutory scheme, as well as the common understanding of all parties prior to the trial court’s unsolicited ruling, make clear that the state board did not intend such a result. We conclude that a district must exclude from the facilities costs it charges a charter school all costs of both operations and ongoing maintenance if the charter school pays those costs for its own premises. We shall therefore reverse the judgment. Factual and Procedural History 1. Statutory and Regulatory History a. The Governing Statute “The Legislature adopted the Charter Schools Act of 1992 ([Ed. Code,] § 47600 et seq. . . .) to ‘provide opportunities for teachers, parents, pupils, and community members to establish and maintain schools that operate independently from the existing school district structure . . . .’ ” (California School Boards Assn. v. State Bd. of Education (2010) 191 Cal.App.4th 530, 540 (CSBA), quoting Ed. Code, § 47601.) Section 47614, as enacted in 1998, required a district to “permit a charter school to use, at no charge, [certain unused] facilities . . . provided the charter school shall be responsible for reasonable maintenance of those facilities.” (Stats. 1998, ch. 34, § 15.) In 2000, the voters “changed this limited obligation of a school district” by adopting Proposition 39, which “expressed the intent ‘that public school facilities should be shared fairly among all public school pupils, including

3 those in charter schools.’ ” (CSBA, supra, 191 Cal.App.4th at p. 41, quoting Ed. Code, § 47614, subd. (a).) Section 47614 now requires a district to “make available, to each charter school operating in the . . . district,” facilities sufficient to accommodate the school’s students “in conditions reasonably equivalent to those in . . . other public schools of the district.” (Ed. Code, § 47614, subd. (b).) The facilities shall be “furnished, and equipped, and shall remain the property of the school district.” (Ibid.) The district “may charge the charter school a pro rata share (based on the ratio of space allocated . . . to the charter school divided by the total space of the district) of those school district facilities costs which the school district pays for with unrestricted general fund revenues”; the school “shall not be otherwise charged for use of the facilities.” (Id., subd. (b)(1).) The statute directs the Department of Education to propose, and authorizes the state board to adopt, implementing regulations—including one to define such terms as “facilities costs.” (Id., subd. (b)(6).) b. The Original 2002 Regulations In 2002, the state board adopted implementing regulations. (See former §§ 11969.1–11969.10.) Section 11969.4, titled “Operations and Maintenance,” set forth these basic principles in terms that remain in effect: “The ongoing operations and maintenance of facilities and furnishings and equipment is the responsibility of the charter school. . . . [T]he replacement of furnishings and equipment supplied by the school district in accordance with [its] schedules and practices, shall remain the responsibility of the school district. . . .” (§ 11969.4.) Although not explicitly defining “facilities costs,” the original version of section 11969.7, titled “Charges for Facilities Costs,” specified costs to be included, and provided: “The pro rata share amount shall not exceed (1) a per-square-foot amount equal to those school district facilities costs that the

4 school district pays for with unrestricted general fund revenues, as described [in] the California School Accounting Manual [(accounting manual)], divided by the total space of the school district times (2) the amount of space allocated by the school district to the charter school. [¶] (a) For purposes of this section, facilities costs includes those costs associated with facilities acquisition and construction and facilities rents and leases, as defined [in the accounting manual].

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Bluebook (online)
Mt. Diablo Unified School Dist. v. Clayton Valley Charter High School, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mt-diablo-unified-school-dist-v-clayton-valley-charter-high-school-calctapp-2021.