Standard Elementary School District v. Healy

79 P.2d 123, 26 Cal. App. 2d 172
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 27, 1938
DocketCiv. No. 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 79 P.2d 123 (Standard Elementary School District v. Healy) 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
Standard Elementary School District v. Healy, 79 P.2d 123, 26 Cal. App. 2d 172 (Cal. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

JENNINGS, J.

The appeal herein has been taken by the plaintiff from a judgment dismissing the action after a demurrer interposed by defendants to the first amended complaint had been sustained without leave to amend. The question here presented, therefore, involves a consideration of the allegations contained in the first amended complaint for the purpose of determining whether or not it may properly be declared that the pleading fails to state facts which are sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

The pertinent and material facts which are stated in the first amended complaint are as follows: The plaintiff is an elementary school district of Kern County organized under the laws of the state of California. Defendant Healy is the duly elected, qualified, and acting superintendent of schools of Kern County. The defendant Katherine Aslin was employed as a teacher by the board of trustees of the plaintiff district for the school year 1934WL935 at a salary of $180 per month. On May 24, 1935, said teacher voluntarily, intentionally, and for her own convenience presented to the board of trustees of plaintiff district a request in writing that she be granted a leave of absence for the school year 1935-1936. Such request was in the following language:

‘1 Having received notice of employment for the year 1935-1936, I wish to ask for a leave of absence from my work for one year.
‘ ‘ If this leave is granted to me, it is with the understanding that in September, 1936, I may return to my work, without my tenure having been in any way affected, and with my [175]*175salary equaling that of the teachers who are now on the same salary schedule as I.”

Thereafter the board of trustees granted the request for leave of absence and the said defendant served no part of the school year covered by the leave of absence. Because of the fact that said defendant performed no service during the school year the board of trustees employed another teacher at a salary of $155 per month. In May, 1936, the defendant, Katherine Aslin, made a claim upon the plaintiff school district for the sum of $75, which claim was rejected by the board of trustees on May 22, 1936. On June 17, 1936, Katherine Aslin filed a purported appeal of her claim and its rejection with the superintendent of public instruction of the state of California. On August 13, 1936, the last-mentioned official purported to decide that defendant, Katherine Aslin, was entitled to payment of her claim for $75 and notified defendant Healy of his decision. The board of trustees of plaintiff district has refused and continues to refuse to pay said claim and defendant Healy, as superintendent of schools of Kern County has informed plaintiff that he will issue his requisition in favor of defendant Katherine Aslin for the sum of $75 in payment of said claim and plaintiff believes that unless restrained he will do so. Plaintiff is not withholding any salary whatsoever from the defendant school teacher and the purported appeal to the state superintendent of public instruction was improper and his purported decision thereon was void and the payment of said claim would amount to an unlawful expenditure of public moneys. For this reason defendant Healy has no right, authority, or jurisdiction to issue a requisition in payment of the claim. The pleading concludes with a prayer that it be decreed that the defendant Aslin has no claim for compensation against plaintiff, that defendant Healy be ordered not to pay the sum of $75 or any other sum to defendant Aslin and that defendant Healy be restrained and enjoined from paying the said claim.

It will be noted that the above-described allegations contain no suggestion of the basis for the claim which the teacher made upon the school district. However, in the statement of facts which is contained in plaintiff’s opening brief it is stated that the amount of the claim represented the difference between the salary which Katherine Aslin received [176]*176during the school year of 1934^1935 and the amount which was paid to the teacher who was employed to substitute for her during the school year of 1935-1936, when she was absent on leave. It is immediately apparent that the sum of $75 did not constitute the full amount of such difference since the salary paid to Katherine Aslin was $180 per month whereas the substitute received $155 per month. This discrepancy is explained in the brief filed by defendants by the statement that Katherine Aslin voluntarily limited her demand to the sum specified in her claim. Since it is thus agreed by all parties to this appeal that the amount for which the claim was made represented the difference in the amount of salary paid to the two teachers and that the presentation of the claim was based on the contention of the defendant Aslin that she was entitled to receive such difference, no point will here be made of the fact that the amended complaint contains no showing of the basis for making the claim and, for the purposes of this opinion, it will be assumed that the pleading shows on its face that the claim was made for the reason indicated.

The defendants contended in support of the demurrer filed by them to the complaint and they here contend in support of the judgment which was rendered upon the sustaining of their demurrer without leave to amend that the pleading fails to state a cause of action for the issuance of an injunction. The basis for this contention is found in the provisions of section 5.760 and section 5.761 of the California School Code. The former section is entitled “Right of Appeal. Investigation” and provides as follows:

“Any teacher whose salary is withheld may appeal to the superintendent of public instruction who shall thereupon require the superintendent of schools to investigate the matter and present the facts thereof to him. ’ ’

The latter is entitled “Judgment and its Enforcement” and contains the following language:

“The judgment of the superintendent of public instruction shall be final, and upon receiving it the superintendent of schools, if the judgment is in favor of the teacher, shall, in case the trustees refuse to issue an order for said withheld salary, issue his requisition in favor of said teacher. ’ ’

It is argued that since the pleading shows on its face that the defendant teacher upon the denial of her claim by the [177]*177board of trustees of the plaintiff school district appealed to the state superintendent of instruction, who rendered judgment in favor of the teacher and since section 5.761 of the School Code provides that such judgment shall be final and on receipt thereof the superintendent of schools shall, in ease of refusal by the trustees to issue an order for payment of the salary withheld, issue his requisition in favor of the teacher, it is apparent that no cause of action for injunctive relief against the defendant superintendent of schools is stated for the reason that he is only proposing to perform the duty which is clearly imposed upon him by the last-mentioned statute.

The correctness of the contention thus advanced depends on the determination of whether or not the claim made by the defendant Katherine Aslin is the kind of claim contemplated by section 5.760 of the School Code as to which it is declared by the immediately following section of said code that the judgment of the superintendent of public instruction shall be final.

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Related

Hunt v. Alum Rock Union Elementary School District
7 Cal. App. 3d 612 (California Court of Appeal, 1970)
State Ex Rel. West Virginia Board of Education v. Sims
81 S.E.2d 665 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1954)

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79 P.2d 123, 26 Cal. App. 2d 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-elementary-school-district-v-healy-calctapp-1938.