Williams v. Bagnelle

72 P. 408, 138 Cal. 699, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 753
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 27, 1903
DocketSac. No. 1005.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 72 P. 408 (Williams v. Bagnelle) 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
Williams v. Bagnelle, 72 P. 408, 138 Cal. 699, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 753 (Cal. 1903).

Opinions

LORIGAN, J.

From a judgment awarding plaintiff a peremptory writ of mandate against defendant, as superintendent of schools of Madera County, requiring her to draw a requisition in favor of plaintiff for a balance due him for salary as school-teacher, under a contract with the school trustees of Madera school district, the defendant appeals.

The school trustees had drawn their warrant in his favor for this balance, but defendant refused to issue a requisition upon it, and urges on this appeal, against the judgment,—1. That plaintiff is not entitled to invoke a writ of mandate, as he has a plain, speedy and adequate remedy at law by appeal to the state superintendent of public instruction from her *701 refusal; 2. That the contract to teach entered into between, plaintiff and the trustees was invalid; and 3. That the warrant of the trustees was not drawn in compliance with the school law, and was, therefore, void.

The first contention is based on section 1699 of the Political ' Code, which reads 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 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.”

If this section of the code could be considered as obligatory rather than permissive, still we cannot see that it has any application to the present case.

It must be considered and construed in its entirety, and the main inquiry is, When, and by whom, is the “salary withheld,” so that the appeal of the teacher may be taken to the superintendent of public instruction?

We think the section itself furnishes the answer, and that, when it speaks of a “withheld salary” it means a withholding, by the boa/rd of school trustees, of the original warrant, in favor of the teacher.

An analysis of the section we believe will make this apparent. The first portion of it provides, simply, that any teacher whose salary is withheld may appeal to the superintendent of public instruction. There is, in this portion of the section, no definition of a “withheld salary.” It simply confers the right of appeal.

The next portion provides for an investigation and presentation of facts to him by the county superintendent. This, deals solely with the presentation and submission of the evidence.

It is next provided that the superintendent of public instruction shall (on the facts) pronounce a final judgment, of which he advises the county superintendent, and the section, then declares that, “upon receiving it [the final judgment] the superintendent of schools, if the judgment is in favor of *702 the teacher, shall in case the trustees refuse to issue an order for said withheld salary issue his requisition in favor of said teacher.”

This last portion of the section clearly informs us that • “said withheld salary” results from, and consists of, the refusal of the trustees to issue their warrant in the teacher’s favor. It is only on such a withholding that the judgment can operate by the terms of the section, and certainly what constitutes the “withholding” mentioned in the opening clause of the section from which the teacher is given the right of appeal, must be determined by the relief upon final judgement to which he would be entitled. As the judgment by its terms is limited in its operation exclusively to a case “where the trustees refuse to issue an order for said withheld salary,” the right of appeal must also necessarily be limited to a case where- the salary is withheld by the trustees.

A fair construction of the statute seems to require a notice of the final judgment to be given to the trustees so that they may act in conformity with it, and issue their warrant, because a “refusal” presupposes a “demand,” and it is only on a refusal by the trustees that the county superintendent can act.

If the trustees obey the judgment and issue the warrant, the requisition of the superintendent is then drawn on the warrant they issue, not on account of the final judgment; i" they refuse, the requisition is then drawn by the superintendent by virtue of the final judgment without the warrant, but in either event the final judgment operates upon the salary withheld by the trustees, either to secure it to the teacher by the voluntary action of the trustees in harmony with the judgment, or by the requisition of the superintendent of schools on their refusal to comply with it.

If this is not the proper construction, then the teacher may appeal in all cases, no matter by whom his salary is withheld. It would be then necessary to appeal, not only when the trustees refuse to issue their order, but also when the superintendent of schools refuses his requisition on it, or the county auditor his warrant on such requisition, or when the treasurer refuses payment on the auditor’s warrant, because all these steps have to be taken by the teacher before he can *703 obtain ultimate payment. If he was required to appeal from the superintendent’s refusal, we would have this peculiar condition,—that under the section the superintendent would have to investigate the matter of his own refusal, present facts in a matter he had already prejudged, and he expected to do it impartially. His investigation and presentation of facts might be warped or colored in harmony with his judgment of refusal, and would hardly be the best or fairest evidence upon which the state superintendent should pronounce a final judgment.

We hardly think the legislature contemplated any such thing. On the other hand, as an intermediary between the teacher and trustees, he would be disinterested and free from bias.

Aside from this, if the auditor on the county superintendent’s requisition refuses to issue a warrant on the treasurer, or the treasurer refuses to pay it, if issued by the auditor, the salary of the teacher is withheld as effectually as it would he by the refusal of the superintendent to issue a requisition on the warrant of the trustees, and the section, if it is to apply, broadly, to all eases where the salary of any teacher is withheld, must apply in these cases.

And to so construe the section would be to place the teacher in the position of appealing to an officer who might render final judgment against him without the slightest benefit to accrue to him if the judgment should be in his favor, because, it goes without saying, that there is no provision of law whereby either the auditor or treasurer is required to pay any attention to the final judgment of the superintendent of public instruction. While we think the section plain as to when and by whom the teacher’s salary is withheld so as to afford the right of appeal to the teacher, and that it applies solely to a withholding by the school trustees, we have discussed the matter at this length on account of the persistence with which defendant insists that it applies in the present case .and to any withholding.

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Bluebook (online)
72 P. 408, 138 Cal. 699, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 753, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-bagnelle-cal-1903.