*153 Opinion
Foothill Community College District on behalf of its governing board (hereafter “district”) appeals from a judgment the petition for a writ of mandate to reinstate Ruth M. Durst, a member of the California School Employees Association (hereafter collectively “Durst”). The district contends that the court below erred in concluding that certain language in the district’s handbook was vague and uncertain, and that Durst had acted in exercise of her First Amendment free speech rights. We have concluded that the judgment must be affirmed.
The court found 1 the pertinent facts as follows;
Durst, a permanent classified employee of the district, on May 18, 1973, was served with a letter notifying her that a recommendation for dismissal was being presented for “conduct unbecoming an employee in public service” as said cause for disciplinary action is set forth in paragraph V.C.l. (b)(8) in the district’s “Classified Staff Handbook.” She properly requested a hearing on the charges for dismissal against her. On May 23, 1973, by a vote of three-two, the district dismissed Durst.
The only basis for the above disciplinary action was that she “unethically and without authorization distributed to other district employees xeroxed copies of Dr. Roland K. Chase’s disciplinaiy letter 2 to Mr. Joel Godfus [j/c], which letter was intended for Mr. Goldfus’ permanent personnel file and to which . . . [she was] an information addressee and, moreover that . . . [she] distributed this letter with the intent of undermining and damaging the position of. . . [her] supervisor, Mr. Goldfus.”
Pursuant to the stated cause for disciplinary action, “conduct unbecoming an employee in public service,” the district was called upon to decide what was or was not conduct unbecoming an employee in public service without any legal standards or guidelines upon which to make such a decision.
*154 Durst received a copy of the letter to Goldfus without request and without any notice that she was to consider it as a confidential information. The distribution of a copy of a letter of reprimand addressed to her supervisor with whatever intent by Durst was a proper exercise of her constitutional rights. No compelling public interest in restraining Durst’s exercise of her constitutional rights appears. The district acted in excess of its jurisdiction in the premises, and its action further constituted an abuse of discretion.
The court then concluded that the cause for disciplinary action set forth in paragraph V.C.l.(b)(8) in the district’s “Classified Staff Handbook” was unconstitutionally vague and uncertain, that Durst’s conduct, regardless of intent, was protected by the First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, and that the district had abused its discretion and that Durst was entitled to reinstatement to her permanent classified position.
The district first argues that the standard “conduct unbecoming an employee in public service,” as set forth in its handbook, is not unconstitutionally vague if there is a proper relationship between the particular misconduct and the duties of the employee. The district cited authorities such as
Board of Education
v.
Swan,
The applicable standard was recently set forth by our Supreme Court in
Morrison
v.
State Board of Education,
We turn first to the question of whether the charge “conduct unbecoming an employee in public service” fails on its face to provide a standard. The district argues that here, as in
Perea,
and other authorities cited, the required certainty may be provided by the common knowledge of members of the particular vocation when the regulation does not itself contain specific standards. This contention, however, is without merit in
*155
the instant case since the
category of employees
in public service is
far too broad
to provide any particular guidelines. In
Perea, Orlandi
and
Gee,
the regulation pertained to a particular vocation, police officers. Durst here was employed as a public information specialist or news writer. Morrison recognized that the conduct of one kind of public employee, such as an auditor, could be held to a different standard than a publicly employed custodian or bus driver (Morrison,
supra;
cf.
Nightingale
v.
State Personnel Board,
The instant case is also significantly different from
Arnett
v.
Kennedy,
While arguably, in the present case, any vagueness, inherent in the rule was, as in
Arnett,
born of the necessity of broad application of a uniform rule to the large population of district employees, the rule does not create a standard of conduct that is capable of objective interpretation by the district employees who must abide by it, the district officials who must enforce it, and by any judicial or administrative tribunal that might be called upon to review any disciplinary proceeding. The “root of the vagueness doctrine is a rough idea of fairness” (Colten v.
Kentucky,
On its face, the rule proscribes conduct that is “unbecoming an employee in the public service.” It is obvious that any apparent *156 limitation on the employee’s conduct through the use of this qualifying term is illusory, for “unbecoming” has no inherent, objective content from which ascertainable standards defining the proscribed conduct can be fashioned. Like beauty, its content exists only in the eye of the beholder. The subjectivity implicit in the language of the rule permits district officials to enforce the rule with unfettered discretion, and it is precisely this potential for arbitrary enforcement which is abhorrent to the due process clause. Further, where, as here, a rule contains no ascertainable standards for enforcement, administrative and judicial review can be only a meaningless gesture. There is simply no benchmark against which the validity of the application of the rule in any particular disciplinary action can be tested.
Moreover, because this vague rule does abut on sensitive First Amendment freedoms, it may operate to chill the exercise of those freedoms (Grayned v.
City of Rockford,
As stated in
Keyishian
v.
Board of Regents,
*157
As stated in
Pickering
v.
Board of Education,
Thus, the rule at issue conforms to classic tests of vagueness on its face (seeAmsterdam,
The
Void-For-VaguenessDoctrine(1960) 109 U.Pa.L.Rev. 67, 76). We note that the same conclusion was recently reached by the Seventh Circuit in
Bence
v.
Breier,
The district next contends that the trial court erred in concluding as a matter of law that Burst’s distribution of her copy of the letter was protected by the First Amendment regardless of her intent. We think, however, that the court below properly concluded that the intent or motive of which a constitutionally protected act is done is not a proper subject of inquiry and does not destroy the protected right. (Cf.
National etc. Mfg. Co.
v.
Producers R. Co.,
We turn next to the requirement of the relationship between the prohibited conduct and Burst’s fitness to perform the duties required by her position as a public information officer or news writer. The record indicates that Burst was not charged with any conduct allegedly detrimental to the operation of the district’s schools. As recently stated by our Supreme Court in
Adcock
v.
Board of Education,
A governmental agency seeking to impose restrictions on the exercise of an employee’s constitutional rights must demonstrate that; (1) the government’s restraint rationally relates to enhancement of the public service; (2) the benefits that the public gains by this restriction outweigh the resulting impairment of the constitutional right; and (3) no alternatives less subversive to the constitutional right are available
(Bagley
v.
Washington Township Hospital Dist.,
With these rules in mind we proceed to examine Durst’s actions in distributing the letter reprimanding her supervisor. The letter pertained to an incident involving Durst and a guest in the office. She
*159
recéived a copy of the letter without request or without any indication that the matter was to be treated as confidential. As the trial court indicated, the district made no attempt to show any impairment or disruption of its function. Thus, the instant case is distinguishable from
Johnson
v.
County of Santa Clara,
The judgment is affirmed.
Kane, J., and Rouse, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied October 24, 1975, and appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied November 20, 1975.
Notes
The instant case was decided on April 26, 1974, about a month after
Strumsky
v.
San Diego County Employees Retirement Assn.,
The letter severely reprimanded Goldfus for his rude and abusive conduct toward Durst in the presence of a guest in the office.
