Opinion
Petitioner Ronald W. Faulkner sought a writ of mandate (pursuant to Code Civ. Proc., § 1094.5) to compel the respondent Public Employees’ Retirement System to afford him a hearing on his appeal from an adverse determination of his claim for disability retirement benefits. The trial court denied the writ; petitioner appeals; we reverse.
Petitioner was employed by the City of Pomona as a police officer and sustainеd an injury during the course of his employment in 1966. On February 22, 1973, petitioner applied for disability retirement benefits. On June 12, 1973, he was advised by letter from respondent that his application for benefits had been denied, and that he had 30 days in which to appeal the decision. On or about June 26, 1973, petitioner sought legal representation by attorneys with respect to his appeal, taking the letter of denial to their office on thаt date.
On July 16, 1973, respondent received from petitioner’s counsel a request for a hearing on petitioner’s appeal. On July 20, 1973, respondent denied this request on the ground that the request for hearing had not been filed in timely fashion, i.e., within the 30-day period specified in the California Administrative Code, title 2, chapter 2, subchapter 1, article 2, section 555.1. Petitioner then sought the writ of mandate.
Petitioner’s attorneys filed the affidаvit of an attorney in support of the mandate petition. In it, the affiant declared that during May and June 1973 he had been in the process of dissolving a prior legal partnership *734 and forming a new partnership; cases being handled by the old partnership were being transferred to the new one. The new firm had hired employees who were charged with affecting the transition, organizing the office and setting up an adequate calendaring system. “Through total inadvertence” (as characterized by declarant) the deadline for filing the Faulkner appeal was missed by four days, because it was not calendared properly. The еrror was discovered on July 15, 1973, and a letter sent immediately to respondent requesting the hearing on the appeal. Neither the retirement system nor the trial court offered petitioner Faulkner any relief fоr the calendaring error made by his attorneys.
We note that a denial of retirement disability benefits affects a fundamental, vested right
(Strumsky
v.
San Diego County Employees Retirement System,
The legislative objective in establishing the state retirement system in California is set forth in Government Code section 20001, which provides: “The purpose of this part is to effect economy and efficiеncy in the public service by providing a means whereby employees who become superannuated or otherwise incapacitated may, without hardship or prejudice, be replaced by more capable employees, and to that end provide a retirement system consisting of retirement compensation and death benefits.”
In
Phillipson
v.
Board of Administration,
Chаpter 2 of part 3 (Gov. Code) deals with the administration of the retirement system, creating a board of administration which may *735 delegate authority to an executive officer to perform any act within the power of the board to perform, including the rule-making function. (Gov. Code, § 20000 et seq.)
Certain administrative regulations of the system are contained in the California Administrative Code, title 2, Public Employees’ Retirement System, chapter 2, Board of Administration of Public Employees’ Retirement System, including the regulations which concern us here; “Subchapter 1. Employees’ Retirement System Regulations. Article 2. Administration.”
Section 555 provides that “The Executive Officer is hereby authorized and empowered to act on any application . . . retirement for disability and service . .. and to fix and authorize the payment of any ... benefit to which such applicаnt may be found to be entitled. The Executive Officer may refer the question of an applicant’s entitlement to any . . . benefit to a hearing officer for hearing.
“§ 555.1. Right of Appeal. Any applicant dissatisfied with the аction of the Executive Officer on his application, other than his referral of the matter for hearing, may appeal such action to the Board by filing a written notice of such appeal at thе offices of the Board within thirty days of the date of the mailing to him by the Executive Officer, at his most recent address of record, of notice of the action and right of appeal.
“§ 555.2. Statement of Issues. Any applicant filing an appeal shall be entitled to a hearing, and upon the filing of an appeal in accordance with these rules, or upon the Executive Officer’s referral of any question for hearing, the Executive Officer shall execute a statement of issues. Such action of the Executive Officer shall not preclude the Board from recalling the proceedings for its review or hearing.”
It appears that the respondent system based its denial of petitioner’s request for a hearing on section 555.1, interpreting the provision “within thirty days” as a jurisdictional limitation on the right to appeal, which, if not strictly complied with, ended the matter of retirement benefits for petitioner for all time. The Attorney General urges us to adopt this interpretation. We decline to do so.
The legislative directive of Government Code sectiоn 20001 is that the retirement system is to be administered “without hardship or prejudice” and to place the interpretation urged by the respondent on section 555.1
*736
would, in our view, constitute the imposition of hardship and the еxercise of prejudice with respect to petitioner’s rights. Both the petitioner and the respondent analogize rights created by the retirement system to those contained in the Unemployment Insurance Code, which contains a provision enabling the filing of late appeals for good cause shown (Unemp. Ins. Code, § 1328). That code is, like the retirement statute, subject to liberal construction. In
Gibson
v.
Unemployment Ins. Appeals Bd., 9
Cal.3d 494, 499 [
The regulatiоns under consideration herein are distinguishable from the statutory scheme set forth in the Unemployment Insurance Code in that nowhere within the retirement regulations is there a provision allowing the filing of a late aрpeal under any circumstances. We observe, however, that section 555.2 appears to give to the executive officer or to the board of administration, itself, discretionary power to refеr a matter for hearing at any time and not just when an appeal has been filed. This would negate the contention that the regulations contain an iron-clad statute of limitations for persons appealing pursuant to section 555.1. The legislative attitude of liberality toward the rights of citizens to file late appeals is reflected in the enactment of Government Code sections 911.2, 911.4 and 946.6, which provide for late filing with respect to tort claims against a governmental entity.
We conclude, therefore, that the absence in the state retirement system regulations of a specific provision enabling an applicant for retirement benefits to file a late appeal,, for good cause shown, does not preclude the filing of such an appeal.
The Attorney General contends that, even if we reject the intеrpretation of section 555.1 et seq., as constituting a statute of limitations, the petitioner in the instant case did not make an adequate showing of “good cause” justifying the filing of the late appeal.
*737
A number of сases have been decided in this area, in the context of the Unemployment Insurance Code.
(Fermin
v.
Department of Employment,
The Attorney General seeks to distinguish Gibson, supra, 9 Cal.3d, and Flores, supra, 30 Cal.App.3d, on the ground that both involved late filings by persons represented by legal aid societies, and suggests that private law firms “operating for profit” should be held to a differеnt standard. It is further asserted in the instant case, that petitioner’s counsel alleged only that a mistake had occurred for which they were responsible and this did not provide a sufficient factual justification for the error made.
In
Gibson, supra, 9
Cal.3d at page 499 (fn. 8), the California Supreme Court cites with approval the language contained in
Cal. Portland Cement Co.
v.
Cal. Unemp. Ins. Appeals Board,
We disagree with respondent’s contention, and the trial court’s conclusion, that no excuse was offered by petitioner’s counsel for the four-day delay undеr consideration here. The affidavit set forth an account of extraordinary circumstances at a law firm, i.e., a transition in a partnership with new personnel. Considering the minimal delay and the lack of prejudice to the respondent, in contrast to the impact that the denial of the right to appeal possibly would have on the petitioner, we reverse the trial court’s denial of mandate.
Judgment reversеd. The cause is remanded with directions to issue mandate to compel respondent board to hear petitioner’s appeal.
Kingsley, J., and Dunn, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied May 15, 1975, and respondent’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied June 26, 1975.
