— This аction for damages was brought by plaintiff, superintendent of defendant school district, against the district, three trustees, the county superintendent of schools and the district attorney. A demurrer to the complaint was sustained without leave to amend, and plaintiff has appealed from the ensuing judgment.
The Gompladnt Against the School District
It is alleged in substance against the district that the three trustees, constituting a majority of the board and acting within the scope of their official duties, maliciously engaged in a course of conduct for the purpose of discrediting plaintiff’s reputation and forcing her out of her position. The asserted conduct of the trustees consisted primarily of disparaging statements made by them concerning plaintiff to various persons including district employees attending secret meetings, newspaper reporters and members of the public to the effect that she was dictatorial, operated a “rubber stamp board,” was overpaid, suppressed facts from the board, tampered with minutes of board meetings, received “kickbacks” from district employees, used school employees and school time to engage in political campaigns, engaged in “shady dealings” and “cleaned up” on business transactions involving the district, *229 and that a grand jury investigаtion was being made of plaintiff concerning discrepancies in construction funds. It is further alleged that the conduct of the trustees constituted a repudiation by the district of plaintiff’s contract and so maligned her reputation and integrity as to prevent her from performing her duties.
In
Muskopf
v.
Corning Hospital District, ante,
p. 211 [
The immunity of the agency from liability for discretionary conduct of its officials, however, is not coextensive with the immunity of the officials in all instances. (See 3 Davis, Administrative Law Treatise (1958), 482-505, 542-544; 2 Harper and James, The Lаw of Torts, 1640-1642, 1657-1665; Hall and Wigmore, Compensation for Property Destroyed to Stop the Spread of a Conflagration (1907), 1 111. L.Rev. 501, 514 et seq.) The danger of deterring official action is relevant to the issue of liability of a public body but is not decisive of that issue. It is unlikely that officials ( would be as adversely affected in the perfоrmance of their-duties by the fear of liability on the part of their employing/ *230 agency as by the fear of personal liability. The community benefits from official action taken without fear of personal liability, and it would be unjust in some circumstances to require an individual injured by official wrongdoing to bear the burden of his loss rather than distributе it throughout the community. Although it may not be possible to set forth a definitive rule which would determine in every instance whether a governmental agency is liable for discretionary acts of its officials, various factors furnish a means of deciding whether the agency in a particular case should have immunity, such as the importance to the public of the function involved, the extent to which governmental liability might impair free exercise of the function, and the availability to individuals affected of remedies other than tort suits for damages.
With respect to the complaint against the district, the acts alleged, insofar as they camе within the scope of authority of the trustees, were of a discretionary character. As we shall see in discussing the complaint against the individual defendants, the trustees were immune as to such acts. There is a vital public interest in securing free and independent judgment of school trustees in dealing with personnel prоblems, and trustees, being responsible for the fiscal well-being of their districts, would be especially sensitive to the financial consequences of suits for damages against the districts. It is also significant that, without holding a school district liable in tort for acts like those complained of, an employee from the outset hаs protection, in the form of mandamus or recovery for breach of contract, against consequences which would be among the most harmful and tangible, i.e., wrongful dismissal or suspension.
(Hancock
v.
Board of Education,
The district is immune from tort liability for the 1 alleged acts of the trustees within the scope of their authority, and familiar principles of agency preclude its liability fоr acts outside the scope of their authority. Accordingly, the complaint does not state a cause of action in tort against the district.
A school district, however, may be liable for breach of contract where its governing body, acting as such and complying with required formalities, either expressly repudiates
*231
a contract or does some act which under generally accepted principles of law prevents the performance of the other contracting party. (Ed. Code, §§ 1006, 2402;
Hancock
v.
Board of Education,
Where, as here, thе alleged repudiation or prevention of performance arises out of asserted affirmative action of trustees, the district is not liable unless it appears that they have acted as a board and have complied with all the formalities required by law. Section 2204 of the Education Code provides, ‘1 The governing board of any school district shall: . . . (b) Transact its business at regular or special meetings called for the purpose . . . ,” and section 2204.2 provides, “No action authorized or required by law shall be taken by the governing board of a school district except in a meeting open to the public.” In the analogous case of
Barnhardt
v.
Gray,
In the absence of compliance with the statutory requirements there was no authority for the acts complained of by plaintiff insofar as concerns the alleged breach of contract, and it is obvious that the district cannot properly be held liable fоr acts which have not been duly authorized. *232 This is not a ease of failure on the part of the district to take affirmative action called for by the contract; in the event of such a breach, of course, the lack of formal action by the board would not preclude liability on the part of the district. Under the circumstances before us the conduct of the three trustees must be treated as conduct by unauthorized third persons.
The judgment must be affirmed with respect to plaintiff’s action against the district.
The Complaint Against the Trustees
It is alleged that the three trustees maliciously engaged in a course of conduct which was designed to obtain the removаl of plaintiff from her position and resulted in impairing her reputation and professional standing. In this connection the complaint incorporates by reference the allegations against the district with respect to disparaging statements made by the trustees concerning plaintiff, and it is further alleged that for thе purposes of maligning her and causing her dismissal the trustees asked questions of various persons regarding her fitness and discussed the matter with the district attorney and the county superintendent of schools.
A determination of whether the complaint states a cause of action against the trustees requires considerаtion of rules relating to liability for defamation and interference with contract.
An action will lie for the intentional interference by a third person with a contractual relationship either by unlawful means or by means otherwise lawful when there is a lack of sufficient justification.
(Fifield Manor
v.
Finston,
*233
Defamation may be either libel or slander. (See Civ. Code, §§ 44, 45, 46.)
2
The burden of proof with respect to the issue of truth or falsity is on the defendant.
(Draper
v.
Heilman Com. Trust & Sav. Bank,
The rule is settled, as pointed out above, that governmental officials are not personally liable for discretionary acts within the scope of their authority, and this rule applies not only to аcts essential to the accomplishment of the main purposes for which the office was created but also to acts which, although only incidental and collateral, serve to promote those purposes.
(White
v.
Towers,
A different situation, however, is presented by the allegations that the trustees made statements to various persons inсluding newspaper reporters and members of the public to the effect that plaintiff suppressed facts from the board, tampered with minutes of board meetings, received “kickbacks” from district employees, engaged in “shady dealings” and “cleaned up” on business transactions involving the district.
False statements оf this type are clearly defamatory within the meaning of sections 45 and 46 of the Civil Code, and they would obviously make it difficult and burdensome for plaintiff to perform her contractual obligations. The statements allegedly made to the press and to members of the public were not confined to reports of chаrges that were being
made; they purported to be statements of fact and were be-yond the scope of the trustees’ powers. In making these statements the three trustees were not within the immunity rule, and a cause of action is stated against them. The case of
Hardy
v.
Vial,
Complaint Against the District Attorney and the County Superintendent of Schools
It is alleged that, maliciously and for the purpose of maligning plaintiff and causing her dismissal, the district attorney and the county superintendent of schools authorized members of their staffs to make investigations of plaintiff’s fitness for her position, and that in the course of these investigations statements wеre made to various members of the public which plaintiff asserts were defamatory. The district attorney has a duty to conduct all prosecutions for public *235 offenses (Gov. Code, § 26500) and to give Ms opinion to county and district officers on matters relating to their offices (Gov. Code, § 26520). The county superintendent has power to investigate the acts of district superintendents. (Ed. Code, §352, subds. (a) and (b).) It is clear that the conduct of these defendants was within the immunity rule insofar as they investigated and discussed plaintiff’s fitness with each other and with the trustees. They cannot claim immunity insofar as they made or caused to be made defamatory statemеnts concerning plaintiff to members of the public which were not merely reports of official action but instead purported to be statements of fact within their personal knowledge.
The complaint, however, is defective in that it is not alleged that any of the statements which can be said to be defamatory were made at the direction of the district attorney or the county superintendent. Moreover, the complaint does not allege either the specific words or the substance of statements attributed to the district attorney but instead merely alleges the conclusions of the pleader that statements were made which “intimated and suggested” that plaintiff had done certain wrongful things. As we have seen, the demurrer was sustained without leave to amend. Plaintiff states that the defects in the complaint relating to these two defendants can be cured by amendment, and she should be given an opportunity to revise her pleading. In this connection it should be noted that the complaint contains much immaterial matter which should be eliminated in the event of amendment.
The judgment is affirmed as to the district and reversed as to the individual defendants.
Traynor, J., Schauer, J., MoComb, J., Peters, J., White, J., "and Booling, J., concurred.
Respondents’ petition for a-rehеaring was denied February 21, 1961.
Notes
References to the Education Code are to its provisions as they existed prior to its recodification in 1959.
It does not appear whether there has been compliance with the statutory requirement (Code Civ. Proc., § 830) that, before a summons is issued in an action for libel or slander, thе plaintiff must file a written undertaking in the sum of $500. The filing of the undertaking is not necessary to vest jurisdiction in the first instance, the defendant may waive it, and, even after a motion has been made to dismiss for lack of a proper undertaking, the court has power to permit the filing and may then overrule the motion. (See
Kennaley
v.
Superior Court,
43 Cal.Sd 512, 515 [
