Opinion
Plaintiff was reemployed as superintendent of defendant high school district for a four-year term commencing July 1, 1963. The statute (Ed. Code, § 938) provides that a district superintendеnt is deemed reelected for a new term of like duration unless given written notice, at least six months before expiration of his term, of the school board’s detеrmination not to reemploy him. During its regular meeting September 19, 1966, the board went into executive session to consider a student disciplinary matter which was listed, without morе detail, on the agenda. When this matter was concluded, the board continued in executive session to consider the reemployment of plaintiff. He was asked to and did leave the meeting, at which the board voted three to two not to reemploy him. He was called back to the meeting, informed of the action, and asked whether he wanted the action made a matter of record when the board reconvened in public meeting. He said he did not want the decision madе public until he could consult with his attorney. At the regular meeting of November 21, 1966, the board again went into executive session, under like circumstances, to determine his rеquest for further consideration of his reemployment. Again the vote was three to two against reemployment. Plaintiff was called back into the meeting, informed оf the action, and asked whether he wanted the action announced in public meeting. He again asked that such notice be withheld until he consulted his attorney. Again the board honored his request by resuming and concluding its public meeting without such announcement. At the next scheduled meeting following each of these, minutes prepаred by plaintiff and adopted by the board failed to mention the decision not to reemploy plaintiff. On December 2, 1966, written notice of the determination not to rehire plaintiff was delivered to him. At the regular meeting of March 1, 1967, the board voted to amend its formal minutes of the September 19 meeting to show the action takеn concerning plaintiff. At the regular meeting of March 20, 1967, the minutes of November 21, 1966 were similarly amended to show reconsideration of the determination not to reemploy plaintiff. This action *991 for declaratory relief and for writ of mandate was filed June 22, 1967. After trial by the court, judgment was entered for defendants. Plaintiff appeаls.
There is substantial evidence to support the finding that the board in fact voted, at the September 19 meeting, not to reemploy plaintiff. There is conflicting evidеnce, but the conflicts were resolved by the trial court and will not be reviewed here.
Nor do we find merit in appellant’s contention that the actions of September 19 and November 21 are invalid because in violation of the statutory requirement (Ed. Code, § 966). That section requires only that all board meetings be public “[e]xcеpt as provided in Section 54957 of the Government Code.” The latter section provides that the chapter in which it appears (commonly called the “Brown Act”) does not prevent the board “from holding executive sessions ... to consider the appointment, employment or dismissal of a public officer or employee.”
Appellant, however, argues that section 54957 permits the board only to “consider,” and not to act upon, personnel matters in executive sеssion. Thus he argues that, even if it be granted that the board could consider his reemployment in executive session, it exceeded its power when it “acted” by adоpting a motion in the same session, and the action is thus invalid. We cannot agree.
In 1962, the Attorney General held that section 54957, in authorizing executive sessions to “cоnsider” personnel matters, necessarily included the right to act thereon in like session (
The opiniоns of the Attorney General, of course, are riot binding upon
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the courts. They are, however, entitled to much weight
(Cal. State Employees Assn.
v.
Trustees of Cal. State Colleges,
We reject appellant’s contention that the statute requires publication of a detailed agenda specifying termination of his contract as a matter to be considered at the executive session.
*
As pointed out in a 1959 opinion (
We find it significant that the Legislature has refrained from specific provision that failure to comply with section 966, subdivision (b) does, of itself, void the action taken. Rather, it amended the Brown Act in 1961 to provide criminal penalties for violation (Gov. Code, § 54959). This choice of an enforcement remedy appears to have been as an alternative to the view now urged by appellant.
Another section (Ed. Code, § 1002.5), however, does not specifically except executive sessions from its operation. It provides that “[e]very official actiоn taken by the governing board of every school district shall be affirmed by a formal vote . . . and [the board] . . . shall keep minutes of its meetings, and shall maintain a journal ... in which shаll be recorded every official act taken.” We need not determine whether section 1002.5 is mandatory or directory, nor whether the amended public minutes of March 1 and March 20 were effective and timely, because the trial court found that appellant was estopped to rely upon the absence of formal minutes. Appellant, as superintendent, was secretary of the board, and was specifically charged with taking or causing to be taken minutes of its meetings. Hе was informed before each of the two executive sessions that renewal of his contract was to be considered, yet he failed to ask any member to prepare minutes. More important, he was informed following each such session of the action taken, yet failed to indicate it in the formal minutes, and affirmаtively requested that no public record be made. This
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evidence amply supports the finding of estoppel. When one is under a duty to speak, and has an opportunity to do so, knowing the circumstances require it, an estoppel may arise from his' silence
(Bruce
v.
Jefferson Union High Sch. Dist.,
Judgment affirmed.
Brown (H. C.), J., and Caldecott, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied August 27, 1971, and appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied September 22, 1971.
Notes
As to a matter which must be considered at a public session, see
Carlson
v.
Paradise Unified Sch. Dist., ante,
p. 196 [
