This is an appeal from an order granting respondents’ petition for a writ of mandamus requiring appellants to pay to each of respondents the sum of $612.
The facts so far as material are:
Petitioners were improperly refused employment in the department of water and power for 72 working days and, after reinstatement to their positions, each sought through a writ of mandate to recover from the appellants the sum of $612.
This is the sole question necessary for us to determine:
Is a writ of mandate, where reinstatement is not sought, a proper remedy for recovery of wages due a municipal employee?
This question must be answered in the negative. The well-recognized procedure, where a right to recover salary is asserted and denied by respondents, is by ordinary suit at law for the salary.
(Butler
v.
City of Plainfield,
5 N. J. Misc. 170 [
Therefore, since petitioners could have filed suit in the municipal court to recover the amount of salary alleged to be due them, they had a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy at law. This is equally convenient, beneficial and effective as a proceeding by
mandamus,
which therefore is not available to them.
(Black
v.
City of Santa Monica,
13 Cal. App. (2d) 4 [
Por the foregoing reasons the judgment is reversed, with directions to ■ the trial court to enter judgment denying the petition for a writ of mandate.
Grail, P. J., and Wood, J., concurred.
A petition by respondents to have the cause heard in the Supreme Court, after judgment in the District Court of Appeal, was denied by the Supreme Court on September 21, 1936.
