OPINION
The district court granted a writ of mandamus, directing the School Board of Jemez Mountain Independent School District No. 53, as successors in interest to the Rio Arriba County Board of Education, to hold a hearing with respect to the termination of the employment of Marie Ann Brown as. a teacher, and the board appeals.
This case, involving a controversy of long standing, is an outgrowth of the situation which culminated in our decision in Brown v. Romero,
Following our decision in the above case, the instant cause was filed in Rio Arriba ■County, and, after trial, the court found 'Mrs. Brown’s purported resignation was •not effective in that it was never accepted, that Mrs. Brown was not guilty of laches, .and that the present action was a continuation of the cause which was commenced as Brown v. Romero, supra. The trial court concluded that Mrs. Brown was a tenure teacher, that her tenure rights had been violated, and that the statute of limitations had not run. It was on the basis of these conclusions that the court ordered the board to hold a hearing.
The board asserts that Mrs. Brown is estopped to deny that she has had a liearing, because upon two occasions she had an opportunity for hearings before the state board and failed to present her case. It is claimed that she should have appealed to the district court from the non-action ■of the state board. This contention is somewhat incongruous in view of the facts, because Mrs. Brown did file her case in the district court (Brown v. Romero, supra) four days after the state board ordered a dismissal as to her requested hearing.
In Brown v. Romero, supra, we held that the state board had no jurisdiction, and that Mrs. Brown’s proper remedy was a mandamus to compel a hearing before the local board, which is exactly what is attempted to be done here. We fail to see how Mrs. Brown can be estopped in attempting to pursue a remedy which was specifically authorized by us.
The board then urges that the earlier case is res judicata, on the theory that the instant case is not an appeal taken within ten days from the action of the state board. What we have said above really disposes of this argument, as it is implicit in our decision in Brown v. Romero, supra, that we were of the opinion that the district court had jurisdiction to hear the instant action.
The board then disputes the findings of the trial court that Mrs. Brown was a tenure teacher. It is here claimed that Mrs. Brown failed to prove her professional qualifications as a tenure teacher. We note that this is the first time that her qualifications have been questioned, inasmuch as the trial court made no finding with respect thereto; contrariwise, the board made no request that Mrs. Brown did not have the requested qualifications. As we view the pleadings and the confused record, all of the parties treated the pleadings as raising the issue of tenure only because of the claimed lack of continuous service. Such a construction was placed upon the pleadings by the trial court, acquiesced in by the parties, and we will not disturb it. Laumbach v. Board of County Commissioners,
- The board then questions the trial court’s .-failure to find that Mrs. Brown effectively resigned in August of 1959, and that she therefore did not have the necessary consecutive service to qualify as a tenure teacher under the statute then in effect, § 1(b), ch. 71, L.1955.
A resignation by a teacher is in the nature of a termination of employment. However, it is ineffective without the necessary intent on the part of the incumbent to sever the relationship of employer and employee. Sherman v. Board of Trustees,
In our decision in Sanchez v. Board of Education,
The board finally questions the trial court’s ruling that the statute of limitations did not apply to the present action. The court gave three alternative bases for such a determination, but we need not discuss any of the other grounds because of the board’s concession, “If this action were a continuation, there is no question that it is timely. * * * ” The board then argues that the trial court’s finding that the present action is a continuation of Brown v. Romero, supra, under the provisions of § 23-1-14, N.M.S.A.1953, is in error. The board cites Miller v. Smith,
There was no error made by the trial court, and' the order must be affirmed so that Mrs. Brown may finally be granted a determination of the issue which she has so long sought to raise.
The judgment will be affirmed. It is so ordered.
