9 P.2d 217 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1932
Heretofore the petitioners were employed as probationary teachers by the Board of Trustees of the Pittsburg School District. Prior to the tenth day of June, 1931, the clerk of the district deposited in the *420 mails of the United States written communications directed to the petitioners advising the petitioners that their services would not be needed during the ensuing year. Said letters were actually received by the petitioners prior to the tenth day of June, 1931. Claiming the dismissal to be ineffectual, the petitioners applied for a writ of mandate directing their reinstatement. The defendants answered and the application was presented to the trial court on an agreed statement of facts. The court made findings in favor of the defendants and from the judgment entered on the findings the petitioners have appealed.
In 1929 the provisions regarding schools were taken out of the Political Code and made into the School Code. At that time section 1609, subdivision (i), became sections 5.680-5.682; but the wording was not changed. Both parties in their briefs set forth the history of the statute involved. We have duly considered those parts of both briefs. Moreover, we have made a more extended examination of the same subject. However, we find nothing in the history of the statute that throws any light on its proper construction.
The petitioners contend that the statute is mandatory and not directory. For all of the purposes of this decision that contention may be conceded. The plaintiffs also contend that a party relying on service by mail must show a strict compliance with the requirements of the statute. The same comment may be made. Continuing, the petitioners claim the statute was enacted to protect the teachers. There is nothing on its face to show that fact. The entire school system is provided in the interest of the school children and not otherwise. This particular statute was undoubtedly enacted in the interest of the orderly conduct of the business and therefore in the interest of both the teachers and their employers. The petitioners also contend that the service provided for in the statute is complete at the time a registered letter is deposited in the mail. (School Code, sec. 5.682; McKeon v. Sambrano,
[2] The clerk of a board of trustees of a school district is an officer. (See School Code, secs. 220-294; Spreckels v.Graham,
[3] The petitioners contend that as the statute named the clerk as the person to serve the notice and as the statute is mandatory no one else could legally perform the act. That contention is too narrow even under rules of strict construction. By virtue of article I, section 22, of the Constitution of California, all the provisions of that instrument are mandatory. But no one would contend that the Governor must in person take his messages to the legislature (art. V, sec. 10), or in person take a vetoed bill to the house in which it originated (art. IV, sec. 16). Nor would it be claimed that an owner must in person file a notice of completion or a mechanic must in person file for record his claim of lien (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1187); nor that the plaintiff must in person file his notice of pendency of action (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 409). But all of these statutes are *423 to be strictly followed. A more stringent rule was hardly intended to apply to school trustees, the great majority of whom are horny-handed sons of toil.
The judgment is affirmed.
Nourse, P.J., and Spence, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the District Court of Appeal on April 4, 1932, and an application by appellants to have the cause heard in the Supreme Court, after judgment in the District Court of Appeal, was denied by the Supreme Court on May 2, 1932.