TEAMSTERS, CHAUFFERS, WAREHOUSEMEN AND HELPERS, LOCAL NO. 45, PLAINTIFF AND APPELLANT, v. CASCADE COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 1, DEFENDANT AND RESPONDENT, v. MONTANA PUBLIC EMPLOYEES’ ASSOCIATION, INC., A MONTANA CORPORATION, INTERVENER AND APPELLANT.
No. 12357
Supreme Court of Montana
Submitted May 30, 1973. Decided June 18, 1973.
277 Mont. 511 | 511 P.2d 339
Hilley & McKittrick, D. Partick McKittrick argued, Great Falls, amicus Curiae, for plaintiff and appellant.
J. Fred Bourdeau, County Atty., Michael T. Greely, Deputy County Atty., argued, Great Falls, for defendant and respondent.
MR. JUSTICE HASWELL delivered the Opinion of the Court.
This appeal is from a declaratory judgment in the district
This action was submitted to the district court on an agreed statement of facts. Plaintiff‘s members and intervener‘s members are employed by defendant Cascade County School District No. 1 on a full time basis in nonteaching capacities. These employees receive vacation benefits under administrative regulations of the school district as part of contract negotiations, rather than pursuant to the provisions of section
The main issue for review is whether full time employees in nonteaching capacities of defendant School District are entitled as a matter of right to the vacаtion benefits enumerated in section
In 1949, the Montana legislature passed an Act providing annual vacation leave for state, county and city employees. Chapter 131, Lаws of 1949, now codified as section
“Section 59-1001(1). Each employee of the state, or any county or city thereof, who is in continuous employment and service of the state, county or city thereof, is entitled to and shall earn annual vacation leave credit from the first full calendar month of еmployment. However, employees are not entitled to any leave with full pay until they have worked continuously for a period of twelve (12) cаlendar months. Vacation credits shall be earned in accordance with the following schedule:
* * *
“* * *
“Section 59-1007. The term ‘employee,’ as used herein, does not refer to or include elected state, county, or city officials, or schoolteachers.”
The district court concluded and defеndant now contends that the “schoolteachers” referred to in the Act are those teachers
It is a basic principle of statutory construction that the intention of the legislature is controlling. Section
On the other hand, where the words of the statute are plain, unambiguous, direct and certain, the court is not at liberty to insert what hаs been omitted, or to omit what has been inserted. Section
In the instant case, we hold that school district employees other than teachers аre entitled to vacation benefits under section
The legislature used the term “employees” in its generic sense to include all employees of the state or employees of state agencies of which a school district is included. This interpretation is given further support by the language of section
We cannot aсcept the limited interpretation sought by the defendant School District. The court‘s function is to construe the language of the statute in accordance with its usual and ordinary acceptance. County of Hill v. County of Liberty, 62 Mont. 15, 203 P. 500. Schoolteachers in its comman usage refers to those teaching at district schools as wеll as in the State‘s system of higher education. Thus we conclude that nonteaching school district employees are employees of an agency of the state government and entitled to the vacation schedule set forth therein.
The second issue presented for review is whether the plaintiff‘s members and the intervener‘s members are entitled to the benefits of section
While the question of whether school district employees other than сertified teachers are governed by this Act is here before this Court for the first time, the Attorney General has rendered several opinions supporting this рosition. This Court is not bound by these opinions but they will be given consideration, especially when determining if this decision should be applied retroactively.
As еarly as 1950, the Attorney General for the State of Montana issued opinions declaring that noncertified employees of school districts are еntitled to the benefits of section
“Since a school district is a political subdivision of the State it is only reаsonable to assume that the Legislature intended that the employees of a school district were included in the category of State employees as provided in the Act. That assumption is strengthened by the language of Section 7 of Chapter 131 wherein the Act specifically excludes schоol teachers from the operation of the Act. Since the law makers deemed it necessary to
specially withhold the benefits of the Act frоm school teachers, it follows therefrom that it was their intention that the remaining employees of the school districts should be entitled to vacatiоn leave.”
This conclusion has been reemphasized several times since then. See 25 Op.Atty.Gen. 123 (1954); 27 Op.Atty.Gen. 184 (1958), 28 Op.Atty.Gen. 133 (1960), 31 Op.Atty.Gen. 31 (1966).
Due to the fact that several opinions of the Attorney General have been issued on this or related matters and that this Court has long held that a school district is a political subdivision of the State, we see no reason why the school district was unaware of the application of the statute to their nonteaching employеes.
Additionally eleven sessions of the State legislature have not seen fit to change this interpretation of the Attorney General and the previоus decisions of this Court. Our decision does not take away or impair a vested right or create any new obligation upon the school district. Butte & Superior Min. Co. v. McIntyre, 71 Mont. 254, 229 P. 730. It merely enforces the rights which were created by the 1949 legislature.
Plaintiff‘s members and intervener‘s members are entitled to the vacation benefits of section
For these reasons the judgmеnt of the district court is reversed and the cause remanded to the district court for entry of judgment in accordance with this opinion.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE JAMES T. HARRISON and MR. JUSTICES DALY, CASTLES and JOHN C. HARRISON concur.
