Opinion
— In this proceeding petitioner and appellant Valenzuela sought a peremptory writ of mandate pursuant to section 1094.5 of the Code of Civil Procedure to compel respondent Board of Civil Service Commissioners (hereinafter designated as “the board”) to vacate its decision that petitioner was not coerced to resign, and did not resign under duress, his position as an employee of the Department of Water and Power of the City of Los Angeles, and to compel the board to reinstate him as an employee. Judgment denying a peremptory writ of mandate was entered and petitioner has appealed therefrom.
The findings of fact in the superior court were in part as follows: 1. Prior to September 15, 1970, petitioner Valenzuela was regularly employed as a maintenance laborer with the Department of Water and Power; that position was in the classified civil service of the City of Los Angeles. 2. On September 14, 1970, petitioner executed a written resignation from his position. 3. On September 17, 1970, petitioner filed a statement of denial of resignation with the board, alleging that he had been compelled to resign under duress by the Department of Water and Power. 4. Pursuant to authority granted to it under section 114 of the city charter, 1 the board conducted “three hearings into petitioner’s appeal from his alleged forced resignation—January 22, 1971; March 19, 1971, and May 7, 1971.” 5. The hearings were “public quasi-judicial hearings at which witnesses were called to testify by petitioner and aforesaid Department of Water and Power, evidence was received, exhibits were introduced into evidence and arguments made by the petitioner and the Department.” 6. “At its *560 meeting of July 30, 1971, the board voted three to two to find that petitioner herein was not coerced to and did not resign under duress.”
One of the conclusions of law of the superior court was: “That the decision of respondent board of July 30, 1971, in finding that petitioner was not coerced into and did not resign under duress from his position as Maintenance Laborer with the Department of Water and Power of the City of Los Angeles is supported by substantial evidence in the light of the record.”
Traditionally, in a case such as this involving the decision of a local administrative agency, the function of the trial court has been to review the evidence adduced before the agency to determine whether there was substantial evidence to support the agency’s findings in light of the whole record. (See
Keithley
v.
Civil Service Bd.,
The Board of Civil Service Commissioners of the City of Los Angeles is a local administrative agency and thus the question presented on this appeal is whether the board’s decision that petitioner was not coerced to resign and did not resign under duress his position as a maintenance laborer with the Department of Water and Power of the City of Los Angeles is a decision substantially affecting a fundamental vested right of petitioner. If such a right was substantially affected by the board’s decision, it must be held that the trial court erred in applying the substantial evidence rule in reviewing the evidence presented to the board.
In
Moreno
v.
Cairns,
In
Strumsky
the court reiterated the definition of the term “fundamental vested right” laid down in
Bixby
v.
Pierno, 4
Cal.3d 130 [
In
Strumsky
the Supreme Court had before it for review a decision of the Board of Retirement of the San Diego County Employees Retirement Association denying the widow of a former employee a service-connected death allowance as established by section 31787 of the Government Code. In deciding that the widow’s right to receive a service-connected death allowance was a fundamental vested right, the Supreme Court stated (
We turn then to the application of the distinction between vested and nonvested rights in the context of the case presently before this court. Respondent takes the position that public employment is not a fundamental vested right, citing those cases which reiterate the rule that one does not have a constitutional right to public employment.
(Bagley
v.
Washington Township Hospital Dist.,
*563
The statement that an individual has no constitutional right to public employment is based on the theory that government employment is a privilege rather than a right. However, the right-privilege distinction has been largely undermined by more recent decisions. (See
Bagley
v.
Washington Township Hospital Dist., supra,
Section 112(a) of the Charter of the City of Los Angeles provides in pertinent part as follows: “Any board or officer having the power of appointment of . . . employees in any department of the government of the city shall have the power to remove, discharge or suspend any . . . employee of such department; but no person in the classified civil service of the city . . . shall be removed, discharged or suspended except for cause. . . .” The Supreme Court interpreted this charter provision in
Steen
v.
Board of Civil Service Commrs.,
Hence permanent employment within the classified civil service of the City of Los Angeles is vested in the sense that one may not be removed from that employment except for cause and after notice and a hearing, just as one’s professional license may not be revoked or suspended except for cause and after notice and a hearing. Thus petitioner had a legally cognizable right of which he could not be deprived except for cause and after notice and a hearing. Such right is “fundamental,” not only with respect to “the economic aspect of it” but also with respect to “the effect of it in human terms and the importance of it to the individual in the life situation.”
(Bixby
v.
Pierno, supra, 4
Cal.3d 130, 144.) A person in petitioner’s position is not merely subject to the loss of his job, a job which he might duplicate in private industry, but he is subject to the loss of a permanent civil service position. Many persons forego the lure of a more lucrative private position for the benefits and security of a civil service career. The breadth of protection afforded a permanent civil service employee is of undeniable importance to the individual, not only economically but also “in the life situation.” Thus it was decided in
Rigsby
v.
Civil Service Com.
(1974)
The judgment is reversed and the case is remanded to the superior court with directions to vacate the findings of fact heretofore made and thereupon to proceed in accordance with the law as set forth in the opinion herein.
Cobey, J., and Allport, J., concurred.
Notes
Section 114 of the city charter is in pertinent part as follows: “The board shall investigate the enforcement of this article [article IX] and its rules, and the conduct and action of the appointees in the classified civil service in this city.”
