Opinion
Statement of the Case
This аppeal arises from a judgment of the superior court denying a writ of mandate brought to review administrative proceedings which resulted in respondent, Governing Board of the Oxnard School District (Board), electing not to reemploy appellant, Gladys Young (Young), a probationary school teacher for a succeeding school year. An administrative hearing had been held pursuant to Young’s request in accordance with the provisions of California Education Code section 13443 1 to determine whether cause existed for not reemploying her.
Statement of Facts
Young was employed by Board as a probationary school teacher beginning with the 1968-1969 school year. She was reemployed by Board for each of the two succeeding years. In February 1971, Young was given preliminary notice in accordance with section 13443, relating to probationary teachers, that her services would not be required for the ensuing 1971-1972 school year. Young elected to have a hearing to determine if there was cause for not reemploying her, in accordance with her right therefor, as specified in section 13443. Subsequently, on or about April *772 2, 1971, an accusation was prepared submitting that the acts and omissions as set forth therein constituted cause for non-reemployment of Young as a probationary employee.
Thereafter, in accordance with law, an administrative hearing was conducted before Helen L. Gallagher, hearing officer from the Office of Administrative Procedure, State of California at Oxnard, California, on April 20 through 23 and May 12 through 14, 1971. Young and Board were both represented by сounsel during the entirety of the administrative hearing.
Following submission of the matter to the hearing officer on May 14, 1971, a proposed decision was issued on May 26, 1971, and on June 3, 1971, the Board determined and ordered, that Young would not be reemployed for the 1971-1972 school year.
Young, on October 18, 1971, filed a petition for a writ of mandamus in the Superior Court of the County of Ventura challenging the Validity of Board’s determination not to reemploy her. The matter came on regularly for hearing before the Honorable Richard C. Hеaton who, following argument of the parties and the presentation of evidence, ordered that the petition for a writ of mandamus be denied and that the alternative writ of mandamus which had previously issued be discharged.
The Issue of Timely Notice
Subsequent to the filing of this appeal,
Stewart
v.
San Mateo Junior College Dist.,
Section 13443 of the Education Code, subdivisions (e) and (i) provides as follows:
“(e) Notice to the probationary employee by the governing board that his services will not be required for the ensuing year shall be given no later than May 15.”
“(i) If after request for hearing pursuant to subdivision (b) any con *773 tinuance is granted pursuant to Government Code section 11524, the dates prescribed in subdivisions (c), (d), (e) and (h) which occur on or after the datе of granting the continuance shall be extended for a period of time equal to such continuance.”
Government Code section 11524 provides:
“The agency may grant continuances. When a hearing officer of the Office of Administrative Hearings has been assigned to such hearing, no continuance may be granted except by him or by the hearing officer in charge of the appropriate regional office of the Office of Administrative Hearings, for good cause shown.”
On April 23, 1971, at the hearing and after the Board had completed prеsentation of its evidence, the following colloquy occurred:
Hearing Officer: I have had a number of conferences between Counsel off the record with respect to the time requirement in this matter, and due to commitments of the Hearing Officer and counsel we have arrived upon the continuance date of May 12, May 13, and May 14.
Am I stating the matter correctly?
Mr. Cohen [Assistant County Counsel]: That is my understanding, your Honor.
Hearing Officer: Mrs. LeVine?
Mrs. LeVine [Attorney for Young]: My understanding, too, your Honor, I concur.
Hearing Officer: In view of this I will state that good cause exists to continuе the matter. I also might point out for the record since at the beginning of the proceeding it was not pointed out by Mrs. LeVine herself, she was retained as counsel for the respondent a short time prior to the commencement of the hearing and her motions for a continuance presented to the Office of Administrative Procedure were denied, and I would like to add the fact that I would think it would be fair to afford proper due process to the respondent that her counsel have some time to prepare her defense.
Mrs. LeVine: Thank you, your Honor.
Hearing Officer: On this basis I would point out, under Section 13443(d), of the Education Code, that notice shall be given no later than May 15th, and under subsection of that code, Section 13443, the continu *774 anee of the case extends the period of time equal to such continuance. I want Mrs. Young to be aware of this as well as counsel.
Is this fully understood?
Mr. Cohen: For the district, so understood.
Hearing Officer: Mrs. LeVine?
Mrs. LeVine: Yes, your Honor.
Hearing Officer: Mrs. Young, you understand this, do you not?
Gladys Young: Yes.
Hearing Officer: Is this agreeable on that basis, Mrs. Young?
Gladys Young: Yes.
Young points out that the continuance requested by her was denied, and suggests the continuance granted (apparently on the hearing officer’s own motion) was not for good cause. We disagree. Although the record is somewhat ambiguous, one reason for the continuance was the hearing officer’s congested calendar. Also, the hearing officer apparently reconsidered Young’s request for a continuance and felt it had some merit. In any event, we agree with the hearing officer’s statement that it was for cause, thus complying with subdivision (i). The continuance еxtended the time for giving final notice to June 3. After the completed hearing on May 14, 1971, the Board sent Young a copy of the hearing officer’s proposed decision which determined there was cause for petitioner’s dismissal. The transmittal letter stated the Board would take action on the decision at a special meeting at 7:30 p.m., June 3, 1971. Young was present with her attorney and at approximately 8:30 p.m. the two were called into a closed meeting (just off the public meeting room) and her attorney was advised shе could make her plea on behalf of Young. She did this and the two left the closed meeting room and returned to the public meeting room. Approximately 10 minutes later the Board entered the open meeting room and a statement was made that the dismissal of Young had been sustained. Young contends this statement did not satisfy the requirements of notice prescribed by section 13443 in that it did not contain a statement of dismissal, but merely an assertion of acquiescence to the hearing officer’s decision; that the rеcord shows the determination not to reemploy her was dated June 4, 1971, which was one day later and *775 after the notice deadline. No objection is made by Young that the notice on June 3d was not delivered to her in writing, 2 nor does she claim she was misled, or did not understand the Board’s declaration that night.
On this point we cannot agree with Young. She had received a copy of the hearing officer’s decision in advance and she knew it determined there was cause for her dismissal. Notice to her that the Board had sustained this finding was adequate to advise her that she was not to be reemployed and that she should seek employment elsewhere.
“[Tjhere can be little doubt that the Legislature’s intent was that May 15 be a deadline for finally notifying the teacher of his dismissal. An obvious purpose of the statute is to allow a teacher, whose employment will be ended with the school year’s termination, timely final notice of that fact in order that he may seek other employment in his profession during the coming school year. Any delаyed notice would seriously and unfairly curtail his opportunities to compete for employment elsewhere.”
(Stewart
v.
San Mateo Junior College Dist., supra,
The Applicable Standard for Review
Another case,
Strumsky
v.
San Diego County Employees Retirement Assn.,
The court recognizes that prior to Strumsky, the independent judgment rule did not apply to two categories of administrative agencies. The first category includes agencies of constitutional origin that are granted limited judicial power by the Constitution itself. In the second category are “local agencies”—which include purely local agencies and state agencies of limited territorial jurisdiction. After a very learned discourse on the decisional law that created the above exceptions, Justice Sullivan, author of the majority opinion in Strumsky, concludes that there is no reason for the exception to apply to administrative agencies in the second category.
The Oxnard School District obviously is a local agency and within the latter category. The procedure for the administrative hearing is set forth in article 5, section 13443 et seq. of the Education Code. The procedure and rights encompassed therein are not based on constitutional authority with a grant of limited judicial power. Thus
Strumsky
would require the trial court to apply the “independent judgment” rule in its review unless the administrative agency’s decision did not affect a fundamental vested right belonging to Young. A synopsis of the meaning of this interest is found in
Bixby
v.
Pierno, supra,
“As we have noted, in determining whether the right is sufficiently basic and fundamental to justify independent judgment review, the courts have considered the degree to which that right is ‘vested,’ that is, already possessed by the individual.
(McDonough
v.
Goodcell, supra,
We agree with Justice Burke’s statement in his concurring opinion in Bixby that decisional law has revealed that the courts have experienced difficulty in determining what are “vested” rights for purposes of applying the above rule. We find some guidelines to assist us, however, in the following cases:
In
Merrill
v.
Department of Motor Vehicles,
The U.S. Supreme Court in
Board of Regents
v.
Roth,
“[Respondent's ‘property’ interest in employment at Wisconsin State University-Oshkosh was created and defined by the terms of his appointment. Those terms secured his interest in employment up to June 30, 1969. But the important fact in this case is that they specifically provided that the respondent’s еmployment was to terminate on June 30. They did not provide for contract renewal absent ‘sufficient cause.’ Indeed, they made no provision for renewal whatsoever.
“Thus, the terms of the respondent’s appointment secured absolutely no interest in re-employment for the next year. They supported absolutely *779 no possible claim of entitlement to re-employment. Nor, significantly, was there any state statute or University rule or policy that secured his interest in re-employment or that created any legitimate claim to it. [Fn. omitted.] In these circumstances, the respondent surely had an abstract concern in being rehired, but he did not have a property interest sufficient to require the University authorities to give him a hearing when they declined to renew his contract of employment.” (Italics added.)
The same opinion also recognizes that a substitute teacher can have an expectancy of continued employment that, is sufficient to warrant a due process hearing. The court states at pages 576-577 [33 L.Ed.2d at pp. 560-561]: “Similarly, in the area of public employment, the Court has hеld that a public college professor dismissed from an office held under tenure provisions [citation], and college professors and staff members dismissed during the terms of their contracts [citation], have interests in continued employment that are safeguarded by due process. Only last year, the Court held that this principle ‘proscribing summary dismissal from public employment without hearing or inquiry required by due process’ also applied to a teacher recently hired without tenure or a formal contract, but nonеtheless with a clearly implied promise of continued employment. [Citation.]” (Italics added.)
The rights afforded a probationary teacher (upon which his expectancy of continued employment is based) are delineated in section 13443. In substance, it provides the teacher shall be rehired unless it can be shown that cause is present for not rehiring him,- and that cause relates solely to the welfare of the school and its pupils. The governing board must provide him with .a statement of the reasons if so requested, and he is entitled to a hearing. 5 This is not only substantially different from the rules (or paucity thereof) of the Board of Regents of Wisconsin State University-Oshkosh, but of further significance, it provides for a statement of the causes, and the right to a hearing.
Although there is a difference between the rights of a permanent teacher and a probationary teacher under the California Education Code, obviously section 13443 gives the latter substantial status. 6 Sections 13200 *780 et seq. set forth certain requirements necessary for a “probationary credential” to be held by a new teacher before he may be hired to teach. Accordingly, a delineated amount of education and training is required before a person can qualify to teach in a probationary status. Normally describing a person’s employment as “probationary,” “non-tenured,” “temporary,” et al., indicates a trial period during which the employee must demonstrate he is qualified for permanent status that often carries with it the vested interest or fundamental right that we are seeking here. Such a concept, however, is not controlling on our determination if the rights afforded the employee by law dictate another interpretation. By applying the rule enunciated in Bixby (p. Ill, ante), Young has a vested right.
Absent the rights' given the probationary teacher in section 13443 we would agree with the statement in
Board of Regents
v.
Roth, supra,
Ironically, the statute enacted to protect Young now might effect her chances for immediate employment as a teacher. Although she is not losing her probationary certificate, the fact that she was not rehired is, as a practical matter, notice to those in her profession that she was released for cause; thus, her chances of being hired by another school district are diminished. Section 13443 provides that the reason for not rehiring the emplоyee shall remain confidential until the employee requests a hearing. Many, if not most, employees will request a hearing, thereby establishing a record open to all future employers. This further illustrates the possible economic side-effects caused by the section—it has created an interest that can affect the employee in varying ways. Thus it meets another Bixby test in that the interest has an important economic aspect to it and in human terms is very viable to the individual in his life situation.
We conclude thаt said code section has effectively given Young a “vested right” that required the trial court to independently determine from the evidence whether there was an abuse of discretion because the findings are not supported by the weight of the evidence.
As stated in Strumsky, because the trial court, in denying the writ, con *781 sidered itself bound by existing law to apply the substantial evidence standard of review, we reverse the judgment and remand the cause for determination under the rule announced herein.
The Board has requested us to conduct an independent review of thе evidence and make a final determination of the matter instead of returning the case to the trial court should we decide, as we do, that
Strumsky
is applicable. Based on the law established in
Tupman
v.
Haberkern,
“In other words, it was not the purpose generally to so confuse the functions of the respective courts as to make the findings of the trial courts, when based on substantial evidence, merely recommendations as, for example, the finding of a referee or сommissioner.”
We have not given the record our independent review; we have reversed for the limited reason stated and this opinion should not be interpreted as favoring either party when the independent review is undertaken.
Reversed and remanded for determination under the rule announced herein.
Kaus, P. J., and Loring, J. * , concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied August 13, 1974, and the opinion was modified to read as printed above. Respondents’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied September 12, 1974.
Notes
All code refеrences are to the Education Code unless otherwise specified.
Subdivision (e) does not state the notice must be in writing. Subdivision (g) could imply otherwise. It states: “Any notice or request shall be deemed sufficient when it is delivered in person to the employee to whom it is directed, or when it is deposited in the United States registered mail, postage prepaid and addressed to the last known address of the employee.” The section is not clear and we note it here for legislative attention in the event it wishes to аddress itself to the problem. However, Young does not deny receiving the oral notice in the form outlined above on June 3, nor, as noted, does she claim error because written notice was not given on June 3; rather, her objection is to the wording of the oral notice.
On April 24, 1974, the court filed its modification of opinion in Strumsky, 11 Cal.3d page 45, and stated, “So that there will be no misunderstanding, we emphasize that this rule shall apply to all pending and future proceedings in trial courts and all pending and future appeals.”
Thе Board relies heavily on this case to sustain its position that Young had no vested right. We believe the Board has overlooked the persuasive dictum that is so applicable to this case.
Subdivision (h) of section 13443 gives further credence to this interpretation by-providing “In the event that the governing board does not give notice provided for in subdivision (e) of this section on or before May 15, the employee shall be deemed reemployed for the ensuing school year.”
The cause which must be present to wаrrant a decision not to reemploy a probationary school teacher is different than the cause which is required in connection with the dismissal of a permanent school teacher (or the discharge of a probationary school teacher during the course of a school year) ... a permanent (or tenured) *780 school teacher may be dismissed only upon a showing of one or more of the causes for dismissal set forth in Education Code section 13403 (unprofessional conduct, incompetency or dishonesty, for example).
Assigned by the Chairman of the Judicial Council.
