Moody v. Board of Trustees
Before: McCOMB
McCOMB, J.
—Defendants appeal from a judgment in favor of plaintiff after trial before the court without a jury in an action requesting her reinstatement as a teacher and requiring defendant school district to pay her a salary in the sum of $150 per month for September, October, and November, 1934.
The material facts are these:
[172]
Plaintiff, a permanent teacher employed by defendant school district, was suspended by the board of trustees on March 30, 1934.
August 31, 1934, after a hearing before the board of trustees, said board sustained the discharge of plaintiff. She thereafter appealed to the state superintendent of public instruction, and he confirmed the .action of the board of trustees in dismissing her.
Plaintiff then filed a petition in the superior court for a writ of mandate to compel defendant board of trustees to reinstate her as a permanent teacher of defendant school district. After a full and fair trial, the superior court found the charge that plaintiff had persisted in violating a rule adopted by defendant school district prohibiting teachers from inflicting corporal punishment upon pupils under their charge was not true.
This is the sole question presented for determination:
Was there substantial evidence to sustain the trial court’s finding that the board of trustees of defendant school district had not adopted a rule prohibiting teachers of the district from inflicting corporal punishment upon pu/pils under their charge?
This question must be answered in the affirmative. The law is settled that under the 1929 School Code, which, as amended, was in effect when the facts in the present case transpired, a permanent teacher dismissed by a board of trustees may apply .to the superior court for a review of the action of the school board in removing her. (School Code, 1929, see. 5.404.) It is likewise settled that the discharged teacher has the right to have the superior court determine the truth of the charges preferred against her without reference to the decision of the board of trustees as to the merits of said charges; in other words, the trial before the superior court is
de novo
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