Los Angeles Unified School District v. United Teachers-Los Angeles
Before: Stephens
Opinion
STEPHENS, J.
This appeal is taken by defendants United Teachers-Los Angeles (UTLA) and certain of its officers and employees from a temporary restraining order
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enjoining defendants (including a vast number of Doe-defendants) from engaging in a teachers’ strike against plaintiff Los Angeles Unified School District of Los Angeles County
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and from inducing plaintiff’s schoolteacher employees to engage in such a strike.
The facts are that plaintiff School District, a public school district organized and operating pursuant to the laws of the State of California, filed an action seeking a temporary restraining order, preliminary injunction,
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and permanent injunction against defendants restraining them from striking or engaging in a work stoppage. Plaintiff’s complaint alleged that defendants voted to and did commence a strike and work stoppage against plaintiff on April 13, 1970. In three separate declarations filed in support of its injunctive action, plaintiff stated: (1) that during the morning of April 13, 1970, a survey of junior and senior high schools in the district showed that 6,434 of the School District’s 12,210 secondary teachers had not reported for work; (2) that 5,870 of the School District’s elementary school teachers had not reported for work on that same day; (3) that the scheduled 1969-1970 school year was for 177 days; that if by reason of a teachers’ strike the School District should become unable to operate its schools for 175 days during the school year, it might lose the right to its apportionment of $172,651,004 from the state School Fund, and that in addition thereto it would lose its entitlement to state School Fund apportionments of $1.19 per pupil-day for grades 1-3, inclusive; $1.02 per pupil-day for grades 4-8, inclusive; $0.91 per pupil-day for grades 9-12, inclusive; and $0.75 per pupil-day for “defined adults.” An informal hearing was held in the chambers of the judge before whom the matter was pending, at which defendants appeared by way of counsel and filed declarations in opposition to the issuance of a temporary restraining order. Following the informal hearing, on April 13, 1970, the court issued its temporary restraining order and order to show cause re preliminary injunction.
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