Summary
In Matter of Boyd v. Collins (11 N.Y.2d 228) relied upon by the Comptroller, the teacher was paid her final year's salary for not actually teaching, which was clearly an unconstitutional gift.
Summary of this case from Lecci v. NickersonOpinion
Argued March 28, 1962
Decided April 26, 1962
Appeal from the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court in the Third Judicial Department, CHARLES M. HUGHES, J.
John T. DeGraff, John R. Davison and John E. Holt-Harris, Jr., for appellants. John W. MacDonald and Adam R. Palmer for respondent.
John E. Glenn for New York State Teachers Association, amicus curiae.
The proceeding was brought by Helen K. Boyd, a teacher (or former teacher) in a central school district in Indian Lake, Hamilton County, N.Y., against the district school board to require the board to restore petitioner to her position on the payroll with full restoration of tenure rights, and with back pay. This appeal is by the board from a unanimous Appellate Division order which directed judgment for petitioner for back pay in the amount of a little over $18,000. The Appellate Division determination followed an earlier interlocutory order of the same court which had modified a Special Term order by directing that petitioner be restored to her teaching position and by remitting the proceeding to Special Term for determination of the amount of salary to be paid to her. A Referee had originally reported, and Special Term had confirmed, that an agreement made by petitioner with the board waived her right to tenure, but the Appellate Division (in its first determination) held that the agreement between petitioner and the board was illegal for various reasons and then remitted the matter to Special Term to fix salary, which Special Term did, followed by the Appellate Division's affirmance.
Primarily, the controversy is as to the validity of the agreement whereby the local board attempted to get rid of this tenured teacher without charges or hearing by paying her a year's salary for not teaching. Such an agreement is in direct violation both of the applicable teacher-tenure statute law (Education Law, § 3013) and of the constitutional ban against gifts of public moneys (N.Y. Const., art. VIII, § 1).
The narrative begins in October, 1956. A number of parents of pupils in petitioner's fourth grade class came before the board informally with petitioner not present or represented and made sundry complaints against the way in which petitioner was conducting her classes and as to the alleged effects on the children. At this time petitioner had been a public school teacher for more than 35 years, had been employed by this Indian Lake school district for 8 years, unquestionably had tenure and was eligible for retirement (Education Law, § 510) but had renewed her contract for the school year 1956-1957. The day after the parents made their representations to the board the president of the board talked to petitioner in the office of the principal, told petitioner of the complaints and said that the school board would pay her salary until the end of the term if she would resign. She expressed reluctance to do so and there was discussion as to her right to a hearing on any charges against her. The president told her that she was entitled to a hearing and she said that she wished one. At the end of this parley the president told petitioner that she was relieved from duty — at least he told her that she was not to teach any more and when she went to her classroom she found that another teacher had been installed there. On the evening of the same day petitioner talked with a County Judge who was a practicing lawyer also but who apparently advised with her as a friend. The Judge testified without dispute that after discussions with petitioner he talked to the supervising principal and was told by the latter that he felt he should have the right "to hire and fire teachers as he saw fit." Section 3013 of the Education Law, as we shall see, denies him that right.
On October 17, 1956 there was a meeting of the board at which petitioner was not present. The Judge was there and spoke on behalf of petitioner although he had not been retained as her attorney. He had previously acted on various occasions as attorney for the school board. At this meeting there was a discussion as to a settlement of the matter and the Referee found that the agreement or purported agreement, to which we will refer, was first proposed by the Judge although there is no proof that he was directly authorized in that respect by petitioner. The substance of the discussion between the Judge and the board at the meeting was that the Judge told the board that the least they could do to remedy the wrong done to petitioner was to pay her till the end of the year and give her "a good letter of recommendation". The Judge said in words or substance that such an arrangement would be acceptable to petitioner. The school board authorized this arrangement and petitioner never taught at the school again. Her salary was paid for the school year 1956-1957. She has never resigned nor have charges ever been filed against her or tried.
In February, 1957 the supervising principal sent to the Judge a letter as follows:
"To whom it may concern: —
Helen Kathan Boyd, after nine years as a teacher in this school, is tendering her resignation to take effect at the close of the present school year.
While a member of the faculty Mrs. Boyd had taught a combined third and fourth grade and in more recent years she has taught a single grade — the fourth. She is a graduate of Plattsburgh State Teachers College and is a fully qualified teacher in the elementary school.
Before coming to this school Mrs. Boyd had many years of grade teaching experience in other schools in this state.
MILTON S. POPE, Principal."
The Appellate Division, among other things, found that this was not "a letter of recommendation" at all since it merely recited facts of public record as to her teaching experience and status.
The main issue, of course, is as to the validity of the alleged agreement whereby petitioner was to give up her position and tenure in return for payment of a year's salary. The Appellate Division said that such an agreement was contrary to the statute (Education Law, § 3013) which says that teachers on tenure shall not be removed except for specified causes after a hearing on written charges. It is clear on this record that petitioner never voluntarily quit her job but was told by the board president to stop teaching and not to return to her classroom. It is unquestionably a violation of the statute and of tenure rights to remove, without charges and hearing, a teacher who has tenure. Of course, a teacher like any other employee may resign but the assertion here is not that petitioner resigned but that for a consideration she waived her right to a hearing. To validate such a holding of waiver would be contrary to the strong public policy of this State expressed in the tenure statutes. The purpose of the tenure law is "to give security to competent members of the educational system in the positions to which they have been appointed" ( Matter of Monan v. Board of Educ., 280 App. Div. 14, 18; Donahoo v. Board of Educ., 413 Ill. 422, 427). The statutory tenure terms can be changed by the Legislature but never by a board of education ( Lapolla v. Board of Educ., 172 Misc. 364, affd. 258 App. Div. 781, affd. 282 N.Y. 674; Matter of O'Connor v. Emerson, 196 App. Div. 807). A dismissal without hearing, charges and findings is illegal ( Hughes v. Board of Educ., 249 App. Div. 158). If all this can be nullified by a dismissal without charges, with or without pay or bonus, the protection of teachers has been removed. For the courts to validate a "waiver" (see, illustratively, as to public policy, Civil Service Law, § 96) by a teacher of such rights would be violative of the spirit and public purpose of the act which protects the school system by giving permanency to the jobs of experienced teachers. This school board in order to back out of an unpleasant situation tried to create its own public policy by destroying tenure rights and giving away public money.
The Appellate Division's second ground for invalidity is the unconstitutionality of an agreement "under which public money would be paid without services rendered on condition that charges be withheld and the teacher resign". This, too, is clearly correct. Paying a public officer or employee for services not rendered is an unconstitutional gift of public moneys (N Y Const., art. VIII, § 1). The charges should either have been dropped or tried out pursuant to statute. If school board members can avoid embarrassment by paying a year's salary to get rid of a teacher, then a board can pay such salary for 5 years or for life. Where would board members ever get such a power?
A third or minor ground for the Appellate Division's invalidation of this agreement was that the board never in fact complied with the agreement because it did not give petitioner a letter of recommendation but merely an official statement as to the duration of her teaching career and the fact that she had the required qualifications. This, too, is correct. The letter, quoted above, contained no words of "recommendation" (see McDonald v. Illinois Cent. R.R. Co., 187 Ill. 529).
The board argues that petitioner is in effect estopped from questioning the validity of the contract because she has accepted its benefits. But Mrs. Boyd got no benefits. Furthermore, the Appellate Division gave another answer to the estoppel theory by expressing a doubt as to whether estoppel can be invoked where such a strong public policy appears. Beyond this, said the Appellate Division correctly, the school board did not itself perform the contract. It gave petitioner not a letter of "recommendation" but a mere statement as to the length of her teaching service, etc. Such a recommendation was of major importance to petitioner who had been a teacher for many years and would need a new job.
There is no substance in the argument of appellants that petitioner, although she has never been found guilty of anything (see Education Law, § 3013), cannot have relief unless she returns the salary paid to her. She was told by the board president to stop teaching and she did so. After that she was under no obligation to present herself every morning for work since she had a valid permanent contract of employment ( Matter of McMaster v. Owen, 275 App. Div. 506, 508; see School City of Elwood v. State ex rel. Griffin, 203 Ind. 626, 634; Steinson v. Board of Educ., 165 N.Y. 431, 434). Presumably she would have appeared and gone to work had she been summoned back. At the beginning of the next (1957-1958) school year she did, without success, demand from the board restoration to her teaching job.
The order should be affirmed, with costs.
Section 3013 of the Education Law provides in substance that a public school teacher with tenure shall hold his respective position during good behavior and competent and efficient service and shall not be removed except upon written charges after a hearing upon notice.
The Appellate Division has construed this provision against discharge as a pronouncement of public policy against the enforcement of any contract made between a teacher and the board "within the frame of the statute"; in short, that a teacher may not relinquish the protection of tenure except through the medium of a statutory proceeding. We do not so read the statute. The public policy there enunciated is against the loss of position except for cause to be determined in a statutory proceeding on written charges after notice. It constitutes a shield protecting the teacher against an unreasonable, arbitrary or capricious removal. It is the counterpart of the right enjoyed by employees of the Civil Service — and like any other fundamental constitutional or statutory right — may be waived or relinquished in a given case. That is the situation here.
The petitioner, Helen Boyd, with a background of 35 years as a teacher in the public school system, the last 8 years being with tenure with the respondent school, in October, 1956 faced removal on the complaint of many of the parents of the 21 or 22 children in the fourth grade, charging incompetence, inefficiency, neglect of duty, and conduct unbecoming a teacher. The petitioner and the members of the board, recognizing the seriousness of the situation thus posed, sought an amicable solution without risking the embarrassing and adverse consequences to the school children, the community and the reputation of the teacher that were bound to attend a disciplinary proceeding of that sort, no matter what the outcome.
The petitioner sought the aid and counsel of the Hamilton County Judge, a life-long friend. Negotiations ensued between the Judge and the members of the board, resulting in an agreement memorialized by a resolution adopted at a meeting of the school board held October 17, 1956. The petitioner did not attend that meeting, although she had been invited to do so; however, she was represented by the Judge, whether as a friend or as attorney does not matter. According to the affirmed findings of fact, "it was agreed that there would be no formal charges filed against petitioner; that she would be paid her salary until the end of the school year, that petitioner would also be furnished with a letter of recommendation and that petitioner would resign". For her part, the petitioner then left the school and took another position. The board, on its part, paid the petitioner her agreed salary in monthly installments to June 27, 1957, the end of the school year for which she had been hired, and furnished her a letter of recommendation. No charges were filed with the board. In September, 1957 the petitioner demanded a further payment of salary and for the first time expressed dissatisfaction with the letter of recommendation theretofore given her by the board. It is significant to note that the petitioner never filed her resignation as agreed, never presented herself to the board for rehire to her former position nor did she offer to return any of the money paid in consideration of her resignation. When the board refused to make any further salary payments the petitioner brought this proceeding. The arrangement to resign in lieu of trial on charges was not the result of fraud or over-reaching on the part of the board or misunderstanding on the part of the petitioner. Nowhere does she claim that she was ignorant of her legal rights, but freely concedes that the Judge whom she had authorized to appear before the board in her behalf had advised her as to the law and had read to her the provisions of section 3013.
We find nothing in the law which bars enforcement of the agreement as made. The petitioner, although advised by the board to take time to think it over, elected to accept the compromise and, in so doing, acted within her rights. When she accepted the consideration therefor she was bound to perform the obligations imposed. She may not now be relieved of that duty by asserting that the board was acting under a disability. What the board did in the premises was not unlawful. The petitioner had an unexpired contract for the balance of the school year. The payment of the balance of her salary for that unexpired period was not a gift under the circumstances but was for a legitimate school purpose (Education Law, § 1709). The board was simply settling a potential claim in avoidance of disagreeable and uncertain litigation for a valuable consideration found in the agreement of the petitioner to give up the teaching position for the balance of the school year and to resign, upon which they were justified in relying (Education Law, § 1709, 3813). The board with propriety could have granted a leave of absence with pay for the unexpired period. This was not that situation, but one which required a high degree of administrative discretion which in this instance was wisely exercised.
The payment of back salary falls into a different category, since it appears without dispute that the duties of the position held by the petitioner have been performed by others ever since she was relieved. Under such circumstances even if she be restored, no back pay may be allowed ( Matter of Barmonde v. Kaplan, 266 N.Y. 214). Section 77 of the Civil Service Law applies only to Civil Service employees ( Matter of Casey v. Ryan, 159 Misc. 206, affd. 249 App. Div. 800; Matter of McMaster v. Owens, 275 App. Div. 506). Public school teachers are governed by the Education Law which authorizes back pay only when a teacher is restored to duty following an acquittal in a statutory proceeding (Education Law, § 3013, subd. 3). Here, no such proceeding was had since petitioner had voluntarily surrendered any rights the statute gave her for a valuable consideration. She may not benefit by her purposeful inaction, especially when her continued silence had lulled the board into making full payment of the balance of salary under the expectation that her resignation would be filed as agreed. Such calculated and long-continued silence under circumstances calling for prompt action must be deemed to have estopped the petitioner from questioning the sufficiency of the letter of recommendation. We note too that, following the relinquishment of her position, she took other employment and that at the beginning of the following school year she made no offer to return. She made the complaint about the sufficiency of the letter in September, 1957 and her first offer to return to her position was made February 9, 1960, some three years after she had received the letter of recommendation.
The order appealed from should be reversed and the petition dismissed.
Judges FULD, VAN VOORHIS, BURKE and FOSTER concur with Chief Judge DESMOND; Judge DYE dissents in an opinion in which Judge FROESSEL concurs.
Order affirmed.