Applebaum v. Wulff

95 N.E.2d 19, 58 Ohio Law. Abs. 260, 42 Ohio Op. 434, 1950 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 348
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedJuly 25, 1950
DocketNo. 612303
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 95 N.E.2d 19 (Applebaum v. Wulff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Applebaum v. Wulff, 95 N.E.2d 19, 58 Ohio Law. Abs. 260, 42 Ohio Op. 434, 1950 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 348 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1950).

Opinion

[261]*261OPINION

By BLYTHIN, J.

In this memorandum the plaintiff will be referred to as teacher. The defendants will be referred to as the board, they being the duly elected, qualified and acting members of the Board of Education of the Cleveland City School District.

Teacher is the holder of a teacher’s life certificate and for about twenty-seven years prior to June 21, 1949 had been'a teacher in the Cleveland Public Schools. Her contract under the Teachers’ Tenure Act is dated July 17, 1942. On June 21, 1949 teacher was notified that the board intended to consider the termination of her teaching contract on the ground of gross inefficiency and that unless within ten days, she demanded an opportunity to appear before the board final action would be taken. Teacher promptly moved to dismiss the entire matter on the ground that the notice given did not comply with the requirements of law in that it was too indefinite, and she further demanded a public hearing before the board. On July 5, 1949 the board by its Clerk-Treasurer communicated to teacher the grounds of the board’s intention to terminate the contract. Teacher still maintained that the board had not complied with the requirements of law, claimed the board to be without jurisdiction to hear the matter, all of which claims were overruled and teacher notified that a public hearing was to be had. The public hearing commenced on October 13, 1949 and further sessions were held on various dates, the last being on February 21, 1950. Five of the seven members of the board sat at the hearing, and at the close of the final session the board retired to deliberate and upon reconvening in public session the chairman of the board declared that the board had voted to sustain the recommendation of the superintendent in terminating teacher’s contract. Under favor of the provisions of §4842-12 GC, teacher filed her petition in this cause setting forth the procedural steps taken to terminate her contract, the conduct of a public hearing, a recital of the board’s "decision and containing a denial of all charges made against her and alleging forty-two claimed errors in the proceedings of the board and praying that the board be required to [262]*262rescind its action in terminating teacher’s contract and be required to reinstate her and to permit her to teach in the public schools of the city; that she be ordered paid her salary for the period of suspension and for such other and further relief to which she be found entitled.

A transcript of the proceedings of the board having been duly filed in this cause, and neither party presenting any further testimony, the matter was presented to the court upon the transcript, the arguments of counsel for teacher and of counsel for the board.

In her forty-second or last specification of error, teacher claims the statute under which her contract was terminated, and under which she seeks relief here, §4842-12 GC, is unconstitutional and void. Teacher herself faces two very serious difficulties with such a claim. First: She is maintaining this proceeding under favor of the statute and can hardly be heard on the one hand to claim its benefits and on the other to assert its unconstitutionality; and Second: If the statute is unconstitutional, teacher would be without a remedy at all for the reason that prior to the enactment of the statute the board had a right to “hire and fire” at will. This court has neither heard nor found any authority or ground for believing the statute unconstitutional. The courts have, on a number of occasions, adjudicated rights under the statute since its enactment without any serious or logical claim of unconstitutionality being considered or even urged.

A question which, in several cases, has presented much more difficulty than that of the claim of unconstitutionality of the statute is that of the nature of the proceeding authorized in the Common Pleas Court, as in this case. Upon oral argument the court inquired of counsel if they deemed it the duty of the court to weigh the evidence presented to the board and counsel for teacher replied in the affirmative, indicating that he deemed the hearing in this court to be more than an error proceeding. This being a special statutory proceeding of rather recent origin it becomes important to appreciate its nature so as to proceed on the basis of that appreciation.

Sec. 4842-12 GC, in its pertinent part, is as follows:

“Any teacher affected by an order of termination of contract shall have the right of appeal to the court of common pleas of the county in which the school is located within thirty days after receipt of notice of the entry of such order. Such appeal shall be an original' action in said common pleas court and shall be commenced by' the filing of a petition against [263]*263such board of education, in which petition the facts shall be alleged upon which the teacher relies for a reversal or modification of such order of termination of contract. Upon service or waiver of summons in said appeal, such board of education shall forthwith transmit to the clerk of said common pleas court for filing a transcript of the original papers theretofore filed with said board and a certified transcript of all evidence adduced at the hearing or hearings before such board, whereupon the cause shall be at issue without further pleading and shall be advanced and heard without delay. The common pleas court shall examine the transcript and record of the hearing before the board of education and shall hold such additional hearings as it may deem advisable, at which it may consider other evidence in addition to such transcript and record.
“Upon final hearing, the common pleas court shall grant or deny the relief prayed for in the petition as may be proper under the provisions of law in accordance with the evidence adduced in the hearing. Such an action shall be deemed to be a special proceeding within the purview of §12223-2 GC and either the teacher or the board of education may appeal therefrom.”

To say that the quoted paragraph is loosely and clumsily drawn is the acme, of understatement, but the Supreme Court of Ohio has finally spoken upon the' scope of the permitted inquiry.

Powell v. Young et al etc. 148 Oh St 342, 35 O. O. 322, Syllabus 1.

“The right granted by §4842-12 (former §7690-6), GC, to a teacher, affected by an order of a board of education terminating her contract, to appeal from such order to the Court of Common Pleas is not a right to a trial de novo, but is a right to a review of such order as provided in such section.”

After a discussion of the nature of the appeal the court, by Stewart, J, says:

“It seems to us that the General Assembly intended the appeal provision in §7690-6 GC, to be confined to a judicial review of the proceedings of the board of education and to give the court discretion to hold further hearings to be certain that the proceedings before the board were legally [264]*264regular and not arbitrary, oppressive, unreasonable or fraudulent; and that it was not the intention of the General Assembly to provide a trial de novo.”

The communications of the board’s complaint or charge against teacher, in their pertinent parts, are as follows:

Letter of June 21, 1949:

“The ground for such action is as follows:
“Gross inefficiency as attested by principals and supervisors.”

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Related

Board of Education, Laurel Sp. Sch. Dist. v. Shockley
155 A.2d 323 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1959)
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123 A.2d 747 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1956)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 N.E.2d 19, 58 Ohio Law. Abs. 260, 42 Ohio Op. 434, 1950 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/applebaum-v-wulff-ohctcomplcuyaho-1950.