Bowlin v. Thomas

548 S.W.2d 515, 1977 Ky. App. LEXIS 654
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 21, 1977
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 548 S.W.2d 515 (Bowlin v. Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowlin v. Thomas, 548 S.W.2d 515, 1977 Ky. App. LEXIS 654 (Ky. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

PARK, Judge.

The plaintiff-appellant, Lynn Bowlin, brought suit in the Fulton Circuit Court against the defendants-appellees, the Fulton City Board of Education, the individual members of the board, and the superintendent of the Fulton City Schools. Bowlin claimed that the school board wrongfully failed to renew his teaching contract in the Fulton City School System for the 1974-75 school year. From a judgment dismissing his complaint, Bowlin appeals.

The case was initially submitted to the circuit court upon a motion to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. However, the parties filed exhibits and affidavits in support of their respective positions. Consequently, the motion to dismiss should be treated as a motion for summary judgment. CR 12.02. In reviewing the action of the circuit court, all doubts must be resolved in favor of Bowlin.

*517 Bowlin was employed as a teacher in the Fulton City School System for the 1973-74 school year. Under his written contract with the school board, Bowlin was to teach five classes, including one designated as a planning period. During the 1973-74 school year, Bowlin received a salary of $5,376.00, or eighty per cent of the base salary of $6,720.00 per year. Not being eligible for a continuing contract pursuant to KRS 161.-740, Bowlin was employed under a limited contract.

With respect to re-employment of nontenured teachers under limited contracts, KRS 161.750(2) provided:

“Any teacher employed under a limited contract * * * shall at the expiration of such limited contract be deemed re-employed * * * for the succeeding school year at the same salary plus any increment or decrease as provided by the salary schedule, unless the employing board shall give such teacher written notice on or before the fifteenth day of May of its intention not to re-employ him; upon request by the teacher, such written notice shall contain the specific reason or reasons why the teacher is not being reemployed. * * * ”

Prior to May 13, 1974, the school superintendent verbally informed Bowlin that his salary would be reduced to seventy per cent of base salary by the elimination of the planning period. Bowlin told the school superintendent that he could not accept reemployment unless he received the same pay as received the prior year.

On May 14, 1974, the school superintendent wrote Bowlin a letter which stated:

“The Fulton City Board of Education met May 13,1974 and instructed me to inform you, that due to loss of students which leads to a loss of revenue, your time will be cut from .8 per day to .7 per day. “At the present time we are using several teachers- over our allotment by the State Department of Education, and this means that we will not replace some teachers who are leaving the Fulton City School System.
“Since you feel that you can not work less than .8 of a day which you indicated on your application form for re-employment, the Fulton City Board of Education wishes to enform [sic] you that it can not renew your contract for the school year of 1974-75, due to the above reasons.”

Bowlin asserts that the reasons given in the school superintendent’s letter are false. Specifically, Bowlin says that there was no loss of students which led to a decrease in revenue necessitating a reduction in the number of teachers in the Fulton City School System.

At the onset, Bowlin is met with the argument that he never made a request to the board that he be given the specific reasons for his not being re-employed. This argument by the defendants-appellees is without merit. Bowlin was not required to go through thé useless act of requesting the board to give him specific reasons for his not being re-employed when the board had already stated its reasons in the letter of May 14, 1974.

It is Bowlin’s position that he is entitled to a hearing in circuit court in order to prove the falsity of the reasons given in the letter of May 14,1974. If the reasons given for not re-employing him were false, Bow-lin argues that the board acted arbitrarily in failing to re-employ him. Because the board’s actions were arbitrary, Bowlin asserts that he is entitled to a judgment reinstating him as a teacher in the Fulton City School System.

Prior to 1970, there was no requirement that a school board give any reasons in its notice that it was not re-employing a nontenured teacher. In that year, the statute was amended by adding the following provision:

“Upon request by the teacher, such written notice shall contain the specific reason or reasons why the teacher is not being reemployed.’’ 1970 Kentucky Acts, Chapter 169 § 1.

This amendment clearly requires a statement, if requested, from the school board to the non-tenured teacher giving the reasons why he is not being re-employed. How *518 ever, the important question is whether the teacher has a right to contest the reasons given by the school board for not re-employing the teacher.

If Bowlin had been a tenured teacher serving under a continuing contract, the school board could have terminated his contract only for certain statutory causes. A tenured teacher has the right to contest the truth of the grounds alleged for termination in a hearing before the school board and, if unsuccessful, in a trial de novo before the circuit court. KRS 161.790; Osborne v. Bullitt County Board of Education, Ky., 415 S.W.2d 607 (1967). Bowlin contends that KRS 161.750 as amended in 1970 grants the non-tenured teacher a right to a circuit court hearing to contest the reasons given for failing to re-employ him. This would place the non-tenured teacher in almost the same position occupied by a tenured teacher under KRS 161.790. The language of the 1970 amendment does not expressly so provide. Nor does the language of the 1970 amendment to KRS 161.-750 justify a strained construction of the statute based upon the assumption that the legislature intended to raise the rights of the non-tenured teacher to the level of the tenured teacher.

Bowlin relies upon the decision of the Illinois Supreme Court in Donahoo v. Board of Education of School District No. 303, 413 Ill. 422, 109 N.E.2d 787 (1952). The Illinois statute under consideration provided:

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Bluebook (online)
548 S.W.2d 515, 1977 Ky. App. LEXIS 654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowlin-v-thomas-kyctapp-1977.