Breedon v. Maryland State Department of Education

411 A.2d 1073, 45 Md. App. 73, 1980 Md. App. LEXIS 246
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 5, 1980
Docket493, September Term, 1979
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 411 A.2d 1073 (Breedon v. Maryland State Department of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Breedon v. Maryland State Department of Education, 411 A.2d 1073, 45 Md. App. 73, 1980 Md. App. LEXIS 246 (Md. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

Moore, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

William B. Breedon, the subject of this appeal, is a young man with aphasia, a disorder which renders it exceedingly difficult for him to communicate with the world because language is something which he cannot readily comprehend. 1 This dispute began in 1975 when the school officials of Prince George’s County decided that William should be placed in a public school facility. William’s parents insisted that continued private schooling would better fulfill his educational needs, and they asked the school officials to pay for his tuition.

While at first glance the case appears to center on the procedural and substantive rights of a handicapped child to a publicly-financed, appropriate education, we perceive from the record a procedural error which diverts us from the merits of William’s appeal. The issue which we believe is determinative concerns the power of the circuit court, sitting as a reviewing court under the Administrative Procedure Act 2 [hereinafter referred to as the "APA”], to receive, in open court, additional evidence not offered before the administrative agency. The Circuit Court for Prince George’s County (Levin, J.) held a hearing and received additional evidence on the parents’ appeal from an adverse decision of the Hearing Review Board of the Maryland State Department of Education. For the reasons that follow, we shall vacate the judgment of the circuit court upholding the department’s action and remand the case for futher proceedings in accordance with this opinion.

*75 I. The Facts

William, who will be twenty years old this spring, has been the object of attentive parental concern since the discovery of his disorder at age four. Until 1967 the Breedon family resided in the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area. Mrs. Breedon diligently sought out an educational program for William but found that aphasic children were in a virtual no man’s land, as she explained to the Hearing Review Board:

"If you want to find the gaps in the educational system have an aphasic child.
The retarded didn’t want him because he wasn’t retarded. The deaf didn’t want him because he wasn’t deaf. He didn’t belong with the emotionally disturbed.”

After much searching, the Breedons, in 1968, discovered the Children’s Hearing and Speech Center at Children’s Hospital in the District of Columbia. William was accepted by the center, and the family moved to Maryland. As Mrs. Breedon told the board:

"It wasn’t a hard decision to make at all. We have certainly never regretted it.
Billy came to Children’s really lost.... He made steady improvement and he became a person. I have often said that I think Billy joined the world when he came to Children’s Hospital. He was not in it before and he now has really become a person.”

During the next seven years, until the Spring of 1975, William made steady progress to the point where his linguistic ability ranged between a second grade and a sixth grade level, depending upon the nature of the tests and the particular skill being tested. In April 1975, William turned fifteen; he was then considerably older than the other students at Children’s. Mrs. Breedon explained to the board why William’s educational program necessitated a change:

"Last Spring it was decided that he should leave Children’s. This was a mutual decision. We all *76 agreed on it. He was much older than most of their children. We all knew he could still benefit greatly from their language program but he did need to be with older children. He needed to start getting some other things, a more mature program. He needed to mature socially. So we all decided that he should leave and we should try to find another program for him.”

Thus began the search for a new school for William. 3 On May 22, 1975, a Pupil Personnel Team for the Prince George’s County Schools reported that there was no appropriate public school in the county for a young man with William’s needs. Mrs. Breedon immediately filed for tuition funding in order to place William at the Lt. Joseph P. Kennedy Institute in the District of Columbia because "it seemed to me to be the closest thing to what he needed that I could find. It is a fully academic program. . . .”

In July 1975, a reconstituted Pupil Personnel Team reversed the prior team’s conclusion and instead proposed that William be placed at the H. Winship Wheatley Center, a facility for multiply-handicapped children operated by the Prince George’s County schools. Formal notice of the Wheatley placement was made on August 27, 1975. Not satisfied with the proposed placement, the Breedons requested a local level hearing. In early September 1975, the Breedons received formal notification that their request for tuition funding for the Kennedy Institute had been denied. Feeling very strongly that Wheatley was inappropriate for an aphasic person whose primary need was growth in linguistic ability, the Breedons enrolled him at Kennedy at their own expense.

Again, in February 1976, the Breedons attempted to convince the Prince George’s County School officials that the Wheatley school did not meet William’s needs. Their effort to have the Wheatley placement reconsidered was denied on March 12, 1976. Shortly thereafter, on March 19, 1976, a *77 Hearing Panel of the Prince George’s County school system (local level hearing) was convened, and it received the testimony of Mrs. Breedon and various experts in the field of special education. Ruling that "William functions as a multiply handicapped youngster,” the Hearing Panel stated that the Wheatley "placement was not shown by a preponderance of the evidence to be inappropriate.” In addition, the panel concluded that "the Wheatley staff can provide reading, mathematics, and language programs which will reasonably meet Williaml’]s academic needs.”

It has been, and continues to be, the Breedons’ position that William is chiefly language-impaired. They relegate any motor or behavioral problems to secondary importance and insist that William requires a structural and linguistically-oriented academic program in order to advance his limited capability to comprehend and use the English language. They also contend that William does not function as a multiply-handicapped person, and they allege that the Hearing Panel was wrong in concluding to the contrary.

As provided by the Bylaws of the Maryland State Department of Education, the Breedons appealed to the department’s Hearing Review Board (State level hearing). 4 At that de novo hearing, Mrs. Breedon and various experts again testified about William, his language impairment, and his educational needs.

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Bluebook (online)
411 A.2d 1073, 45 Md. App. 73, 1980 Md. App. LEXIS 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/breedon-v-maryland-state-department-of-education-mdctspecapp-1980.