Carroll v. City of Dothan Board of Education

510 So. 2d 246, 40 Educ. L. Rep. 1338
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedDecember 31, 1986
DocketCiv. 5456
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 510 So. 2d 246 (Carroll v. City of Dothan Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carroll v. City of Dothan Board of Education, 510 So. 2d 246, 40 Educ. L. Rep. 1338 (Ala. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

EDWARD N. SCRUGGS, Retired Circuit Judge.

This is a student expulsion case.

After fully complying with procedural due process requirements, the City of Do-than Board of Education (board) expelled Carroll, an eighteen-year-old student, for being intoxicated at a school-sponsored function. He was a senior in a Dothan high school. Carroll petitioned the circuit court to set aside his expulsion, to order his readmission, and to expunge his expulsion from the school records. After an ore ten-us trial, the circuit court denied Carroll’s petition and affirmed the board’s action in expelling him. Carroll timely appealed and raises two issues through his capable counsel.

I

Carroll had a juvenile friend, who also attended the same school-sponsored function, a dance, while in a very intoxicated state and who was also arrested and later expelled from school. Carroll sought a summary judgment in this case on the ground that the juvenile court reinstated his juvenile friend in school with a finding that the board, its agents, or employees had violated the juvenile friend’s right to equal protection of the laws through its unequal enforcement of the board’s Code of Student Conduct. That motion for a summary judgment was overruled by the circuit court, and such action of the circuit court constitutes an issue which is raised by Carroll in his appeal.

Among the four elements of res judicata are the requirements that the parties in both suits must have been substantially identical and that the same cause of action must have been present in both suits. On the other hand, collateral estoppel operates where the subsequent suit between the same parties is not on the same cause of action. Wheeler v. First Alabama Bank of Birmingham, 364 So.2d 1190, 1199 (Ala.1978). Carroll and his juvenile friend obviously are not the same persons, nor are [248]*248they substantially identical persons, nor were they in privity. Therefore, the circuit court properly overruled Carroll’s motion for a summary judgment.

II

Carroll also contends that his expulsion from the public school amounted to an unequal, invidious, and discriminatory enforcement of school regulations which deprived him of his property rights and of the equal protection and due process of law guarantees of the Constitution of the United States.

In its final judgment, which upheld Carroll’s expulsion from school, the learned trial court made the following findings and ruling upon that issue:

“The Court finds that a dance, sponsored by the Journalism Club at North-view High and approved by the school’s principal, was held on the evening of April 4 of this year at the Doug Tew Community Center in Dothan. Two Northview teachers were assigned as chaperones, and, additionally, two off-duty policemen were hired to keep order. The Plaintiff and a friend, who is a juvenile, went to the dance after having consumed a large amount of rum. By Plaintiff’s own testimony, he and his friend were very intoxicated by the time they arrived at the dance. Plaintiff was seen by one of the chaperones and a policeman, staggering through the lobby outside the dance floor [and] vomiting on the wall and floor. Plaintiff’s juvenile friend also became nauseated and vomited. Both students were arrested by the policemen for public intoxication, Plaintiff being taken to the city police station and the juvenile to the diversion center. After a hearing before the Defendant Board of Education, where Plaintiff was present with his attorney and given an opportunity to present evidence, the Defendant Board of Education voted to expel Plaintiff from the school system for the remainder of the school year. That expulsion prompted Plaintiff’s petition to this Court.
“The Defendant Board of Education has adopted a Code of Student Conduct which classifies conduct violations into three separate categories. Class III violations are considered to be the most severe, and, when the evidence presented to the Board establishes that a student has committed a Class III violation, the only disciplinary action prescribed by the Code is expulsion. The possession, use, transfer or sale of drugs, drug paraphernalia, or alcoholic beverages on school property or at any school-sponsored function is stated to be a Class III offense. The Code of Student Conduct has been published by the Board, and each student is furnished a copy at the beginning of each school year. Each student and his parent or guardian are required to return to the student's school a statement affirming that they have received a copy of the Code and are familiar with its provisions. Plaintiff and his parents knew that he could be expelled if he went to school or to a school-sponsored function while intoxicated.
“Plaintiff seeks to have this Court set aside his expulsion by-contending that there has been selective enforcement by Defendant on Class III violations of its Code of Student Conduct and by contending that this type discipline is too severe for the violation committed. In support of this position, he produced evidence that the off-duty policemen, in addition to Plaintiff and his juvenile friend, saw two other males on the evening of April 4 who had been drinking. Neither of these individuals had gotten into the dance, but were both stopped by the police in the parking lot and sent away before they could get inside. Both had the odor of alcohol on their breath, but neither was intoxicated to the extent of Plaintiff and his friend. The evidence doesn’t reveal whether or not these people were students in the city school system. Perhaps, as Plaintiff apparently contends, the police should have arrested these two individuals and reported them to school officials rather than sending them away. On the other hand, law enforcement officers are quite often called upon to use [249]*249their discretion as to whether or not citizens have consumed alcohol to the extent of violating the law. Both policemen in this case have served for many years in the Dothan Police Department. They apparently felt that what they did was the appropriate action to be taken under the circumstances, and this Court certainly can’t say that they were wrong. This Court doesn’t feel that Plaintiff can justify his actions and avoid discipline simply because these policemen did two other people favors by barring them from the dance and thus possible punishment themselves. This evidence certainly does not rise to the level of proving that the Defendant Board of Education has engaged in any intentional, systematic, selective enforcement of Class III violations under the Code.
“Plaintiff next produced evidence, in an effort to show selective enforcement, that seven different elementary, middle, and high school students had been charged during the current school year with Class III violations where the discipline ultimately imposed was less than expulsion. To rebut this contention, the Defendant quite satisfactorily proved that, when each of these incidents was investigated, the evidence showed (1) that some lesser violation than that charged had actually been committed, (2) that there were no witnesses to the commission of the offense charged, or (3) that there were other mitigating circumstances which caused discipline less than expulsion to be exacted. This is no evidence of selective enforcement, but rather examples of school authorities attempting to record complaints of student misbehavior, to thoroughly investigate those complaints, and then to discipline the offending students appropriately.

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Related

A.S. v. Dothan City Board of Education
570 So. 2d 1247 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 1990)
Matter of As
570 So. 2d 1247 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 1990)
Scoggins v. Henry County Board of Education
549 So. 2d 99 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 1989)

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Bluebook (online)
510 So. 2d 246, 40 Educ. L. Rep. 1338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carroll-v-city-of-dothan-board-of-education-alacivapp-1986.