Catherine Parsells v. Board of Education of the Borough of Somerville, Somerset County

CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 12, 2023
DocketA-21-22
StatusPublished

This text of Catherine Parsells v. Board of Education of the Borough of Somerville, Somerset County (Catherine Parsells v. Board of Education of the Borough of Somerville, Somerset County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Catherine Parsells v. Board of Education of the Borough of Somerville, Somerset County, (N.J. 2023).

Opinion

SYLLABUS

This syllabus is not part of the Court’s opinion. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Court and may not summarize all portions of the opinion.

Catherine Parsells v. Board of Education of the Borough of Somerville (A-21-22) (087261)

Argued March 14, 2023 -- Decided June 12, 2023

FASCIALE, J., writing for a unanimous Court.

The Board of Education of the Borough of Somerville challenges the award of relief to former teacher Catherine Parsells in this tenure dispute. The Court considers whether the Appellate Division erred by imposing a duty on school boards to “notify, in advance, full-time teachers who consider voluntarily transferring to part-time teaching positions that they may not have a right to return to their full-time position consistent with the principles espoused in Bridgewater-Raritan Education Ass’n v. Board of Education of Bridgewater-Raritan School District, 221 N.J. 349 (2015).” 472 N.J. Super. 369, 372 (App. Div. 2022). The Court also considers whether, under principles of common law waiver, the circumstances show that Parsells knowingly waived her tenured right to a full-time teaching position by temporarily transferring to a part-time teaching position.

The Board employed Parsells as a full-time preschool teacher from September 2010 to June 2016. Parsells earned tenure in 2013. In May 2016, she wrote to the superintendent, expressing an interest in a temporary part-time preschool teaching position that includes health benefits “for as long as [such a position] is available, or until my family decides that full-time work would be in our best interests again,” so that she could “pursu[e] [her] career goals while also being able to spend time with [her] son during his precious first few years.”

Even though Parsells never formally applied for a part-time teaching job, and without addressing her assertion that she understood that her switch would be temporary, the superintendent notified Parsells that the Board “approved [her] transfer from the position of full-time preschool teacher to the position of part-time . . . preschool teacher for the 2016-2017 school year.” Parsells began the 2016-17 school year as a part-time tenured teacher with health benefits.

After requesting and receiving approval for maternity leave followed by a childcare leave of absence from February through June 2017, Parsells re-expressed interest in remaining a temporary part-time teacher for the 2017-18 school year,

1 provided the position continued to include health benefits. She received a voicemail response indicating that health benefits would not be available for the part-time position and then a second voicemail -- from the new superintendent -- stating that the school “might have to add a preschool” class, which “would be a full-time position.” Parsells then extended her leave for the 2017-18 school year.

In April 2018, while Parsells remained on an extended leave of absence, the new superintendent contacted her about the 2018-19 school year. He reiterated that she could work as a part-time teacher but without health benefits. As to working as a full-time teacher, he told Parsells that if a position became available, she would need to apply for it. In an email to the school’s principal, the new superintendent noted that Parsells “was under the impression that she had the option of coming back full-time if she wanted to” and had “stated that if she had known all of this before changing to part-time, she would not have made the change.” Parsells returned to her part-time tenured teaching job in September 2018, but without health benefits.

Parsells then applied for a full-time teaching position and “all other positions for which she was certified.” The Board rejected her applications for at least six full-time jobs, hiring non-tenured teachers from outside the district for at least some of those positions. Parsells found employment elsewhere. She filed a petition alleging that the Board had violated her tenure rights by hiring non-tenured teachers for the full-time positions to which she applied and that she had not voluntarily relinquished her tenure rights by moving temporarily to a part-time position.

An administrative law judge (ALJ) found that Parsells had voluntarily changed her full-time teaching status, that her tenure and seniority protections were therefore not triggered, and that the Board therefore did not violate her rights. The Commissioner reversed for three reasons: (1) the ALJ failed to resolve whether Parsells “knowingly and voluntarily waived her tenure rights to her full-time position”; (2) the Commissioner was unpersuaded that there was no notice obligation under Bridgewater-Raritan in the circumstances of the case; and (3) extending leave for the 2017-18 school year did not “constitute a waiver of her tenure rights.”

The Appellate Division affirmed the Commissioner’s final agency decision and explicitly extended Bridgewater-Raritan to impose a duty on school boards to “provide advance notice to their tenured full-time teachers that they may not get their full-time teaching job back if they voluntarily take a part-time teaching job.” 472 N.J. Super. at 378. The Court granted certification. 252 N.J. 327 (2022).

HELD: Parsells did not knowingly waive her tenured right to a full-time teaching position, and the Court therefore affirms the Appellate Division’s decision upholding the Commissioner’s award of “full back pay, benefits, and emoluments, less mitigation.” But the Court rejects the extension of Bridgewater-Raritan to 2 impose a duty on school boards to notify, in advance, full-time teachers who consider voluntarily transferring to part-time teaching positions that they may not have a right to return to their full-time position.

1. The Tenure Act provides that tenured teachers “shall not be dismissed or reduced in compensation except for inefficiency, incapacity, or conduct unbecoming such a teaching staff member or other just cause.” N.J.S.A. 18A:28-5. The question is whether the circumstances show that by voluntarily switching to a part-time teaching position temporarily, Parsells knowingly waived her right -- otherwise protected by her tenure status -- to a full-time teaching position clearly, unequivocally, and decisively. The Court reviews the evidence presented in detail and finds that the Board presented no proofs to show Parsells waived or abandoned her known right to full-time employment as a tenured teacher “either by design or indifference,” or that she did so “clearly, unequivocally, and decisively.” See Knorr v. Smeal, 178 N.J. 169, 177 (2003). Instead, the circumstances surrounding Parsells’ expressed interest and the Board’s subsequent approval clearly show that she believed she had a right, as a tenured teacher, to return to work full-time and that she did not knowingly waive or abandon that right. (pp. 12-18)

2. It was error, however, to extend Bridgewater-Raritan to impose a duty on school boards to notify tenured teachers in advance that if they work part-time after working full-time, they might not have a right to return to the full-time position. Bridgewater-Raritan is a different case. The Court there interpreted the term “designate” in a statute not at issue here -- N.J.S.A. 18A:16-1.1 -- to impose an obligation that school boards make applicable employees “aware that [they are] being employed as a ‘replacement,’” because that designation “takes the employee off the normal service road toward tenure.” See 221 N.J. at 361. Here, there is no use of the term “designate” and indeed no specific provision of the Tenure Act that counsel have asked the Court to interpret. The “mere existence of the Tenure Act” does not supply a rationale for the imposition of a duty to notify. (pp. 18-20)

3.

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Catherine Parsells v. Board of Education of the Borough of Somerville, Somerset County, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/catherine-parsells-v-board-of-education-of-the-borough-of-somerville-nj-2023.