Celestine v. Lafayette Parish School Board

284 So. 2d 650, 1973 La. App. LEXIS 6715
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 5, 1973
Docket4242
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 284 So. 2d 650 (Celestine v. Lafayette Parish School Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Celestine v. Lafayette Parish School Board, 284 So. 2d 650, 1973 La. App. LEXIS 6715 (La. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

284 So.2d 650 (1973)

Allen CELESTINE, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
LAFAYETTE PARISH SCHOOL BOARD, Defendant-Appellee.

No. 4242.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

November 5, 1973.

*651 Murphy Bell, Baton Rouge, for plaintiff-appellant.

Ronald Dauterive, Asst. Dist. Atty., Lafayette, for defendant-appellee.

Before HOOD, CULPEPPER and MILLER, JJ.

HOOD, Judge.

Allen Celestine instituted this action for judgment ordering that he be re-instated as a classroom teacher in the Lafayette Parish School System as of March 17, 1970 the date he was dismissed, with all of the emoluments and benefits of that employment. The defendant is the Lafayette Parish School Board. The trial judge rendered judgment in favor of the defendant School Board, dismissing plaintiff's suit. Plaintiff has appealed.

The issues are whether the evidence is sufficient to support the School Board's finding that plaintiff is incompetent, whether defendant acted arbitrarily or unreasonably in dismissing plaintiff, and whether plaintiff has been denied due process of law.

On March 16, 1970, plaintiff Celestine was serving as a fifth grade teacher in the N. P. Moss Elementary School in Lafayette Parish, pursuant to a contract of employment previously entered into between him and the Lafayette Parish School Board. He had been working as a classroom teacher for defendant for eleven years prior to that date, and he thus was a "permanent teacher," within the meaning of LSA-R.S. 17:442.

*652 Shortly after his class reconvened following the noon lunch period on the above mentioned date, plaintiff was confronted by several students who told him that two of his girl students had been using "bad words." Plaintiff thereupon asked the two girls in the presence of other members of the class whether they had been using vulgar language, and when they responded that they had, he instructed each of them to write the vulgar word 1,000 times and to turn that work in to the principal for his signature, and to their parents for their signatures. One of the two girls to whom this assignment was given was eleven years of age at that time.

Pursuant to the instructions given to them by plaintiff, each of these girls began writing a four letter word, beginning with the letter "F," being an extremely vulgar word meaning sexual intercourse. They spent the rest of that day carrying out the assignment of writing that word 1,000 times. One of them, the above mentioned eleven year old girl, finished about the time the rest of the class was dismissed for the day, and she turned in her paper to the plaintiff. Celestine then ordered her to take the paper to the principal, Robert Landry, for his signature, and she complied with that order. The other student who had been given the same type punishment did not finish her assignment that afternoon and the record indicates that she has never been required to complete it.

On the following day, March 17, the principal of the school met with plaintiff Celestine, the Parish Superintendent of Schools, the Parish Director of Elementary Schools, and two School Board members to discuss the incident. Plaintiff also conferred privately with the Parish Superintendent of Schools later that afternoon. On that day, March 17, the Superintendent of Schools for Lafayette Parish wrote a letter to plaintiff informing him that he was being suspended indefinitely from duty, without pay, effective March 17, 1970. In that letter the Superintendent also offered plaintiff the option of resigning or of facing a recommendation of the Superintendent that he be dismissed for incompetency. Plaintiff refused to resign, and the Superintendent thereupon formally charged plaintiff with incompetency, and he recommended to the School Board that plaintiff be dismissed on the basis of that charge. The Superintendent specified in his recommendation that his charge of incompetency was based on the above mentioned incident.

A copy of the written charge was furnished to plaintiff, and he was formally notified by registered mail of the date and place scheduled for a hearing before the School Board and of his right to a public or private hearing. A full public hearing was held by the School Board at the time scheduled for it, and at the conclusion of that hearing the School Board, by unanimous vote, formally dismissed plaintiff as a teacher in the Lafayette Parish School System. Plaintiff then instituted this suit.

Plaintiff contends, first, that he did not assign the "word" which was written by the two girl students. He testified that after his students informed him that the two girls had been using bad words, he asked the girls shortly after the class reconvened if they had used vulgar language again, and when they admitted that they had he instructed each of them to write the vulgar word they had used 500 times. The one who completed the assignment testified that she was instructed to write the word 1,000 times, and the record shows that she did write it that many times. Celestine maintains that he did not ask and did not know what the word was until after the assignment had been completed by one student and her paper on which the word had been written many times had been handed to him.

The girl who finished the assignment testified that immediately before the punishment was imposed the word which she wrote 1000 times was spelled out to the plaintiff by another student in the classroom, and that although it was spelled in a low voice, she could hear it easily while *653 sitting on the second or third row of seats in that class. Plaintiff does not deny that a student spelled the word for him before he gave the assignment, but he stated that if the student spelled it he didn't hear it. He concedes that he used poor judgment in giving that type punishment to a pupil, and that he would not require his own child to write the word which these two young girls wrote.

The evidence shows that the two students who were subjected to this punishment spent the rest of the day writing this vulgar word in the classroom in the presence of the other students, while classes were being conducted in the same room. At least some of the other students knew the word which was being written, because one of them testified that another student had told her what it was while the assignment was being carried out.

We do not feel that plaintiff's unawareness of the exact word which he required the girls to write relieves him of the responsibility of having assigned that specific word to them. According to his own testimony, he knew that he was requiring them to write a vulgar word. If he did not know or bother to inquire as to what the word was, then the assignment by chance could have involved a word which was even more vulgar than the one actually used in this instance, if such a word exists.

We can understand how upsetting the type of punishment administered by plaintiff in this instance may have been to the parents of all of the children in that school. We will not speculate as to the effect which such a punishment may have on the children who were given this assignment, or on the other pupils in the class, but it at least is conceivable that the effect would be harmful to them and to the school.

When there is a rational basis for an administrative board's discretionary determinations which are supported by substantial evidence insofar as factually required, the Court has no right to substitute its judgment for the administrative board's or to interfere with the latter's bona fide exercise of its discretion. Chantlin v. Acadia Parish School Board, 100 So.2d 908 (La.App. 1 Cir.

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Bluebook (online)
284 So. 2d 650, 1973 La. App. LEXIS 6715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/celestine-v-lafayette-parish-school-board-lactapp-1973.