Chalmers v. State Board of Education

168 A. 236, 11 N.J. Misc. 781, 1933 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 102
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedSeptember 15, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 168 A. 236 (Chalmers v. State Board of Education) 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
Chalmers v. State Board of Education, 168 A. 236, 11 N.J. Misc. 781, 1933 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 102 (N.J. 1933).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

This writ brings up a decision of the state board of education holding that prosecutrix was not entitled to the protection of the Teachers’ Tenure of Office act.

The prosecutrix was engaged by the board of education of the township of Earitan in Middlesex county, to teach in Oak Tree public school, by a contract in writing, dated June 28th, 1928, for a period of ten months from September 14th, 1928; by a contract, dated July 29th, 1930 (obviously an error and should be 1929), from September 1st, 1929, to June 30th, 1930; by a contract, dated May 7th, 1930, from September 1st, 1930, to June 30th, 1931; and by a contract, dated June" 24th, 1931, from September 1st, 1931, to June 30th, 1932.

On April 29th, 1931, the local board adopted a resolution that, thereafter, no married teacher should be allowed to acquire tenure unless they were self-supporting. Prosecutrix [782]*782was therefore notified that she would not be re-employed, because to do so would bring her within the provisions of the statute referred to, and that, therefore, her services would not be needed by that board after the expiration of her then existing contract. The prosecutrix thereupon offered to waive her right to acquire tenure. Subsequently, prosecutrix, on May 20th, 1931, tendered her resignation in writing, to be effective June 18th, 1931. The resignation was received by the supervising principal, and by him submitted to the local board of education, some weeks prior to the date when it was to take effect. The proofs are uncontradicted that it was acted upon by the board at a regular meeting and that it was duly accepted, although the clerk of the board made no entry of such action in the minutes. The word “Accepted” was noted on the resignation, when the board acted upon it. The testimony was that the prosecutrix was desirous of resigning in order that she should not be subject to the provisions of the resolution of the board that married women should not acquire tenure.

In this situation, and on June 24th, 1931, the fourth contract was entered into. Under it, prosecutrix taught until the close of the school year in June, 1932. On June 1st, 1932, she was notified that her services would not be needed after June 30th, 1932. She appealed to the commissioner of education, who decided in her favor. Whereupon the local board appealed to the state board of education, which reversed the finding of the commissioner of education.

Four reasons for reversal are written down by prosecutrix. These are—

1. “The state board of education erred in finding that the resignation of the prosecutrix had been accepted.”

2. “The state board of education erred in holding that ‘the commissioner deemed the resignation of respondent to be ineffective because she did not know of its acceptance by the board * * */”

3. “The state board of education erred in holding that the prosecutrix Tiad not served for the period necessary to confer the right to tenure upon her under the statute/ because tenure under the statute does not depend upon a contract but upon [783]*783service and the prosecutrix having rendered the statutory service is entitled to tenure protection by virtue of operation of law.”

4. “Any resignation offered by the prosecutrix, or any notice terminating service served by the Earitan township board of education, was part of a scheme to evade the operation of the Teachers’ Tenure of Service act, and was not operative because evasion of the Teachers’ Tenure of Service act is against public policy.”

Both the commissioner of education and the state board of education appear to have believed that the determination of the matter rested upon the effect of the letter of resignation sent by prosecutrix to the local board.

In its finding, the state board well states the situation as follows:

“The commissioner of education, in his opinion, says: ‘This case rests upon the effect of appellant’s letter of resignation, the action of the board in relation to it, and her subsequent re-employment of June 24th.’ Evidently he considered that upon the acceptance of the resignation an interruption would be created in the continuous service required by the Tenure act, and thus the benefit of previous service by respondent lost to her. Fountain v. Board of Education of Madison Township, 1928, School Law Dec. on page 180. We agree with him that to acquire protection under the Tenure act there must have been a continuous, uninterrupted service of a period of three years, and a re-employment immediately thereafter. The Tenure act provides:

“ ‘The service of all teachers * * * shall be during good behavior and efficiency, after the expiration of a period of employment of three consecutive years in that district unless a shorter period is fixed by the employing board.’ Pamph. L. 1909, ch. 243.

“The commissioner deemed the resignation of respondent to be ineffective because she did not know of its acceptance by the board, and moreover, he says, ‘the president and district clerk, who had full knoweldge of the matter, signed the warrant for the entire month’s salary, and the supervising principal, who was aware of her continued service, [784]*784handed to her a warrant which he knew included payment for the time after which her resignation was intended to take effect, and further, that the board was charged with a knowledge of its own minutes and the official acts of its officers and it cannot therefore disavow the acceptance of appellant’s services for the full period of the third contract and payments therefor.’ ”

“We do not.agree with the commissioner in his view that respondent did not know of the acceptance by the board of her resignation. That method of avoiding the acquisition by her of tenure was her own suggestion. The language of her letter of May 1st, where she inquires if cre-employing’ would make it possible for her to receive consideration, can mean nothing else. She must have meant a re-employing after an interruption of her present service before the end of the school year, otherwise her language would be without sense. Both she and the board believed that if she were re-employed after full performance of her contract ending on June 30th, she would come under tenure protection. The sequence of events negatives such lack of knowledge. She was notified on April 30th, 1931, she would not be re-employed after June 30th. On May 1st she wrote, asking if waiving tenure or re-employment would make it possible she be considered for next year. On May 18th the board adopted the resolution to re-employ her for the next school year, provided she waive tenure rights. On May 20th she wrote her resignation, which was received by the supervising principal on May 26th, and by him presented to the board early in June, and by it accepted. We are not so credulous as to believe respondent was ignorant of any step in a matter which concerned her so vitally, and that the course that was followed was not fully concurred in by her.

“The absence of a record of the receipt and action of the board upon the resignation does not preclude oral evidence of the board’s acts in reference thereto. The School law. prescribes that the secretary shall record the proceedings of the board and its committees, but that requirement does not preclude other evidence of the acts of a board. Where the minutes contain no reference to such acts, the testimony [785]

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Bluebook (online)
168 A. 236, 11 N.J. Misc. 781, 1933 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chalmers-v-state-board-of-education-nj-1933.