Clarksdale Municipal School District Board of Trustees v. Sharron Montgomery

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedNovember 18, 2025
Docket2024-CA-00611-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Clarksdale Municipal School District Board of Trustees v. Sharron Montgomery (Clarksdale Municipal School District Board of Trustees v. Sharron Montgomery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clarksdale Municipal School District Board of Trustees v. Sharron Montgomery, (Mich. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2024-CA-00611-COA

CLARKSDALE MUNICIPAL SCHOOL APPELLANT DISTRICT BOARD OF TRUSTEES

v.

SHARRON MONTGOMERY APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 04/22/2024 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. WATOSA MARSHALL SANDERS COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: COAHOMA COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: KASHONDA LEKESHA DAY MARY CLARK JOYNER ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: JOSEPH LEE ADAMS KRISTINE LYNN BISHOP CALLAHAN NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - CONTRACT DISPOSITION: REVERSED AND RENDERED - 11/18/2025 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:

BEFORE BARNES, C.J., WESTBROOKS AND McCARTY, JJ.

McCARTY, J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. After a school district employee’s contract was not renewed, she sought review from

the school board. The school board determined a hearing was not necessary because she

failed to provide the district with the required materials and upheld the non-renewal. She

appealed to the chancery court, which reversed and remanded, finding the board had failed

to follow its own rules. Since the educator did not comply with the statute’s requirements,

a hearing was not necessary, and we reverse the chancery court’s decision and render in favor

of the school board.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY ¶2. Sharron Montgomery was employed as a “Parent and Family Engagement

Coordinator” with the Clarksdale Municipal School District. In early 2023, she was

informed by letter that her employment contract would not be renewed for the 2023-2024

school year, as her position was “being eliminated.” Montgomery was subsequently told in

a follow-up letter that the reason for her non-renewal was that her

duties [will be] repurposed to school-level Parent Liaison positions throughout the District. Due to the District’s chronic absenteeism rate of 52% and the increase of schools identified as those in improvement by MDE, the District has determined it necessary to have more onsite parental support in place.

¶3. Montgomery requested a due process hearing before the school district’s Board of

Trustees to challenge the non-renewal. At the meeting before the Board, the attorney

representing the school district argued that “the District has not received the necessary

information from Ms. Montgomery or her attorney” “in compliance with [the] law before the

five-day period before this particular hearing.” He then stated, “[T]he District is asking

for . . . the Board to do two things: One, make a factual finding that Ms. Montgomery failed

to submit the required response to the District pursuant to [state law]; and, secondly, to

approve the recommendation of nonreemployment, which the Board is allowed to do

pursuant to that particular same provision of the statute.” He further asserted the statute “says

if an employee fails to provide this information, the recommendation of nonreemployment

of the superintendent, of course, in this particular position, shall be final without the

necessity of a hearing.”

¶4. After deliberation, the Board stated on the record: “it is the understanding of this

Board” that the law requires “that we . . . recognize that we do not have or did not receive

2 any evidence in support of the response intended to be presented here today, nor any list of

witnesses, nor that we received any other further documentation listed in that.” The Board

concluded, “As a result, we are obligated and understand that we are obligated by law to

uphold the nonrenewal that has been issued to Ms. Montgomery.” Notably, Montgomery’s

attorney then had an opportunity to poll the Board members regarding their votes, and every

member announced that he or she voted to affirm the nonrenewal.

¶5. The day after the Board meeting, the school district’s attorney sent a letter to

Montgomery’s attorney stating:

As you are aware, on Tuesday, May 30, 2023, the Board . . . conducted a due process hearing on the non-renewal of Sharron Montgomery. After hearing oral arguments and posing questions, the Board deliberated and voted unanimously to uphold the non-renewal decision . . . . The Board found, concluded, and announced that Ms. Montgomery failed to timely submit a response regarding the Superintendent’s non-renewal . . . .

¶6. Montgomery subsequently filed a petition with the chancery court “to appeal the

Board’s affirmance of the decision not to renew” her employment contract. Her core

argument was that the Board failed to notify her of its decision “with written and signed

Board minutes.” In her view, this failure meant the Board did not properly ratify the

non-renewal of her contract. She reasoned, “A public Board can only act or speak through

its minutes,” and since she never received an official decision from the Board, the decision

was not finalized, so “[a]t a minimum, Montgomery’s case must be remanded to the Board

for a full hearing on the merits.”

¶7. The chancery court agreed with Montgomery’s approach, finding that her “failure to

adhere to the 5-day rule amounts to harmless error since she did not plan to present any

3 witnesses other than herself and because the Board had already been put on notice that

Montgomery would be present at the hearing, especially since she was the one that requested

it.” The court further determined that the “five day rule” was meant to prevent trial by

ambush and because “the school already had all of Ms. Montgomery’s employment records[,]

and since she did not have any witnesses to testify, there would not have been any significant

amount of testimony which the School Board and/or its attorney were not already privy to.”

¶8. Additionally, the court found that the Board erred by failing to reduce in writing its

decision dismissing Montgomery’s appeal by spreading the decision over the Board’s

minutes, and by failing to send the decision to her within 10 days per state law. The chancery

court concluded that “[a] written copy of the Board minutes should have been sent to Ms.

Montgomery just as she should have submitted her five (5) day documentation.”

¶9. The court ruled that “this case should be remanded back to the School Board for a full

hearing on the merits” since “[t]he School Board cannot simply pick and choose which

statutes it will adhere to.” In the end, the relief granted was that which Montgomery had

requested—a remand “for a full hearing on the merits.”

¶10. The Board timely appealed, and the case was assigned to us for review.

DISCUSSION

I. The judgment rendered by the chancery court on appeal was a final and reviewable order per statute.

¶11. Our threshold issue is whether there is a final judgment upon which an appeal may

4 rest.1 “Regardless of whether the parties raise jurisdiction, the Court is required to note its

own lack of jurisdiction[.]” Smith v. Parkerson Lumber Inc., 890 So. 2d 832, 834 (¶12)

(Miss. 2003). Appellate courts “must address this question on our own initiative.” M.W.F.

v. D.D.F., 926 So. 2d 897, 899 (¶4) (Miss. 2006).

¶12. “An appeal may be taken only from a final judgment.” Blaney v. Black Jack Oil Co.,

325 So. 3d 1204, 1206 (¶8) (Miss. Ct. App. 2021). “This Court will dismiss uncertified

interlocutory appeals.” Id. And “[w]ithout the entry of a Rule 54(b) certificate, a trial court

order which disposes of less than all of the claims against all of the parties in a multiple party

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Clarksdale Municipal School District Board of Trustees v. Sharron Montgomery, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clarksdale-municipal-school-district-board-of-trustees-v-sharron-missctapp-2025.