Clinch County Board of Education v. Hinson

543 S.E.2d 91, 247 Ga. App. 33
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 28, 2000
DocketA00A2226, A00A2227
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 543 S.E.2d 91 (Clinch County Board of Education v. Hinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clinch County Board of Education v. Hinson, 543 S.E.2d 91, 247 Ga. App. 33 (Ga. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

Phipps, Judge.

David Hinson was employed by the Clinch County Board of Education as Media and Technology Coordinator. At the request of school administrators, Hinson placed a videocamera in a girls’ locker room during high school basketball games in an attempt to apprehend a thief. Although no thefts occurred, videotapes captured images of female students changing their clothing and recorded their conversations. Following disclosure of the tapes’ existence, the county school superintendent suspended Hinson and recommended that his contract of employment be terminated. A hearing requested by Hinson under the Fair Dismissal Act was conducted by a tribunal composed of active and retired school administrators from various Georgia counties. 1 Based on its findings of fact, the tribunal recommended that Hinson’s contract of employment be terminated. The county board of education approved the tribunal’s findings and recommendation, as did the state board acting in its appellate capacity. On further appeal, however, the superior court reversed.

In Case No. A00A2226, the county board of education appeals. The board charges the superior court with error in failing to give deference to the local board’s decision under the applicable standard of appellate review. In Case No. A00A2227, Hinson cross-appeals. He contends that the local board’s decision should have been reversed for reasons not given by the superior court in its order. Finding merit in the appeal but not the cross-appeal, we hold that the superior court erred in reversing the board’s termination of Hinson’s employment.

Hinson was employed by the Clinch County Board of Education for a number of years. He was a system-wide media and technology *34 coordinator. He was regarded as a very effective administrator, and his evaluations were uniformly excellent.

During a girls’ basketball game at Clinch County High School, a thief gained entrance to the locker room used by the visiting team and stole money and jewelry worth almost $2,000. The suspected point of entry was near the locker room entrance. The theft was discussed in a meeting between School Resource Officer Lonnie Webb (a Clinch County deputy sheriff), high school principal Dr. Kay Hinson (Hinson’s wife), and assistant principal Donald Tyson. At the meeting, Webb suggested that an attempt be made to apprehend the thief by placing a videocamera in the visiting girls’ locker room during a basketball game. Webb advised Dr. Hinson that this would be legal so long as the camera was aimed at the locker room entrance.

Hinson was asked to meet with Dr. Hinson, Tyson, and Webb and, at the meeting, was informed of Webb’s plan. Hinson was given no legal advice, but was told that the videocamera should be focused on the locker room entrance and asked if this was feasible. After Hinson, Tyson, and Webb went to the locker room and determined that a videocamera could be positioned in a locker so as to focus on the entranceway, a decision was made to proceed with the plan. Although Hinson characterized the decision as a “collective” one, Dr. Hinson acknowledged that the final decision-making authority was hers.

One afternoon, Hinson and Webb installed Hinson’s personal videocamera inside a wire-mesh locker in the visiting locker room and caused it to record activities in the locker room before, during, and after a girls’ basketball game. Hinson repeated this procedure during another girls’ basketball game two weeks later. Altogether four two-hour tapes were made, two on each date. The camera was focused so as to record benches and lockers used by players and cheerleaders, as well as the locker room entrance. The videotapes showed some of the female students removing their outer garments and dressing for the game. Some students were captured by the camera in underclothing. The camera was visible to some but not all of the students. During the latter game, a cheerleader for the visiting team unplugged the camera, but Hinson reconnected it before recording the final tape. None of the female students had any prior knowledge of the videotaping or gave their prior consent.

On direct examination, Hinson testified that he meant to aim the camera at the entrance to the locker room and did not intend to record any images of female students using the lockers. But during cross-examination, he testified that he knew female students would be undressing in the locker room and intended to capture them on videotape because he was unsure whether one of them might have been the thief.

Without erasing the tapes, Hinson put them in a storage room *35 adjacent to his office to which a limited number of school personnel had access. The tapes thereby became available to be used by teachers for retaping. A student found one of the tapes in a teacher conference room, viewed it, and disclosed the contents to his mother. The school superintendent later obtained the tape. Upon reviewing the tape, the local board of education turned the matter over for criminal investigation. After the remaining tapes were found by a Georgia Bureau of Investigation investigator in Hinson’s office and in the adjacent storage room about two years after the recordings were made, Hinson was indicted by a grand jury on felony eavesdropping charges. Although a subsequent grand jury dismissed the charges, the cheerleader who had unplugged the camera filed suit against the school board and others because of the taping. When Webb’s involvement in the videotaping was disclosed, he was dismissed.

Hinson’s claim that he did not know that the students would be dressing in the area where the camera was focused was found by the tribunal to be lacking in credibility. In this regard, the members of the tribunal noted that they had visited the locker room with the consent of the parties and observed that a videocamera located where Hinson placed it surely would record the benches intended for use by students dressing. The tribunal and later the local board concluded that the acts and omissions of Hinson in causing or participating in causing the videotapes to be made, retaining the videotapes, and failing to ensure that they were erased, destroyed, or otherwise safeguarded constituted “incompetency” under OCGA § 20-2-940 (a) (1) and “other good and sufficient cause” justifying termination of his employment under OCGA § 20-2-940 (a) (8). The state, board noted these findings and determined there was evidence supporting the local board’s decision.

The superior court concluded otherwise and reversed. The court ruled that in videotaping the girls’ locker room Hinson had merely carried out a task assigned to him by school administrators; that there was no evidence of any policy, directive, or training that would have required Hinson to erase the tapes; and that the evidence was insufficient to support a finding that he was custodian of the tapes. Relying on an out-of-state case, the court also held that Hinson could not be dismissed for unfitness or incompetence absent evidence showing that his conduct produced disruption or impairment of discipline or of the teaching process and that his retention posed a significant danger of harm to either students, school employees, or others who might be affected by his actions.

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Bluebook (online)
543 S.E.2d 91, 247 Ga. App. 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clinch-county-board-of-education-v-hinson-gactapp-2000.