Coosa County Board of Education v. Hamilton

778 So. 2d 831, 2000 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 450, 2000 WL 1036352
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedJuly 28, 2000
Docket2990542
StatusPublished

This text of 778 So. 2d 831 (Coosa County Board of Education v. Hamilton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coosa County Board of Education v. Hamilton, 778 So. 2d 831, 2000 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 450, 2000 WL 1036352 (Ala. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinions

THOMPSON, Judge.

Sheila Hamilton, William Whetstone, and Calvin Edwards (hereinafter collectively referred to as the “plaintiffs”) filed an action against the Coosa County Board of Education; the superintendent of education, and the members of the Coosa County Board of Education (hereinafter collectively referred to as the “Board”). In their complaint, the plaintiffs, all school-bus drivers, alleged a denial of equal protection and a breach of contract. The plaintiffs sought backpay.

The defendants moved for a summary judgment. The trial court denied their motion. In lieu of conducting a bench trial, the court allowed the parties to submit the case on briefs. The trial court entered a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, finding that the Board had changed [833]*833its policy regarding the rate of pay for school-bus drivers. The court awarded the plaintiffs backpay. The defendants appealed.

The trial court did not hear ore tenus evidence, and it was therefore not called upon to determine the issue of the credibility of the witnesses. Thus, because this court reviews the same evidence, in the same form, as was presented to the trial court, the trial court’s judgment applying the law to the facts carries no presumption of correctness. Beavers v. County of Walker, 645 So.2d 1365 (Ala.1994). Because this appeal concerns only the application of the law to the facts, this court reviews the trial court’s judgment de novo. Ex parte Graham, 702 So.2d 1215 (Ala.1997).

The record indicates that before 1977, the Board operated three high schools and two junior high schools. Each bus driver drove a route carrying students from home to school in the morning and from school to home in the afternoon. Some of the drivers made more stops than others, and some of the drivers delivered students to more than one school. Before 1977, all bus drivers were paid the same salary; the parties refer to this one salary as “one contract.”

In 1977, the Board opened a vocational school and an advanced-placement center. The student body at the vocational school was made up solely of students attending the three Coosa County high schools. In order to shuttle the vocational students between those high schools and the vocational school, the Board hired five of the bus drivers who also drove regular morning and afternoon routes to transport students to and from the vocational school during the day. (For the remainder of this opinion, those school-bus drivers are referred to as “vocational-shuttle drivers”). The Board paid an extra “half contract” salary to the vocational-shuttle drivers who delivered students to the vocational school during the day in addition to driving their regular routes. Bus drivers who drove students from home to school and back received pay by the “one-contract” rate. The vocational-shuttle drivers received an additional amount equal to half the “one-contract” rate, to compensate them for their additional duties.

In 1988, the Board consolidated the three high schools into one high school, Central High School. The Board created new bus routes after the three high schools were consolidated. Some of the new routes required that some of the bus drivers stop at the elementary school, the vocational school, and the new high school. Other routes required only that drivers transport students to and from one of the schools. Larry Hardman, the superintendent of education, testified that the new routes were designed to ensure that all bus drivers spent a comparable amount of time on their routes.

The new school is located approximately one-half mile from the vocational school. After the three area high schools were consolidated in 1988, there was no longer a need for more than one vocational-shuttle driver to shuttle students between the vocational school and the new high school. Therefore, the remaining four vocational-shuttle drivers were no longer needed during the day, but they continued to drive their morning and afternoon bus routes.

Hardman met with representatives of the Alabama Education Association (“AEA”), to discuss the possibility of eliminating the extra half-contract salary for the five former vocational-shuttle drivers. However, the AEA representatives told Hardman that to make that change the Board would have to conduct a “fair-dismissal” hearing for each of the vocational-shuttle drivers affected by the change. Hardman testified that such hearings could be very expensive and that he therefore decided to continue paying the former vocational-shuttle drivers a base salary pursuant to the “contract and a half.” All drivers who had not driven a mid-day shuttle to the vocational school continued [834]*834to receive a “one-contract” salary. All bus drivers who were hired to replace a retired vocational-shuttle driver were paid a salary at the “one-contract” rate.

The bus driver who was selected to shuttle students from the new high school to the vocational school during the day is paid at a rate twice the “one-contract” rate — i.e., she is paid at a “two-contract” rate. This is because she was a vocational-shuttle driver before 1988 (thus her base salary was at a rate of one and a half contracts) and the Board pays her an additional amount at the half-contract rate for shuttling the students to and from the vocational school.

The plaintiff Whetstone was hired as a school-bus driver in 1979. Both before and after 1988, Whetstone drove only a morning and an afternoon bus route. He never drove a shuttle during the school day to the vocational school. Since he was hired in 1979, he has been paid at the “one-contract” rate.

The Board hired the plaintiff Sheila Hamilton as a bus driver for the 1994-95 school year. She replaced a vocational-shuttle driver who had been paid at the “contract-and-a-half’ rate since 1988. Wfiien she was hired, Hamilton signed an agreement stating that she understood that her predecessor had earned one and a half times her salary and that some fellow bus drivers also earned that amount because of their prior service as vocational-shuttle drivers.

The Board hired the plaintiff Calvin Edwards as a bus driver in 1995. He drives students to and from school in the mornings and afternoons. He signed an agreement similar to that signed by Hamilton, an agreement indicating that he knew of the discrepancy between his pay and that received by a few of the Board’s other 28 bus drivers.

The plaintiffs alleged that it was the Board’s policy to pay a salary to bus drivers based on “one-and-a-half ’ contracts if the bus drivers, at any point during the day, drove students to the vocational school. The plaintiffs’ morning route required them to drop off students at the elementary school, pick up students from other buses at the elementary school, and transport those students to the high school or the vocational school. They make the same stops in reverse order in the afternoon. The plaintiffs alleged that they are performing duties that entitle them to a salary under a “contract-and-a-half’ because they had “shuttled students between schools.”

The Board argued that because none of the plaintiffs shuttle students between the high school and the vocational school between classes during the school day, the plaintiffs are not vocational-shuttle drivers and are not entitled to be paid at the “contract-and-a-half’ rate.

The plaintiffs argued that because other bus drivers received higher pay than they did for performing the same duties, the Board had violated their rights to equal protection of the laws.

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Related

Ex Parte Graham
702 So. 2d 1215 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1997)
Beavers v. County of Walker
645 So. 2d 1365 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1994)
Sears, Roebuck and Co. v. Dennies
870 So. 2d 1080 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2004)
McClendon v. Shelby County
484 So. 2d 459 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 1985)
Harris v. Marion County Board of Education
644 So. 2d 29 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 1994)

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Bluebook (online)
778 So. 2d 831, 2000 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 450, 2000 WL 1036352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coosa-county-board-of-education-v-hamilton-alacivapp-2000.