Daniman v. Board of Education

23 Misc. 2d 664, 190 N.Y.S.2d 225, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3336
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 8, 1959
StatusPublished

This text of 23 Misc. 2d 664 (Daniman v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daniman v. Board of Education, 23 Misc. 2d 664, 190 N.Y.S.2d 225, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3336 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1959).

Opinion

Louis L. Friedman, J.

In this article 78 (Civ. Prac. Act) proceeding, one Blau moves for an order relieving him from the terms of a stipulation, and further asks that the stipulation he vacated insofar as it applies to him.

By cross motion, respondent moves for an order denying the present application and directing that an order heretofore entered in this proceeding be resettled so as to provide that the present moving party, Blau, be bound thereby.

The facts in this case closely parallel those in Shlakman v. Board of Higher Educ. (5 Misc 2d 901, [Hart, J.]).

The original article 78 proceeding was brought by a number of petitioners for the purpose of overruling a determination made by the respondent Board of Education of the Gity of New York. These petitioners were school teachers having tenure, and in 1952 they were subpoenaed to and appeared before a subcommittee of the Committee on Judiciary of the United States Senate. They were there questioned as to their then or prior affiliation "with the Communist party. Asserting the privileges afforded them by the Fifth Amendment, they each refused to answer, and, as a result thereof, by resolutions made by respondents in October of 1952 their employment was terminated. Bespondents purported to act pursuant to the provisions of section 903 of the New York City Charter.

This proceeding followed, instituted by petitioners in November of 1952. When the matter came on before Special Term the application was denied and the proceeding was dismissed (Matter of Daniman v. Board of Educ., 202 Misc. 915). On June 15,1953, the Appellate Division affirmed (282 App. Div. 717). At the same time, when this matter came on before the Special Term and when it was argued in the Appellate Division, the court heard and decided simultaneously a separate proceeding involving college personnel in the employ of the Board of [666]*666Higher Education of the City of New York, who had been dismissed under the same circumstances. The decision of the Appellate Division affirmed the dismissal of that proceeding by the Special Term (282 App. Div. 718).

One of the petitioners in these proceedings, named Sloehower, dissatisfied with the services of his attorney, and while the appeals in both proceedings were pending in the Appellate Division, sought and secured a substitution of counsel. By reason thereof, his appeal was argued separately. Thus, when the matter was presented to the Appellate Division, it came there by reason of separate notices of appeal filed by the two petitioning groups, as well as one by Sloehower, and on the appeals themselves separate briefs were filed and separate arguments were made.

On June 18, 1953, three days after the affirmances by the Appellate Division, the respondent terminated the employment of the present moving party, Harold Blau. At the same time five other teachers were also discharged, all six of them having refused to testify before the same Senate subcommittee for the same reason previously indicated. These employees, hereinafter referred to as the “ stipulants,” retained the same attorney who was then representing the group of petitioners in the main proceeding.

There then followed many discussions, and, on September 10, 1953, a stipulation was entered into on behalf of the present moving party and the others in his group. This stipulation, after reciting that the issues of law and fact relating to the termination of the employment of stipulants ‘ ‘ are substantially similar to the issue of law and fact in the above entitled proceedings and * ® * in the interests of economy, the parties considered that no useful purpose will be served by the institution of independent proceedings * * * or by their formal intervention as parties in the above entitled proceedings,” provided inter alia: (1) That the said stipulants “ shall for all purposes be considered as parties to this proceeding to the end that the final order of judgment made herein in behalf of the present parties petitioner shall apply to and benefit or bind them, as the case may be, with the same force and effect as though they were formal parties petitioner herein.” (2) The final order to be entered herein may, at the request of counsel for the petitioners or of counsel for the respondent, refer to and include (the named stipulants) within its terms so that claim for reinstatement of (the named stipulants) shall be disposed of in the same manner and upon the same terms and conditions as are the claims to reinstatement of the petitioners formally named herein. The [667]*667stipulation further provided: “4. It shall not be necessary for (naming stipulants) to institute any other proceeding or formally to intervene in the above pending proceeding or to take any steps to become formal parties herein, and their rights shall be determined by the final order to be entered herein on the basis of this stipulation.”

Following the execution of this stipulation, the matter came on before the Court of Appeals where the order of the Appellate Division was affirmed (306 N. Y. 532). Motions for reargument and to amend the remittitur of the Court of Appeals to show that a Federal question had been presented were denied (307 N. Y. 806).

Petitioners then appealed to the United States Supreme Court, and by a decision handed down on February 7, 1955, the appeal was dismissed for want of a properly presented Federal question (348 U. S. 933). A second motion to amend the remittitur or, in the alternative, to recall and retain the remittitur pending the decision by the United States Supreme Court in the companion case of Matter of Slochower, was denied by the Court of Appeals on April 14,1955 (308 N. Y. 909).

Petitioner Slochower’s matter was heard by the United States Supreme Court and he eventually prevailed therein (350 U. S. 551). The court held that section 903 of the New York City Charter was unconstitutional in its application under the circumstances there present, and directed that Slochower be reinstated to his position as a school teacher. Fortified by this decision relating to Slochower, petitioners herein again moved before the Court of Appeals for some relief, contending that they were entitled to the same determination as had been made in his case. Again, the Court of Appeals denied their application on June 8, 1956 (1 N Y 2d 855), and in September, 1956, petitioners appealed to the United States Supreme Court from the denial of this motion. In addition, petitioners filed a separate motion in said Supreme Court for a rehearing of that court’s order denying their original appeal, and also filed a petition for certiorari to the Court of Appeals from its order of June 8, 1955. On December 17, 1956, the Supreme Court denied petitioners’ application, dismissed their appeal, and denied their petition for certiorari (352 U. S. 950).

Thus, there is presented the picture of a group of teachers having lost their positions by virtue of the provisions of section 903 of the New York City Charter, a determination by the United States Supreme Court that said section is unconstitutional in its application under the circumstances therein present, [668]*668and the anomalous result that one of the teachers affected thereby is entitled to reinstatement, while the others are not.

Other proceedings followed.

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Bluebook (online)
23 Misc. 2d 664, 190 N.Y.S.2d 225, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniman-v-board-of-education-nysupct-1959.