Dauphine v. Carencro High School

843 So. 2d 1096, 2003 WL 1905978
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 21, 2003
Docket2002-CC-2005
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 843 So. 2d 1096 (Dauphine v. Carencro High School) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dauphine v. Carencro High School, 843 So. 2d 1096, 2003 WL 1905978 (La. 2003).

Opinion

843 So.2d 1096 (2003)

Marcus Paul DAUPHINE
v.
CARENCRO HIGH SCHOOL and Lafayette Parish School Board.

No. 2002-CC-2005.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

April 21, 2003.

*1099 Dawn L. Morris, Larry L. Roy, George E. William, Jr., Preis, Kraft & Roy, Lafayette, Counsel for Applicant.

Donald R. Cravins, Jr., Victor J. Versaggi, Domengeaux, Wright, Roy & Edwards, Lafayette, Counsel for Respondent.

KNOLL, Justice.

The writ before us concerns an injunction and contempt proceedings. The two issues presented raise the validity vel non of the temporary restraining order (TRO), and notwithstanding any legal deficiencies of the TRO, whether the criminal contempt conviction based upon a violation of the TRO should be reversed. Specifically, defendants, Dr. James H. Easton, the superintendent of the Lafayette Parish School System, and Dr. Donald W. Aguillard, the principal of Carencro High School, were held in contempt of court for willfully violating a TRO delivered to them by plaintiff's attorney thirty minutes prior to graduation. The TRO directed them to allow the plaintiff, Marcus Dauphine, to "to participate in the graduation ceremonies of Carencro High School scheduled to occur on May 18, 2002, to the fullest extent possible and with all rights and privileges afforded to any and all of the graduates of Carencro High School and be allowed to receive a diploma." For reasons that follow, we reverse, finding legal deficiencies render the TRO invalid, and notwithstanding that defendants could still be held in contempt of an invalid TRO, the record evidence fails to support that Drs. Easton and Aguillard intended to defy the court's authority.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On Wednesday, May 15, 2002, Principal Aguillard notified Dauphine's mother that her son was ineligible to participate in the upcoming graduation ceremony scheduled for 2:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 18, 2002, because he was deficient one-half math credit required for graduation; the deficiency occurred as a result of Dauphine's failure to successfully complete one semester of Algebra I during his freshman year in high school.[1] On the afternoon of Friday, *1100 May 17, 2002, Superintendent Easton also telephoned Dauphine's mother to tell her that her son would not be allowed to participate in Saturday's graduation exercises because he failed to satisfy the math requirement needed for graduation. Sometime on Saturday, May 18, 2002, prior to the commencement of the graduation ceremony, Dauphine's attorney obtained a TRO from the Fifteenth Judicial District Court.[2] The order stated, in pertinent part:

IT IS HEREBY, ordered, directed and mandated, in the name of the State of Louisiana and of the Fifteenth Judicial District Court for the Parish of Lafayette, that Marcus Paul Dauphine be allowed to participate in the graduation ceremonies of Carencro High School scheduled to occur on May 18, 2002, to the fullest extent possible and with all rights and privileges afforded to any and all of the graduates of Carencro High School and be allowed to receive a diploma.
A PERSON WHO VIOLATES THIS ORDER MAY BE PUNISHED UNDER LA. R.S. 13:4611 FOR CONTEMPT OF COURT BY A FINE OF NO MORE THAN $1,000.00 OR BY CONFINEMENT OF JAIL FOR AS LONG AS SIX MONTHS, OR BOTH, AND MAY BE FURTHER PUNISHED UNDER THE CRIMINAL LAWS OF THE STAT [SIC] OF LOUISIANA. THIS ORDER SHALL BE ENFORCED BY ALL LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICERS OF THE STATE OF LOUISIANA.

Although the order bore the signature of a judge of the Fifteenth Judicial District, it contained no reference to the judicial division of the signing judge and the judge's name was not typewritten on the order. Because the order was obtained without having the Clerk of Court open his office on an emergency basis, the order also neither bore a filing stamp from the clerk of court nor the docket number for this proceeding. Although the order was issued on an emergency basis and at a time when the clerk of court's office was not open, the signing judge did not certify a copy of the order for service as provided in LA.CODE CIV. PROC. ANN. art. 251(B).

*1101 Dauphine's attorney testified that he and his law partner delivered the order to Principal Aguillard at the Cajundome.[3] Although the identity of the signing judge could not be deciphered from the signature on the order, Principal Aguillard stated that approximately thirty minutes before graduation, two gentlemen dressed in suits, neither of whom he knew, handed him a folder. At that time, the two gentlemen told him that the folder contained an order signed by Judge Rubin.

After examining the order, Principal Aguillard consulted with Superintendent Easton who was in attendance at the Carencro High School graduation. After conferring with each other and considering that Dauphine did not meet the requisite academic requirements for graduation, they concluded that they would not allow Dauphine to participate in the graduation ceremony. Their decision was further based upon the timing of delivery of the order and suspicions raised in the manner in which the order was presented, i.e., by someone other than a law enforcement official, the document had no court markings such as a docket number and court seal, and the order was illegibly signed.

On the following Monday, May 20, 2002, counsel for Dauphine filed a "Verified Writ of Injunction" with the Lafayette Parish Clerk of Court. At that point, the proceeding was assigned a docket number and was randomly allotted to Judge Byron Hebert. The record shows, however, that shortly after this filing, Dauphine voluntarily dismissed his petition for writ of injunction ostensibly because graduation had passed and no injunctive relief could be provided that would benefit Dauphine.

Additionally, Dauphine formally filed the TRO that Judge Rubin signed on the preceding Saturday, May 18, 2002, and service was made on Principal Aguillard and Superintendent Easton. Contemporaneous with that filing, counsel for Dauphine provided Judge Rubin with a letter that detailed what had transpired when he gave the restraining order to Principal Aguillard and Superintendent Easton just prior to the graduation exercise and further explained that Dauphine was not allowed to graduate. Judge Rubin then issued a sua sponte order, directing Principal Aguillard and Superintendent Easton to appear before his court to show whether they had complied with the TRO issued on Saturday, May 18, 2002.

On May 23, 2002, Judge Rubin conducted a hearing. After Judge Rubin examined the three individuals primarily involved,[4] he held Principal Aguillard and Superintendent Easton in contempt of court for refusing to comply with the TRO. In finding Aguillard and Easton in contempt, the trial judge first determined that it is only within the province of the court to determine the legality of orders and that individuals who choose to act in contravention of a court order place themselves in a precarious position. The trial judge further rejected the assertion of Aguillard and Easton that they could not obey the order because Dauphine simply was not eligible for graduation and compliance with the court order would have required them to violate state law. In discounting this argument, the trial judge *1102

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Bluebook (online)
843 So. 2d 1096, 2003 WL 1905978, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dauphine-v-carencro-high-school-la-2003.