Driessen v. Freborg

431 F. Supp. 1191
CourtDistrict Court, D. North Dakota
DecidedJune 20, 1977
DocketA77-1020
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 431 F. Supp. 1191 (Driessen v. Freborg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. North Dakota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Driessen v. Freborg, 431 F. Supp. 1191 (D.N.D. 1977).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM and ORDER

VanSICKLE, District Judge.

This action was originally commenced against Underwood Public School District No. 8, a public corporation. By stipulation in open court, accepted personally by four of the five School Board members, the Public School District was dismissed as a party defendant, and the following members of the School Board were named as parties defendant:

Layton Freborg
Clayton Boots
Les Landenberger
James Sayler
Harley Hassler

In return for waiver of the time for answer by Defendants, and for adoption of the Answer of the School Board as their answer, and their consent to immediate trial, Plaintiff agreed that she would and did recognize that the Defendants were protected from individual liability under the doctrine of qualified good faith immunity as spelled out in Wood v. Strickland, 420 U.S. 308, 95 S.Ct. 992, 43 L.Ed.2d 214 (1975), i. e., there is made no claim that the Defendants knew, or reasonably should have known, that the action they took within their sphere of official responsibility would violate the constitutional or statutory rights of the Plaintiff.

Prior to the 1973-74 school year, the School Board of Underwood Public School District No. 8 had no definite policy as to pregnant teachers who came to full term during their teaching year. In the 1972-73 school year, a primary school teacher threatened the School Board with a lawsuit if it relieved her of her duties because of her pregnancy. As a result they did not remove her and she went into labor in the classroom.

In the 1973-74 teacher negotiations, at the insistence of the School Board, there was put into the contract a clause drafted by the Superintendent of Underwood Public School District No. 8 which read:

“A teacher that becomes pregnant would be required, with consent of their physician, to take a leave of absence after the seventh month of pregnancy and not return to teaching until one month after childbirth.”

This provision was drafted without consideration of any medical data or information.

The Plaintiff, Julie Driessen, was employed as a teacher at the beginning of the 1975-76 school year. At that time the maternity leave clause was in the general labor contract and she knew it. She participated as a “note taker” and secretary of the Underwood Teacher Association in the contract negotiations for the year 1976-77. At that time the fact of the existence of the clause was discussed. But there was no dialogue as to its probable meaning. She did protest to the negotiating board members that she felt the clause violated her civil rights. Both parties interpreted the clause to mean that a pregnant teacher must be relieved at the end of the seventh month of her pregnancy, and that she could be relieved earlier if a physician, acceptable to both parties, so recommended.

Mrs. Driessen is a teacher of business education and physical education. She has a weekly coeducational class of seventh and eighth graders, wherein she teaches team sports, badminton, etc., two hours a week. She also has a class of high school girls, wherein she teaches team sports, including refereeing the games, two hours a week.

Mrs. Driessen became pregnant in August, 1976. She was advised by her doctor of the pregnancy in October, 1976. The date of her delivery is estimated to be May 5, 1977. She was directed to leave the classroom as of March 7, 1977. At that time she was earning $9,050.00 per school year, paid over a 12 month period. She asked to teach 19 days longer — that is, through the last full week of March. That request was denied. The end of the first week in March was the end of the seventh month of her pregnancy.

*1194 She was replaced by a male teacher, a farmer who had left teaching, but who also had a major in business education and a minor in physical education.

The school employs eighteen teachers of whom eleven are female. Except for the problem of the teacher who went into labor in the classroom and this Plaintiff, the School Board has had no prior experience with school teachers being relieved for reasons related to pregnancy.

The Plaintiff took two days of sick leave during the first or second trimester of her pregnancy because of morning sickness. Otherwise she feels that her overall teaching performance has not been adversely affected. She has suffered no undue fatigue, no irritability, and the School Board members and the Superintendent did not assert that her performance as a teacher had suffered, although they did recognize that as she went into the third trimester of her pregnancy she did not herself participate in the physical education drills and games.

There was no reported change in her business education teaching methods.

One School Board member, married and the father of four children, testified that in his experience the last two months of pregnancy were difficult, and the expectant mother tended to be easily fatigued, irritable and emotionally upset.

John J. Smolenski, M.D., the Plaintiff’s attending physician, testified that there was no medical reason why the Plaintiff should give up her teaching activities at the end of the seventh month. But cross examination disclosed she did not tell him she taught physical education four hours per week.

The Court called C. R. Montz, M.D., an Obstetrician who has practiced in the Bismarck area for the past twenty-two years, as an expert witness. Dr. Montz testified that in our present day society, with a normal pregnancy, it is medically reasonable for a pregnant woman to work until term, that is, until the day of delivery. 1 He further testified that the type of work performed generally is not a problem. Also, he said, with reference to teaching physical education, that a pregnant woman might have mechanical problems, for example, touching her toes; but that “jumping up and down or jogging would not hurt her a bit.”

Dr. Montz also affirmed the accuracy of the following statement in exhibit 5, J. A. Pritchard and P. C. MacDonald, Williams Obstetrics, at 246-47 (15th ed. 1976):

“Normal Duration of Pregnancy. The average duration of pregnancy calculated from the first day of the last menstrual period averages very close to 280 days, or 40 weeks. Kortenoever (1950), in an analysis of 7,504 pregnancies, found the average duration to be 282 days. Moreover, the mean value was 281 days calculated from data of the Obstetrical Statistical Cooperative for 77,300 women who underwent spontaneous labor and whose infants weighed at least 2,500 g. More recently, Nakano (1972) identified for 5,596 pregnancies in Osaka, Japan, the mean duration to be 279 days from the first day of the last menstrual period with two standard deviations of ±17 days. All pregnancies that terminated before 28 weeks gestation were excluded by Nakano, as were breeches and multiple births.

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Bluebook (online)
431 F. Supp. 1191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/driessen-v-freborg-ndd-1977.