Farris v. Burke County Board of Education

559 S.E.2d 774, 355 N.C. 225, 2002 N.C. LEXIS 187
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 7, 2002
Docket272PA01
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 559 S.E.2d 774 (Farris v. Burke County Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farris v. Burke County Board of Education, 559 S.E.2d 774, 355 N.C. 225, 2002 N.C. LEXIS 187 (N.C. 2002).

Opinion

EDMUNDS, Justice.

Petitioner Linda Farris (petitioner) was employed by respondent Burke County Board of Education (respondent), teaching educable mentally handicapped children in the sixth, seventh, and eighth grades. Petitioner began her employment with respondent in 1970 and thereafter attained tenured status as a teacher.

The record indicates that petitioner’s teaching methods and skills were considered acceptable and unremarkable through most of her career. However, in 1998, doubts arose. On 12 June 1998, Dr. Tony M. Stewart (Stewart), respondent’s superintendent, wrote petitioner to inform her that the principal of her school, Charles W. Sherrill, had recommended that petitioner not be rehired for the upcoming school year and that Stewart agreed with the recommendation. In that same letter, Stewart added that he wished to meet with petitioner on 16 June 1998 to review with her the facts behind this decision.

When petitioner failed to meet with Stewart after receiving his 12 June 1998 letter, he sent her á second letter on 29 June 1998. This letter advised petitioner that she had waived her opportunity to respond to Stewart about the recommendation that she not be rehired and, in addition, informed her that she had fourteen days to file a request in writing for either “(i) a hearing on the grounds for [Stewart’s] proposed recommendation by a case manager, or (ii) a hearing within five (5) days before the board [i.e., respondent] on [Stewart’s] recommendation.” The letter included the following language:

GROUNDS FOR DISMISSAL
The grounds for your dismissal are inadequate performance, insubordination, and neglect of duty, pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 1150325(e)(1)(a), (c), and (d).
BASIS FOR THE CHARGES
Attached to this letter ... is a summary of the factual basis for my recommendation that you not be rehired for the coming school year. You have repeatedly ignored direct orders from your principals^] both oral and written. You created, and refused to correct, health and fire hazards, which endangered your students. *228 You refused to follow directives regarding curriculum, and you misrepresented the status of your plan book.
The administration has demonstrated a thoughtful, patient, persistent but unavailing effort to get you to recognize that you were not properly managing your classroom and to correct the situation. Any or all of the referenced acts constitute inadequate performance, insubordination],] and neglect of duty.

Stewart attached to this letter a nine-page “Chronological Listing Documentation & Correspondence Concerning [Petitioner].” This list, intended to substantiate the decision to terminate petitioner, detailed letters, conferences, memoranda, and the like circulated between petitioner and others in the school system.

On 10 July 1998, petitioner responded by requesting a hearing before a case manager, and in a letter dated 12 August 1998, petitioner asked Stewart to provide her copies of the documents described in the attachment to his 29 June 1998 letter. Stewart complied on 20 August 1998. On 31 August 1998, petitioner requested from Stewart a list of witnesses, a summary of the witnesses’ anticipated testimony, and a copy of any documents Stewart intended to provide the case manager at the upcoming hearing. That same day, Stewart provided petitioner a list of potential witnesses. The list also included the following information:

Each of the above individuals will testify about the events that culminated in Dr. Stewart’s decision to recommend to [respondent] that [petitioner’s] contract not be renewed for the next year.
With regard to documents that I plan to introduce, I may present any of the documents that I have previously provided to you. Additionally, I will present reports from the fire marshall [sic] and possibly the health department, neither of which are [sic] currently in my possession.

The hearing before the case manager was held on 3 September 1998 and 8 October 1998. At the hearing, petitioner objected to certain evidence that had not been set out in Stewart’s 29 June 1998 notice. This evidence included photographs of petitioner’s classroom purporting to show roach droppings and a rat’s nest in addition to clutter, letters to petitioner, and the testimony of two witnesses whose names had been provided, but not the pertinent substance of their testimony. One of these witnesses, Beth Wright (Wright), peti *229 tioner’s teacher assistant, testified that petitioner used classroom time to talk to friends on the telephone and to call a psychic hotline, that petitioner had returned her students three hours late from a field trip to Biltmore Estate because petitioner spent over an hour and a half in the gift shop, that petitioner had called an African-American student a “monkey,” that petitioner would give massages to individuals while students were present in the classroom, and that petitioner spent only about ten percent of her time teaching. The other witness, Joel Hastings (Hastings), Director of Exceptional Children, testified about petitioner’s failure to maintain some of her students’ records necessary for continued state and federal funding, and petitioner’s relationship with a particular student. Hastings also expressed concern that “there was the lack of quality individualized instruction in the [petitioner’s] classroom, plus there was a fear of intimidation if someone went to an administrator about those concerns.” The case manager held in abeyance her rulings on petitioner’s objections to this evidence.

On 9 November 1998, the case manager filed a report that included findings of fact and a recommendation that Stewart’s grounds for petitioner’s dismissal were not substantiated by a preponderance of the evidence. That same day, Stewart wrote petitioner informing her that he intended to submit a written recommendation to respondent that petitioner be terminated. Accordingly, petitioner requested a hearing before respondent. On 18 November 1998, Stewart recommended in writing to respondent that petitioner be terminated, stating:

The grounds for my recommendation are inadequate performance, insubordination, and neglect of duty, pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 115C-325(e)(l)(a), (c)[,] and (d). [Petitioner] repeatedly ignored direct orders, both oral and written, from principals. [Petitioner] created, and refused to correct, health and fire hazards, including giving special education children seriously outdated food, all of which endangered her students. [Petitioner] refused to follow directives regarding curriculum, and she misrepresented the status of her [lesson] plan book.
The administration has demonstrated a thoughtful, patient, persistent but unavailing effort to get [petitioner] to recognize that she was not properly managing her classroom.

Pursuant to requests by both parties, on 24 November 1998, the case manager filed an “Amended Report of Case Manager” in which *230 she made rulings on evidentiary challenges raised at the hearing, sustaining petitioner’s objections to the photographs and the evidence described above offered by Wright and Hastings.

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Bluebook (online)
559 S.E.2d 774, 355 N.C. 225, 2002 N.C. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farris-v-burke-county-board-of-education-nc-2002.