Gallery v. SECONDARY SCH. ACTIVITIES COM'N
This text of 518 S.E.2d 368 (Gallery v. SECONDARY SCH. ACTIVITIES COM'N) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Philip D. GALLERY, Sharon M. Gallery, natural guardians and next friends of Matthew Robert Gallery, Plaintiffs below, Appellants,
v.
WEST VIRGINIA SECONDARY SCHOOLS ACTIVITIES COMMISSION and Warren Carter, Executive Secretary, West Virginia Secondary Schools Activities Commission; and All Other Members of the West Virginia Secondary Schools Activities Commission, Defendants below, Appellees.
Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia.
*369 Richard G. Gay, Esq., Margaret B. Gordon, Esq., Berkeley Springs, West Virginia, Attorneys for Appellants.
William R. Wooton, Esq., The Wooton Law Firm, Beckley, West Virginia, Attorney for Appellees.
Brentz H. Thompson, Lewisburg, West Virginia, Attorney for Amici Curiae, The West Virginia School Boards Assoc.
PER CURIAM:
I.
In October of 1995, Matthew Gallery, then of 7th grade age, was being "home schooled" in Hampshire County, West Virginia.[1] Matthew and his parents, Philip and Sharon Gallery, the appellants herein, asked permission from the principal of their local junior high school, Capon Bridge Junior High, for Matthew to try out for the school's cross-country team. The principal told the Gallerys that *370 Matthew was barred from trying out for the team because of Rule 127-2.3.1[2], promulgated by the West Virginia Secondary Schools Activities Association ("the SSAC"), the appellee herein.[3]
The Gallerys then appealed to the SSAC, asking that Matthew be allowed to try out for the cross-country team. The SSAC denied the Gallerys' request. The SSAC applies Rule 127-2-3.1 to prohibit all home-schooled children, without exception, from participation in interscholastic athletics.[4]
Subsequently, in May of 1997, near the end of Matthew's 8th grade year, the Gallerys filed suit in the Circuit Court of Hampshire County, asking that the circuit court require that the SSAC permit Matthew to try out for the Capon Bridge Junior High cross-country team. They asserted various constitutional and statutory causes of action. In September of 1997, the Circuit Court of Hampshire County granted a preliminary injunction to that effect, and Matthew was able run cross-country on behalf of Capon Bridge Junior High during the 1997-98 school yearagewise, Matthew's 9th grade year.[5]
In June of 1998, after Matthew had completed his 9th grade year, the circuit court issued a final order dissolving the preliminary injunction and finding for the appellee SSAC. The circuit court concluded that the SSAC's application of Rule 127-2.31 to bar all home-schooled students from participation in interscholastic athletics was neither statutorily or constitutionally prohibited. Specifically, the circuit court held that the SSAC's bar on the participation of home-schooled students in interscholastic athletics was permissibly designed to avert the danger that home-schooling would be used as a way to avoid the academic achievement or "C average" requirement for interscholastic athletic eligibility.[6]
After the circuit court issued its ruling, Matthew entered the public school system as a 10th grader, and he became a regular student in the Hampshire County public school system. He is now, therefore, under the SSAC's policy, eligible for interscholastic athletics, and it appears from the briefs that he in fact participated during his 10th grade year.
II.
The SSAC contends that the instant appeal should be dismissed as moot. The SSAC argues that because Matthew is no longer a home-schooled student and is enrolled in the public school system, and can participate in interscholastic athletics, there is no longer a live controversy that this Court must resolve.
In their briefs, the Gallerys agree that there is no longer a live controversy. The Gallerys do not suggest that they currently wish Matthew to return to home-schoolingeven if he were eligible to compete in interscholastic athletics as a home-schooler.
Thus, because there is no longer an underlying dispute between the parties, the instant appeal is subject to dismissal on the ground of mootness. See Syllabus Point 1, West Virginia Bd. of Dental Examiners v. Storch, 146 W.Va. 662, 122 S.E.2d 295 (1961).
*371 However, this Court retains the discretion to address issues that are raised in technically moot cases. We set forth guidelines for deciding whether and when to address such issues in Syllabus Point 1 of Israel by Israel v. West Virginia Secondary Schools Activities Comm'n, 182 W.Va. 454, 388 S.E.2d 480 (1989):[7]
Three factors to be considered in deciding whether to address technically moot issues are as follows: first, the court will determine whether sufficient collateral consequences will result from determination of the questions presented so as to justify relief; second, while technically moot in the immediate context, questions of great public interest may nevertheless be addressed for the future guidance of the bar and of the public; and third, issues which may be repeatedly presented to the trial court, yet escape review at the appellate level because of their fleeting and determinate nature, may appropriately be decided.
Examining the first of these three factors as they apply to the instant case, we conclude that there probably would be some degree of collateral consequences from declining to assess the validity of the SSAC's blanket ban on home-schooled students' participation in interscholastic athletics in the instant appeal. But on the record before us, we have no idea of the scope of those consequences, other than our speculation that they are probably not great. Certainly the collateral consequences from not deciding an issue that is moot in the instant case are far less than were present in Israel, supra, where we considered the propriety of a rule that affected many thousands of students, even though the student who brought the case had graduated from high school when we decided the case.
Looking to the second factor, again because of the limited record before us, we similarly have no idea of the scope of the public interest involved in the issues that were before the circuit court.
As to the third factor, it does not appear that the issues raised in the instant case are so fleeting that they will inherently and necessarily escape review if presented in a subsequent case. We cannot assume that all home-schooled children and their families who want a chance to play interscholastic sports as home-schoolers will not persist in that desire. Thus, if this issue remains alive, we should expect to see another case where a live controversy is presented to this Court.
Summarizing, we conclude that there is uncertainty as to the weight to be accorded to the collateral consequences and public interest factors, and the weight to be assigned to the "escaping review" factor is less than compelling.
Several important considerations weigh in favor of adhering to our general mootness rule.
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