Gary Whitsel v. Southeast Local School District

484 F.2d 1222, 71 Ohio Op. 2d 381, 1973 U.S. App. LEXIS 7772
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 25, 1973
Docket72-1665
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 484 F.2d 1222 (Gary Whitsel v. Southeast Local School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gary Whitsel v. Southeast Local School District, 484 F.2d 1222, 71 Ohio Op. 2d 381, 1973 U.S. App. LEXIS 7772 (6th Cir. 1973).

Opinion

*1224 McCREE, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff, a continuing-contract teacher in the Southeast Local School District of Ravenna, Ohio, appeals from a judgment determining that he was not discharged because of the exercise of activity protected by the First Amendment and that due process was not offended by the dismissal procedures employed. We affirm.

Gary Whitsel, the possessor of a Bachelor of Science degree and a Master of Arts degree in Sociology and Anthropology from Kent State University, had taught for seven years in the public schools of Ohio prior to his discharge in 1970. The last five were spent in the defendant school system, and in the last two of these years he taught history and a “Great Issues” course at Southeast High School. He was awarded a continuing contract on April 27, 1970, a few weeks before the events that precipitated this litigation.

On Monday, May 4, 1970, Whitsel was the supervisor of a Kent State student teacher named Goldstein, who requested permission to leave Southeast High School before completing his teaching assignments in order to attend an antiwar rally at the Kent State campus. Whitsel granted permission, and Gold-stein left without informing the principal or assistant principal and obtaining their approval, as required by established procedures. As events transpired, this was the day the Ohio National Guard was summoned to quell the demonstration on the Kent State campus against the extension of the Vietnam War into Cambodia, and four students were shot to death. Goldstein and another student teacher became tear gas casualties shortly after their arrival on the campus and they retired to a dormitory without observing much of the day’s activities.

The two student teachers were summarily dismissed by defendant school board the next day for failure to have secured the approval of their Kent State coordinators and the Southeast principal before leaving the high school. Gold-stein informed Whitsel of this action by telephone the same evening.

On May 6, the next day, about forty students gathered at the principal’s office as soon as school opened and sought an explanation for the dismissal of the two popular student teachers. The assistant principal directed the group to the gymnasium to await the principal’s arrival. When the principal’s explanation failed to satisfy them, the students, their numbers now augmented to about four hundred, demanded the presence and explanation of the superintendent of schools. Whitsel left his class to investigate the commotion he had heard and, after advising Goldstein of the student demonstration, joined the assembly in the gymnasium.

The superintendent explained why Goldstein had been dismissed and instructed the students to return to their classes because the assembly was unauthorized. The students did not obey and asked to hear from Whitsel, who addressed them and said that he had given Goldstein permission to leave. He also suggested that there were political implications in the dismissal and that he was familiar with a Supreme Court case reported in a National Education Association periodical that caused him to believe that Goldstein and the other student teacher might have “a case for the American Civil Liberties Union or the Ohio Civil Rights Union.” Goldstein, who returned to the school without first reporting to the office as required by regulation, entered the gymnasium to student applause while Whitsel was speaking but departed when he learned that the Sheriff had been called to help terminate the assembly. Other teachers and administrators then spoke to the students, who remained in the gymnasium until the school authorities closed the school for the day and sent them home. The Southeast Local schools remained closed from May 6, 1970, until May 12.

*1225 On May 11, the school board convened a private meeting shortly before a special meeting with all teachers of the district. The board . members discussed “. . . what was going to be said that afternoon, and what steps we were going to take to make sure there was order, and we could finish the year cooperatively and smoothly.” Three teachers who were present at the May 5 assemblage in the gymnasium were identified as coconspirators responsible for the episode: Mr. Galmish, Miss Sterrett, and Mr. Whitsel. Subsequently, the teachers in attendance at the special meeting were ■advised of the decision to charge these three with responsibility for the unauthorized assembly.

After a month-long investigation, Whitsel was notified by the board of education on June 18, 1970, of its intention to terminate his contract on the grounds of “ . . . gross inefficiency and willful and persistent violations of reasonable regulations of the board of education and other good and just cause.” 1 He was suspended on Septem *1226 ber 2, 1970, and was accorded a hearing pursuant to the statutory provision for contract termination. Ohio Rev.Code § 3319.16. 2 Whitsel did not demand that *1227 the hearing be conducted by a referee, 3 and on January 11, 1971, the board terminated his contract for “persistent and willful violations of reasonable regulations of the Southeast Board of Education and other good and just cause.”

Whitsel filed a timely appeal in the Court of Common Pleas of Portage County, 4 but, inexplicably, he later withdrew the suit and initiated this action under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1343(3), 1343(4), and 42 U.S.C. § 1983. His complaint asserted that the incident of May 6 merely afforded defendants a pretext for terminating his contract and that the true reason was that he had expressed controversial and unpopular opinions and ideas on political, social, and religious subjects. He averred that his termination for these reasons violated his rights to freedom of speech, assembly, association, and religion as guaranteed by the First and Fourteenth Amendments. He also asserted that he had been denied procedural due process in several respects because, inter alia, the notice of the charge against him was inadequate, the findings of wrongdoing were vague and imprecise, and the hearing was unfair because the board was both accuser and trier of fact. Finally, he claimed that he was denied equal protection of the laws because the board had not taken similar disciplinary action against other teachers who participated in the May 6 assembly.

After a non jury trial on the merits, the district court dismissed the complaint.

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Bluebook (online)
484 F.2d 1222, 71 Ohio Op. 2d 381, 1973 U.S. App. LEXIS 7772, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gary-whitsel-v-southeast-local-school-district-ca6-1973.