Giles ex rel. Giles v. Brookville Area School District
This text of 669 A.2d 1079 (Giles ex rel. Giles v. Brookville Area School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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Brookville Area School District (District) appeals an order from the Court of Common Pleas of Jefferson County directing Brook-ville Area High School (School) to readmit student Chris Giles immediately.
Giles is a ninth grade student at the School. During fifth period German class, Giles offered to sell and James Guild, another student, agreed to purchase marijuana to be delivered at Giles’ home on a subsequent date. On or about Sunday, February 26, 1995, at Giles’ home, Giles sold the marijuana to Guild in exchange for forty dollars. Subsequently, on school property but unknown to Giles, Guild resold some of the marijuana to two other students who were ultimately caught smoking it on campus. The two students then identified Guild as the one who sold them the marijuana, and Guild, in turn, identified Giles as the original source of the marijuana. Giles subsequently confessed to the Brookville Police Department that he had originally sold the marijuana to Guild.
On March 17, 1995, a hearing was held by the School Board. The Board found that [1081]*1081although the ultimate sale between Giles and Guild occurred off school premises, Giles facilitated the resale on-campus and was an accessory thereto. (Board’s Findings of Fact Nos. 13-16; Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 18a-19a.) Accordingly, on March 20, 1995, the School Board voted unanimously to expel Giles for the remainder of the current academic year and all of the 1995-96 academic year for violating the District’s drug and alcohol policy. On April 20, 1995, Monica Giles, on behalf of Chris Giles, filed an appeal under the Local Agency Law1 in the Court of Common Pleas of Jefferson County, in which the case was heard de novo, by agreement of counsel. By an Opinion and Order dated April 27, 1995, the court granted Giles’ appeal and ordered that Chris Giles be readmitted to school immediately, based on the court’s determination that the Giles-Guild sale was totally off school premises and that Giles was not an accessory to the subsequent on-campus resale of the same marijuana. The District’s appeal to this Court followed.
On appeal2, the District argues that the trial court erred in ordering Giles reinstatement: (1) because the conversation between Giles and Guild on school premises during fifth period German class in which Giles offered to sell marijuana to Guild and in which Guild agreed to purchase the marijuana constitutes the sale of drugs on school property for which the District has the authority to expel students pursuant to Section 510 of the Pennsylvania School Code of 1949 (Code), Act of March 10, 1949, P.L. 30, as amended, 24 P.S. § 5-510; and (2) alternatively, because the District has the authority to expel a student for off-campus drug sales as part of its responsibility for the health, safety and welfare of its student body pursuant to Section 1318 of the Code, 24 P.S. § 13-1318.
Section 510 of the Code provides a school board in any school district broad discretion to adopt and enforce rules and regulations regarding student conduct during the time that the students are under school supervision, including time spent on school buses and school sponsored field trips.3 Abremski v. Southeastern School District Board of Directors, 54 Pa.Cmwlth. 292, 421 A.2d 485 (1980). Pursuant to Section 510, the District promulgated the following policy regarding drugs and alcohol, which states in pertinent part:
The Brookville Area School Board recognizes the use and possession of drugs and/or alcohol as being illegal and detrimental to the health and welfare of the students. Therefore, the Brookville Area School Board directs the following:
4. Violations of these administrative procedures include the possession, use, sale, distribution or mimicking the possession, use, sale, or distribution of drugs and/or alcohol, and/or drug paraphernalia as defined and described within the parameters of these procedures. The consequences of such violations may be permanent expulsion from school by the Board of School Directors.
(Brookville Area School District Student Handbook at 18; R.R. at 63a.)
In the instant case, the District argues that notwithstanding the fact that the actual transfer of marijuana in exchange for money occurred off school property, the verbal offer of sale by Giles and the acceptance thereof by Guild while in school constituted a sale of drugs on school grounds, a permissible basis [1082]*1082for expulsion under the District’s drug policy.4 Conversely, Giles argues that because the “sale” was the actual exchange of money for marijuana which indisputably occurred off school property, he did not violate the District’s drug policy which can only reach students’ conduct during the time that “they are under the supervision of the board of school directors and teachers.” 24 P.S. § 5-510.
Initially, we note that “ ‘[w]hen one attacks the action of a school board concerning matters committed by law to its discretion, he has a heavy burden as the courts are not prone to disturb a school board’s decision. Indeed, they are without jurisdiction to interfere therewith unless it is apparent that the school board’s conduct is arbitrary, capricious and to the prejudice of public interest. Lack of wisdom or mistaken judgment is insufficient.’” Commonwealth v. Hall, 309 Pa.Superior Ct. 407, 411, 455 A.2d 674, 676 (1988) (quoting Farris v. Swetts, 158 Pa.Superior Ct. 645, 648, 46 A.2d 504, 505 (1946)).
In this case, we find that Giles’ offer to sell marijuana to Guilds and Guilds’ acceptance thereof in school constituted “conduct ... during such time as they were under the supervision of the board of school directors and teachers,” 24 P.S. § 5-510, and, therefore, subject to the District’s “reasonable rules and regulations” pursuant to Section 510. Certainly the transaction between Guiles and Guild while in their German class on school property was an integral part of the subsequent sale and distribution of the drugs at Giles’ home. Accordingly, we conclude that the Board acted within its discretion in interpreting its policy prohibiting the sale of drugs on school property as also proscribing the agreement for the sale of drugs on school property, and that the Board had the authority to impose sanctions on Giles in the instant case.
Expulsion for more than one school year was not an improper sanction for the selling of marijuana. Section 1318 of the Code provides a school board with broad discretion to expel a student if the board determines that such a penalty is warranted under the particular circumstances so long as the board first conducted a proper hearing.5 Abremski Giles does not dispute that he was afforded a proper due process hearing before the Board. Further, it cannot be disputed that on-campus drug deals, even if consummated off campus, pose a significant threat to the health and welfare of the student body on-campus by infiltration as in this case. Thus, in light of such a serious offense, we cannot find that Giles’ expulsion was without authority or justification. Accordingly, the trial court erred in reinstating Giles.6
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669 A.2d 1079, 1995 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 597, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/giles-ex-rel-giles-v-brookville-area-school-district-pacommwct-1995.