Gray v. Marshall County Board of Education

367 S.E.2d 751, 179 W. Va. 282, 1988 W. Va. LEXIS 25
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1988
Docket18136
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 367 S.E.2d 751 (Gray v. Marshall County Board of Education) 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.

Bluebook
Gray v. Marshall County Board of Education, 367 S.E.2d 751, 179 W. Va. 282, 1988 W. Va. LEXIS 25 (W. Va. 1988).

Opinion

NEELY, Justice:

A. Wayne Gray, the plaintiff below, is a professional photographer in Cameron, West Virginia. The defendant below, Ronald Trowbridge, is the principal of Cameron High School. Mr. Gray sued Mr. Trow-bridge and the Marshall County Board of Education for conspiring to interfere with his business and a Marshall County Circuit Court jury awarded him $47,000 in actual damages. 1

The case was submitted to the jury on the single issue of whether the actions of the defendants, Mr. Trowbridge and the Marshall County Board of Education, violated W.Va.Code, 47-18-3(a) [1978] which provides:

Every contract, combination in the form of trust or otherwise, or conspiracy in restrain [sic] of trade or commerce in the State shall be unlawful.

Because W.Va.Code, 47-18-9 [1978] provides treble damages in antitrust suits, the circuit court entered judgment for $141,-000, or three times the jury’s $47,000 award. Thereafter, the defendants moved for a new trial on the grounds that the plaintiff had not proved an actionable conspiracy. The circuit court granted the motion and Mr. Gray appealed. The sole issue before us now is whether at trial Mr. Gray proved a conspiracy in restraint of trade that violated the West Virginia antitrust laws. We find that the plaintiff did not prove such a conspiracy, and we affirm the judgment of the circuit court.

I

In 1976 Mr. Gray returned to his hometown of Cameron and opened up an independent photography studio. At that time he was advised that Cameron High School was dissatisfied with its photographer and was looking for a replacement. Mr. Gray interviewed for the job and was offered a written contract by the board of education.

Apparently the duties of a school photographer differ from school to school, but the essential elements of the position are that the photographer provides underclass pictures and pictures of school activities for the yearbook for which he receives little or no compensation. In return, however, he is placed in a favorable position to take senior portraits, photographs of individual students who are involved in school activities, and dance pictures — all of which produce handsome profits. If the photographer is operating under an “exclusive” arrangement, other photographers are precluded from competing for the profitable business.

After Mr. Gray embarked upon the performance of his duties as school photographer for Cameron High School he found many of the provisions of his contract burdensome. One provision called for him to “rebate” 25 percent of the price of his pictures to the school. The rebate system was open and aboveboard, and there is no question that the money went to the school. Nonetheless, Mr. Gray found that the profit margin on underclass pictures was so small that he was required to charge considerably more than the pictures were worth in order to break even.

Much to Mr. Gray’s credit, he also recognized that many parents in the community could not afford to pay for underclass pictures in light of their high cost — a problem related to the rebate requirement. Consequently, Mr. Gray began to give away underclass pictures to students who were indigent. Furthermore, Mr. Gray decided never again to accept a contract that re *284 quired a rebate to the school. The decision by Mr. Gray to give pictures away was not to the school’s liking because giving pictures away cut into the school’s percentage. Consequently, relations between Mr. Gray and the school’s new principal, Ronald Trowbridge, began to deteriorate.

After one year as official school photographer, Mr. Gray was replaced by Gruber Studios. Gruber Studios had an exclusive contract that precluded Mr. Gray from taking pictures on school premises or pictures related to school activities, even though students or faculty might request him to do so. However, Mr. Gray’s overwhelming popularity with the students required Mr. Trowbridge to go beyond simple denial of access to school property if Gruber Studios’ “exclusive” contract was to be of any value to Gruber Studios. Accordingly, Mr. Trow-bridge threatened to expel students from school activities if they patronized Mr. Gray’s studio while wearing a school activity uniform. 2 Mr. Trowbridge informed the students that they would be excluded from senior dances if Mr. Gray photographed them either before or after a school dance. Thus, Mr. Trowbridge’s efforts to give meaning to the exclusivity clause of Gruber Studios’ contract denied Mr. Gray three lucrative photographic opportunities: (1) school activity pictures, (2) athletic pictures, and (3) dance pictures.

In addition to specific policies denying Mr. Gray direct access to school business, Mr. Trowbridge also engaged in general harassment. Yearbooks that Mr. Gray had lent the school mysteriously disappeared; darkroom equipment that Mr. Gray had lent to the school was not readily returned; and, an article appeared in the Cameron High School yearbook indicating that Mr. Gray’s pictures were twice as expensive as they actually were.

Eventually, there was even an effort to change a longstanding, policy allowing any senior portrait that met the specifications of the yearbook advisor to be included in the Cameron High School yearbook. In 1984 Mr. Gray’s only child was a senior at Cameron High School and, by that time, the appellant was so popular that he took approximately 80 percent of all the senior portraits. That year, however, Mr. Trow-bridge and the yearbook advisor began to require that all high school senior portraits be taken by the official school photographer.

In summary, then, the jury could have concluded from the evidence at trial that there was a personal vendetta on the part of Mr. Trowbridge against Mr. Gray. Furthermore, there is ample evidence that as a result of Mr. Trowbridge’s actions Mr. Gray lost substantial money.

II

There is little question that the plaintiff proved to the jury’s satisfaction that he was unfairly treated by Mr. Trowbridge. However, Mr. Gray did not demonstrate the existence of a conspiracy between Mr. Trowbridge and the Marshall County Board of Education to injure Mr. Gray in his trade or business that would be actionable under the antitrust laws. This failure of proof involves two distinct aspects: First, the evidence in the record, including an admission requested by Mr. Gray, demonstrates that Mr. Trowbridge’s policies with regard to Mr. Gray were not approved, condoned, or encouraged by the superintendent of schools or his direct subordinates. Second, the West Virginia antitrust laws prohibit conspiracies between separate economic actors. Mr. Trowbridge was an employee and agent of the Marshal] County Board of Education; thus, to the extent that there was malicious conduct directed against Mr. Gray, it was the action of one entity— namely the board of education — and not the action of two entities conspiring with one another.

A.

The explicit disapproval of Mr. Trow-bridge’s conduct by the superintendent’s office is exemplified by the facts surround *285 ing attempts to prevent seniors from using Mr. Gray’s pictures in the yearbook.

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Bluebook (online)
367 S.E.2d 751, 179 W. Va. 282, 1988 W. Va. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-v-marshall-county-board-of-education-wva-1988.