Joshua Watters v. Board of School Directors

975 F.3d 406
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedSeptember 21, 2020
Docket19-3061
StatusPublished
Cited by132 cases

This text of 975 F.3d 406 (Joshua Watters v. Board of School Directors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joshua Watters v. Board of School Directors, 975 F.3d 406 (3d Cir. 2020).

Opinion

PRECEDENTIAL

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT _____________

No. 19-3061 _____________

JOSHUA WATTERS; MOLLY POPISH; LAURIE BURDETT, Appellants

v.

BOARD OF SCHOOL DIRECTORS OF THE CITY OF SCRANTON; SCHOOL DISTRICT OF THE CITY OF SCRANTON _____________

On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania D.C. Civil No. 3-18-cv-02117 District Judge: Honorable Robert D. Mariani _____________

Argued June 16, 2020

Before: CHAGARES, PORTER, and FISHER, Circuit Judges

(Opinion Filed: September 21, 2020) ____________ Marc L. Gelman [ARGUED] James Goodley Ryan P. McCarthy Jennings Sigmond 1835 Market Street Suite 2800 Philadelphia, PA 19103

Counsel for Appellants

Matthew J. Carmody Joseph J. Joyce, III Jennifer Menichini [ARGUED] Joyce Carmody & Moran 9 North Main Street Suite 4 Pittston, PA 18640

Counsel for Appellees ____________

OPINION OF THE COURT ____________

CHAGARES, Circuit Judge.

Three Pennsylvania teachers who obtained tenure contracts under the state’s Public School Code of 1949 brought a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the City of Scranton Board of School Directors and the City of Scranton School District (collectively, the “School District”), alleging that the School District deprived them of a right secured by the United

2 States Constitution’s Contracts Clause when it applied a Pennsylvania law, Act No. 2017-55 (“Act 55”), to suspend them from employment. Act 55 amended the Public School Code to authorize the suspension of tenured teachers for economic reasons. According to the teachers, the Contracts Clause forbids their suspensions because Act 55 took effect after they entered into tenure contracts with the School District, and the change in the law allowing for their suspensions based on economic reasons amounted to a substantial impairment of their tenure contract rights. The teachers further allege that the School District’s stated justification for impairing their contracts, a budget shortage that presented serious economic difficulties, does not pass muster under the Contracts Clause because their suspensions were not a necessary or reasonable way to address the School District’s financial problems.

The District Court dismissed the teachers’ claim, reasoning that they failed to allege a plausible Contracts Clause violation because the School District did not substantially impair the teachers’ tenure contract rights. We agree with the District Court’s dismissal of the teachers’ claim, but we reach that conclusion based on different grounds. We hold that the teachers failed to state a § 1983 claim premised on the Contracts Clause because their complaint and its exhibits show that the School District’s suspension of the teachers was a necessary and reasonable measure to advance the School District’s significant and legitimate public purpose of combatting the budget shortage that it faced. We therefore will affirm.

3 I.

A.

The plaintiffs, Joshua Watters, Molly Popish, and Laurie Burdett, are teachers who brought this action to challenge their suspensions from employment with the City of Scranton School District. The teachers’ action against the School District involves provisions of Pennsylvania’s Public School Code of 1949, 24 Pa. Cons. Stat. § 1-101 et seq., so we start by describing relevant aspects of that statute.

The Public School Code affords the status of professional employee to certified teachers who have served in a school district for three years. Id. §§ 11-1101(1), 11- 1108(b)(2), 11-1121(b)(2). That status comes with certain tenure protections. For example, the Public School Code limits the valid causes for suspending or terminating tenured teachers from employment. Id. §§ 11-1122 (providing causes for termination), 11-1124 (providing causes for suspension). As relevant here, until recently, the Public School Code authorized four causes for tenured teacher suspensions. See id. § 11- 1124(a)(1)–(4). Those causes allow for suspensions because of decreases in student enrollment, id. § 11-1124(a)(1), the curtailment or alteration of educational programs, id. § 11- 1124(a)(2), the consolidation of schools, id. § 11-1124(a)(3), and the reorganization of school districts, id. § 11-1124(a)(4).

On November 6, 2017, however, Act 55 took effect. 2017 Pa. Legis. Serv. Act 2017-55 (H.B. 178) (West). That Act amended the Public School Code to add a fifth cause for suspension: “economic reasons” requiring a reduction in teachers. 24 Pa. Cons. Stat. § 11-1124(a)(5). The Act allows

4 for such suspensions only if certain procedures are followed. For example, a school district’s board of school directors must approve suspensions under Act 55 “by a majority vote of all school directors at a public meeting.” Id. § 11-1124(d)(1). In addition, Act 55 requires the board of school directors to “adopt[] a resolution of intent to suspend” the teachers in the next fiscal year. Id. § 11-1124(d)(2). That resolution must describe, inter alia, “[t]he economic conditions of the school district making the proposed suspensions necessary,” id. § 11- 1124(d)(2)(i), “how those economic conditions will be alleviated by the proposed suspensions,” id., “[t]he impact of the proposed suspensions on academic programs to be offered to students” if the suspensions are carried out, id. § 11- 1124(d)(2)(v), and the impact on such programs “if the proposed suspensions are not undertaken,” id.

The Public School Code also entitles tenured teachers to written employment contracts, and it supplies certain mandatory language to be used in those contracts. Id. § 11- 1121(a)–(c). The Code requires such contracts to include that they are “subject to the provisions of the ‘Public School Code of 1949’ and the amendments thereto.” Id. § 11-1121(c). These features of the Public School Code’s tenure system — a delimited set of permissible causes for suspensions, Act 55’s addition of an “economic reasons” cause for suspension, and mandatory employment contracts — are the focus of the teachers’ claim in this case.

B.

The teachers allege that they entered into tenure contracts with the School District and that those contracts took “substantially the same form” required by the Public School

5 Code. Appendix (“App.”) 53. The Public School Code contained four permissible causes for suspension at that time. But on January 25, 2018 — after Act 55 amended the Code — the City of Scranton Board of School Directors held a special meeting, where it considered a “Resolution of the Intent to Suspend of the Scranton Board of Education.” App. 54–55. Through that resolution, the Board of Education sought authorization for the School District’s superintendent to send notices of the intention to suspend twenty-eight tenured teachers, including the three plaintiffs here, and all seventy-one of the School District’s non-tenured teachers.

The Board of Education, in the resolution, explained the financial backdrop for the proposal to suspend some tenured teachers. It projected an approximately $4.5 million deficit for the next fiscal year, and the tenured teacher suspensions were expected to save $691,033. The Board of Education also noted that the proposal for suspensions came after it had “undertaken other cost saving measures,” such as fifty layoffs of maintenance and clerical staff, “healthcare savings,” “vendor savings,” and “other savings.” App. 66.

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975 F.3d 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joshua-watters-v-board-of-school-directors-ca3-2020.