Madison County. Board of Education v. Wigley

259 So. 2d 233, 288 Ala. 202, 1972 Ala. LEXIS 1199
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMarch 16, 1972
Docket8 Div. 419
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 259 So. 2d 233 (Madison County. Board of Education v. Wigley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Madison County. Board of Education v. Wigley, 259 So. 2d 233, 288 Ala. 202, 1972 Ala. LEXIS 1199 (Ala. 1972).

Opinion

*205 MERRILL, Justice.

This appeal is from a decree in a declaratory judgment proceeding in equity ordering back pay for a teacher who was unjustly discharged.

J. D. Wigley, the appellee, who will hereafter be referred to as “the teacher,” was a vocational agriculture teacher in Buckhorn School in Madison County with “tenure” or continuing service status. The County Board of Education gave notice to the teacher that it was canceling his employment for certain stated reasons under and according to the provisions of Tit. 52, § 359, Code 1940, as amended. After a contested hearing, the Board canceled the contract on September 25, 1963, and the teacher appealed to the State Tenure Commission as provided in § 360. That Commission held that the action of the County Board of Education was arbitrary and unjust. The Board sought a review of this decision by mandamus in the circuit court as provided in § 361. The circuit court set aside the ruling of the Tenure Commission and the teacher appealed to this court.

In State Tenure Commission v. Madison County Board of Education, 282 Ala. 658, 213 So.2d 823, this court, in its opinion, set out and discussed the charges in detail so they will not be repeated here, and this court reversed the judgment of the trial court and rehearing was denied on September 19, 1968.

On September 24, 1968, the teacher wrote the County Superintendent of Education and, after relating the history of the case, asked to be “permitted to resume his profession as a teacher in the Madison County School System,” and requested payment of accrued salaries since- September Í, 1963. • ■ '

The County Board of Education did not qffer him a teaching position nor did it pay any accrued salary, so the teacher filed the declaratory judgment proceeding against the Board of Education, its individual members and officers, which was the beginning of the instant suit. The prayer for relief sought (1) a construction of the teacher’s contract (an exhibit to the bill) and a declaration of the rights of the parties thereunder to the extent that complainant be declared to be entitled to resume a teaching position, (2) that complainant be entitled to recover from the respondents his back salary, with interest thereon, from September 26, 1963, through the filing of the bill of complaint and a determination by the court of the sum due thereof, (3) that respondents be ordered to pay to complainant the sum determined due the complainant or, in the alternative, that the court render a judgment in favor of complainant and against the respondents, in their official capacities, for the amount ascertained due by the court with interest, (4) that the court would order the respondents to allow complainant to resume his prior teaching position with the respondent Board and (5) to pay to complainant a salary comparable to other teachers of *206 the complainant’s qualifications, education and experience for his teaching services performed, and (6) a prayer for general relief.

• Demurrers of the separate and several respondents were overruled and they filed their answer setting up at least sixteen defenses, most of which will be discussed as we take up the argued assignments of error. On October 13, 1969, the complainant filed a motion for a hearing “to test the sufficiency of each plea of each respondent.” After the hearing, the trial court entered a decree which, in effect, held that all the defenses except the general issues were legally insufficient' and set the date for trial as June 17, 1970.

On June 8, respondents filed a motion to dismiss the action because the teacher had resumed his employment and there was no equitable basis for maintaining the action. Jury demand was also filed. On June 17, respondents moved that the case be transferred to the law side of the court. All of these motions were denied and the trial was begun on June 17.

On September 28, 1970, the court entered its decree declaring (1) that the complainant was entitled to be reinstated by the respondents as a teacher with continuing service status at a salary equal to the salary of other teachers of his qualification, education and experience and that the respondents were entitled to receive the teaching services of the complainant in return, (2) that the complainant “has the legal right and is entitled to receive from the Madison County Board of Education of Madison County, Alabama . . .” and the other respondents, and that the respondents had the legal duty and obligation to pay or cause to be paid to the complainant for the period from August 1, 1963, to February 4, 1970, both dates inclusive, being the period when the said J. D. Wigley was contractually entitled to be paid but was receiving no pay, the sum of $62,600.58, and the court further decreed that the further sum of six per cent per annum on the principal sum of $53,048.32 from February 4, 1970 to the date said sum was paid was entitled to be received by the complainant. The court further decreed that in the event respondents did not accord the complainant the legal rights and obligations therein determined within thirty days from the date thereof, the court, on petition of the complainant, would grant such supplemental relief as may be necessary or proper to effectuate the relief therein determined to be due the complainant. Application for rehearing was overruled and this appeal was taken December 29, 1970.

Appellants’ first assignment of error charges that the court erred in overruling the demurrer of each respondent to the bill of complaint. Appellants’ position is that the bill is without equity.

Title 7, § 157, Code 1940, permits any person interested under a written contract to have it construed; and § 158 states that a contract may be construed either before or after there has been a breach thereof. See also §§ 160, 163, 167 and Equity Rule 63.

Ordinarily, where the bill for a declaratory judgment shows a bona fide justiciable controversy which should be settled, the demurrer thereto should be overruled and a declaration of rights made and entered only after answer and on such evidence as the parties may deem proper to introduce on submission for final decree. City of Mobile v. Jax Distributing Co., Inc., 267 Ala. 289, 101 So.2d 295, and cases there cited.

A justiciable controversy was not only alleged but the bill showed on its face that the cause had already been to this, court previously and that the appellants, had not followed the normal course of behavior after our decision was rendered in that suit.

*207 Assignment 3 charges error in the overruling of the demurrer to that aspect of the hill seeking payment of hack salary.

Under the tenure act, Tit. 52, § 351 et *seq., Code 1940, as amended, the County Board of Education does not have the right to terminate the employment contract of a teacher on continuing service status and pay damages for the breach, and a teacher cannot quit his teaching job except under certain circumstances (not here applicable) under penalty of not being allowed to teach again (§ 361(1), Recompilation) .

When the County Board refused to reinstate the teacher after this court’s decision that its action was arbitrarily unjust, one of the teacher’s remedies was to seek specific performance of the contract.

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Bluebook (online)
259 So. 2d 233, 288 Ala. 202, 1972 Ala. LEXIS 1199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/madison-county-board-of-education-v-wigley-ala-1972.