Melvin Appeal

48 A.2d 108, 159 Pa. Super. 328, 1946 Pa. Super. LEXIS 392
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 12, 1946
DocketAppeal, 34
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 48 A.2d 108 (Melvin Appeal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Melvin Appeal, 48 A.2d 108, 159 Pa. Super. 328, 1946 Pa. Super. LEXIS 392 (Pa. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinions

Opinion by

Reno, J.,

This appeal poses an interesting and important problem relating to the status of appellant as a school teacher in the first class school district of Pittsburgh. Is he a high school teacher as he claims, or a junior high school teacher as the school district contends?

A high school teacher is entitled, under a statute, which we shall presently analyze, and appellee’s salary schedule, to a minimum annual salary of $1800 and a minimum of eight annual increments of $175, while a junior high school teacher is entitled to the same mini *330 mum salary and six annual increments of $175. Appellant’s claim to eight annual increments raised this controversy.

On September 22, 1931, the Board of Education elected appellant: “Teacher, Allerdice Junior High School, at a salary of $1800.00, to date from September 1, 1931; new position.” He accepted the position, and in the six years succeeding the school year of 1931-32 received annual salary increments of $175, so that during the 1938-39 school year his salary was $2850. On November 26, 1941, he informed the board’s secretary: “as a high school teacher I am entitled to be paid on the basis of Thirty-two Hundred Dollars per year.” That is, although he had been elected a teacher in a junior high school, he contended he was actually a high school teacher, and therefore entitled to eight instead of six annual increments. Following the receipt of his letter, the board transferred appellant to the Herron Hill Junior High School, admittedly a junior high school, where under protest he has since been teaching. The transfer, appellant contended, was a demotion within the School Code, §1205-A, 24 PS §1161, and demanded a hearing.

The board refused a hearing, but upon appeal the Superintendent of Public Instruction ordered a hearing. From that order the board appealed to the court below which quashed the appeal as interlocutory. The board then held a hearing, heard testimony, and resolved that appellant was elected a teacher in a junior high school and had not been advanced to a higher position, that the transfer did not constitute a demotion, that it was not warranted in filing charges against him, and dismissed his complaint.

He again appealed to the Superintendent, who sustained him, holding that, although elected a teacher in a junior high school, he was actually a high school teacher. On the board’s appeal to the court below, it held appellant was a junior high school teacher and that *331 the transfer was not a demotion. This appeal followed.

I. Whether appellant was demoted, and his right to eight annual increments, depends upon the grade of the position to which he was originally elected. The minutes state that he was elected a teacher in a junior high school, and the minutes constitute the best and the only evidence of his election. Com. ex rel. Hetrick v. Sunbury School Dist., 335 Pa. 6, 6 A. 2d 279. But appellant’s basic contention is that while Allerdice was called a junior high school, in fact and under the law it was a high school. No argument is required to demonstrate that a school district cannot evade statutory obligations by calling a junior high school that which the law classifies as a high school.

The School Code, §1701, 24 PS §1581, defines and classifies schools beyond the elementary grades. It provides: “A complete high school course is one requiring four years beyond an elementary course of eight years or six years beyond an elementary course of six years. The Department of Public Instruction shall make such regulations as shall be necessary to insure proper standards for the various grades of the twelve years of the public school program of studies.” Omitting the requirements concerning the minimum number of days and teachers, and conformance to regulations of the Department of Public Instruction, the section continues: “Any high school giving work for the seventh, eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh and twelfth years . . . shall be designated a sico-yewr high school.

“Any high school giving work for the ninth, tenth, eleventh, and twelfth years . . . shall be designated a four-year high school.

“Any high school giving work for the ninth, tenth, and eleventh years . . . shall be designated a three-year high school.

“Any high school giving work for the ninth and tenth years . . . shall be designated a two-year high school.

*332 “Any school [‘high’ is here omitted] giving work for the seventh, eighth, and ninth years, or for the seventh, eighth, ninth and tenth years . . . shall be designated a junior high school 1 (Italics supplied.)

Thus, the criteria which determine the classification of secondary schools are the grades taught in it. As our italicization of the section emphasizes, the line of demarcation runs between high schools and junior high schools, the former being subdivided into separate categories dependent upon the number of years of work offered in them. The term “senior high school”, and “junior-senior high school”, which frequently occur in this record and sometimes in reported cases, do not appear in the statute. According to the statute, a secondary school is either a junior high school or a high school, and “a complete high school” offers four years work after eight of elementary instruction or six years after six years of elementary work. The act is clear, explicit and unambiguous. It becomes confusing only when an effort is made to read “senior high school” or “junior-senior high school” into it, or deduce these categories from its terms. We repeat, whatever may be the practice of school authorities and others, or the terminology employed by them, the law itself does not recognize the classifications.

Judged by this standard, Allerdice, although called a junior high school is, and has been, a high school. The associate superintendent of the Pittsburgh schools, in charge of secondary instruction, called as a witness for *333 the board, testified: “The Taylor Allerdice Junior-Senior High School is what is known as a six-year high school, embracing grades 7B through 12A.” Disregarding his reference to “Junior-Senior High School”, because, as has been demonstrated, that term is unknown to the law, he has properly classified Allerdice as a high school, a six-year high school, since it gives work in the seventh to the twelfth grades. The court below also found as a fact that grades taught at Allerdice “includes the work of grades seventh to twelfth”, but it rejected appellant’s contention: “Since it is well-known that a senior high school course takes only four years, the extra two years’ work offered in a ‘six-year’ high school are junior high school activities.” Upon that premise the court founded its conclusion that Allerdice was “both a senior high school and a junior high school.” The conclusion is not supported by the statute.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Smith v. Darby School District
130 A.2d 661 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1957)
Pittsburgh School District Appeal
52 A.2d 17 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1946)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 A.2d 108, 159 Pa. Super. 328, 1946 Pa. Super. LEXIS 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/melvin-appeal-pasuperct-1946.