Michael Nellums v. Pine Bluff School District
This text of 2025 Ark. App. 103 (Michael Nellums v. Pine Bluff School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 103 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION III No. CV-23-678
MICHAEL NELLUMS Opinion Delivered February 19, 2025
APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE JEFFERSON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. 35CV-21-304]
PINE BLUFF SCHOOL DISTRICT HONORABLE ROBERT H. WYATT, APPELLEE JR., JUDGE
APPEAL DISMISSED
CINDY GRACE THYER, Judge
This case arises from an administrative appeal filed in the Jefferson County Circuit
Court seeking review of the Pine Bluff School District’s (PBSD’s) decision to terminate
appellant Michael Nellums’s employment as principal of Pine Bluff High School. We dismiss
the appeal.
Only a brief recitation of the facts is necessary to provide context for our decision.
Nellums began working for PBSD in July 2012. In December 2020, after a series of
allegations against Nellums and lawsuits against both him and PBSD, Superintendent
Barbara Warren determined that Nellums should be terminated from his position as
principal. PBSD notified Nellums of his termination in a letter dated March 12, 2021. The
letter was sent via both regular mail and certified mail. Nellums filed a complaint in the
Jefferson County Circuit Court seeking administrative review of PBSD’s actions on May 27, 2021. PBSD subsequently moved for summary judgment, asking the circuit court to uphold
its termination decision. The court granted PBSD’s summary-judgment motion, and
Nellums filed a timely appeal of that decision to this court.
After the record on appeal was lodged and Nellums’s brief was filed, PBSD filed a
motion in this court to dismiss the appeal, arguing that Nellums failed to timely appeal his
termination to the circuit court. Under the Arkansas Teacher Fair Dismissal Act (ATFDA),
a nonprobationary teacher whose contract has been terminated may seek review of that
decision in circuit court. Arkansas Code Annotated section 6-17-1510(d)(1) (Repl. 2021)
provides that
[t]he exclusive remedy for any nonprobationary teacher aggrieved by the decision made by the board of directors shall be an appeal therefrom to the circuit court of the county in which the school district is located, within seventy-five (75) days of the date of written notice of the action of the board of directors.
(Emphasis added.)
When the time for filing an appeal is fixed by a rule or statute, the provision that
limits the time is jurisdictional in nature, Ark. Game & Fish Comm’n v. Eddings, 2009 Ark.
359, at 6, 324 S.W.3d 328, 332, and the appeal must be taken within the time designated.
Searcy Cnty. v. Holder, 257 Ark. 435, 436, 516 S.W.2d 901, 903 (1974). If the filing of the
appeal is untimely, the circuit court never gains jurisdiction, and if the circuit court lacks
jurisdiction, then the appellate court also lacks jurisdiction. Ark. State Univ. v. Pro. Credit
Mgmt., Inc., 2009 Ark. 153, at 3, 299 S.W.3d 535, 536.
2 In its motion to dismiss the appeal, PBSD asserts that the letter notifying Nellums of
the termination decision was dated March 12, 2021, but he did not file his appeal in circuit
court until May 27, which was the seventy-sixth day following the date of written notice.
Citing Evans v. Little Rock School District, 2022 Ark. App. 443, Nellums responds that his
appeal was, in fact, timely because he did not receive the written notice of PBSD’s action
until March 13, 2021, making May 27 the seventy-fifth day, therefore rendering his appeal
timely.1
In Evans, supra, Kathryn Evans was terminated from her employment with the Little
Rock School District (LRSD). LRSD informed Evans on August 6, 2019, that she was being
terminated. Evans filed a complaint in the Pulaski County Circuit Court on September 11
alleging violations of the ATFDA, due process, and equal protection. On December 12,
LRSD provided Evans with a hearing, and on December 17, the school board’s
recommendation to terminate Evans’s contract was approved. On February 23, 2021, Evans
filed an amended complaint alleging breach of contract and violation of the ATFDA. LRSD
moved to dismiss her ATFDA claim as untimely because it was filed more than seventy-five
days “after she had received written notice of her termination” as required by the statute.
Evans, 2022 Ark. App. 443, at 2. The circuit court agreed, reasoning that Evans’s original
complaint was filed three months before the actual decision was made to terminate her, and
her amended complaint was filed nearly fourteen months after termination––well outside
1 We note that in his complaint, Nellums affirmatively asserted that he was “notified of his termination on or about March 12, 2021.”
3 the seventy-five-day window. Id. at 3. On appeal, this court affirmed the dismissal of Evans’s
complaint, concluding that because she had “received written notice on December 17,
2019,” she had until March 1, 2020, to appeal LRSD’s decision. Id. at 4.
Here, Nellums, citing Evans, argues that he did not receive PBSD’s written notice of
the termination decision until March 13, 2021. And because he filed his complaint in the
circuit court on May 27, 2021––seventy-five days from March 13—his appeal to the circuit
court was timely. We do not agree.
Although we do not dispute the ultimate holding in Evans––that Evans’s appeal of
the school board’s adverse decision to the circuit court was untimely––we essentially
misstated the law by speaking in terms of when Evans received notice. Section 6-17-1510(d)(1)
unequivocally states that an appeal must be taken “within seventy-five (75) days of the date of
written notice of the action of the board of directors.” (Emphasis added.) By introducing the
word “received,” we strayed from the statute’s plain words and our rules of statutory
construction that preclude us from reading into a statute language that was not included by
the legislature.2 See, e.g., Ark. Dep’t of Corr. v. Shults, 2018 Ark. 94, 541 S.W.3d 410; Scoggins
v. Medlock, 2011 Ark. 194, 381 S.W.3d 781.
2 We do not hereby overrule Evans because the date on which Evans “received” the notice was irrelevant to that case’s ultimate holding, i.e., that her appeal was fourteen months too late. The discussion of the date of the receipt of the notice was thus dicta, not part of the holding itself.
4 Nellums concedes that he filed his appeal on May 27, 2021, which was seventy-six
days after March 12, 2021, the date of the written notice of the action of the board of
directors. Given our clarification of Evans, the statute’s plain words, and Nellum’s admission,
there is no path to avoid a dismissal. His appeal to the circuit court was untimely, so that
court never acquired jurisdiction. Because the circuit court lacked jurisdiction, we do, too,
and must therefore dismiss this appeal. See Ark. State Univ., supra.
Appeal dismissed.
HARRISON and TUCKER, JJ., agree.
Terrence Cain, for appellant.
Bequette, Billingsley & Kees, P.A., by: W. Cody Kees, for appellee.
.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
2025 Ark. App. 103, 707 S.W.3d 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-nellums-v-pine-bluff-school-district-arkctapp-2025.