Nancy Kessling v. Lionel Meno

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 26, 1996
Docket03-95-00296-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Nancy Kessling v. Lionel Meno (Nancy Kessling v. Lionel Meno) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nancy Kessling v. Lionel Meno, (Tex. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

Kessling v. Meno

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN



NO. 03-95-00296-CV



Nancy Kessling, Appellant



v.



Lionel Meno, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 98TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 94-11946, HONORABLE PAUL R. DAVIS, JR., JUDGE PRESIDING



Nancy Kessling, appellant, brought an action against appellee Lionel Meno, in his official capacity as Commissioner of Education, ("Commissioner") essentially for a declaration that he failed to fulfill his statutory duties under the Foundation School Program. See Act of June 1, 1975, 64th Leg., R.S., ch. 334, § 1, 1975 Tex. Gen. Laws 877 (Tex. Educ. Code Ann. §§ 16.001-.304, since repealed and recodified at Tex. Educ. Code Ann. §§ 42.001-.411 (West Pamph. 1996)). (1) The trial court dismissed the suit for want of jurisdiction. We will affirm the trial-court judgment.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The following factual and procedural background is gleaned from the allegations in Kessling's pleadings and attached exhibits. In 1991, Kessling, a local taxpayer, became convinced that the board of trustees of the Friendswood Independent School District ("FISD") was not appropriately managing the district's money. After reviewing FISD's 1992-1993 Annual Compliance Report, she decided that FISD was not properly reporting to the Commissioner the interest income from $12.55 million in bonds in compliance with the accounting guidelines of Texas Education Agency bulletin 679. Concerned that the district's lack of "internal controls over financial activities" was impairing the integrity of the Foundation School Program's database and thus ultimately the information used by the legislature to determine how to distribute the program's funding to participating school districts, Kessling began a personal campaign to remedy the perceived abuses.

Not satisfied with FISD's response to her complaints, on November 23, 1993 Kessling sent a letter to the Commissioner complaining that "school district auditors" were auditing FISD's books in an "unprofessional manner" and that the TEA had not taken "effective action" to protect the public from the FISD board's "incompetence." Kessling closed by asking simply for "a written response to this complaint within 60 days." On December 10, 1993, Kessling sent a letter to Dr. Carolyn Crawford, chair of the State Board of Education, informing her of the letter sent to the Commissioner and that Kessling planned to make her "final appeal" to the FISD board on December 14, 1993 before she would "bring [her] complaints to Austin." The letter concluded by asking Dr. Crawford to consider the letter "to be a formal request for the State Board of Education to review the matters set forth" in the letter to the Commissioner and further stated:



Should Commissioner Meno uphold the findings of the auditors, or refuse to review the auditor's working papers as required in Procedure AUD-602 of the TEA's Financial Accounting Manual (Bulletin 679), I will resubmit this complaint to you at the end of January 1994 as required by Section 16(e) of the [Administrative Procedure] Act as a "motion for rehearing."



In January 1994, an official from the Texas Education Agency sent Kessling a letter notifying her that an investigator had been assigned to investigate her complaints.

Beyond a series of correspondence in the summer of 1994 concerning an "open records request" made by Kessling, the record does not reflect that Kessling ever had any further contact with the Commissioner or Dr. Crawford's office on the matters addressed in the foregoing letters. Consequently, the record does not reflect that Kessling ever asked for or was granted or denied an administrative hearing before the Commissioner, nor does it reflect that the Commissioner ever took any action or rendered any decision, final or otherwise, in the matter.

In September 1994, Kessling, acting pro se, filed a "petition for declaratory judgment" naming the Commissioner as the sole defendant. The bulk of the petition complained of actions of the FISD board of trustees. With respect to the Commissioner, the petition complained of his "failure . . . to fulfill his statutory duties in the matter of overseeing[,] recording[,] keeping[,] and reporting of financial activity resulting from $12.55 million in bond funds received by Plaintiff's school district in May 1992." Kessling maintained that FISD was not properly reporting financial activity in accordance with the accounting standards set forth in Texas Education Agency's bulletin 679. Therefore, Kessling contended that by accepting FISD's flawed Annual Compliance Report, the Commissioner was not fulfilling his statutory duty to "take such action and require such reports consistent with the terms of this chapter as may be necessary to implement and administer the Foundation School Program."

The Commissioner filed a plea to the jurisdiction, plea in abatement, special exceptions, and affirmative defenses in which he asserted, inter alia, that the petition did not state a justiciable controversy under the Declaratory Judgments Act and that Kessling lacked standing. Following an evidentiary hearing of unknown scope and purpose, the trial court granted the Commissioner's plea to the jurisdiction with respect to any administrative appeal Kessling was seeking, granted the Commissioner's special exceptions, and abated the claim to allow Kessling to amend. (2)

In December 1994 Kessling filed an amended petition which expanded her allegations but did not eliminate the ambiguities or cure the deficiencies. For example, in her amended petition Kessling alleged that she had complied with the doctrine of "primary jurisdiction" by submitting her complaints to the Commissioner before bringing suit, apparently indicating that her suit was in fact an administrative appeal from some action or decision of the Commissioner. In this connection she pleaded:



Plaintiff would like this Honorable Court to concur that Defendant's nonfeasance of duties constitutes an action which is appealable under the terms of Texas Education Code 11.13(a).



. . . .



. . . Plaintiff would like this Honorable Court to concur that . . . Defendant's failure to respond to specific complaints regarding abuse of the accounting system is an action which is appealable under the terms of Texas Education Code 11.13(a).



The gravamen of Kessling's complaint about the Commissioner was still his alleged failure to provide "adequate oversight of financial activities of Plaintiff's school district."

On January 31, 1995, the trial court signed a second and final order dismissing the suit for want of jurisdiction. This order recites that the court was granting the Commissioner's plea to the jurisdiction "[a]fter hearing testimony and oral arguments and considering the documents on file."



DISCUSSION

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