North East Independent School District and Texas Commissioner of Education v. Dehann Riou

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 27, 2020
Docket18-0986
StatusPublished

This text of North East Independent School District and Texas Commissioner of Education v. Dehann Riou (North East Independent School District and Texas Commissioner of Education v. Dehann Riou) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North East Independent School District and Texas Commissioner of Education v. Dehann Riou, (Tex. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS ══════════ No. 18-0986 ══════════

NORTH EAST INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT AND TEXAS COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION, PETITIONERS,

v.

DEHANN RIOU, RESPONDENT

══════════════════════════════════════════ ON PETITION FOR REVIEW FROM THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS ══════════════════════════════════════════

Argued January 7, 2020

JUSTICE BLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.

A school board ended a teacher’s continuing contract because the teacher failed to record

grades and evaluate her pupils’ progress for half of the school year. In this case, we consider

whether state and federal laws requiring school districts to record grades and evaluate student

progress provide standards of conduct for the teaching profession, generally recognized and

applied throughout the state, such that the teacher’s failure to comply with district policies

implementing those laws supports termination for “good cause.”

Education Code section 21.156(a) provides that a school district may end a continuing

contract with a teacher for “good cause.” 1 The statute defines “good cause” as “the failure to meet

1 TEX. EDUC. CODE § 21.156(a). the accepted standards of conduct for the profession as generally recognized and applied in

similarly situated school districts in this state.” 2 Based on an independent hearing examiner’s

findings, the North East Independent School District board voted to end Dehann Riou’s continuing

teaching contract. Riou appealed the decision to the Commissioner of Education. The

Commissioner upheld the decision, agreeing with the examiner that Riou’s conduct was “good

cause per se” for termination. Riou then sought judicial review, arguing that the Education Code

has no “good cause per se” standard and that the district failed to adduce evidence of accepted

standards from similarly situated districts to show good cause. The trial court ruled for Riou,

reversing the Commissioner’s decision. The court of appeals affirmed, agreeing with Riou that

“good cause per se” has no basis in section 21.156(a)’s good cause definition, and the board’s

decision must be reversed because the district adduced no evidence of generally accepted standards

of professional conduct from similarly situated school districts.

In this Court, the district and the Commissioner contend that the evidence supports the

board’s decision. In addition, as a threshold matter, they contend that Riou failed to challenge the

application of a good cause per se exception at the local level, and thus she failed to preserve her

complaint for judicial review.

We hold that Riou preserved her complaint. Riou challenged the sufficiency of the

evidence supporting good cause to end her contract before the school board and the Commissioner.

Riou’s argument that the Commissioner excused this lack of evidence by relying on an improper

“per se” standard falls within this challenge. We further hold that the Commissioner erred in

2 Id.

2 employing a three-pronged “good cause per se” test, which as the court of appeals correctly

observed, has no basis in the Education Code’s plain text.

Even so, this record supports the board’s and Commissioner’s decisions. The statute

requires evidence of a failure to meet generally accepted standards of professional conduct but not,

as Riou suggests, evidence that similarly situated school districts would have ended her contract

under these specific facts. District policies implementing state and federal law denote generally

accepted standards of professional conduct—such policies reflect standards applicable to school

districts throughout the state. Evidence of a failure to meet a district policy that implements state

law supports a good cause determination. Accordingly, we reverse the court of appeals and

reinstate the Commissioner’s decision.

I

Dehann Riou began working as a fifth-grade teacher in North East ISD in 2006. In 2010,

she received a continuing contract from the district, which entitled her to continual employment

unless the district ended the contract for good cause. 3 Riou taught fifth grade and third grade at

Stahl Elementary, where she received scores of “proficient” or “exceeds expectations” in annual

evaluations.

Riou transferred to Royal Ridge Elementary in 2013, where she taught fourth grade for one

year before she was assigned to teach kindergarten for the 2014–15 school year. That year, Riou

took leave pursuant to the Family Medical Leave Act from April through August. A long-term

substitute teacher taught Riou’s classes during her absence.

3 Id. § 21.154.

3 Riou received a mixed annual evaluation on May 1, 2015, while she was on leave. The

evaluation scored her as below expectations in three categories, proficient in three categories, and

exceeds expectations in two categories. When Riou returned to work in August, Royal Ridge

principal Deborah Jarvis-Hernandez notified Riou that she had recommended termination of

Riou’s continuing contract.

In a three-page memo to Riou, Jarvis-Hernandez documented concerns over the lack of

progress of Riou’s pupils, and in particular, Riou’s failure to record grades and conduct benchmark

testing—all discovered after Riou went on leave. Jarvis-Hernandez stated that, while assisting

another teacher in preparing a lesson plan for Riou’s students, she found blank “Benchmark

Text/Reading Level Assessment Records” in Riou’s classroom. Jarvis-Hernandez stated that the

records “should have been completed in early December and again in March in order to complete

the Kindergarten report card/checklist for the second and third 9-week grading period.” Jarvis-

Hernandez also discovered that Riou had failed to ensure parents returned signed report cards as

required by district policy.

These discoveries prompted Jarvis-Hernandez to review Riou’s entries in the school’s

electronic grading system. She learned that Riou had not recorded any grades since October 24,

2014—the last day of the first nine-week grading period. Riou had not logged in to the system at

all since January 7, 2015 and did not enter grades that day. Riou’s failure to record grades meant

that the system showed “the same [grades] for all three grading periods since the grades rolled

over and duplicated from the first grading period.”

Jarvis-Hernandez’s review further revealed that although reading level assessments should

have been entered for the second and third nine-week grading periods, “[o]nly one report

4 card/checklist, belonging to a student who had withdrawn earlier in the year . . . had a reading level

indicated for the third 9-week grading period.” Jarvis-Hernandez identified “three student report

card/checklists that had no grades included at all,” other grades entered incorrectly (with symbols

instead of numbers), and scores recorded in areas “that should not have been scored until later in

the year.” Additionally, grades for Riou’s students furnished to Riou by music and physical-

education teachers had not been entered or were entered incorrectly.

On September 15, 2015, the school board notified Riou that it planned to terminate her

continuing contract for good cause based on her failure to comply with district policies regarding

grading and testing, among other reasons. Riou requested a hearing before an independent hearing

examiner.

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

Related

Pretzer v. Motor Vehicle Board
138 S.W.3d 908 (Texas Supreme Court, 2004)
Presidio Independent School District v. Scott
309 S.W.3d 927 (Texas Supreme Court, 2010)
Montgomery Independent School District v. Davis
34 S.W.3d 559 (Texas Supreme Court, 2000)
City of El Paso v. Public Utility Commission
883 S.W.2d 179 (Texas Supreme Court, 1994)
City of Keller v. Wilson
168 S.W.3d 802 (Texas Supreme Court, 2005)
Whitaker v. Moses
40 S.W.3d 176 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2001)
Watts v. St. Mary's Hall, Inc.
662 S.W.2d 55 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1983)
RAILROAD COM'N v. Pend Oreille Oil & Gas Co., Inc.
817 S.W.2d 36 (Texas Supreme Court, 1991)
Texas State Board of Dental Examiners v. Sizemore
759 S.W.2d 114 (Texas Supreme Court, 1988)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
North East Independent School District and Texas Commissioner of Education v. Dehann Riou, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-east-independent-school-district-and-texas-commissioner-of-education-tex-2020.