Picone Ex Rel. Picone v. Bangor Area School District

936 A.2d 556, 2007 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 621
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 15, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 936 A.2d 556 (Picone Ex Rel. Picone v. Bangor Area School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Picone Ex Rel. Picone v. Bangor Area School District, 936 A.2d 556, 2007 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 621 (Pa. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinions

OPINION BY

Senior Judge KELLEY.

Kyle Russel Picone, a minor by and through his natural parents and guardians, Anthony Picone and Kimberly Picone, his wife, (Student) appeals from the February 16, 2007, order of the Court of Common [558]*558Pleas of Northampton County (trial court), which affirmed the decision of the Board of School Directors (School Board) of the Bangor Area School District (School District) expelling Student until the end of the third marking period and requiring Student to fulfill certain conditions for readmission. We affirm.

The facts, as found by the School Board, are as follows. On December 13, 2006, shortly after 2:30 p.m., Student was in his automobile in the high school parking lot preparing to drive two other students to the middle school for basketball practice. One of the other students noticed a box of pellets in the car and asked Student about the pellets. Student picked up a soft air pellet gun that was alongside his seat and showed it to the other students. Student decided to demonstrate how it worked. Student noticed his girl friend walking across the parking lot toward his car, pointed the pellet gun at her through an open window and fired the gun. The pellet struck Student’s girl friend in the thigh. As his girl friend walked past the car, Student apologized to her.

Student’s girl friend, who was wearing gym shorts, entered the gym lobby upset and with tears in her eyes. When she saw a teacher, she told him that Student shot her in the leg with a BB gun, and she showed the teacher the welt on her thigh. Student later admitted to his basketball coach that he shot his girl friend with a pellet gun. Student cooperated with school representatives, answering their questions, turning over to them the pellet gun and plastic pellets and writing a statement in his own words to explain what occurred.

The principal and assistant principal met with Student and his parents about the pellet gun incident. Again, Student was cooperative, admitting that he fired the pellet gun toward another student. As a result of the incident, Student was suspended from school for ten days, and the school superintendent recommended that Student be expelled for one year.

At the January 8, 2007 expulsion hearing, Student testified that he aimed and shot the pellet gun at his girl friend “maybe as kind of a joke” or “maybe to scare her.” Student agreed with the Director of Safety and Security, the School Police Officer and the superintendent, who all testified that, if a pellet from the soft air pellet gun struck someone in the eye, the pellet could cause serious bodily injury. Student and his father testified that Student had learned his lesson and that they would like Student to remain in school.

Numerous witnesses testified on behalf of Student, including: the basketball coach; the football coach; the assistant football coach; the President of the Football Parents Club; the owner of Bangor Hardware, where Student worked part-time; and a teammate from the basketball team. These witnesses described Student as likeable, with a great personality, and testified that they did not consider Student a danger to the school community.

Student’s girl friend testified that: (1) there had been no incidents between her and Student prior to the pellet shooting; (2) she did not believe that Student meant to hurt her; and (3) although the pellet stung her, the welt went away quickly. The girl friend’s father testified that the pellet shooting “wasn’t a big deal” and that he did not consider his daughter to be in danger around Student.

Student’s disciplinary record was entered into evidence. About a month prior to the pellet shooting, Student was suspended out of school for making inappropriate sexual comments to a female student, i.e., sexual harassment. In addition, since December of 2003, Student received [559]*559ten after-school detentions for showing disrespect for teachers, plagiarism, horseplay, disrupting class, failure to follow directions and reckless driving.

At the hearing, the superintendent agreed to modify his recommendation to expel Student for one year by recommending that Student be expelled until the end of the third marking period, with readmission conditioned upon the following: (1) readmission at the discretion of the superintendent; (2) completion of fifty hours of community service; (3) participation in weekly individual psychological counseling and submission of a counselor’s report indicating that Student will be able to conform his behavior to acceptable school standards; (4) maintenance of a C or better average during expulsion; (5) upon readmission, remain free of any disciplinary referrals, no participation in a school sports team, no participation in the prom or senior banquet and participation in graduation ceremonies only if Student satisfies all graduation requirements and all requirements of the expulsion.

In its January 22, 2007 adjudication, the School Board concluded that Student violated Section 1317.2 of the Public School Code of 1949 (Public School Code)1 by possessing a pellet gun on school property. In reaching this conclusion, the School Board determined that a pellet gun is a “weapon” under Section 1317.2(g) of the Public School Code, 24 P.S. § 1317.2(g), because it is capable of inflicting serious bodily injury to an eye. The School Board also concluded that Student, in shooting another student with a pellet gun, violated the school policy prohibiting terroristic acts or threats and engaged in disorderly conduct. As a result, the School Board expelled Student until the end of the third marking period, with readmission subject to the conditions set forth by the superintendent in his recommendation.

Student filed an appeal with the trial court. Student alleged that: (1) a toy “air soft” pellet gun that discharges plastic pellets is not a “weapon,” and the shooting of a toy gun at a student does not constitute a terroristic act or threat; (2) the School Board violated the Sunshine Act, 65 Pa. C.S. §§ 701-716, by taking official action in private, i.e., by asking the solicitor to request that the superintendent modify his recommendation to allow the School Board to expel Student for less than one year; and (3) the School Board’s communication with the superintendent through the solicitor, ex parte, violated Student’s due process rights.

The trial court held a hearing on the Sunshine Act issue. One of the nine School Board members testified as follows. When the School Board members began to deliberate, it became evident that there was not a majority of five in favor of a one-year expulsion. Two members were in favor of the penalty, but two members would not support any expulsion at all because they concluded that the pellet gun was not a weapon. The remaining five members discussed reducing the period of expulsion and imposing conditions for readmission, but they became aware that, under Section 1317.2 of the Public School Code, 24 P.S. § 13-1317.2, the School Board was required to expel Student for one year unless the superintendent recommended modifying that requirement. The solicitor suggested that he leave the room and negotiate with the superintendent and the School District’s attorney. After doing so, the solicitor reported that the superintendent had agreed to the reduced expulsion with conditions for readmission.

[560]*560The solicitor testified as follows.

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Picone Ex Rel. Picone v. Bangor Area School District
936 A.2d 556 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2007)

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936 A.2d 556, 2007 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/picone-ex-rel-picone-v-bangor-area-school-district-pacommwct-2007.