Reed v. Orleans Parish School Board

21 So. 2d 895, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 347
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 30, 1945
DocketNo. 18202.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 21 So. 2d 895 (Reed v. Orleans Parish School Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reed v. Orleans Parish School Board, 21 So. 2d 895, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 347 (La. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

On March 17, 1943, Mrs. Sarah Towles Reed, a permanent teacher of Fortier High School, in New Orleans, was tried and found guilty by the Orleans Parish School Board on charges of wilful neglect of duty in that she failed and refused to fill out a certain questionnaire which had been sent by the School Board to the teachers of *Page 896 New Orleans pursuant to a resolution of the Board, dated January 8, 1943. As a result of this finding, the Board confirmed a prior suspension of Mrs. Reed from duty without pay from February 24, 1943, the date upon which the charges against her were preferred, to March 18, 1943, and reinstated her as of the latter date. Claiming that the charges made against her and the subsequent proceedings before the Orleans Parish School Board were illegal for the reason that the Board was without authority to require her to execute a questionnaire concerning her activities after school hours, Mrs. Reed brought the instant suit seeking to have the action of the School Board rescinded and annulled and that it be ordered to pay her the full sum of $200.52, representing her salary which was allegedly illegally withheld by it from February 24th to March 17th 1943 inclusive.

The defense of the School Board is that the action taken by it was legal and in conformity with the provisions of Act No. 79 of 1936, which amended and reenacted Section 66 of Act No. 100 of 1922, generally referred to as the "Teachers' Tenure Law"; that it had the authority and right, under Act No. 100 of 1922, to pass the resolution requiring school teachers of New Orleans to answer a questionnaire concerning the time which they were devoting after school hours to War work; that plaintiff wilfully refused to supply the information requested by the questionnaire and that, as a result thereof and after a public hearing, she was found guilty and suspended without pay for the time as alleged by her in her petition. It further averred that plaintiff's demeanor toward it and its members has long been, and still is, hostile and recalcitrant and, in support of this charge, it set forth in detail various offenses allegedly committed by plaintiff in the past.

After a trial on the foregoing issues, the judge of the District Court rejected plaintiff's demand. She has appealed.

Although the record in the case is quite voluminous, the issue presented for determination is a most narrow one. We say this because the vast preponderance of evidence submitted at the trial below exhibits that plaintiff not only neglected to supply the information sought to be obtained through the medium of the questionnaire which was submitted to her but that she actively and steadfastly refused to do so on the ground that the Board did not have the authority to inquire into her activities after school hours. The District judge so found and we fully concur in his ruling.

Thus, the question to be decided is whether the School Board had the right to require that the teachers of the New Orleans Public School System give it the information it sought to obtain by means of the questionnaire. In approaching a solution of this problem, it is important to ascertain at the outset whether the resolution of the Board of January 8, 1943, which provided for the issuance of the questionnaire, was founded on just cause. The circumstances surrounding the adoption of the resolution are shown by the record to be, in substance, as follows:

The United States Department of Education in Washington, in an effort to better prepare the youth of the land for the rigors of the present global War, had requested that all public school systems throughout the country emphasize the teaching of mathematics and science to a higher degree than ever before and also that courses in physical education be intensified. In order to comply with this request, the State Board of Education found it necessary to require that science be taught in the high schools of the State five times a week instead of three and that, inasmuch as the War Policy Commission of the Department of Education in Washington had suggested that physical education be increased from five hours to ten hours per week as outlined in the "Victory Corps" curriculum, the teaching of physical culture should be augmented. Taking cognizance of the recommendations of the Federal Government as approved by the State Board of Education, it was proposed by the Orleans Parish School Board, at its regular meeting on January 8, 1943, that the school hours in New Orleans be lengthened in order to accomplish this intensified program. Plaintiff, who is a leader of one of the teachers' associations in New Orleans, appeared at this meeting of the School Board and, with other teachers, opposed the proposal to lengthen the school hours on the ground that the increase of hours would interfere with War work in which many of the teachers were engaged. Upon stating this objection, plaintiff was asked by one of the members of the School Board whether she had any idea as to the number of teachers then engaged in War work, either voluntary or remunerative. To this query, plaintiff replied that she did not *Page 897 have information as to the number of persons so engaged nor the hours during which the War work was performed but that this information could be easily obtained. At this point of the discussion, Mr. A.J. Tete, Superintendent of the School Board suggested that a poll be conducted among the teachers of the New Orleans School System to ascertain how many of them were engaged in War work, the nature thereof and the hours during which it was done. In accordance with this suggestion, the Board adopted a resolution directing the Superintendent to prepare and cause questionnaires to be issued to each and every teacher in the New Orleans Public School System requesting information concerning their activities in War work after school hours.

Thereafter, the questionnaire was prepared and sent out by the Superintendent of the Board to all teachers in New Orleans, which number approximately 2000. Of this number, plaintiff was one of the few who failed and neglected to fill in or otherwise supply the information requested. The questionnaires, which are entitled "War Work Questionnaire", were addressed to the principals of the various schools in New Orleans and directed the principals to distribute them to the members of their faculties and return the completed forms to the Superintendent not later than February 4, 1943. Each questionnaire further states "Work referred to is other than that with School Board" followed by a heading entitled "Work for which remuneration is received", with blanks to be filled in with employer's name and address, the hours before and after school in which the work is done, services rendered or type of duties performed and a further space for "Remarks or further explanation". Following this is a heading "Volunteer Work" with blanks for the name of organization and hours, etc. in which such work is done.

The main contention of plaintiff is that the School Board was without power or right to require her to fill out the above described questionnaire because the information sought refers solely to matters of a private nature respecting her activities after school hours, as to which the board is neither concerned nor interested.

[1] If the School Board had attempted to require plaintiff to account to it for the use of her time after her duties at school were ended, with the purpose and design of harassing her or otherwise prying into her private life, there would be some basis for the proposition she has advanced. In such case, we would unhesitatingly say that the resolution of the Board providing for the issuance of the questionnaire was unreasonable and further that the requirement would be an undue invasion of her right of privacy.

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Bluebook (online)
21 So. 2d 895, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-v-orleans-parish-school-board-lactapp-1945.