Rio Arriba County Board of Education v. Martinez

397 P.2d 471, 74 N.M. 674
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 13, 1964
Docket7464
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 397 P.2d 471 (Rio Arriba County Board of Education v. Martinez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rio Arriba County Board of Education v. Martinez, 397 P.2d 471, 74 N.M. 674 (N.M. 1964).

Opinion

CARMODY, Justice.

By writ of error,, we are asked to review the action of the district .court in granting a temporary restraining order, which enjoined the transfer of certain teachers “until a final determination of the validity of such transfers by a competent tribunal within the contemplation of the statutes of the State of New Mexico.”

In order to bring this matter into some sort of understandable perspective, it is necessary to relate .certain background.

In the Spring of 1963, the Rio Arriba county board of education ordered that seven school teachers (defendants-in-error) be assigned to teach in different schools than those in which the teachers had formerly taught. The teachers protested the transfers, and were granted a hearing by the county board, which, however, reaffirmed it decision. Thereupon, the teachers undertook an appeal to the state board of education. The state board determined to grant the appeals and to hold a hearing; but before the actual hearing, the county board filed suit in the district court of Santa Fe County, to restrain the state board from hearing the appeals. Prior to any hearing in the district court in the case ¿gainst the state board, the state board brought an original prohibition proceeding before us, asking that the district court be prohibited from interfering with the hearing before the board on the appeals. In the meantime, of course, several months had elapsed, and the teachers, who were not actual parties to any of the above proceedings, filed a complaint in the district court of Rio Arriba County, seeking an injunction against the county board from transferring the teachers pending the final disposition of the question as to the legality or illegality of the transfers. This particular case was filed before the original prohibition proceeding before us, and was actually the commencement of the proceeding which we are now considering on writ of error. The disqualification of the two resident district judges, and the designation of a non-resident judge, caused considerable delay, as a result of which the instant case was not heard in any sense until after the argument in the original prohibition case before us, but prior to the announcement of our decision. The opinion by this court in State ex rel. State Board of Education v. Montoya, 73 N.M. 162, 386 P.2d 252, was filed on September 16, 1963, and the hearing in the instant case was concluded the evening of September 9, 1963, the order being filed in the office of the clerk the following morning.

Thus, at the time of the district court hearing, it was not known whether the state board of education had the power, under the facts of that case and under the statutes, to determine the validity of the transfer of the teachers. This was the issue in State ex rel. State Board of Education v. Montoya, supra, which was still within the bosom of this court. At that time, neither the able trial judge nor the attorneys had any way of knowing that this court, in the Montoya case, would determine that the state board had no power to hear the teachers’ appeal. Actually, counsel for the teachers seemed confident that our Montoya opinion would hold that the state board had tlie authority to hear the case on its merits, but utilized the words “a competent tribunal” with realistic caution in case they were wrong.

Nevertheless, apparently in line with their contention that the state board had jurisdiction, the teachers amended their pleadings. The original petition sought a temporary and permanent injunction to prohibit the county board from transferring the teachers and a ^filial determination of the merits of the controversy. However, some three days before the actual hearing before Judge Armijo (the judge sitting by designation), the teachers filed an amended complaint, which plainly, both upon its face and in its prayer, sought only to preserve the status quo of the non-transfer of the teachers pending a determination of the validity or invalidity of the transfers “by a competent tribunal.” Thus the teachers abandoned their original claim and merely sought an injunction until some other tribunal could determine the merits of the controversy.

, It. is to be regretted that the litigation between the parties cannot be disposed of at this time, particularly in view of the able presentation of the case by counsel. Nevertheless, there are two strictly legal issues which demand solution by us prior to reaching the merits.

We are first called upon, by motion tq dismiss the writ of error, to decide whether the order appealed from is one that can be appealed, the point being made by the teachers (defendants-in-error) that the order was merely interlocutory and therefore not appealable. We would observe that even though the case is before us upon writ of error, it is reviewable, if it is, in a like manner to an ordinary appeal. Milosevich v. Board of County Commissioners, 1942, 46 N.M. 234, 126 P.2d 298. Thus our rule, § 21-2-1(5) (2), N.M.S.A.1953, comes into play. The rule, insofar as pertinent, reads:

“2. Appeals shall also be allowed * * * in all civil actions, from such interlocutory judgments, orders or decisions of the district courts, as practically dispose of the merits of the action, so that any further proceeding therein would be only to carry into effect such interlocutory judgment, order or decision. * * * ”

The problem, insofar as the motion to dismiss is concerned, is whether the order entered by the trial court was one which practically disposed of the merits of the action.

We have carefully reviewed the entire record before us, including the statements of counsel in argument and the various rulings'made by the trial judge during the course of the hearing, the legal arguments, and his final decision issued from the bench. It appears patent that at that time the trial judge was of the opinion that this particular case was at an end. The purpose of the temporary restraining order was to attempt to preserve matters in status quo, insofar as transfer of the teachers was concerned, only until some competent tribunal finally determined the validity, or invalidity, of the transfers. It appears from the transcript that, in the judgment of counsel for the teachers (although this was not joined in by counsel for the county board of education), the state board of education would be determined to have the right to pass upon the validity of the transfers. At one point in the hearing, one of the attorneys for the teachers stated that the only reason for the hearing in the cause then before the court was to “determine whether or not the teachers are entitled to have a status quo in regard to their positions until such time as the administrative board has an opportunity to look at it.” It also appears that the attorneys for the teachers agreed that it made no difference how the supreme court decided State ex rel. State Board of Education v. Montoya, because that would have no effect on Judge Armijo’s jurisdiction in the instant case, since he was not to determine the validity of the transfers. Counsel admitted, in the district court hearing, that if we decided in State ex rel. State Board of Education v.

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Bluebook (online)
397 P.2d 471, 74 N.M. 674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rio-arriba-county-board-of-education-v-martinez-nm-1964.