Roman Perales v. Board of Law Examiners of the State of Texas Rachael Martin Carol Smoot The Supreme Court of Texas Chief Justice Thomas Phillips And Warlick Carr

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 17, 1995
Docket03-94-00377-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Roman Perales v. Board of Law Examiners of the State of Texas Rachael Martin Carol Smoot The Supreme Court of Texas Chief Justice Thomas Phillips And Warlick Carr (Roman Perales v. Board of Law Examiners of the State of Texas Rachael Martin Carol Smoot The Supreme Court of Texas Chief Justice Thomas Phillips And Warlick Carr) 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.

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Roman Perales v. Board of Law Examiners of the State of Texas Rachael Martin Carol Smoot The Supreme Court of Texas Chief Justice Thomas Phillips And Warlick Carr, (Tex. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

cv4-377.PERALES

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN



NO. 03-94-00377-CV



Roman Perales, Appellant



v.



Board of Law Examiners of the State of Texas;

Rachael Martin; Carol Smoot; The Supreme Court of Texas;

Chief Justice Thomas Phillips; and Warlick Carr, Appellees



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 250TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 93-06598, HONORABLE PETE LOWRY, JUDGE PRESIDING



PER CURIAM



Roman Perales, who narrowly missed a passing score on the Texas bar examination, challenged the method of calculating bar examination scores as unauthorized, unconstitutional, and discriminatory. He sued the Board of Law Examiners, which administers the bar examination; its chairman, Warlick Carr; its executive director, Rachel Martin; its director of eligibility, Carol Smoot; the Supreme Court of Texas and its chief justice, Thomas Phillips. The trial court denied his requests for a declaratory judgment, a permanent injunction, and other relief. We will affirm the judgment.



BACKGROUND

Perales failed the bar examination repeatedly. His scores on Part I of the examination missed the passing mark of 75 by less than a point in 1991 and 1992. Part I of the examination consisted of the multistate bar examination (MBE) and the Texas essay questions, while Part II of the examination covered civil and criminal practice and procedure. (1)

Perales filed this suit after learning that the Board had, several times during the 1980s, raised the MBE score that equated to the passing mark of 75. In 1974, a supreme court order set the 75-equivalent at 120. In 1980, the Board raised the 75-equivalent score to 121. For February 1983, it became 126; for July 1983, 127; for July 1984, 128; for February 1986, 130; for July 1992, 132; and for February 1994, 135. (2)

The 75-equivalent score on the MBE was an important element of the scoring process because it affected the conversion of the raw scores from all sections of the examination to the bar scale. The Board used the MBE scores to norm the scores of the other sections of the examination using an equipercentile method. The Board took the raw scores from the other sections of the test, grouped them into percentiles, and assigned them the value of the MBE scaled score from the corresponding MBE percentile. To convert the scaled scores of the MBE and essay portions of Part I into a scale on which 75 was passing, the Board added an applicant's scaled scores on the MBE and essay portions and divided the sum by a particular divisor; that divisor changed from 5.6 when the 75-equivalent MBE score was 130 to 5.686 when the 75-equivalent was 132. The Board then added 28.58 to the quotient to obtain the final score for Part I.

The impact of raising the 75-equivalent score is apparent when examining Perales's July 1992 scores. With the 75-equivalent at 130, Perales would have scored 74.55; instead, his score was 73.856. After his examination was regraded, his score with the 75-equivalent at 130 would have been 74.92 instead of the 74.216 he received. With the Board's policy of rounding up scores of 74.5-74.99 to the passing score of 75, Perales would have passed in July 1992 had the 75-equivalent remained 130.

Perales's case centers on his complaint that the Board lacked the power to raise the passing mark. He requested alternative declaratory judgments. He first requested a declaration that the Supreme Court's rules did not authorize the Board alone to raise the passing score. He alternatively requested that the rules be declared invalid if they authorized the Board's action. He finally requested that the supreme court's raising of the passing score be invalidated and the bar examination be declared discriminatory, unconstitutional, and unlawful. He requested a permanent injunction reversing all actions that raised the passing score. He finally requested that he be admitted to the State Bar of Texas on his old tests under the refigured passing score.

The trial court held a hearing on his motion for a permanent injunction. At the close of his presentation, the appellees moved for and received a directed verdict against all relief sought.



DISCUSSION

Perales raises two points of error, attacking the form and the substance of the judgment.



THE FORM

By his first point of error, Perales contends that the trial court erred because its denial of his requested relief through a directed verdict failed to declare the rights of the parties. Trial courts have the power to affirmatively or negatively declare rights of parties. Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 37.003 (West 1986). This court has reversed as inadequate a summary judgment ordering only that plaintiff take nothing in a suit for declaratory judgment. University of Tex. v. National Collegiate Athletic Ass'n, 685 S.W.2d 409, 410-11 (Tex. App.--Austin 1985, writ ref'd n.r.e.). We held that, because the judgment did not show which of several possible bases of the motion for summary judgment the court adopted, we had no basis on which to review the decision. Id.

The NCAA case does not control this case. That case was a summary judgment favoring the defendants rather than a directed verdict against the plaintiff. The appellant here lost based on his failure to prove the merits of his case rather than losing based on one or more of several unspecified bases asserted by the defendant; because the appellees here never introduced evidence to support their claim of sovereign immunity, the judgment could not have been based on that defense. The judgment here presents the clear, albeit implicit, basis on which to review the judgment--the merits of the claim. The trial court's rejection of all of Perales's options leaves no doubt that the court implicitly found the opposite of his requests, declaring that the Board had the power to raise the 75-equivalent and that the administration of the bar examination withstands the constitutional and legal challenges asserted by Perales. We overrule point one.



THE SUBSTANCE

By point of error two, Perales contends that the Board's raising of the passing score on its own violates the supreme court's 1974 order setting a passing score and breaches the state constitution's separation of powers provision. He also contends that the Board and the supreme court acted outside their authority in taking and authorizing these steps. He contends that these actions illegally caused him to fail the examination and not get his license, in violation of his rights to due process and equal protection.

His point of error directly attacks no action by the trial court, in violation of Tex. R. Civ. P.

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Roman Perales v. Board of Law Examiners of the State of Texas Rachael Martin Carol Smoot The Supreme Court of Texas Chief Justice Thomas Phillips And Warlick Carr, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roman-perales-v-board-of-law-examiners-of-the-state-of-texas-rachael-texapp-1995.