Roseboro v. Fayettevile City Board of Education

491 F. Supp. 113
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Tennessee
DecidedDecember 29, 1978
DocketCIV-4-77-27
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 491 F. Supp. 113 (Roseboro v. Fayettevile City Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roseboro v. Fayettevile City Board of Education, 491 F. Supp. 113 (E.D. Tenn. 1978).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

NEESE, District Judge.

This is an action for declaratory and injunctive relief brought by the plaintiff Ms. Bobbie Haston Roseboro (also once known as Ms. Bobbie Clanton) against the defendant Fayetteville (Tennessee) City Board of Education, the individual members thereof, its superintendent of schools, the principal of one of its schools, and one of its teachers. She charged the defendants with multiple violations of the federal civil rights statutes, 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981, 1982, 1983, 1985, 1986, 1988, 2000d, and asked this Court to assert pendent jurisdiction over certain state claims she advanced. Her application for the maintenance of this suit as a class action was denied. Memorandum opinion and order herein of November 3, 1977. A bench trial was conducted on June 23, 26-28,1978, inclusive. This Court has jurisdiction of the subject matter and of the parties. 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1343.

BASIC FACTS

I

The individual members of the aforenamed board, under color of Tennessee law, transferred Ms. Roseboro, a citizen of the United States, on May 9, 1977 1 from the position of teacher of home economics in Fayetteville Junior High School (Junior High) to the consolidated position of home-bound students’ and kindergarten teacher 2 and, on the same date, transferred the defendant Ms. Eleanor Helton from the position of teacher of health and science in another school in the system to the consolidated position of teaching home economics and health at the Junior High. Ms. Roseboro suffered no monetary loss of salary as a result of these transfers. Both such transfers were made on the recommendation of the defendant superintendent of schools Mr. Don McAlister and were made concurrently with the transfers within the school system of 3 other white teachers. Ms. Roseboro is a black person, and Ms. Helton is a white person. The defendant Mr. Ellis neither made nor recommended the aforementioned transfers. The defendant Ms. Helton, beyond agreeing to the transfer of herself to the new position by the board members on the recommendation of the defendant Mr. McAlister, had no part in the transfer of Ms. Roseboro. 3

*115 Ms. Roseboro was at the time of the foregoing transfers senior to Ms. Helton in the Fayetteville City school system. Ms. Roseboro had earned a master’s degree; Ms. Helton had not earned a master’s degree. Ms. Roseboro had taught courses in home economics for the 6 years immediately preceding the transfers; Ms. Helton had received her training as a home economics teacher 18 years beforehand and had not taught that subject previously in such school system.

II

Preliminarily to the preparation of a proposed budget for the Fayetteville City school system for the impending year 1977-1978, the defendant board members and superintendent were confronted with an admonition of the City of Fayetteville, Tennessee to pare prospective expenditures for its schools to the pragmatic minimum. 4 Having 9 more teachers than required of it by the state of Tennessee, the defendants involved with the problem began a program of retrenchment by reducing the number of its “excess” teachers to 6.

It was determined initially that the positions of 2 teachers who were retiring at the end of the 1976-1977 school year would not be filled, and that the position of another teacher, whose husband was being transferred from his position in the locality, would not be filled. Having arranged for the reduction in the teaching force, by not replacing the immediately foregoing teachers, the defendants involved considered the manner of making intra-system transfers of the teachers who were to return, so as to provide certified personnel to teach all courses to be offered.

A preregistration of students for the coming year revealed that it would then be necessary to assign some teachers to teaching more than 1 subject. This necessity reflected that only a “half-time” teacher of home economics would be required in the Junior High the following year, and that such part-time teacher of that course would be required to teach part-time also a course in either science or health.

When this latter necessity materialized, the defendant Mr. Ellis, the principal of the Junior High, met with Ms. Roseboro and advised her on March 17 that home economics 5 would be taught in that institution only half-time in the ensuing school year. Ms. Roseboro had expressed earlier to Mr. Ellis her hope that she would never again be called upon to teach a course in health. 6 Ms. Roseboro informed Mr. Ellis that she did not wish to teach a science course halftime, and the two discussed the possibility of other combinations of courses in which a teacher might instruct. Several times between that date and May 3, there were further discussions of varying lengths between Mr. Ellis and Ms. Roseboro concerning the possibilities involved in her reassignment for the impending school year.

When the matter of Ms. Roseboro’s future placement in the system had not been resolved by May 3, Messrs. Ellis and McAlister conferred with Ms. Roseboro again. (This was within a week of the meeting of the defendant board, when Mr. McAlister would recommend the assignments of teachers in the system for the coming year.) Ms. Roseboro expressed no preference as to her next assignment, stating that she was willing to do “ * * * whatever you-all want me to do. * * * ” Mr. McAlister inquired if she were in a position to “ * * * pull-up your roots and leave, * * * ” and Mr. Ellis apprised her of a vacancy in a position of teaching food ser *116 vice in the Lincoln County, Tennessee 7 school system.

Ms. Roseboro recognized her dire need economically to continue the pursuit of her professional career. She understood from Messrs. Ellis and McAlister that she was being called upon to make the personal decision, whether she could “live” from the salary produced by a position of teaching home economics on a half-day schedule. The school administrators sought to reassure Ms. Roseboro that she, as a tenured teacher, would be given a full-time teaching assignment in the Fayetteville city school system. Nonetheless, Ms. Roseboro was apprehensive, feeling “ * * * I was being moved, because I was black. * * * ”

Her fears were not allayed when Mr. McAlister mentioned her possible transfer to a position of teaching deprived children and working with the parents of such children in their homes. She understood this would entail her visiting in such homes after normal classroom hours, “ * * * sometimes at night. * * * ” The combination of all her fears and direful forebodings of the future caused her to become very upset and emotional on this occasion.

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

Related

Walker v. Oregon State Board of Higher Education
674 P.2d 88 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1984)
Dixon v. McMullen
527 F. Supp. 711 (N.D. Texas, 1981)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
491 F. Supp. 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roseboro-v-fayettevile-city-board-of-education-tned-1978.