Rudolph v. State

2011 ND 13, 798 N.W.2d 878
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 2011
Docket20100249
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2011 ND 13 (Rudolph v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rudolph v. State, 2011 ND 13, 798 N.W.2d 878 (N.D. 2011).

Opinion

Filed 2/8/11 by Clerk of Supreme Court

IN THE SUPREME COURT

STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA

2011 ND 32

Joseph Kalvoda, Melissa Davis,

Gerald Prouty and Sandra Broschat, Petitioners and Appellants

v.

Bismarck Public School District #1, Respondent and Appellee

No. 20100320

Appeal from the District Court of Burleigh County, South Central Judicial District, the Honorable Robert O. Wefald, Judge.

AFFIRMED.

Opinion of the Court by Sandstrom, Justice.

Michael J. Geiermann, 425 North Fifth Street, P.O. Box 2196, Bismarck, N.D. 58502-2196, for petitioners and appellants.

Gary R. Thune (argued) and Tiffany L. Johnson (on brief), 314 East Thayer Avenue, P.O. Box 400, Bismarck, N.D. 58502-0400, for respondent and appellee.

Kalvoda v. Bismarck Public School Dist. #1

Sandstrom, Justice.

[¶1] Joseph Kalvoda, Melissa Davis, Gerald Prouty, and Sandra Broschat appeal from the district court’s amended judgment dismissing their action seeking to compel the Bismarck Public School District to pay them additional compensation.  We hold the appellants are currently fulfilling their duties as required by the rules in their contract.  Further, the parties’ long-standing interpretation of administrative rule GBRB-R reflects the appellants are teaching the normal workload specified in their contracts.  Because the teachers are not entitled to additional compensation under this rule, we affirm the district court’s judgment dismissing the teachers’ complaint.

I

[¶2] The Bismarck Public School District (“Bismarck School District”) has three high schools.  The two “traditional” high schools are Bismarck High School and Century High School, while South Central High School is the district’s alternative high school.  The appellants were teachers employed by the Bismarck School District and assigned to teach at South Central during the 2009-10 school year.  They were also members of the Bismarck Education Association, which had negotiated the standard teaching contract for its members with the Bismarck School District.

[¶3] Part of the contract governing the relationship between the Bismarck School District and the teachers is administrative rule GBRB-R.  Entitled “Administrator and Teacher Work Day,” this rule establishes the daily and weekly teaching time requirements for teachers and is the subject of this dispute.  Rule GBRB-R provides in part:

The teacher work day shall include a normal teaching contact time of 1500 minutes per week.  Teaching contact time is defined as time actually assigned to instructional classroom activities. . . . Senior high school teachers may, in addition to five classes, fulfill the 1500 minute schedule with the assignment of a “tutorial” period.  The tutorial period is to be scheduled by the building administrator in cooperation with teaching staff in such a way as to provide student/teacher contact regarding instructional programs.

. . . .

Each full-time teacher shall be provided a minimum of 250 minutes per week for planning and preparation time.

Teachers whose work day is extended beyond the normal work day and secondary teachers who are assigned classes beyond the normal five at the senior high . . . will be reimbursed in accord with the percentage of time the additional duties add to the work day.  If classes are added, a prorated amount of preparation time will also be added and reimbursed.

Any teacher who feels that this rule is being violated may report that alleged violation and a review will be performed by a committee consisting of two administrators appointed by the superintendent and two teachers appointed by the BEA president.

[¶4] Under the 2009-10 schedule, the teachers at South Central taught in two 150-

minute blocks for a total of 300 minutes per day and 1,500 minutes per week.  According to the affidavits and exhibits filed in this case, this has been the standard teaching schedule at South Central for some time.  The teaching schedule at Bismarck High and Century High reflects that teachers in those schools typically teach five 50-

minute classroom periods, with one 50-minute tutorial period and one 50-minute preparation period.  The affidavits and exhibits reflect that this has been the schedule in these schools for a number of years.  Under rule GBRB-R, the standard teaching schedule used at Bismarck High and Century High totals 300 minutes per day and 1,500 minutes per week because the tutorial period is counted towards the teacher’s daily teaching contact time, but the preparation period is not.

[¶5] Rule GBRB-R provides that if a teacher at Bismarck High or Century High teaches a sixth period, they are to receive a separate contract reimbursing them “in accord with the percentage of time the additional duties add to the work day.”  Whether this extra period replaces the tutorial period or the preparation period is an issue in the case.  Numerous contracts were entered into evidence that were issued to Bismarck High and Century High teachers for teaching an additional period, but the record here reflects no South Central teacher receiving such a contract.

[¶6] Under the teachers’ interpretation of rule GBRB-R, the “normal five” period work day adds up to 250 minutes of daily in-class teaching duties at Bismarck High and Century High, while there are 300 minutes of daily in-class instruction at South Central.  In response to this interpretation of the rule, the teachers brought a complaint to the Bismarck School District’s administration.  A committee consisting of two teachers and two administrators was formed to hear the complaint under the terms of the rule.  The committee concluded the rule had been violated and the teachers at South Central were entitled to additional compensation.  The committee sought to reimburse them for the first semester and then reduce their teaching contact time in the second semester.

[¶7] Bismarck School District Superintendent Paul Johnson, Ph.D., disagreed with the committee’s findings.  In a letter to the Bismarck Education Association president, Dr. Johnson concluded the committee misinterpreted rule GBRB-R.  Dr. Johnson noted 1,500 minutes is the standard teaching requirement under the rule, and explained the teachers at Bismarck High and Century High met this requirement through their five periods of class lecture and one tutorial period.  South Central teachers, he noted, fulfilled the requirement through their twice daily 150-minute block classes.  Dr. Johnson concluded the teachers were teaching a normal workload under rule GBRB-R and were not entitled to additional compensation.  The Bismarck School District proceeded to offer the teachers contracts for 2010-11 with the same terms as their previous contracts.

[¶8] The teachers petitioned the district court for a writ of mandamus, seeking an order compelling the Bismarck School District to issue them contracts for 2010-11 with the additional compensation allegedly owed under rule GBRB-R.  Finding there was “a basis for Petitioner’s claim,” the district court issued its alternative writ of mandamus ordering the Bismarck School District to offer the teachers contracts for the 2010-11 school year identical to those already offered, except with “an . . . additional assignment contract for extra compensation for teaching an additional class period . . . .”

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

Related

State v. Mertz
2012 ND 145 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 2012)
Kalvoda v. Bismarck Public School Dist. 1
2011 ND 32 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2011 ND 13, 798 N.W.2d 878, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rudolph-v-state-nd-2011.