Sauter v. Mount Vernon School District No. 320

791 P.2d 549, 58 Wash. App. 121
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 8, 1990
Docket23811-6-I
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 791 P.2d 549 (Sauter v. Mount Vernon School District No. 320) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sauter v. Mount Vernon School District No. 320, 791 P.2d 549, 58 Wash. App. 121 (Wash. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

Coleman, C.J. —

Rocke Sauter appeals from the trial court's judgment affirming his discharge by the Mount Vernon School District. We affirm.

Sauter was a math teacher at Mount Vernon High School. On October 10, 1986, the superintendent of the Mount Vernon School District notified Sauter by letter that he had found "probable cause for your discharge as a certificated employee of the District." The letter stated:

The cause for my determination is your patently unacceptable, unprofessional, and immoral conduct in relation to [J], a District student and a minor. As demonstrated by your handwritten note delivered to [J] last month, you have engaged in sexually exploitive conduct toward [J]. The note — itself highly suggestive and totally unprofessional — was delivered by you in the context of a dialogue concerning a potential liaison and sexual relationship between yourself and [J]. By your written *124 admission of last month, you acknowledged that such a dialogue did in fact occur. It was you who solicited her for a sexual relationship, according to [J]. The sexual dialogue occurred in the context of proposals by you for private get-togethers of yourself and [J].
So far as we know at this time, you did not succeed in seducing [J]; but your reprehensible and predatory conduct toward [J] plainly is inherently destructive to [J] ánd to the student-teacher relationship and constitutes a material breach of your duties and obligations as a teacher. Your conduct has a material and substantial [sic] adverse effect on your fitness to teach and lacks any positive educational aspect or legitimate professional purpose. Further, your conduct materially and adversely detracts from your teacher-teacher, teacher-administrator, and teacher-community/parent relationships.

Upon receipt of the letter from the superintendent, Sauter requested a hearing. After an extensive hearing before a hearing officer, findings of fact and conclusions of law were entered. The findings of fact can be summarized as follows.

Rocke Sauter began teaching at Mount Vernon High School in 1985. Prior to that time, he taught math and coached sports at a middle school in the Mount Vernon School District since 1971. During the 1985-86 school year, Sauter taught algebra. J was one of his students. During that year, Sauter and J had daily contact and many conversations together. She expressed concern over some surgery she needed. Sauter was genuinely concerned on her behalf, however nothing unusual happened in the relationship between the two during that school year.

During the summer of 1986 Sauter rode his bicycle daily. On one occasion he rode past J's residence and stopped in to see her. He was curious as to how she was doing and if she had completed her surgery. They took a bike ride together, and at one point they stopped to rest, during which time they had an extensive conversation. Sauter told J that he thought she was very attractive and was pretty enough to be a model. He told her that he had seen her in her apartment when he had ridden by her house before. He told her that he was glad he had taught at a middle school for so many years because he did not know if he could handle "the girl situation" in high school when he was younger.

*125 When the 1986-87 school year began, J dropped by Sau-ter's office on a regular basis, during which time they discussed many of her personal problems. At one point she told Sauter she would like to make love to him. During these conversations, Sauter confided in J that he was having difficulty with his marriage and that his wife might be going to California. Sauter told J that he found her very attractive, that he had had a vasectomy, and that he wanted to make love with her too. Both expressed reasons why this potential relationship should not take place, but their discussions continued.

On September 19, 1986, Sauter wrote a note to J during his second period class which he gave to her immediately after second period. The note was not addressed, dated, or signed. The note read as follows:

I wrote you a letter at 2:22 last night — I couldn't sleep — A little war was going on inside me. One part of me was saying "forget her — time will take care of things." Another was saying "she is beautiful, stimulating, sensational and can make you feel so alive. Go for it."
What I wrote last night depicted a little scene between us. A fantasy of an encounter. I must admit I liked what I thought about, and I planned to give you the note — It was full of feeling and emotion — but I chickened out — After reading it this morning I couldn't go through with it — I was too embarrassed to have you read about my fantasy with you — I am in a difficult situation — I want you to be around and yet I don't trust myself to keep it at a friendly level — and yet I must — The temptation is so great — But let's just play it cool — come and see me — I do want you to come around — we can talk, share our thoughts and just see how time affects us — Sorry I missed you this morning.

When Sauter gave J the note, he told her to "rip it up and don't let anyone see it."

J subsequently brought the note to the attention of school authorities. A few days after J turned the note in and J's written and oral statements concerning the incidents with Sauter were taken, Sauter prepared a written statement which he delivered to the school authorities outlining his interpretation of the note and his reply to the *126 accusations made by J of previous sexual advances. Sauter's statement is as follows:

To the best of my recollection, Monday or Tuesday, the week of the 15-20 of September, [J] was in my office upon my return from my third period class. I could tell that she was upset. I didn't ask her if she had a class. I assumed she was on lunch. I was on lunch/prep so we talked. She related to me that things were pressing in on her at home. Her boyfriend lived with them and she wasn't comfortable with that arrangement. She also said they would be moving soon and he would be moving out at that time. I listened and told her that just give it some time, when he moved things would look better, that what they probably needed was some space of their own. She talked some more about her situation relative to her boyfriend and finally she brought up the subject that she was attracted to me. She stated "I want you" or something to that effect. She asked me if I had a desire to make love to her. This did catch me off guard. I said: 1. If I weren't married; 2. Not a teacher; 3. Twenty years younger, sure, but I proceeded to explain about the trust society puts in teachers, the significance of my feelings about marriage and the fact that I was old enough to be her father. I tried to be as delicate about the whole thing, thinking that I didn't want to make her feel terribly rejected after she had taken the risk of revealing her feelings to me, but at the same time establishing the fact that there was no way that we would ever have anything but a student/teacher friendship. I left it at that and felt there was no need for further action. I didn't find out that she was supposed to be in French until the bell for end of lunch rang and I asked her where she was supposed to go.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
791 P.2d 549, 58 Wash. App. 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sauter-v-mount-vernon-school-district-no-320-washctapp-1990.