Silvio v. Commonwealth

439 A.2d 893, 64 Pa. Commw. 192, 1982 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1001
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 20, 1982
DocketAppeal, No. 1577 C.D. 1980
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 439 A.2d 893 (Silvio v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Silvio v. Commonwealth, 439 A.2d 893, 64 Pa. Commw. 192, 1982 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1001 (Pa. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge Rogers,

Melissa Silvio, an eight-year-old hearing impaired person, who resides with her parents in the School District of Pittsburgh, had been attending DePaul Institute, an approved private school for hearing impaired children, from the time her impairment was discovered when she was, about three years old. Her attendance at DePaul has' been publically funded. When Melissa attained the school attendance age of six years, the school district, after a review of her case records kept by DePaul, determined that an appropriate program would be her attendance at the district’s Beechwood School, an elementary school having special programs for hearing impaired children. Melissa’s parents, the appellants here, objected to the proposed placement, believing that Melissa was making good progress in her ability to speak and understand speech at DePaul and that the district should so provide. They asked for and were accorded the due process hearing provided for at 24 Pa. Code §13.31. After five days of hearings which produced almost eight hundred pages of testimony, the hearing officer filed a report containing findings and a recommendation to the Commonwealth Secretary of Education that the program proposed by the district for Melissa, her placement at Beechwood, was appropriate. On appeal, the Secretary of Education agreed with the hearing officer’s recommendation but by imposing upon the district the duty to provide Melissa with a program which would concentrate on her oral development.

This case is .almost identical on the -facts with the case of Savka v. Department of Education, 44 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 62, 403 A.2d 142 (1979) and many of the appellants’-objections.to the placement of their daughter in'-the public school system are the same as those made and disposed of adversely to the parents’ positions in that case. In this category of complaint is [195]*195the. appellants’ contention that the school district should have made its own evaluations instead of relying on records obtained from DePaul, dismissed in SavJca on the ground that the petitioners cited no authority prohibiting this practice and the fact that under existing regulations the appellants could have requested a fresh evaluation and did not do so. The same- circumstances obtained in this case. In the samé stead is the appellants’ argument that the records on which the placement determination was made were outdated. The State Board of Education regulations at 22 Pa. Code §13.31 (c) requires that an exceptional person must be evaluated not less than every two years or annually at the request of the parents. No request for an annual evaluation was made by Melissa’s parents so that question is solely that of whether the evaluations here used were more than two years old. The school district relied on the psychological, audiological and educational tests made at DePaul in March and November of 1977. Since the placement at Beechwood was made in May, 1978, the evaluation was conducted within two years and therefore was not outdated. In Savha the same determination with respect to evaluation was made somewhat closer to the date of placement.

The appellants also complain that they were denied an impartial hearing because the hearing officer was a professor at Slippery Bock State College and therefore, as they term it, an employee of the Secretary of Education. In SmTca, we held this issue to have been waived for failure of the parents to object to the hearing officer’s conducting the hearing; here an objection was made. We reject the appellants ’ thesis on the merits of this case. The only regulation on the subject is that found at 22 Pa. Code §13.32(12) which states that the hearing officer should not be an officer, employee or agent of the school district or inter[196]*196mediate unit in which the exceptional child resides. In recent cases wé have held that due process principles were not violated when the attorneys for the same agency appeared in different roles in an employee demotion proceeding, since functions performed by. the attorneys were different and there was no actual prejudice. Miller v. Department of Transportation, 59 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 446, 429 A.2d 1278 (1981). We have also held that no improper commingling of adjudicatory and prosecútory functions occurred when one assistant state attorney general served as a hearing officer and another prosecuted, an insurance licensure case. Romano v. Pennsylvania Insurance Commission, William J. Sheppard and the Pennsylvania Insurance Commission, 45 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 19, 404 A.2d 758 (1979). The hearing officer in this class of case does not have final adjudicatory authority; he simply hears the evidence and makes recommendations to the Secretary. Furthermore, the hearing officer here, a professor at Slippery Eock State Teachers College, could hardly be said to be subject to the influence of the Secretary of Education merely because both are functionaries of the Department of Education. Finally, on this subject, a fair reading of this record reveals that the hearing officer’s rulings were if anything overly favorable to the appellants. For instance, on the motion of their counsel, the hearing officer sequestered the witnesses although most of the testimony was of a highly technical nature based upon special competence of the witnesses in teaching the hearing impaired. Also, the examiner patiently considered the appellants’ counsel’s numerous objections to evidence proffered by the school district and in close rulings seems to us to have inclined toward exclusion rather than admission. There was neither bias nor the appearance of bias in the conduct of the hearing.

[197]*197The appellants’ principal contention is that the Secretary’s conclusion .that Beechwood is an appropriate place for Melissa to attend school is not supported by the evidence. The appellants ’ counsel writes in his brief that the issue before us is whether there was a preponderance of evidence to support the determination that the Beechwood School had an appropriate program for Melissa. This is much wide of the mark. It is true that the school district had the burden to show the appropriateness of the proposed placement of Melissa at Beechwood. 22 Pa. Code §13.32(15). Our review of this appeal from the Secretary’s order, as in every agency appeal, is not to determine whether the order in favor of the party having the burden below is supported by a preponderance of the evidence but whether the agency’s findings upon which its order was based are supported by substantial evidence. Our careful examination of this long record convinces us that the evidence supporting the findings and the decision below are amply supported by the record.

The Director of the Division for Exceptional Children of the School District of Pittsburgh testified that upon Melissa’s attaining school age, he and his staff reviewed the Individualized Educational Program developed for her at DePaul and concluded that the program at the district’s Beechwood Elementary School would be appropriate, and would further have the advantage of being less restrictive than the program at DePaul.

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Bluebook (online)
439 A.2d 893, 64 Pa. Commw. 192, 1982 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1001, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/silvio-v-commonwealth-pacommwct-1982.