Smithville Independent School District and Steven Tom v. Jerry Hoskins

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 16, 1999
Docket03-98-00561-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Smithville Independent School District and Steven Tom v. Jerry Hoskins (Smithville Independent School District and Steven Tom v. Jerry Hoskins) 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.

Bluebook
Smithville Independent School District and Steven Tom v. Jerry Hoskins, (Tex. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN



NO. 03-98-00561-CV

NO. 03-98-00624-CV



Smithville Independent School District and Steven Tom, Appellants



v.



Jerry Hoskins, Appellee



AND



Jerry Hoskins, Appellant





Smithville Independent School District and Michael Moses,

Commissioner of Education, Appellees



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BASTROP COUNTY, 21ST JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NOS. 22,264A & 22,264, HONORABLE JOHN L. PLACKE, JUDGE PRESIDING



The Smithville Independent School District (the "District"), following the recommendation of Steven Tom, its superintendent, terminated Jerry Hoskins's continuing teacher's contract based on a finding of good cause. When Hoskins's appeal to the Commissioner of Education (the "Commissioner") was unsuccessful, he brought suit in district court, seeking judicial review of the Commissioner's decision and raising three independent claims against the District and Tom: (1) breach of contract/wrongful discharge; (2) defamation; and (3) intentional infliction of emotional distress. In response, the District filed a plea to the jurisdiction that was denied by the district court. The court rendered a separate final judgment that affirmed the Commissioner's decision and severed Hoskins's administrative claim against the Commissioner from his independent claims against the District and Tom.

On appeal, Hoskins challenges the district court's judgment affirming the Commissioner's decision. The District and Tom, in a separate cause, appeal the court's denial of the plea to the jurisdiction. We will affirm the district court's action in both respects.



FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Hoskins, an agriculture teacher at Smithville High School ("SHS"), was employed pursuant to a continuing contract with the District. (1) In November 1996, Hoskins, Christina Gaytan, and Tab Young, also teachers at SHS, traveled to Academy High School to participate as judges in a Future Farmers of America ("FFA") area competition. When the judges gathered at Academy , Hoskins told Young that the examination to be used in the Academy competition was also going to be used the next day in a competition in Hutto that included SHS students. Hoskins and Young then separated to judge their respective competitions. Gary Adams, a teacher from a different district, noticed some copies of that day's exam lying on a table in the judges' lounge. Believing that these exams were to be distributed as future study material, Adams picked up two copies and handed one to Hoskins. After the day's competition was complete, Hoskins told Young and Gaytan that he had a copy of the test and was ninety-nine percent sure that it would be used the next day in Hutto. When Adams learned that the test was to be used the next day in the Hutto competition, he returned his copy.

The next morning, Hoskins told Lance Hanson, another teacher at SHS, that he had "the tests." Hoskins then asked Hanson, Gaytan, Young, and a student at SHS to help him fill out the answers to the exam. Believing it to be a practice exam for study purposes, they agreed. Throughout the morning, they supplied answers to the questions. At one point, Hoskins told a special-education aide that he thought that SHS would do well in the competition and was ninety-nine percent sure that he had the test. After most of the questions were answered, Hoskins found an SHS student scheduled to compete that day, gave her a copy of the answered exam, and asked her to review it and distribute copies to her classmates.

On the bus to the Hutto competition, three SHS students studied the completed exam. Hoskins advised the students against making a perfect score if the same exam were administered at the competition. When they reached Hutto, Hoskins told the students to put the examination away and advised them not to let anyone see it; he also told two of the students not to tell anyone else that they had seen the exam. Following the competition, the students told Hoskins and some accompanying teachers that the Hutto exam was the same exam distributed to them by Hoskins. Hoskins cautioned one of the students not to let anyone know that they had a copy of the test prior to the competition. After the competition, a student asked Hoskins if he could get another exam for the students to study from before the next competition. Hoskins told the student that no one needed to know what had happened.

The next day, Hanson, Young, and Gaytan informed the SHS principal about the exam and the events surrounding the Hutto competition. The District's superintendent placed Hoskins on administrative leave with pay until an investigation of the matter could be resolved. In December, the superintendent informed Hoskins by letter that upon his recommendation, (2) the District's board of trustees (the "Board") proposed to terminate Hoskins's contract for good cause based on his conduct in November. In response, Hoskins requested a hearing before a hearing examiner certified by the Commissioner. See Tex. Educ. Code Ann. §§ 21.251(a)(1), .252, .253 (West 1996) ("Education Code"). After the hearing, the examiner found that good cause existed for the dismissal or suspension of Hoskins and recommended to the Board that Hoskins be suspended without pay for the remainder of the school year. (3) The Board, however, voted to terminate Hoskins's contract.

Hoskins appealed the Board's decision to the Commissioner, who affirmed the Board's action. Hoskins then filed suit in district court, seeking judicial review of the Commissioner's decision (the "administrative appeal") and raising independent claims for breach of contract/wrongful discharge, defamation, and intentional infliction of emotional distress ("independent claims"). In response to Hoskins's independent claims, the District filed a plea to the jurisdiction, arguing that the district court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction over Hoskins's breach-of-contract/wrongful-discharge claim because any further proceedings would necessarily involve factual disputes already resolved at the administrative level and Hoskins had failed to exhaust his administrative remedies.

The district court denied the District's plea to the jurisdiction. The court, in a separate final judgment: (1) severed Hoskins's independent claims from the administrative appeal, and (2) affirmed the decision of the Commissioner, concluding that the decision was reasonably supported by substantial evidence. Hoskins challenges the district court's final judgment affirming the Commissioner's decision in the administrative appeal. In a separate appeal, the District and Tom contend that the court erred in denying the District's plea to the jurisdiction.



DISCUSSION

Administrative Appeal

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Smithville Independent School District and Steven Tom v. Jerry Hoskins, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smithville-independent-school-district-and-steven--texapp-1999.