State Ex Rel. Board of Education v. Bailey

453 S.E.2d 368, 192 W. Va. 534, 1994 W. Va. LEXIS 263
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1994
Docket22167
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 453 S.E.2d 368 (State Ex Rel. Board of Education v. Bailey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Board of Education v. Bailey, 453 S.E.2d 368, 192 W. Va. 534, 1994 W. Va. LEXIS 263 (W. Va. 1994).

Opinion

NEELY, Justice:

The Board of Education of Randolph County (“Randolph County Board”) and the Board of Education of Upshur County (“Ups-hur County Board”) appeal from the 20 September 1993 Order of the Circuit Court of Kanawha County denying their request to declare W.Va.Code 18A-4-5, as amended in 1988, unconstitutional. W.Va.Code 18A-4-5 [1988] was passed to assist the State in achieving salary equity among the teachers and service personnel of all counties. The appellants assert that they are entitled to receive State equity pay salary supplements, despite statutory provisions to the contrary in W.Va.Code 18A-4-5, as amended in 1988.

The Appellees in this case are the State Treasurer, the State Auditor, the West Virginia Board of Education, and the State Superintendent of Schools. The Randolph County Board of Education (“Randolph County Board”) filed a petition for writ of mandamus seeking a determination that the 1988 *536 amendments to W.Va.Code 18A-4-5 failed to correct the constitutional funding defects in the State equity funding formula, which we recognized in State ex rel. Bd. of Educ. for Grant County v. Manchin, 179 W.Va. 235, 366 S.E.2d 743 [1988], Randolph County had an excess levy in effect on 1 January 1991, which expired on 30 June 1991, because the voters failed to renew the excess levy during a November 1990 election. 1 At the conclusion of a 15 December 1992 hearing on the petition in the Circuit Court of Kanawha County, the Court took the matter under advisement.

On 23 January 1993, the Upshur County voters failed to renew the county’s excess levy. Accordingly, the levy, in effect on 1 January 1993, expired on 30 June 1993. By Agreed Order entered 18 March 1993, the Upshur County Board was permitted to intervene in the case. Another hearing was held before the same court, and by order entered 20 September 1993, the Circuit Court found W.Va.Code 18A-4-5, as amended in 1988, to be constitutional. We conclude that the 1988 amendments to W.Va.Code 18A-4r-5 [1985] are an unconstitutional violation of equal protection principles, and as such, fail to correct the defects noted by this court in Manchin, supra. Accordingly, we reverse the Circuit Court of Kanawha County.

I.

The statutory funding for the salaries of West Virginia teachers and service personnel is as follows: (1) State “minimum salaries” provided in W.Va.Code 18A-4-2 [1994] and 18A-4-8(a) [1994]; (2) local county salary supplements funded by voter-approved local property tax levies (“excess levies”); and (3) State “equity pay” salary supplements provided for in W.Va.Code 18A-4-5 (1988). State “minimum salaries” are fully funded through the formula found in W.Va.Code 18-9A-1 [1990] et seq., and are not dependant on local salary supplements or equity pay for funding. 2

In this case we must focus on the interaction between State equity pay and excess levies to determine the overall effect of the 1988 amendments to W.Va.Code 18A-4-5. The appellants each had an excess levy in effect on 1 January. In 1988, the legislature amended W.Va.Code 18A-4-5 to prohibit counties that discontinued county supplements used for salaries after the first day of January from receiving pro-rata equitable distribution of State equity funds during the following fiscal year. Thus, although Randolph County’s excess levy expired on 30 June 1991, and Upshur County’s excess levy expired on 30 June 1993, W.Va.Code 18A-4-5 [1988] requires that those excess levies still be considered under the equity funding formula, despite the fact the voters discontinued these funds and they no longer exist.

West Virginia Code 18A-4-5(b), as amended in 1988, provides in pertinent part:

Pursuant to this section, each teacher and school service personnel shall receive the amount that is the difference between their authorized state minimum salary and ninety-five percent of the maximum salary schedules prescribed in section five-a and five-b [§§ 18A-4-5a and 18A-4-5b] of this article, reduced by any amount provided by the county as a salary supplement for teachers and school service personnel on the first day of January of the fiscal year immediately preceding that in which the salary equity appropriation is distributed: Provided, That no amount received pursuant to this section shall be decreased as a result of any county supplement increase instituted after the first day of January, one thousand nine hundred eighty-four, unless and until the objective of salary *537 equity is reached: Provided, however, That any amount received pursuant to this section may be reduced proportionately based upon the amount of funds appropriated for this purpose.

(Emphasis added.) The effect on the appellants was that the salaries of the employees of the Randolph County Board and the Up-shur County Board were supplemented by the State Board of Education, pursuant to W.Va.Code 18A-4-5 [1988], as if the local supplement from the excess levy was still in effect.

Therefore, despite an actual decrease in local revenues available for educational purposes, due to the voter defeat of excess levies, the Randolph County Board, like the Upshur County Board, received no increase in state equity funding. As a result, the Randolph County employees lost $454,049 in compensation for the fiscal year 1991-2, and Upshur County employees will have lost $641,307 during the 1993-94 school year. Both Randolph County’s and Upshur County’s teachers and service personnel were the lowest paid in the State in 1991-92 and 1993-94 respectively, as a result of the operation of W.Va.Code 18A-4-5 [1988].

II.

The issue before this Court is whether the statutory provision of W.Va.Code 8A-4-5 [1988], which was designed to assist the State in attaining salary equity among teachers and service personnel in all counties throughout the State, is unconstitutional. The appellants’ primary contention is that W.Va. Code 8A-4-5 [1988], in effect, continues to perpetrate an unequal and discriminatory compensation system on the county boards of education in the State of West Virginia. The Appellants’ further assert that this statute impermissibly treats counties without an excess levy in effect on 1 January more favorably than those counties with an excess levy in effect on 1 January, and unnecessarily allocates state funding based on a county’s ability to maintain an excess levy. As such, it is argued, then, W.Va.Code 18A-4-5 [1988] violates the equal protection requirements of the West Virginia Constitution, Art. Ill, Sections. 3

Article XII, Section 1 of the West Virginia Constitution,

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453 S.E.2d 368, 192 W. Va. 534, 1994 W. Va. LEXIS 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-board-of-education-v-bailey-wva-1994.