State Ex Rel. Fields v. Rapides Parish School Board

79 So. 2d 312, 227 La. 290, 1955 La. LEXIS 1243
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 21, 1955
Docket41757
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 79 So. 2d 312 (State Ex Rel. Fields v. Rapides Parish School Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Fields v. Rapides Parish School Board, 79 So. 2d 312, 227 La. 290, 1955 La. LEXIS 1243 (La. 1955).

Opinion

McCALEB, Justice.

This is a mandamus proceeding having for its purpose the reinstatement of a school teacher and recovery of her back salary. The case was originally brought on January 20, 1951, on the relation of Sallie Holmes Fields, who alleges that she is and has been a permanent teacher in the public schools of Rapides Parish, having been employed by the defendant Board continuously at the South Alexandria Elementary School for Negroes from 1925 *294 until the school term beginning in September of 1946; that, at that time, she was ill in California, where she had gone during the vacation period; that she notified the Superintendent of Public Schools of her disability and requested in writing a one-year leave of absence; that the Superintendent did not reply to her request and, due to her illness, she was unable to perform her duties during the school term of 1946-1947; that, upon her recovery in July of 1947, she notified the Superintendent of her ability to resume her duties at the opening of school in September of 1947 and asked that she be reinstated in her former position; that the Superintendent thereupon advised her that her previous request for leave of absence had not been granted and that the Board considered that she had abandoned her position; that, having attained the status of permanent teacher within the meaning of the Teachers’ Tenure Act, LSA-R.S. 17:441-444, the defendant Board was without right or authority to remove her from office except upon the filing of written charges against her and after a hearing, and that she is therefore entitled to be reinstated and to recover the salary that she lost by reason of the unlawful action of the defendant.

.On the showing made by relator, an alternative writ of mandamus issued for the defendant Board to show cause why her demands should not be granted. On the return day of the writ, relator appeared with her husband, Richard Fields, and filed a supplemental and amended petition in which it was alleged that the right of action asserted in the original petition properly belonged to the community of acquets and gains existing between the spouses and, hence, the suit should have been brought by the husband as head and master of the community. Accordingly, Sallie Holmes Fields was permitted to withdraw from the case and her husband, Richard Fields, was substituted as relator in her place and stead.

With these changes in the pleadings, which were followed by a supplemental petition of Richard Fields as relator, wherein he adopted and re-averred all of the allegations contained in the original petition, the case was fixed for summary hearing before the trial judge.

On the appointed day, the defendant School Board appeared and- resisted the demand, initially interposing exceptions to the jurisdiction ratione materiae, no right pr cause of action and laches. And in its answer, which was filed simultaneously with the exceptions, the Board maintained that there was no legal necessity for it to have given Sallie Holmes Fields a hearing as she had abandoned her employment as a teacher in the schools of the parish.

After a trial on the issues thus formed by the pleadings, the judge overruled all of the exceptions and entered judgment on the merits, ordering that relator’s wife be reinstated to her former position and the Board *296 pay relator $14,688.29 for her back salary. 1 Wherefore this appeal.

The exceptions to the jurisdiction ratione materiae 2 and the exception of no cause of action, which are re-urged by the School Board in this court, are based on the theory that relator is not entitled to proceed summarily, as suit for reinstatement under the teacher’s tenure law is an ordinary proceeding which must be initiated by petition and citation. The cases of Houeye v. St. Helena Parish School Board, 213 La. 807, 35 So.2d 739 and State ex rel. Eberle v. Orleans Parish School Board, 221 La. 243, 59 So.2d 177, are said to be complete authority for the Board’s position.

We think that counsel for the Board are mistaken in their interpretation of the cited authorities. In the Houeye case, the record shows that written charges had been filed against the teacher and that he had been discharged by the School Board only after a hearing had in conformity with LSA-R.S. 17:443, which grants to the discharged teacher a period of one year from the adverse finding of the Board to petition the court for a review of its action. Hence, as pointed out in the opinion in that matter, mandamus does not properly lie under those circumstances because the court does not review Board action of a purely ministerial nature but, rather, is called on to determine whether the discretion exercised by it in its disciplinary action is arbitrary or unjustified by the facts.

This proceeding, however, is predicated on an entirely different premise; it is grounded on the- alleged failure of the Board to comply with the requirements of LSA-R.S. 17:443, which forbids the removal of any permanent teacher except on written and signed charges and after a hearing. Thus, by the specific terms of Articles 829, 830 and 834 of the Code of Practice, 3 mandamus to enforce the teacher’s legal rights is the appropriate remedy under the allegations of the petition, which must be taken as true for the purpose of determining the exceptions. Sallie Fields’ status was fixed by law and the Board was therefore without power, in view of the plain statutory provisions, to discharge her without a hearing. Its obligation to her in this respect was purely ministerial and it is well settled in civil service cases that com *298 pliance with such duty may be coerced by mandamus. 4

Eberle v. Orleans Parish School Board is inapplicable here as the relator in that •case was admittedly a substitute teacher and was not entitled to the protection accorded permanent teachers by the Teachers’ Tenure Act.

We therefore hold that the judge was •correct in overruling the exception of no •cause of action.

The exception of no right of action challenges relator’s right to compel the School Board to reinstate his wife and to pay him her back salary. It is said that the right of a permanent teacher to the protection afforded by the provisions of the Teacher’s Tenure Act is a personal one which cannot be asserted by anyone else in his or her behalf, not even on the hypothesis that it belongs to the conjugal partnership where the teacher is a married woman.

We think that this exception is well founded. However, in fairness to relator’s counsel and the trial judge, we observe that it is evident that Fields was substituted as relator in the case in place of his wife, in order to comply with the ruling of the Court of Appeal for the First Circuit in Riche v. Ascension Parish School Board, La.App., 200 So. 681, by which the judge was unquestionably bound. In that case, it was held that a demand by a teacher who was a married woman, for unpaid salary alone must be brought by her husband, as her salary forms part of the community of acquets and gains which is recoverable only by the husband as head and master.

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

Related

Clark v. Wilcox
928 So. 2d 104 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2005)
Physicians & Surgeons Hospital v. Leone
399 So. 2d 806 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1981)
Kirkland v. Winn-Dixie Louisiana, Inc.
345 So. 2d 1175 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1977)
Holmes v. Holmes
270 So. 2d 578 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1972)
Hill v. Caddo Parish School Board
250 So. 2d 446 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1971)
Foster v. Department of Public Welfare
144 So. 2d 271 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1962)
Williams v. Cormier
100 So. 2d 307 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1958)
Fields v. Rapides Parish School Board
93 So. 2d 214 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1957)
Mitchell v. First National Life Insurance
91 So. 2d 788 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1956)
Succession of Scott
91 So. 2d 574 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1956)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 So. 2d 312, 227 La. 290, 1955 La. LEXIS 1243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-fields-v-rapides-parish-school-board-la-1955.