State Ex Rel. Gs

749 A.2d 902, 330 N.J. Super. 383
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJanuary 4, 2000
StatusPublished

This text of 749 A.2d 902 (State Ex Rel. Gs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Gs, 749 A.2d 902, 330 N.J. Super. 383 (N.J. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

749 A.2d 902 (2000)
330 N.J. Super. 383

STATE of New Jersey In the Interest of G.S.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division, Family Part, Camden County.

Decided January 4, 2000.

*903 Cynthia Hall Miller, Deputy Attorney General, for the New Jersey Department of Human Services, Division of Youth and Family Services.

Barry Chatzinoff, (Weinberg, McCormick, Chatzinoff and Zoll), Haddonfield, for Lower Camden County Regional High School District Number One.

Diane Marano, Assistant Prosecutor, Office of the Camden County Prosecutor.

Harold Katz, A.D.P.D., Office of the Public Defender, for G.S.

COOK, J.S.C.

INTRODUCTION

This case presents issues of first impression concerning the constitutional right of juveniles who have been adjudicated delinquent to continue to receive public education, after being expelled from school. Specifically, does a juvenile expelled from public school for conduct for which he was also adjudicated delinquent, thereby forfeit his right under Article 8, § 4, para. 1 of the New Jersey Constitution to a free public education? Does his expulsion relieve the State of its obligation to provide him any further education? Also, does the Superior Court, Chancery Division, Family Part have subject matter jurisdiction to decide such issues and to order the State to provide him with an education?

Because this is the age of increasingly "zero tolerance" of certain types of schoolrelated offenses, commission of which results not only in court-adjudication of delinquency but automatic expulsion of the miscreant student by the school board, as in this case, the question of the juvenile offender's constitutional right to receive any further public school education correspondingly recurs with greater frequency. Thus, the jurisdictional and substantive issues presented in these cases are of such import and far-reaching consequence as to warrant judicial determination.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

On March 29, 1999, several students at Edgewood Senior High School participated in the placement of a false bomb threat call to the school, which led to the evacuation of all students, teachers and personnel. One student made the call from the school cafeteria using a cell phone, while several other students including G.S., then age 15, acted as "lookouts". They were charged with violating N.J.S.A. 2C:33-3a, making a false public alarm. At trial, G.S. was adjudicated delinquent. Since this was a fourth-degree offense, and G.S. was a first-time offender with no prior history of delinquency, there was a presumption of non-incarceration. N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-44b(1). His school attendance was consistent. His academic record clearly demonstrated an aptitude for college, although his family's income is limited, since his father, a Korean War veteran, suffers from diabetes of such severity as to disable him from working. At the dispositional hearing, the State did not seek incarceration, nor was the statutory presumption against confinement overcome. G.S. was placed on a term of probation and fines were imposed. *904 Probation conditions included the requirement that he attend school regularly, with no unexcused absences and no detentions, that he maintain passing grades, and that he obtain a high school diploma.

Meantime, the school board of the Lower Camden County Regional High School District Number One (the "school district") in which Edgewood Senior High School is located, expelled G.S. for his participation in the bomb threat incident. According to the school district, there has been a history of several such incidents at Edgewood. In the past, suspension of students involved in those incidents and placement of them on in-home instruction has not deterred bomb threats. Accordingly, following the recommendation of the National Alliance for Safe Schools, the school district adopted a "Zero Tolerance" policy for all "bomb threat" cases, expelling all students involved in such conduct, such as G.S., with no further educational services provided. The district reports that adoption of this policy has led to a marked decrease in the number of such incidents.

While not challenging his expulsion from Edgewood Senior High School, G.S. points to the dispositional order of this Court requiring him to attend school and obtain a high school diploma, and asserts that the State is obligated under Article 8, § 4, para. 1 of the New Jersey Constitution to provide him further public education in an alternative program or setting.[1] It is in this posture that the matter is presented to the Court.

Subject-Matter Jurisdiction

The school district asserts that the Court lacks subject-matter jurisdiction to determine whether G.S., the expelled juvenile delinquent, is entitled to any further public education. The district relies on N.J.S.A. 18A:6-9, which vests the Commissioner of Education with "jurisdiction to hear and determine ... all controversies and disputes arising under the school laws..." (emphasis added). The school district further relies on Theodore v. Dover Board of Education, 183 N.J.Super. 407, 412-13, 444 A.2d 60 (App.Div.1982) (school law disputes do not constitute part of the cognizable judicial business of the trial courts).

Theodore is inapposite. There, a school custodian sued a school board for wrongful termination in retaliation for his having pursued a worker's compensation claim, and on a claim under N.J.S.A. 18A:30-2.1, which provides for payment of sick leave benefits to a school board employee disabled as a result of a work-connected injury. The Appellate Division held that the claim for wrongful termination was initially within the jurisdiction of the Commissioner of Education, since it involved a schoollaw controversy where a local board's decision was challenged, and the exhaustion of remedies doctrine required first resort to the administrative process. Id. at 412-14, 444 A.2d 60. The court also noted that "[t]he school laws do not suggest that the Commissioner's primary jurisdiction is exclusive of court jurisdiction". Id. at 414 n. 2, 444 A.2d 60. Nor did the court construe N.J.S.A. 18A:6-9 as vesting the Commissioner of Education with exclusive or even primary jurisdiction to decide issues of constitutional import, or for enforcement of rights recognized by the New Jersey Constitution.

The issue here does not implicate the propriety of the school board's decision to expel G.S. at all. The propriety of the expulsion decision is not before this Court. The expulsion stands. It is unchallenged and not at issue. Any appeal of the school *905 board's decision to expel G.S. would be within the jurisdictional domain of the Commissioner of Education, not this Court, just as would be the case of an appeal by a school employee terminated by a school board, as in Theodore. Rather, the substantive issues presented here are whether, given the expulsion from school of a juvenile adjudicated delinquent, he nonetheless is entitled to further public school education under the Constitution or statutes of New Jersey, and if so, whether the Family Part may order the State to provide such education. This in turn raises the initial question whether the Court has subject-matter jurisdiction to decide the substantive issues in the first place.

Subject-matter jurisdiction involves the threshold determination as to whether the court is legally authorized to decide the question presented.

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Bluebook (online)
749 A.2d 902, 330 N.J. Super. 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-gs-njsuperctappdiv-2000.