State ex rel. McGhee v. John

837 S.W.2d 596, 1992 Tenn. LEXIS 494
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 27, 1992
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 837 S.W.2d 596 (State ex rel. McGhee v. John) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee 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. McGhee v. John, 837 S.W.2d 596, 1992 Tenn. LEXIS 494 (Tenn. 1992).

Opinions

OPINION

DAUGHTREY, Justice.

This appeal involves a continuing dispute between the Campbell County Board of Education and a teacher discharged from the Campbell County High School in 1987. The case is before the Court on direct [597]*597appeal for the third and, we trust, the last time. Its earlier history can be traced in McGhee v. Miller, 753 S.W.2d 354 (Tenn.1988) (McGhee I), and McGhee v. Miller, 785 S.W.2d 817 (Tenn.1990) (McGhee II). Those two appeals involved Julia Anne McGhee’s ultimately successful efforts to be reinstated as a teacher in the Campbell County school system (McGhee I) and to receive the benefits to which she was entitled upon reinstatement (McGhee II). The current controversy arose when McGhee tried to resume her position as a senior English teacher at the Campbell County High School at the end of a 12-month leave of absence, which had been granted by the school board pursuant to T.C.A. §§ 49-5-702 and 49-5-703.

The provisions governing the teacher’s return from leave are found in T.C.A. § 49-5-705, as follows:

Teacher’s reinstatement after leave.— Upon return of the teacher within the twelve (12) months, the interim teacher shall relinquish the position, and the teacher shall return thereto. If the leave exceeds twelve (12) months, the teacher shall be placed in the same or a comparable position upon return from leave.

When the school board failed to assign McGhee to her former position at the high school, she sued the school board, seeking reinstatement to that position and back pay. The trial court ruled against McGhee, and she now appeals the chancellor’s order dismissing her complaint. We find merit in her appeal and reverse the trial court’s judgment in favor of the Campbell County Board of Education.

As the recitation of facts in McGhee I reflects, this case began in January 1987 when Anne McGhee, a tenured high school teacher, gave a failing grade in English to the school’s star basketball player. McGhee was acting in compliance with administrative guidelines, which required the imposition of a failing grade if a student had more than five unexcused absences from class. The student in question had been absent on numerous occasions, and in spite of a warning, he had failed to resume regular attendance or to make up the work he had missed in McGhee’s class. As a result of receiving the failing grade, the student was academically ineligible to play basketball, a situation that was met with what is described in McGhee I as “a considerable hue and cry” in the school’s athletic department and in the community in general. 753 S.W.2d at 355. Within a short period of time, petitions began circulating inside and outside the high school, calling for McGhee’s dismissal as a teacher. On January 19, 1987, McGhee was intimidated by the high school principal into changing the student’s grade from an F to a D-minus and, “too emotionally upset to complete her teaching assignments for the day,” she left the high school and went home. Id.

The “stress and depression brought on by [these] events” caused McGhee to seek treatment from Dr. Mark Beale, a psychiatrist. Id. She notified school officials in early February that Dr. Beale thought she was not immediately able to perform her teaching duties. Nevertheless, the superintendent of schools ordered her to return to work by February 6, 1987, or face suspension.

In the meantime, petitions calling for McGhee’s dismissal continued to circulate. On February 6 “someone fired a bullet through the windshield of Mrs. McGhee’s automobile as she returned from Dr. Beale’s office.” Id. The harassment of McGhee also took other forms, not in and of themselves life-threatening, but certainly calculated to humiliate and ostracize her:

[For example,] buttons were sold on school property and at school ball games, at which members of the Board of Education were in attendance, commemorating the shooting. One type button said T didn’t shoot Ann McGhee, I tried but missed.’ Another ‘had a head on them with a slash mark through them that said no love lost for Ann McGhee.’

Id.

When McGhee did not return to work on February 6, 1987, she was suspended. On April 8, 1987, the school board discharged her for “abandonment of her position, refusal to return to work, insubordination, and dereliction of duties.” Id. at 356.

[598]*598A week or so later, McGhee filed suit in chancery court, challenging her discharge by the school board. In June 1987, the chancellor ruled in her favor, finding that she had been wrongfully terminated. We affirmed, holding that McGhee “should be reinstated without the loss of any salary or perquisites of office.” Id. In addition, we declined to allow an offset to the extent of a workers’ compensation award that McGhee had secured in the meantime, holding that “if any offset were appropriate, it should have been sought in the workers’ compensation case,” not in the suit for reinstatement. Id. at 356-357.

The workers compensation case mentioned in McGhee I had actually been initiated in April 1987, shortly after McGhee filed the reinstatement action. As the basis for her compensation claim, McGhee alleged that she was totally and permanently disabled from teaching as the result of the circumstances leading to her discharge. At trial in November 1987, she presented the testimony of her psychiatrist, Dr. Beale, to support her claim.

The chancellor found in McGhee’s favor, awarding her temporary total disability benefits from January through November 30, 1987, the date of the hearing, and permanent partial disability benefits equal to 50 percent of the body as a whole.

The workers’ compensation judgment was not appealed, but in February 1988, the chancellor heard McGhee I on remand from this Court. In calculating the amount of back pay to be awarded McGhee, the chancellor made certain adjustments to avoid “double recovery” of salary and compensation benefits.

McGhee appealed, and although we affirmed the chancellor’s ruling on “double recovery,” we again emphasized that McGhee should receive “all perquisites and benefits” that she would have received but for her wrongful discharge. We reiterated that she was entitled to reinstatement, and we observed that “Mrs. McGhee has been treated reprehensibly by the Campbell County School Board.” McGhee II, 785 S.W.2d at 819 (emphasis added).

Despite her repeated victories in court, McGhee’s battle with the school board continued. The opinion in McGhee I was released on June 27, 1988, directing the teacher’s immediate reinstatement. At that point, according to her physician, Dr. Beale, McGhee was not well enough to resume teaching. Consequently, on August 18, 1988, she sent a letter to the school board asking for a one-year medical leave of absence from her position as “Senior English Teacher at Campbell County Comprehensive High School.” The minutes of the school board indicate that on October 21, 1988, the board “approve[d] a medical leave of absence for Anne McGhee, English Teacher at Campbell County High School, for the 1988-89 school year.”

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Bluebook (online)
837 S.W.2d 596, 1992 Tenn. LEXIS 494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-mcghee-v-john-tenn-1992.