Stoner v. Conewago Valley School District

66 Pa. D. & C.2d 689, 1974 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 323
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Adams County
DecidedJune 18, 1974
Docketno. 78
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 66 Pa. D. & C.2d 689 (Stoner v. Conewago Valley School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Adams County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stoner v. Conewago Valley School District, 66 Pa. D. & C.2d 689, 1974 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 323 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1974).

Opinion

MacPHAIL, P. J.,

This is a suit in assumpsit brought by two teacher employes against the school district for salary allegedly due and not paid according to appropriate salary schedules beginning with the school year 1965-66. Plaintiff Stoner claims $5,500 together with six percent compounded interest from June 30,1966. Plaintiff Swanger claims $6,000, together with six percent compounded interest from June 30,1966. The case was tried without a jury. Many of the essential facts were stipulated.

[691]*691Basically, the dispute arises over the rights of each plaintiff under the salary schedules as adopted by the State and the salary schedules as adopted by the school district. The school district contends that it had a salary schedule in effect at the time both employes were hired and that both employes were hired pursuant to that schedule. The first issue is, at what “step” of either the school district or State salary schedule the two employes entered. A second issue is whether “incentive payments” for longevity and extra college credits obtained after employment should be included in determining whether the employe’s base salary meets the State minimum standards. Finally, the question arises concerning interest with respect to any sums due plaintiffs, their contention being that they are entitled to have that interest compounded.

Stoner was employed by defendant as a temporary professional employe on September 5, 1961, and has remained in continuous employment with defendant since that date. Swanger was employed by defendant as a temporary professional employe on July 6, 1962, and has remained in continuous employment with defendant since that date. The suit was commenced February 21,1973.

Section 1142 of the Public School Code of March 10, 1949, P. L. 30, as amended, 24 PS §11-1142, sets forth the minimum salary “schedules” for professional employes of school districts. For the purpose of this suit, the amendments to the Act of 1949, as adopted June 1, 1956, P. L. 1955, December 9, 1965, P. L. 1057, and June 12, 1968, P. L. 192, are relevant and controlling. The amendment of 1956 prescribed a minimum starting salary of $3,600 with $200 annual service increments for the school year 1959-60 and thereafter. The amendment of 1965 provided a minimum salary of $4,500 beginning with the school [692]*692year 1965-66 and thereafter with annual service increments of $300. The amendment of 1968 provided a minimum salary of $5,400 for the school year 1968-69 and $6,000 for 1969-70 and thereafter with $300 increments. All of those statutes, section 1152, 24 PS §11-1152, provide that a school board may prescribe higher pay schedules than those set forth in the law. It follows that where the school district has not adopted a higher pay schedule, the State minimum would apply. It also follows that if the school district contends that it did adopt a pay schedule, the burden of proving that fact falls upon the district.

In that respect, the school district has offered excerpts from its minute book and the testimony of an administrative officer. The minutes of March 1, 1961, show that five teachers were hired at $3,800 per annum. The minutes of June 7, 1961, show that six teachers were hired at salaries ranging from $3,800 to $4,300 (including Mr. Stoner who was hired at a salary of $4,000). The administrative officer testified that $3,800 was the minimum salary when both employes were employed. From that evidence, the school district asks us to conclude that a salary schedule had been adopted by the school board in 1961 fixing minimum starting salary of $3,800. We hold that the evidence is inconclusive and insufficient to prove that the school board adopted a minimum salary schedule for the year in question. Therefore, we hold that Stoner was employed under the provisions of the State mandated minimum salary schedule then in effect, Act of 1956, supra.

Flowever, on February 7, 1962, a resolution was adopted by the school board providing that the pay for starting teachers would be $4,000 per year. Plaintiffs claim that this action on the part of the board is not equivalent to the adoption of a formal salary sched[693]*693ule. It is true that a full schedule was not adopted showing increments, classifications, etc., but section 1152 of the code provides that it is within the power of the school boards to . increase for “any person or groups of persons” the amount of the initial salary. We believe that this is what the school board accomplished, and that when Mr. Swanger was employed on July 6, 1962, the school district’s salary schedule consisted of the State salary schedule with the modification that the minimum starting salary would be $4,000 instead of $3,800.

Defendant urges that subsequent increments in salary for both plaintiffs must be based upon actual years of service in the school district. Plaintiffs contend that their increments are based upon the “step” at which the employe entered the salary schedule when they were employed initially. Thus, in 1961 the minimum state salary was $3,600. Stoner was hired at $4,000 or two increments above the minimum. He contends he was employed in step 3 of the salary schedule. Swanger’s initial contract called for a salary of $4,600. He was employed after the school board adopted a minimum initial salary of $4,000. The annual increments were $200 each under the Act of 1956, supra. Therefore, he would enter the salary schedule at step 4 on the date of his employment. (He contends, however, that the school board did not adopt a salary schedule and, therefore, he would enter at step 6.) A school administrator’s memorandum (no. 100, July 9, 1968) from the Superintendent of Public Instruction to all chief school administrators, offered as defendant’s exhibit, substantiates plaintiffs’ contention. It is said there that the “entering step” is the step on the school district’s salary schedule at which the employe agrees to enter the services of the school district. While we recognize that the memorandum specified that its con[694]*694tents were limited to an interpretation of the Act of 1968, supra, it would seem that no other conclusion is logical with respect to the situation existing under prior statutes; otherwise, the professional employe would be “down-graded” when new salary schedules were adopted. We also note that the school district advanced each plaintiff’s initial salary each succeeding year in accordance with the State mandated annual increment. While the two situations are not exactly comparable, the court in Welsh v. The Wilkes-Barre Board of Education, 46 D. & C. 2d 61 (1968), held that where a school district employed a teacher at a salary level equivalent to that which he would have attained had he been employed in that school district for two years, the employe’s “entering step” was at the third step so that, after two years of service in the district, he was then at the fifth step on the salary schedule. We hold that Stoner was employed at the third step of the State mandated minimum salary schedule in effect for the school year 1961-62, and that Swanger was employed at the fourth step of the State salary schedule in effect for the school year 1962-63, as modified by the school district in February of 1962.

In determining the minimum salary to which each teacher was entitled in subsequent years, we must refer to the “step attained” in those particular years. The school administrator’s memorandum previously referred to defines a “step attained” as the step on the school district’s schedule determined by years of service within the school district beyond

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Bluebook (online)
66 Pa. D. & C.2d 689, 1974 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stoner-v-conewago-valley-school-district-pactcompladams-1974.