Teacher Standards & Practices Commission v. Bergerson

153 P.3d 84, 342 Or. 301, 2007 Ore. LEXIS 62
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 2007
DocketTSPC 584001-GE0327-01; CA A122752; SC S52842
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 153 P.3d 84 (Teacher Standards & Practices Commission v. Bergerson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Teacher Standards & Practices Commission v. Bergerson, 153 P.3d 84, 342 Or. 301, 2007 Ore. LEXIS 62 (Or. 2007).

Opinion

*303 GILLETTE, J.

In this judicial review proceeding, a long-time elementary school teacher challenges a final order of the Teacher Standards and Practices Commission (TSPC) suspending her teaching license for a period of 60 days. She contends that the order does not establish that certain acts that she committed in 2001 constitute either “gross neglect of duty” or “gross unfitness,” as those terms are used in the statutes and rules that authorize the TSPC to suspend teachers’ licenses. She also challenges the TSPC’s order on the ground that the TSPC failed to identify and explain modifications that it made to a proposed order issued by the administrative law judge (ALJ) who heard the case. We conclude that petitioner’s challenges are well taken. Accordingly, we reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals that upheld the TSPC order. We also reverse the final order of the TSPC and remand the case to the TSPC for further consideration.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Although certain factual findings in the TSPC’s order are a subject of controversy, there appears to be no dispute about the following facts. Petitioner graduated from the Oregon College of Education in 1976 and married a few years later. In 1986, having already had some teaching experience, petitioner accepted a teaching position in an elementary school in the Salem-Keizer School District, where she remained for the next 15 years. During that 15-year period, petitioner consistently received positive performance reviews.

In 1998, petitioner and her husband began to experience marital difficulties and, in December 1999, petitioner’s husband moved out of the family home. A few months later, petitioner’s husband moved in with Siebler, a girlfriend. He did not tell petitioner where he was living or about his relationship with Siebler. Petitioner apparently continued to hope that she and her husband would reconcile.

On August 22, 2000, petitioner’s husband was seriously injured in a motorcycle accident and was taken to a hospital in Portland. Petitioner was contacted as the next of kin. *304 She rushed to the hospital, signed the necessary medical authorizations, and remained at her husband’s bedside for the next three days. Petitioner’s husband was in a coma for the next few weeks and underwent five surgeries. Petitioner rearranged her work schedule and traveled from Salem to Portland every day to be with her husband and to participate in medical decisions.

On September 12, 2000, a Salem lawyer visited petitioner’s husband in the hospital. During the lawyer’s visit, petitioner’s husband signed a durable power of attorney appointing the lawyer as his agent. 1 Within a week, the lawyer was working toward filing a divorce action on behalf of petitioner’s husband. In conjunction with those efforts, the lawyer moved for and obtained a temporary ex parte order enjoining petitioner and her husband from altering marital assets or insurance policies and from “harassing, molesting, or interfering in any manner with the other.” The lawyer then sent a letter to petitioner’s domestic relations lawyer to the effect that petitioner’s husband did not want petitioner to contact or visit him. Petitioner’s lawyer advised her that she should limit contact with her husband to discussions concerning the couple’s two children and their joint financial obligations. 2

On September 24, 2000, petitioner’s husband was transferred to a rehabilitation center in Salem. There, petitioner walked into her husband’s room while Siebler was visiting and learned, apparently for the first time, that her husband had a girlfriend and had been living with her. At around that time, petitioner also learned that her husband had filed for divorce.

Later in the fall, petitioner experienced another emotional setback: She learned some very troubling news concerning her 17-year-old son. Petitioner also was experiencing financial difficulties, at least in part because her husband refused to pay child support for one of the couple’s two children.

*305 On January 6, 2001, petitioner drove to the home that her husband was sharing with Siebler, hoping to speak to him and to deliver certain items to him. After an acrimonious interchange with her husband on Siebler’s doorstep, petitioner returned to her car, which was parked down the street, and ingested a large quantity of three different prescription medications. Petitioner then drove her car up the street, turned into Seibler’s driveway, and slammed her car into the rear of her husband’s unoccupied truck. The truck was pushed forward by the impact into Seibler’s garage door, which was destroyed along with a brick facade on the house’s exterior. Petitioner’s car was going between 20 and 30 miles per hour when it crashed into the truck.

Following the crash, Keizer police officers and paramedics arrived and found petitioner slumped over the steering wheel of her car, disoriented and unresponsive. She was transported to Salem hospital. After a one-night medical stay, petitioner admitted herself to the hospital’s psychiatric unit, where she remained for seven days. There, her treating psychiatrist diagnosed her with “Major Depressive Disorder, single episode, severe.” Upon her release, she began treatment with another psychiatrist.

Petitioner ultimately was charged in the incident with four counts of criminal mischief in the first degree. Pursuant to a plea agreement, she pleaded no contest to one of the four counts. She was sentenced to a term of probation that provided that, if she fulfilled all the conditions of probation and paid restitution for the damage that she had caused, the court would dismiss the charge.

Two articles about the incident appeared in local newspapers. Both articles reported, erroneously, that petitioner had been driving 80 miles per hour at the time of the accident. Parents, teachers, and students at petitioner’s school learned about the incident through those newspaper articles and word of mouth. A number of parents contacted the school at that time and expressed concern about petitioner’s fitness to teach.

Petitioner took a number of months off from work but eventually, with the agreement of her treating psychiatrist, announced that she was ready to return to the classroom. However, the district superintendent recommended to *306 the school board that petitioner be dismissed, based on the January 2001 incident. The school board ultimately accepted that recommendation and terminated petitioner, effective January 2002.

Petitioner appealed her termination to the Fair Dismissal Appeals Board (FDAB). After a hearing, the FDAB reversed the dismissal and ordered the school district to reinstate petitioner. The district sought judicial review of that order and also sought to stay enforcement of the order pending judicial review. The FDAB denied the requested stay and the Court of Appeals affirmed that decision. Bergerson v. Salem-Keizer School Dist., 185 Or App 649, 60 P3d 1126 (2003).

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Bluebook (online)
153 P.3d 84, 342 Or. 301, 2007 Ore. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/teacher-standards-practices-commission-v-bergerson-or-2007.