The School Board of Hernando v. Michelle Rhea, Theresa Butler

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMarch 6, 2017
Docket16-3914
StatusPublished

This text of The School Board of Hernando v. Michelle Rhea, Theresa Butler (The School Board of Hernando v. Michelle Rhea, Theresa Butler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The School Board of Hernando v. Michelle Rhea, Theresa Butler, (Fla. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL FIRST DISTRICT, STATE OF FLORIDA

SCHOOL BOARD OF NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO HERNANDO COUNTY, PAM FILE MOTION FOR REHEARING AND STEWART, IN HER OFFICIAL DISPOSITION THEREOF IF FILED CAPACITY AS COMMISSIONER OF THE CASE NOS. 1D16-3914, 1D16-3932, 1D16- FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF 3933, 1D16-3936, 1D16-4052, and 1D16- EDUCATION, STATE BOARD 4084 OF EDUCATION, SCHOOL BOARD OF SEMINOLE COUNTY, SCHOOL BOARD OF ORANGE COUNTY, CORRECTED PAGES: pg 3 SCHOOL BOARD OF PASCO CORRECTION IS UNDERLINED IN COUNTY, AND SCHOOL RED BOARD OF OSCEOLA MAILED: March 7, 2017 COUNTY, BY: KMS

Appellants,

v.

MICHELLE RHEA, THERESA BUTLER, GERALDINE CALLAGHAN, PAM EVERETT, ALEXA HASANIA, SCOTT HASTINGS, AMANDA HAZARD, MELINDA HOHMAN, BRANDY KINKADE, RHONDA NICKERSON, SUZANNE ROWLAND, AND GABRIELLE WEAVER,

Appellees.

_____________________________/ Opinion filed March 7, 2017.

An appeal from the Circuit Court for Leon County. Karen A. Gievers, Judge.

Richard Burton Bush, Audra Michelle Bryant, and Lisa J. Augspurger of Bush & Augspurger, P.A., Tallahassee, for Appellant School Board of Hernando County.

Matthew H. Mears, Steven S. Ferst, David L. Jordan, and Mari M. Presley of the Department of Education, Tallahassee; Rocco E. Testani and Stacey M. Mohr of Sutherland Asbill & Brennan LLP, Atlanta, G.A., for Appellants Pam Stewart and State Board of Education.

Serita Beamon of Seminole County Public Schools, Sanford; Donna E. Blanton, Angela D. Miles, and Brittany Adams Long of Radey Law Firm, Tallahassee, for Appellant School Board of Seminole County.

Nicholas A. Shannin and Carol B. Shannin of Shannin Law Firm, P.A., Orlando, for Appellant School Board of Orange County.

Dennis J. Alfonso, Knute J. Nathe, and Carl J. DiCampli of McClain, Alfonso, Nathe & DiCampli, P.A., Dade City, for Appellant School Board of Pasco County.

Amy J. Pitsch and Susana Cristina Garcia of Greenspoon Marder, Orlando, for Appellant School Board of Osceola County.

Andrea Flynn Mogensen of the Law Office of Andrea Flynn Mogensen, P.A., Sarasota, for Appellees.

WETHERELL, J.

In these consolidated appeals, the State Board of Education and the

Commissioner of the Department of Education (collectively “DOE”) and five local

school boards seek review of a nonfinal order that (1) denies the school boards’

2 motions to transfer or dismiss based on the home-venue privilege and (2) grants

temporary injunctive relief against DOE and one of the school boards. We reverse

the order and vacate the injunction because the school boards were entitled to be

sued in their home venues and none of the requirements for injunctive relief were

established.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

The day before the 2016–2017 school year started in most areas of the state,

Appellees (hereafter “the plaintiffs”)—a group of parents whose children were not

promoted to fourth grade because they “opted out” of the mandatory statewide

standardized reading test known as the English Language Arts assessment

(“ELA”) 1—filed a complaint in the Leon County circuit court seeking declaratory

and injunctive relief against DOE and the school boards for Broward,2 Hernando,

Orange, Osceola, Pasco, Sarasota,3 and Seminole counties. The complaint alleged

that the plaintiffs’ children did not have reading deficiencies and that the school

boards’ decisions to retain the children in third grade without offering a “portfolio

1 The ELA is one of the tests that make up the Florida Standards Assessment, which is commonly referred to as the FSA. See generally Florida Standards Assessments, Fla. Dep’t Educ., http://www.fldoe.org/accountability/assessments/k-12-student- assessment/fsa.stml; see also § 1008.22(3), Fla. Stat. 2 The Broward County School Board is no longer a party because the claims against it were dismissed by the plaintiffs during the pendency of this appeal and its appeal—case number 1D16-3934—was voluntarily dismissed. 3 The Sarasota County School Board is no longer a party because the claims against it were voluntarily dismissed by the plaintiffs in the trial court. 3 option”4 were based on an erroneous interpretation of section 1008.25, Florida

Statutes (2015), which was dictated to the school boards by DOE. The complaint

included claims alleging violations of the children’s rights to due process and equal

protection under the state and federal constitutions.

The plaintiffs also filed an emergency motion for a temporary injunction

premised on the irreparable harm their children would suffer if retained in third

grade. The specific relief requested in the motion was “[a] preliminary injunction

enjoining defendants from refusing to accept a student portfolio or report card based

on classroom work throughout the course of the school year when there is no reading

deficiency.”

In response to the complaint—and in some cases, prior to being served—each

of the school boards filed a motion to dismiss or transfer asserting their home-venue

privilege. After the trial court deferred ruling on the venue motions at a hearing held

three days after the complaint was filed, the school boards and DOE jointly removed

the case to the federal district court in Tallahassee. In response, the plaintiffs

amended the complaint by deleting the federal claims. The federal court thereafter

remanded the case to the trial court.

The trial court did not immediately rule on the venue motions after the case

was remanded despite the school boards’ repeated contentions that they were entitled

4 See § 1008.25(6)(b)4., Fla. Stat.; Fla. Admin. Code R. 6A-1.094221(3). 4 to a ruling on the motions before they were subjected to additional proceedings in

this case outside of their home venues. Instead, the court took the venue motions

under advisement and held a lengthy evidentiary hearing on the plaintiffs’ motion

for a temporary injunction. 5

The evidence presented at the hearing established that the plaintiffs directed

their children to “opt out” of—or, as they now characterize it, to “minimally

participate” in6—the ELA by breaking the seal, writing their names on the test, and

then turning it in without answering any questions. Each of the plaintiffs was offered

opportunities for their children to take alternative standardized assessments, but they

refused. Most of the plaintiffs were also offered the “portfolio option” for their

children, but the Hernando County School Board (“HCSB”) did not offer that option

to students who had not taken the ELA or an alternative standardized assessment.

The evidence also established that although DOE does not have a rule defining

“participation” in the ELA, DOE does not consider students who—like the plaintiffs’

children—do not even attempt to answer a single question to have “participated” in

5 On the day of the hearing, the school boards filed an emergency petition for writ of mandamus with this court seeking to compel the trial court to rule on their venue motions, but the petition—case number 1D16-3773—was dismissed as moot after the trial court ruled on the venue motions before this court could rule on the petition. 6 It is noteworthy that, in describing the plaintiffs’ actions, the amended complaint used the phrase “opt out” nearly 25 times and did not once use the phrase “minimally participate.” Moreover, the amended complaint alleged that one of plaintiffs, Michelle Rhea, told school officials that her child “would not participate” in standardized testing, not that she would “minimally participate” in the testing.

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