Tuller v. Central School District No. 1

354 N.E.2d 826, 40 N.Y.2d 487, 387 N.Y.S.2d 87, 1976 N.Y. LEXIS 2921, 92 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3347
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 13, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 354 N.E.2d 826 (Tuller v. Central School District No. 1) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tuller v. Central School District No. 1, 354 N.E.2d 826, 40 N.Y.2d 487, 387 N.Y.S.2d 87, 1976 N.Y. LEXIS 2921, 92 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3347 (N.Y. 1976).

Opinion

Fuchsberg, J.

These cross appeals involve a probationary period imposed by section 210 (subd 2, par [f]) of the Civil Service Law (commonly known as the Taylor Law) upon public school teachers because they had participated in an illegal strike.

The petitioners, two tenured teachers, participated in the strike against the respondent school district in October of 1972. As a result, by operation of law, they were placed on probation for a period of one year, the penalty specified in section 210 (subd 2, par [Q) of the Civil Service Law, in their case to run from October 6, 1972 to October 6, 1973. In March of 1973, however, while the petitioners were still serving their imposed probations, the district discharged them without a hearing. To challenge that discharge, the two teachers then brought an article 78 proceeding which resulted in the Supreme Court reinstating them to their positions with full salary and back pay, although, because of the approach of the Regents’ examinations, the court did not require their actual assignment to classrooms for the balance of the then current academic year. (73 Misc 2d 1028.) Neither party appealed from that order.

The district duly returned petitioners to the payroll and issued the back pay for the period between the March discharge and the date of the court’s order of reinstatement, May 10, 1973. But on May 24, 1973, the respondent district’s [490]*490superintendent of schools wrote to petitioners to inform them that, because their services during probation had been unsatisfactory, he would not recommend that they be appointed to tenure at the close of their probationary year. Upon receipt of the superintendent’s recommendations, the board of education met with the petitioners’ supervisors and, after a meeting which the two teachers attended, and presumably after due deliberation, voted not to grant tenure. Neither party claims the meeting constituted a hearing.

The petitioners then brought the present article 78 proceeding to challenge the district’s decision not to grant them tenure. They contend, first of all, that they had a statutory right to serve the full year of probation in the classroom before any decision to deny tenure could be made. Secondly, they assert that statutorily required evaluation procedures were not properly followed before the decision was made. Finally, they take the position that, if the May 24 notice was not effective to terminate their services, then they have reacquired permanent tenure by estoppel, no other notice of intent to deny tenure having been given to them within the probationary year expiring on October 6, 1973. On these bases, they seek reinstatement as tenured teachers and back pay from October 6, 1973 to the present.

The district, on the other hand, insists it not only complied with the order issued in the prior proceeding, but that, in terminating the services of petitioners as of October 6, 1973, it acted strictly in accord with the applicable statutes.

The Supreme Court did not fully agree with either party. It did not find that the petitioners had obtained tenure by estoppel, but it did hold that the notice of intent to terminate given on May 24 was ineffective for failure of the respondents to have first afforded the petitioners the opportunity to be screened in accordance with statutorily required evaluation procedures. Its order reinstated the teachers for a further probationary period of four months, during which time they were not only to be permitted to teach actively but required to be further evaluated preliminary to the district’s ultimate decision on tenure. The Appellate Division affirmed that disposition. Both parties have appealed. For the reasons which follow, we conclude that the petition should have been dismissed.

At the outset, it should be made clear that there is no evidence that the failure to grant tenure here was a reprisal [491]*491for petitioners’ strike activity. This case would have stood on a different footing had the termination been a device by which to enlarge the punishment mandated, but also limited, by section 210 (subd 2, par [f]). There is neither support in the record for such a claim nor have the petitioners made it on this appeal, expressly abjuring it at oral argument. Further, the response to the petition sets out in detail the alleged specific shortcomings in petitioners’ teaching which respondents assert motivated the district in denying tenure; these were independent of the parties’ earlier difficulties.

Instead the issues raised by this appeal revolve around the peculiar status accorded to striking teachers under section 210 (subd 2, par [f]) of the Taylor Law. That section reads: "Probation. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, any public employee who has been determined to have violated this subdivision shall be on probation for a term of one year following such determination during which period he shall serve without tenure; provided, however, that the effect of probation hereunder with regard to teachers and others subject to the education law shall not exceed or differ from the effect of probation hereunder with regard to other public employees. ” (Emphasis added.)

We have not previously had occasion to comment on the precise reaches of the protections provided for those "subject to the education law” by the emphasized language in section 210. At least one Federal court has done so, however, indicating that the policy behind the inclusion of special reference to teachers placed on penalty probation was clearly a recognition that the ordinary procedures applicable to teachers under the Education Law were inadequate to protect their rights in this special situation: "[W]e are persuaded that the failure of the New York legislators to repeat the language of the prior Condon-Wadlin Act (C. 790, §108 (5) (c) (1958) McKinney’s N.Y. Sess. Laws 1008 (repealed 1967)) which provided that the probationer had to serve without tenure 'and at the pleasure of the appointing officer or body’ was significant. Without clear and unmistakable language to the contrary we would hesitate to construe the statute to permit the obliteration of benefits accrued during service by administrative whim.” (Kiernan v Lindsay, 334 F Supp 588, 593, affd 405 US 1000, rehearing den 405 US 1076.)

Under the provisions of the Education Law, which ordinarily governs the probationary terms of teachers, a probationary [492]*492teacher may be discharged without a hearing at any time (Education Law, § 3012; Matter of Pinto v Wynstra, 22 AD2d 914). That same law also governs the procedures and timing for the giving of notice that tenure will not be granted.

We agree with the court in Kiernan, however, that section 210 of the Taylor Law requires us to substitute for the minimal protections of the Education Law the more elaborate rights during a penalty probation which other nonteaching civil service employees receive. That substitution accords with section 210’s specific requirement that its punitive effect on teachers "shall not exceed” what other civil service employees suffer. The applicable protections are set forth in 4 NYCRR 4.5, enacted pursuant to the enabling legislation found in section 63 of the Civil Service Law. For example, 4 NYCRR 4.5 (1) provides that an employee may not be discharged during probation except for misconduct or incompetence and then only after a hearing (People ex rel. Kastor v Kearny, 164 NY 64; Matter of Going v Kennedy, 5 AD2d 173, affd 5 NY2d 900).

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354 N.E.2d 826, 40 N.Y.2d 487, 387 N.Y.S.2d 87, 1976 N.Y. LEXIS 2921, 92 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tuller-v-central-school-district-no-1-ny-1976.