Wajnowski v. Connecticut Assn. of Schools, No. Cv00 0432727 (Dec. 17, 1999)

1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 16306
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1999
DocketNo. CV00 0432727
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 16306 (Wajnowski v. Connecticut Assn. of Schools, No. Cv00 0432727 (Dec. 17, 1999)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wajnowski v. Connecticut Assn. of Schools, No. Cv00 0432727 (Dec. 17, 1999), 1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 16306 (Colo. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
This action seeks to prevent the application of the "student transfer rule" of the Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference to a student transferring for financial reasons from private school to public school.

THE PLAINTIFF

The plaintiff is Mark Wajnowski, who brings the lawsuit on behalf of his minor son Nicholas Wajnowski, age sixteen. For his freshman and sophomore years of high school, Nicholas attended Notre Dame High School of West Haven, a private, parochial school. The school charges a yearly tuition of around $6000, in addition to requiring the student to pay for books, and for other assessments and fees.

Nicholas is one of four siblings, all of whom are teenagers attending school. Mark Wajnowski is the family breadwinner, working as an engineer for Connecticut Light Power, earning a gross annual income of $75,000. Mrs. Wajnowski is a homemaker with no outside salary. During the 1998-1999 school year, the family had three of the four children in parochial school: Nicholas and his older brother Daniel attended Notre Dame, their youngest sister attended Our Lady of Victory elementary school, and the other sister, after graduating from eighth grade at Our Lady of Victory in 1998, matriculated at West Haven High School as a freshman last year. The family received financial help from Mark Wajnowski's brother to pay the tuition costs at Notre Dame for Nicholas and Daniel.

As the family faced the 1999-2000 school year, they had difficult choices to make. Daniel had graduated and elected to go to Assumption College in Worcester, Massachusetts, a private college. He received a full tuition scholarship, and his grandparents and aunt had offered to pay for his other expenses. The youngest sister would enter the eighth grade at Our Lady of Victory, her final year there. Nicholas would be a junior at Notre Dame. But Nicholas's uncle who had paid the tuition for the Wajnowski boys in the past was now a father himself, and his CT Page 16308 child had been born with special medical and therapeutic needs.

The Wajnowski family chose not to ask for or accept any further financial help from Nicholas's uncle. They chose not to make a change for their youngest daughter. They chose not to invade a savings account of $6000 to make full or partial tuition payment for Nicholas, instead reserving the money for future college costs. And they chose not to accept an offer of tuition help for Nicholas's junior year directly from Notre Dame unless it came with a guarantee of a comparable scholarship for the 2000-2001 school year as well. Rather, they chose to withdraw Nicholas from Notre Dame and enroll him in West Haven High School.

THE DEFENDANT CIAC

Both Notre Dame High School and West Haven High School are members of the Connecticut Association of Schools, one component of which is the Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference (CIAC), a private non-profit corporation organized to direct and control student athletics among secondary schools in Connecticut. It derives its funds from dues paid by member schools and from ticket sales and contest fees for the interscholastic tournaments that it sponsors.

The individual voting members of the CIAC are the principals of all the member schools, who volunteer their time to serve on the Boards and Committees that administer the organization. The CIAC also employs a paid staff, including an executive director and several assistant executive directors. Among the purposes of the CIAC are to develop intelligent recognition for the proper place of interscholastic athletics in education, to encourage good sportsmanship, to nurture more cordial relationships among member schools, and to foster equitable competition among schools. In order to achieve these purposes, the CIAC has certain rules regarding the eligibility of student athletes.

To be eligible to compete in an athletic contest in a CIAC-controlled sport, a student-athlete must, for example, maintain a certain minimum course load and achieve satisfactory academic progress toward eventual high school graduation. Also a student is ineligible to compete in any sport in which he competed at his old school for 365 days following that student's transfer from one school to another in grade 10, 11, or 12, unless the student simultaneously changes residence to the CT Page 16309 corresponding school district or school service area. CIAC Rules, Appendix B, Rule II C.

Both Mark Wajnowski and Nicholas Wajnowski were aware of this rule when the decision was made to withdraw Nicholas from Notre Dame and enroll him in West Haven High School.

The so-called transfer rule, utilized by interscholastic athletic conferences in many other states besides Connecticut, has certain exceptions that are not particularly controversial, such as an exception when the "sending school" ceases to operate as a school. Rule II C (7). But only in the last two years (1998-1999 and 1999-2000) has the rule in Connecticut had a "hardship" exception. The hardship exception states:

Hardship — Eligibility may be granted to a transfer student who does not meet the CIAC Transfer Standard when sufficient evidence, as determined by the CIAC Eligibility Committee, is provided to show that it was necessary for the student to transfer because of unforeseen, unavoidable, or unusual circumstances including, but not limited to, broken home conditions, terminal or serious illness of parent of sibling, death of a parent or guardian, abandonment, loss of school accreditation, bankruptcy and/or loss of principal income of legal guardian(s), and provided the transfer was not for athletic reasons and there was no undue influence. Hardship is defined as an unforeseeable act, condition or event which may not reasonably and/or practically be avoided or corrected and which causes the imposition of a severe burden upon the student or his/her family. A hardship situation may be a situation which is unique to the student or his/her family which could not have been predicted, which does not apply to others in a similar setting, and over which the family has no control.

Rule II C (20).

While at Notre Dame, Nicholas had played on the varsity soccer team and the junior varsity basketball team. He will therefore be ineligible to compete in those sports at West Haven High until he begins his senior year, unless he is granted an exception. In August 1999, Nicholas applied for such an exception.

THE PLAINTIFF'S HARDSHIP APPLICATION CT Page 16310

The Wajnowski application for an exception to the transfer rule consisted of a letter from the principal of the new school, Ronald Stancil of West Haven High, who believed that the family [night qualify on account of financial hardship. Supporting documentation by the Wajnowski family was submitted, including a written breakdown of family income and expenses, and a lengthy letter of explanation from Mark Wajnowski about the family's circumstances.

Such an application for exception is first referred to the Eligibility Committee of the CIAC for consideration. CIAC By-Laws, Art. VIII, Sec. B.4. That committee examines the application and supporting documentation and is empowered to deny the application or to recommend favorable action. In the case of a recommendation to grant the exception or in the case of an appeal from a denial by the Eligibility Committee, the matter is referred to the Eligibility Review Committee for final action. Art. Viii, Sec. B.6.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 16306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wajnowski-v-connecticut-assn-of-schools-no-cv00-0432727-dec-17-1999-connsuperct-1999.