Whitney Leigh Davidson, Minor Child, by next friend, Rozan Davidson v. Donna Wright

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 6, 1997
Docket03A01-9702-CH-00051
StatusPublished

This text of Whitney Leigh Davidson, Minor Child, by next friend, Rozan Davidson v. Donna Wright (Whitney Leigh Davidson, Minor Child, by next friend, Rozan Davidson v. Donna Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitney Leigh Davidson, Minor Child, by next friend, Rozan Davidson v. Donna Wright, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE

EASTERN SECTION AT KNOXVILLE FILED June 6, 1997

Cecil Crowson, Jr. Appellate C ourt Clerk WHITNEY LEIGH DAVIDSON, minor ) KNOX CHANCERY child, by next friend, ROZAN ) DAVIDSON, ) ) Plaintiffs/Appellants ) NO. 03A01-9702-CH-00051 ) v. ) HON. WILLIAM EVERETT LANTRIP ) CHANCELLOR, By Interchange DONNA WRIGHT, ET AL, ) ) Defendants/Appellees ) ) AFFIRMED

William A. (Bill) Davidson, Knoxville, for Appellants. Catherine F. Quist, Knoxville, for Appellees.

OPINION

INMAN, Senior Judge

I

The Knox County Board of Education adopted a policy against the possession

of weapons on school campuses for the school year beginning in September 1995.

Whitney Leigh Davidson was provided a copy of the West High School Handbook

which explained the policy and the consequences of its violation. On January 23,

1996, while a junior at West High School, she was suspended for a violation of the

policy. Following a series of administrative hearings the Board of Education held a

plenary hearing and upheld the decision to expel Ms Davidson for one year. Judicial

review resulted in a finding that the Board had not acted arbitrarily, illegally or beyond

its jurisdiction in expelling Ms. Davidson.

This appeal by Ms. Davidson presents for appellate review the issue, as

paraphrased, of whether she was deprived of due process and equal protection of

the law. She also questions the action of the Board in declining to allow her to

attend an alternative school following her expulsion from West High. Our standard of review permits us to determine whether the board’s action

was illegal, in excess of its jurisdiction, or arbitrary or capricious. Laidlaw

Environmental Service of Nashville v. Metropolitan, 934 S.W.2d 40 (Tenn. Ct. App.

1996); McCallen v. City of Memphis, 786 S.W.2d 633, 638 (Tenn. 1990).

II

On the night of January 17, 1996, Ms. Davidson had a telephone conversation

with a student friend, DeVon Logan, who told her that he had purchased a cane-

sword.1 Logan attended Powell High School and on the morning following his

conversation with Ms. Davidson took the weapon to Powell High School. At noon on

January 18, 1996, Ms. Davidson and a friend, Claggett, drove to Powell High School

in Ms. Davidson’s car and picked up Logan, with his cane sword, which he showed to

Ms. Davidson. They eventually drove to Powell Middle School to attend a basketball

game. Ms. Davidson and Claggett decided to leave early, and Logan requested that

she “get his stuff” from her car. She retrieved Logan’s book bag and the cane-sword

and gave them to him. The cane-sword was later confiscated by a security guard,

who reported the incident to the Powell High School principal, who reported it to the

West High School principal, Donna Wright.

Principal Wright notified Ms. Davidson and her parents that a disciplinary

hearing would be held on January 23, 1996 to consider whether she had violated the

no-weapons policy by possessing a dangerous weapon on school grounds. In the

interim the Knox County Schools Security Department investigated the incident and

filed a report with Principal Wright which revealed that she admitted having the cane-

sword at the basketball game. At the hearing before Principal Wright she admitted

that she had the cane-sword in her car, and that she delivered it to Logan at the

game. Ms. Davidson was represented by counsel at the hearing before Principal

Wright, who suspended her pending a recommendation of expulsion.

1 A knife, eighteen inches in length, concealed in a cane. It is admittedly a dangerous weapon.

2 Ms. Davidson appealed, and on February 1, 1996 another hearing was held

before the disciplinary-hearing authority for the Board, Jimmie Thacker. This was a

de novo hearing, and Ms. Davidson was again represented by counsel. The

decision of Principal Wright was upheld.

On March 6, 1996, Ms. Davidson appeared before the Board of Education,

still represented by counsel. The Board elected to hear the matter on the record

from the Hearing Authority, and voted to uphold the decision of the Disciplinary

Hearing Authority.

A petition for certiorari was filed March 11, 1996. The Chancellor heard the

matter de novo on August 14 and 15, 1996 and concluded that the Board had not

acted arbitrarily, illegally or beyond its jurisdiction and that Ms. Davidson had been

afforded due process at every stage.

III

This appeal presents the issues of (1) whether the Board violated the

appellant’s due process rights; (2) whether the Board acted illegally and arbitrarily

and in excess of its jurisdiction; (3) whether the appellant was denied equal

protection, (4) whether the Board violated its own policy in refusing to allow the

appellant to attend an alternative school; (5) whether the individual defendants

should have been dismissed.

IV

The policy adopted by the Board was disseminated to each student. The

appellant conceded her knowledge of the policy, which we reproduce verbatim:

KNOX COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION Weapons & Dangerous Instruments

Students shall not possess, handle, transmit, use or attempt to use any dangerous weapon in school buildings or on school grounds at any time, or in school vehicles and/or buses or off the school grounds at a school-sponsored activity, function or event.

Dangerous weapons for the purpose of this policy shall include, but are not limited to “ . . . any firearm, explosive, explosive weapon, Bowie knife, hawk bill knife, ice pick, dagger, slingshot, switchblade knife, blackjack knuckles . . .”

Students who are found to have violated this policy shall be subject to suspension and/or expulsion for a period of not less than one (1) year.

3 The Superintendent shall have the authority to modify this suspension requirement on a case-by-case basis.

When it is determined that a student has violated this policy, the principal of the school shall notify the student’s parents or guardian and the criminal justice or juvenile delinquency system as required by law.

Students are further forbidden to use any instruments or substances such as chemicals, pencils, scissors, razors, or compasses with the intent to do harm on in a manner which renders the item dangerous.

Students who violate this policy shall be subject to suspension and/or expulsion.

Upon information that a student is suspected of violating this policy, the principal of the school shall be notified immediately.

The principal shall notify the student’s parent or guardian and the appropriate law enforcement officials as required by law.

The appellant does not deny her knowledge of the policy, as previously

stated; neither does she deny that she possessed the cane-sword in her automobile

while on (1) the Powell High School campus, (2) the Karns High School campus, and

(3) the Powell Middle School campus.

We are constrained to make short shrift of the lack of due process argument,

in light of the myriad, meticulous efforts by the school system to afford the appellant

a litany of hearings, all of which were directed to the substantive issue of whether

she violated a Board policy known to her.

The School Security Act of 1981 (T. C. A. 49-6-4201 et seq.)

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Related

McCallen v. City of Memphis
786 S.W.2d 633 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1990)

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