Wirt v. Parker School District 60-4

2004 SD 127, 689 N.W.2d 901, 2004 S.D. LEXIS 198
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 23, 2004
DocketNone
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2004 SD 127 (Wirt v. Parker School District 60-4) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wirt v. Parker School District 60-4, 2004 SD 127, 689 N.W.2d 901, 2004 S.D. LEXIS 198 (S.D. 2004).

Opinion

ZINTER, Justice.

[¶ 1.] Bonnie Wirt retired from the Parker School District after 39 years of teaching. Before the next school year started, she came out of retirement and accepted a new one-year contract of employment for the amount teachers without “continuing contract status” were paid. At the end of the new one-year contract, Wirt was terminated without the tenure protections given to continuing contract status teachers. Writ appealed to the circuit court contending that she had continuing *903 contract status notwithstanding her retirement. The circuit court disagreed and granted summary judgment in Parker’s favor. We affirm.

Facts and Procedural History

[¶ 2.] The facts are not in dispute. Wirt was a continuing contract teacher with 39 years of experience. On March 11, 2002, the Parker School Board decided to reduce her kindergarten position from full-time to half-time for the 2002-2003 school year. 1 Wirt held the full-time position at a salary of $34,064. On April 26, 2002, she accepted the half-time position at a salary of $17,032, which was one half of her full-time salary as a continuing contract teacher.

[¶ 3.] On May 23, 2002, Wirt apparently changed her mind and resigned from the half-time teaching position, indicating that she was going to retire. The Board accepted her resignation on June 10, 2002. Upon retirement, Wirt was fully paid for her 2001-2002 contract, she received a payout of her accumulated sick leave, she ended her contributions to the South Dakota Retirement System (SDRS), and she began receiving her SDRS retirement benefits.

[¶ 4.] The Parker School District continued to seek a teacher to fill the 2002-2003 half-time position. Wirt subsequently decided to come out of retirement and apply for the position. On August 12, 2002, the parties came to an agreement, and Wirt signed a one-year contract at a reduced salary of $15,900.96. The reduced salary was the amount the District paid non-continuing contract teachers with Wirt’s education and experience. Wirt did not contest the reduced salary.

[¶ 5.] Wirt taught the half-time kindergarten class during the 2002-2003 school year. However, on March 31, 2003, the Board voted to nonrenew her contract for the 2003-2004 school year. Wirt was notified of the Board’s decision and requested the due process hearing that continuing contract teachers are entitled to receive under SDCL 13-43-6.2. The Board denied Wirt’s request because it believed that, as a result of her retirement, she was no longer a continuing contract teacher.

[¶ 6.] Wirt appealed to circuit court pursuant to SDCL 13 — 46—l. 2 The circuit court granted Parker summary judgment, concluding that Wirt’s retirement terminated her status as a continuing contract teacher. Wirt appeals raising the issue whether her resignation terminated her continuing contract status.

Analysis and Decision

[¶ 7.] This matter is before the Court on appeal from the circuit court’s grant of summary judgment. Our standard of review of summary judgments was stated in Kimball Investment Land, Ltd. v. Chmela:

Summary judgment is authorized “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact, and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of *904 law.” We will affirm only when there are no genuine issues of material fact and the legal questions have been correctly decided. All reasonable inferences drawn from the facts must be viewed in favor of the non-moving party. The burden is on the moving party to clearly show an absence of any genuine issue of material fact and an entitlement to judgment as a matter of law.

2000 SD 6, ¶ 7, 604 N.W.2d 289, 292 (internal citations omitted).

[¶ 8.] The effect of Wirt’s resignation on her continuing contract status is a question of first impression in this jurisdiction. Wirt concedes that if she lost that status, the District could nonrenew her 2003-2004 teaching contract without just cause or hearing. However, Wirt contends that she was a continuing contract teacher, and as such, she should have been afforded the rights and protections in SDCL 13-43-6.1 (termination only for just cause) 3 and SDCL 13-43-6.2 (teacher must be furnished statement of reasons for termination and a hearing to refute them). 4

[¶ 9.] SDCL 13 — 43—6.3 5 defines continuing contract status. We construe such statutes under the following rules:

The intent of a statute is determined from what the legislature said, rather than what the courts think it should have said, and the court must confine itself to the language used. Words and phrases in a statute must be given them plain meaning and effect. When the language in a statute is clear, certain and unambiguous, there is no reason for construction, and the Court’s only function is to declare the meaning of the statute as clearly expressed. Moreover, “[i]n arriving at the intention of the Legislature, it is presumed that the words of the statute have been used to convey their ordinary, popular meaning.” “SDCL 2-14-1 requires that words in a *905 statute are to be understood in their ordinary sense.”

In re West River Elec. Ass’n, Inc., 2004 SD 11, ¶ 21, 675 N.W.2d 222, 228 (internal citations omitted).

[¶ 10.] The pertinent language of SDCL 13-43-6.3 provides that continuing contract status is afforded for “a teacher [that] is in or beyond the fourth consecutive term of employment....” The meaning of the words “consecutive” and “term of employment” are dispositive. Wirt suggests the term “consecutive” means successive or to follow successively without interruption. We agree.

[¶ 11.] To define the phrase “term of employment,” Wirt relies on an Attorney General’s Opinion that defined a “term of employment” as the “ordinary school term.” However, the 1980 Op. Att’y Gen. interpreted a predecessor statute that has been repealed.

[¶ 12.] This Court, in a different context, has also considered the meaning of a teacher’s term of employment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2004 SD 127, 689 N.W.2d 901, 2004 S.D. LEXIS 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wirt-v-parker-school-district-60-4-sd-2004.