Wojt v. Chimacum School District No. 49

516 P.2d 1099, 9 Wash. App. 857, 1973 Wash. App. LEXIS 1281
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 5, 1973
Docket845-2
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 516 P.2d 1099 (Wojt v. Chimacum School District No. 49) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wojt v. Chimacum School District No. 49, 516 P.2d 1099, 9 Wash. App. 857, 1973 Wash. App. LEXIS 1281 (Wash. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

*858 Pearson, C.J.

Mr. Wojt was discharged from his employment as a schoolteacher in December of 1971. This appeal is taken from the judgment of the superior court upholding the action of the school board.

The primary issue on this appeal is whether the causes specified by the school board, as established at trial, constitute “sufficient cause” for discharge within the contemplation of RCW 28A.58.100(1) 1 and allied statutes. Accordingly, we deem it necessary to set out at length those causes and the pertinent findings of the trial court with respect to them.

On December 14,1971, the board of directors of the Chimacum School District passed a resolution discharging Mr. Wojt. As required by RCW 28A.58.450, the resolution specified the causes for discharge. These were in substance as follows:

1. that Mr. Wojt made no effort to maintain an effective educational classroom atmosphere, but on the contrary permitted a complete breakdown of discipline;
2. that he permitted students to deface classroom property, and negligently permitted damage to a student’s property;
3. that he was guilty of “unprofessional and unmanly” conduct in giving notice to his students of parental complaints directed against him, with the intent to humiliate the student daughter of the complainant, and that he released the complaints of a fellow teacher;
4. that he permitted students to fix their own grades, in defiance of school policy;
5. that he exposed his students to materials wholly irrelevant to the purposes of his courses, in particular that he played in class a phonograph record wholly irrelevant to the subject matter of his course;
*859 6. that he played the record without clearance by the instructional materials committee of the school;
7. that he removed the record from the safekeeping of the librarian with a showing of contumaciousness and insubordination; and
8. that he has evinced an attitude of egocentrism, and refusal to conform to school policies toward the school board, administrators, and parents.

Mr. Wojt elected to pursue his remedy directly to superior court, pursuant to RCW 28A.58.515, in lieu of an intermediate hearing before the school board. A trial de novo was had in that court, as required by RCW 28A.58.480. See Hattrick v. North Kitsap School Dist. 400, 81 Wn.2d 668, 504 P.2d 302 (1972). Upon live testimony and other evidence, the trial court found that six of the causes specified by the board had been established. Essentially, the findings relate

1. that Mr. Wojt offered lip service to classroom discipline, failing to respond in good faith to administration directives;

2. that he gave public notice to his students of complaints respecting his teaching methods;

3. that he failed to follow administrative policy in fixing grades;

4. that he played a record irrelevant to the subject matter of his course in class, without clearance by the instructional materials committee;

5. that he wrongfully thereafter obtained the record from the custody of the librarian; and

6. that his attitude toward the administration and its policies was one of egocentricity, stubbornness, and insubordination, lacking in a spirit of good faith and cooperation.

Mr. Wojt initially contends that the findings of the trial court cannot sustain his discharge, aside from the question of whether they demonstrate “sufficient cause,” because they are not based “upon the cause or causes stated in the notice” as required by RCW 28A.58.515. This argument is without merit. While the causes specified by the school *860 board were in some instances stated in more conclusionary terms than the trial court’s determinations, it is apparent that the findings were “based upon” them. Moreover, in this case the board’s specifications were expanded and elucidated by a bill of particulars produced after the pretrial conference. The trial court pursued its inquiry within the parameters established by the stated causes and the bill of particulars, and shaped its findings accordingly. This satisfied the statutory mandate that the trial be confined to the issues framed by the school board.

Furthermore, it is clear from the record that the trial court’s determination was made “independent of any conclusion of the school board, and . . . based solely upon the evidence and testimony” which it received. Hattrick v. North Kitsap School Dist. 400, supra at 670. Thus, while the scope of the inquiry in superior court is defined by the causes specified by the school board, the trial judge is unhampered by the board’s conclusions. In effect, the superior court is substituted for the school board and redecides the case. Reagan v. Board of Directors, 4 Wn. App. 279, 480 P.2d 807 (1971). The trial court in this case recognized this requirement, and its findings were supported by substantial evidence adduced in court.

The legal sufficiency of these findings as cause for discharge is the crucial issue. RCW 28A.58.100(1) differs from many such statutes in other jurisdictions in its failure to set forth with particularity specific types of conduct which constitute grounds for the discharge of a teacher during his contract term, or to set any reasonably ascertainable standard against which a teacher’s conduct may be measured. 2 This complicates the task of determining “sufficiency.”

It is clear under Washington law that the discharge of a teacher affects a legal right, which cannot be canceled or impaired at the will or discretion of the board of direc *861 tors. Seattle High School Chapter 200 v. Sharples, 159 Wash. 424, 293 P. 994, 72 A.L.R. 1215 (1930). Notwithstanding this proposition, the case law does little to elucidate what constitutes sufficient cause for discharge. Teacher failure in the areas of classroom organization, control, and discipline has been held to create sufficient cause for nonrenewal of a teaching contract.

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Bluebook (online)
516 P.2d 1099, 9 Wash. App. 857, 1973 Wash. App. LEXIS 1281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wojt-v-chimacum-school-district-no-49-washctapp-1973.