The appeal at bar was taken from an order, orally made, 1 by the court below refusing to grant a temporary restraining order to restrain a hearing to be conducted by the defendants or by some of them, in particular by “The Board of Public Education” of Pittsburgh on the question as to whether or not the appellant’s, Dorothy Albert’s, contract and tenure as a professional employee of the School District of Pittsburgh should be permanently terminated or endéd because she has been charged with being a Communist or because she is a member of the Civil Rights Congress. This, it is alleged, has -been designated as a Communist front organization by Attorneys General of the United States and the Committee on Un-American Activities of the House of Representatives of the United *691 States Congress. By a resolution adopted March 28, 1950, the Board recited the allegations to which we have referred and resolved “That the contract with Miss Dorothy Albert as- a professional employee of the School District of Pittsburgh be terminated in accordance with section 1122. 2 *****8 of the Public School -Code of 1949 which reads in part as follows: ‘The only valid causes for termination of a contract heretofore or hereafter entered into with a professional employe shall be * * * participating in un-American or subversive doctrines * * * on the part of the professional employe * * * ’ ” and “that the date for a formal hearing on these charges [against the appellant] as provided in section 1127 of the Public School Code [of Pennsylvania] of 1949 be set for Tuesday, April 11, 1950 at 4 P.M.”
On April 6, 1950 the appellant -filed her complaint in the court below, seeking the interposition of a three-judge statutory court, to be constituted pursuant to the provisions of Section 2281, Title 28, United States Code Annotated, and for a temporary restraining order pursuant to Section 2284(3), alleging in substance that the action taken by the Board and the hearing contemplated by it, based on Sections 1122 and 1127 3 of the School -Code of Pennsylvania of 1949, Laws of Pennsylvania, Volume 1, 1949, 24 P.S. § 1—101 et seq., were in -derogation of the appellant’s constitutional rights guaranteed to her by the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States. On April 7, 1950, when the court below, after hearing, 'denied appellant’s application for a temporary restraining order, Albert appealed. The Board of Public Education- of Pittsburgh and the other defendants to the action have moved, inter alia, to dismiss the appeal.
On April 8, 1950 the present writer, having received a certification from District Judge Gourley, to whom application was made, that there was a substantial federal question requiring the interposition of a Section 2284(1) court, designated the members of such a court in accordance with the statute.
The appeal at bar must be dismissed. We pass by the issue as to whether or not this court, as distinguished from the Supreme Court, has jurisdiction to entertain it, notice of appeal having preceded the making of the order constituting the three-judge statutory court. Cf. Sections 1253, 1291, 1292, 2281, and 2284, Title 28, United States Code; Stainback v. Mo Hock Ke Lok Po,
The appeal at bar is an interlocutory one, and, under the circumstances of the -instant case and for reasons which will be set out hereinafter, what was stated in Morgenstern Chemical Co., Inc., v. Schering Corporation, 3 Cir.,
The appellant has, .in effect, -been suspended, though the resolution of the Board uses the word “terminated”. The word “discharged”, is used in the Public School Code to indicate the -complete and final separation of the employee from the service. See Section 1130. Sections 1126 and 1127 provide for a hearing for the accused teacher, a professional employee, before the School Board (Board of School Directors). Section 1128 provides 'for the subpoenaing ' of witnesses 'both by the Board and by the accused teacher. Section 1129 states that a vote of two-thirds of the members of the Board is' required to effect a discharge. , Section 1130 provides for notice of discharge and also for the physical expunging of the -charge itself from the records of the Board if the decision is in favor of the professional employee. The same section states that there shall be no abatement of salary or compensation if the decision is in favor of the accused. Section 1131 provides for an appeal to the Superintendent of Public Instruction whose decision shall be final unless an appeal is taken to the -Court of Common Pleas. Section 1132 provides for such an appeal. It is obvious, therefore, that the appellant may be reinstated or she may be discharged, but as yet ho final action has been taken in her case by the Board or the Pennsylvania authorities.
The decision of Reinecke v. Loper, D.C. Hawaii, 77 F.Supp, 333, is very close in its facts to the instant case and we deem that decision to be persuasive albeit a temporary restraining order , had issued in the cited case. In the Reinecke. cases, 77 F.Supp. at pp. 335-336 it was said: “It is a well established principle of law that where matters peculiarly within the purview of an administrative
body
are before it for disposition, a court of the United States will not (other than by way of a restraining order) enjoin the administrative process unless the circumstances alleged demonstrate that irreparable harm and injury will occur to an individual ¡by reason of the application of an unconstitutional law or by the illegal application of a statute otherwise valid. This principle is set forth by the Supreme Court of the United States in Natural Gas Pipeline Co. of America v. Slattery,
The fact that the District Court of the United States for the District of Hawaii in the Reinecke cases interpolated the phrase quoted above, viz., “other than by way of a restraining order”, is not pertinent to the issues in the instant case for the District Court discharged the restraining order and dismissed the actions in the cited cases when it appeared that the suits, like the action at bar, were premature.
For the reasons stated the appeal will ¡be dismissed.
Notes
. We call attention again as we have in ■ the past, to- the desirability, if not the ; necessity,' of the»-United-States-District Courts of this Circuit filing written orders at any critical stage of proceedings. See Magee-Hale Park-O-Meter Company v. Vehicular Parking, Ltd., et al., 3 Cir.,
. Section 1122, Article XI, p. 170 of the School Code of Pennsylvania of 1949, in pertinent part reads as follows: “The only valid causes for termination of a contract heretofore or hereafter entered into with a professional employe shall bo immorality, ineompetency, intemperance, cruelty, persistent negligence, mental derangement, advocation of or participating in un-American or subversive doctrines, persistent and wilful violation of the school laws of this Commonwealth on the part of the professional employe.”
. Section 1127 provides the detailed procedure relating to dismissals, to charges, to notice and to hearing. Its contents need not be set out here.
