BELANGER v. WARREN CONSOLIDATED SCHOOL DISTRICT, BOARD OF EDUCATION
Docket No. 80714
Supreme Court of Michigan
June 27, 1989
432 Mich 575 | 443 N.W.2d 372
Argued October 4, 1988 (Calendar No. 4).
In an opinion by Justice BOYLE, joined by Chief Justice RILEY, and Justices BRICKLEY, CAVANAGH, GRIFFIN, and ARCHER, the Supreme Court held:
A school district has discretion to deny or grant tenure only with respect to persons employed as administrators. Persons employed as teachers acquire teacher tenure regardless of the positions to which they are assigned, and it is only tenured teachers employed as administrators who are eligible for or can be denied tenure in administrative positions.
1. Under the teacher tenure act, all teaching personnel, including those serving in administrative capacities, may acquire teacher tenure after completion of a probationary period. Once acquired, tenure cannot be waived, and a tenured teacher cannot be fired or demoted except for reasonable and just cause. While school districts may grant or deny tenure with respect to administrative positions, a tenured teacher who accepts such a nontenured position does not forfeit teacher tenure and may return to classroom teaching upon termination
2. In this case, the Tenure Commission correctly determined that the counselors in question did not acquire administrative tenure and, because of the necessary reduction in personnel, were properly laid off and replaced by tenured teachers with greater seniority. The circuit court‘s reversal on the basis of a literal interpretation of the term “teacher” leads to the arbitrary and absurd result of granting a school district the power to deny tenure to any person employed as a teacher who spends a majority of the school day outside the classroom, regardless of the amount of time spent with students. The commission‘s decision is in accordance with the job security envisioned by the tenure act: a guarantee of continued employment, not a guarantee of continued employment in a specific position absent a nontenure clause in a contract.
Reversed.
Justice LEVIN, dissenting, stated:
1. The statutory term, “other than as a classroom teacher,” is not limited to persons performing administrative duties. 1963 PA 242, which expanded the authority of the school board to grant position-specific tenure by adding the words “other than as a classroom teacher, including but not limited to” before the words “superintendent, assistant superintendent [or] principal,” struck the words “in such administrative capacity” thereby indicating that position-specific tenure could be granted a nonclassroom teacher who did not have administrative duties.
2. The teacher tenure act provides that a tenured teacher employed other than as a classroom teacher is to be deemed to have been granted continuing tenure in that capacity unless the contract of employment provides otherwise, in which event the teacher is to be granted continuing tenure as an active classroom teacher. In this case, the contracts of employment did not exclude acquisition of tenure as counselors.
3. Under the teacher tenure act, the decision whether to allow position-specific tenure to a tenured teacher is to be determined as a matter of contract between the teacher and the school board. In this case, the employment contracts did not exclude position-specific tenure; thus, the plaintiffs were wrongfully laid off.
SCHOOLS - TEACHERS - COUNSELORS - POSITION-SPECIFIC TENURE.
A school district has discretion to deny or grant tenure only with respect to persons employed as administrators; persons em
Gayle S. Boesky for the plaintiffs.
Mosher, Vondale, Gierak & Baumhart, P.C. (by Richard U. Mosher and John L. Gierak), for the defendant.
Amicus Curiae:
Miller, Cohen, Martens & Ice, P.C. (by Mark H. Cousens), for Michigan Federation of Teachers, AFL-CIO.
BOYLE, J. This Court granted leave to appeal to address the issue whether school counselors qualify for position-specific tenure under the teacher tenure act,1 and thus are protected during layoffs at the expense of other qualified and more senior tenured teachers.
It is apparent from a reading of art 3, § 12
The decision of the Court of Appeals that a school district has the power to create a separate tenure status for teachers assigned to certain positions would subject teachers to, rather than protect them from, political and arbitrary interferences with the type of job security envisioned by the tenure act.
Therefore, we hold that persons employed as teachers acquire teacher tenure, regardless of the positions to which they are assigned within the school district, and it is only tenured teachers employed as administrators who are eligible for, or can be denied, tenure in an administrative position.
Accordingly, we reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals and reinstate the decision of the Michigan Tenure Commission that the plaintiffs hired as teachers and assigned counselor positions were properly laid off and replaced by tenured teachers with greater seniority.
granted continuing tenure as an active classroom teacher in such school district. Upon the termination of any such contract of employment, if such controlling board shall not re-employ such teacher under contract in any such capacity, such teacher shall be continuously employed by such controlling board as an active classroom teacher. Failure of any controlling board to re-employ any such teacher in any such capacity upon the termination of any such contract of employment shall not be deemed to be a demotion within the provisions of this act. The salary in the position to which such teacher is assigned shall be the same as if he had been continuously employed in the newly assigned position. Failure of any controlling board to so provide in any such contract of employment of any teacher in a capacity other than a classroom teacher shall be deemed to constitute the employment of such teacher on continuing contract in such capacity and subject to the provisions of this act. Continuing tenure shall not apply to an annual assignment of extra duty for extra pay.
I
The plaintiffs in this case are tenured teachers who possessed valid Michigan teaching certificates with counselor endorsements during the times relevant to this discussion. In June, 1981, they each were notified they would be laid off due to a necessary reduction in personnel. At that time, one plaintiff was assigned a split counselor/teacher position,3 and the others were assigned full-time counselor positions.4 Their positions were subsequently filled by three tenured teachers who had greater seniority and counseling endorsements but had not been assigned previously as counselors.
Approximately two years after their layoff and after the Tenure Commission‘s decision in Leonard
In the instant case, the Tenure Commission decided, first, that neither Leonard, supra, nor the prior case law7 upon which it relied fully addressed whether a counseling position is a classroom or nonclassroom position within the meaning of art 3, § 1, and, second, that whether counselors hold nonclassroom or classroom positions depends upon the duties commonly associated with the position. The commission found that a person whose primary duties involve instruction or guidance of students is a “classroom teacher” within the meaning of art 3, § 1.8 Thus, the plaintiffs, who
The circuit court reversed the decision on the basis that a teacher is “one that teaches or instructs,”9 and since the primary duty of counselors is not teaching,10 the plaintiffs were entitled to tenure as counselors, absent a specific exclusion to that effect in their employment contracts.
The Court of Appeals reversed the circuit court‘s decision and remanded the case to the commission with instructions that the term “classroom teacher” must be given its ordinary meaning which does not include a teacher who acts as a counselor offering guidance to students.11 Although the panel was not persuaded that counselors are
divided into two sections. The first section addressed the statutory definition of teacher:
We find that the outside parameters of the definition of “classroom teacher” as used in Article III Section 1 can be determined by analysis of the statute itself. First, a teacher is defined as “all certificated persons . .”
MCL 38.71 ;MSA 15.1971 . Before a person can become subject to Article III, he or she must have satisfactorily completed the probationary period. During the mandatory two year probationary period the person must hold a certificate which is “valid for the position to which he is assigned” [1979 AC] R 390.661[1]. Further, the person must be assigned to a position which requires specific certification to fall within this definition.... Thus, we find that the term “classroom teacher” as used in Article III Section 1, excludes any position which does not carry a specific certification requirement. [Belanger v Warren Consolidated Schools, unpublished opinion of the Michigan Tenure Commission, decided April 2, 1985 (Docket Nos. 83-28-31, 83-41).]
II
To determine whether teachers acquire administrative tenure as counselors, we must first look to art 3, § 1, of the teacher tenure act, which provides in part:
If the controlling board shall provide in a contract of employment of any teacher employed other than as a classroom teacher, including but not limited to, a superintendent, assistant superintendent, principal, department head or director of curriculum, made with such teacher after the completion of the probationary period, that such teacher shall not be deemed to be granted continuing tenure in such capacity by virtue of such contract of employment, then such teacher shall not be granted tenure in such capacity, but shall be deemed to have been granted continuing tenure as an active classroom teacher in such school district. [
MCL 38.91 ;MSA 15.1991 .]
More specifically, the Court must determine what is meant by “employment of any teacher employed other than as a classroom teacher, including but not limited to, a superintendent, assistant superintendent, principal, department head
While “classroom teacher” is not defined in the act, the dissent‘s literal definition of a teacher as one who “teaches or instructs” ignores altogether that “teacher” is defined as “all certificated persons employed for a full school year by any board of education or controlling board of any public educational institution.”13 Just as “teacher” is not used literally in the act, neither must “classroom,” and there is no support for the adoption by the Court of a literal definition of “classroom teacher,” as one who “teach[es] or provide[s] instruction in a classroom setting.”
Instead, both the language of the act and the history of its enactment support substituting a functional definition for a literal definition of “classroom teacher.” That “classroom teacher” is used in contrast to one whose primary duties do not involve instruction or guidance of students is evidenced by the fact that the general term “other than as a classroom teacher” is followed by the specific, “including but not limited to, a superintendent, assistant superintendent, principal, department head or director of curriculum ....” Where specific words follow general ones, the doctrine of ejusdem generis restricts application of the general term to things that are similar to those enumerated:
The rule “accomplishes the purpose of giving effect to both the particular and the general words, by treating the particular words as indicating the class, and the general words as extending the provisions of the statute to everything embraced in that class, though not specifically named by the particular words.”
If the general term were given its full and natural meaning, it would include the objects designated by the specific words, making the latter superfluous.14
The phrase “other than as a classroom teacher” would, at first blush, seem broad enough to include counselors, librarians, and essentially any teacher whose primary duty did not involve “teach[ing] or provid[ing] instruction in a classroom setting.” It is apparent, however, from a reading of the entire provision that the term “classroom teacher” is used in contrast to the term “administrator,” i.e., a person whose duties do not ordinarily involve actual work with students which are positions similar to those enumerated in the statute.
Further, a review of the history and purpose of the tenure act15 also supports the conclusion that
After the satisfactory completion of the probationary period, a teacher shall be employed continuously by the controlling board under which the probationary period has been completed, and shall not be dismissed or demoted except as specified in this act. [1937 (Ex Sess) PA 4.]17
Because there is no requirement in the act that the person so employed must, in fact, teach,18 all teaching personnel, including those in administrative capacities, may acquire tenure after completion of a probationary period.19 In addition, tenure
“[A]pparent public dissatisfaction with such shackles on local control of school administration brought about the 1941 amendment22 providing for the exemption [of tenure], by contract, of those in administrative capacities....” Street v Ferndale Bd of Ed, 361 Mich 82, 87; 104 NW2d 748 (1960). The exclusion23 allows school districts to deny, or grant, tenure in an administrative position,24 and assures that a tenured teacher who accepts a
In 1963, the provision was amended again to expand the scope of the types of positions for which a school district could exclude tenure pursuant to the employment contract. However, the class to which the right was extended was described as “including,”25 but not limited to “superintendent, assistant superintendent, principal, department head or director of curriculum ....” 1963 PA 242. While the new list of positions is no longer exclusive, the types of jobs generic to the list provided indicate that the provision contemplates that the school district has discretion regarding tenure status only with respect to administrative positions.
Under the act, a teacher may acquire either teacher tenure or administrative tenure. Accordingly, when a teacher claims tenure status under art 3, § 1, the decision regarding that claim is made on the basis of the statutory construction of the language of both the tenure act and the provision in the code which addresses employment contracts for administrative personnel.26 See Dodge v
The underlying philosophy of art 3, § 1, and the related provisions in the School Code, is to enable “local school boards to tailor their administrative tenure policies accordingly.” Smiley, supra, p 327. Thus, whether a school district may deny or grant tenure to counselors will depend on whether a school district employs counselors as administrators.
III
The Tenure Commission correctly held that it is the nature of the duties performed by a teacher which will determine the capacity in which the person is employed and, thus, whether the position is one for which tenure status can be denied. The decision that counselors are classroom teachers for purposes of art 3, § 1, is based on a reasonable interpretation of the act and is consistent with the purpose of the amendment that a controlling board have discretion to deny tenure only to teach-
The circuit court overturned the commission‘s decision on the basis of its determination that “classroom teacher” should be given its plain and ordinary meaning. However, a literal interpretation is appropriate only when the language is clear and susceptible to a literal reading that results in a conclusion not inconsistent with the purpose of the statute.28 In this case it leads to the arbitrary and absurd result that the Legislature intended that a school district have the power to deny tenure to any person employed as a teacher, but who spends the majority of the school day outside of a classroom, regardless of how much of the time is spent with students.
The Court of Appeals erred in assuming the statute contemplates a special tenure status for all teachers who hold a nonclassroom position, absent a nontenure clause in the employment contract between the teacher and the school board.29 First,
However, administrators are employed under a separate contract.31 Thus, it is the contract between the school district and the teacher employed as an administrator, not the contract between the district and the teacher employed as a teacher, which must specify whether the individual is denied tenure in the administrative position. There would be no logic in a decision which would require a school district to insert a nontenure clause in the contract of a person employed as a teacher and assigned to a counselor position in order to prevent that person from acquiring administrative tenure.
The decision of the Court of Appeals defeats rather than promotes the purposes of the tenure act, and further exemplifies why judicial review of agency decisions “must be undertaken with considerable sensitivity in order that the courts offer due deference to administrative expertise ....”
(e) Arbitrary, capricious or clearly an abuse or unwarranted exercise of discretion.
(f) Affected by other substantial and material error of law.
(2) The Court, as appropriate, may affirm, reverse or modify the decision or order or remand the case for further proceedings. [
MCL 24.306 ;MSA 3.560(206) . See also Const 1963, art 6, § 28.]
The majority of school districts in the state have bargaining agreements which provide for seniority rights for all teachers and, at the same time, do not restrict school boards from transferring teachers to appropriate positions within the district. Such agreements recognize that teacher-tenure legislation was enacted to protect competent and qualified teachers in the security of their positions and to protect them, after having undergone an adequate probationary period, against removal for unfounded reasons.32 78 CJS, Schools & School Districts, § 180, p 1011.
The lower courts’ determination that counselor positions are nonclassroom positions for purposes of art 3, § 1 would subject teachers to, rather than protect them from, political and arbitrary interferences with the type of job security envisioned by the tenure act. It would allow school districts to create a separate tenure status for teachers assigned to certain positions, separate and apart from teacher tenure, and, by merely assigning favored teachers to these positions, arbitrarily protect these teachers from layoffs at the expense of other qualified, certified, and more senior tenured teachers.
CONCLUSION
There is no support for a conclusion that the Legislature intended that a school district have the power to deny tenure to any person employed as a teacher whose primary duty is not teaching in the classroom.
The Tenure Commission correctly determined that the plaintiffs did not acquire administrative tenure as counselors and, because of the necessary reduction in personnel, were properly laid off and replaced by tenured teachers with greater seniority. This decision is in accordance with the job security envisioned by the tenure act which is a guarantee of continued employment and not a guarantee of continued employment in a specific position, absent a nontenured clause in the contract.
Accordingly, we reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals and reinstate the decision of the Tenure Commission.
RILEY, C.J., and BRICKLEY, CAVANAGH, GRIFFIN, and ARCHER, JJ., concurred with BOYLE, J.
LEVIN, J. (dissenting). The question presented is whether the plaintiffs, tenured school teachers, acquired position-specific tenure as counselors with the defendant school district and thus were wrongfully laid off when they were replaced by tenured
I would hold that the teacher tenure act1 contemplates that each school district may determine whether the employment contract it enters into shall exclude position-specific tenure for a non-classroom position, and that the plaintiffs were wrongfully laid off because the employment contracts with the plaintiffs did not exclude such tenure.
I
Plaintiffs, Patricia Belanger, Helen Hanley, Bonnie Zervas, and Norma Stanbury, were tenured teachers who were assigned counseling positions with the defendant Warren Consolidated School District. In 1981, the school district laid off a number of teachers. Plaintiffs were laid off and tenured teachers with greater seniority, who had not theretofore been employed as counselors, assumed their positions.2
The plaintiffs appealed to the Tenure Commission which found that they had tenure only as classroom teachers and not as counselors. The circuit court, on appeal, reversed, holding that plaintiffs were entitled to tenure as counselors absent a tenure exclusion in their employment contracts. The Court of Appeals affirmed.3 I would affirm.
II
The teacher tenure act provides that after com-
The contracts of employment with the plaintiff teachers did not exclude their acquiring tenure as counselors. The question presented thus narrows to whether a tenured teacher employed as a counselor is “employed other than as a classroom teacher” within the meaning of the act and acquires position-specific tenure absent a contrary provision in the contract of employment.
In Smiley v Grand Blanc Bd of Ed, 416 Mich 316, 327; 330 NW2d 416 (1982), this Court, in holding that teachers who had been originally
The Court, in Goodwin, said that the statute authorizes “individual school districts to determine which administrative positions should carry tenure.” The statute does not, said the Court, “dictate categories of administrative positions which carry tenure as a matter of law.” The Court said that “[i]n view of the wide range and size of school districts, the statute enables local school boards to tailor their administrative tenure policies accordingly. The statute does not attempt to dictate uniform tenure policies for administrators in all school districts.” Since the contract with the plaintiff as director of buildings and grounds did not deny him tenure, he had achieved position-specific tenure.
The decision whether to allow position-specific tenure to a tenured teacher is to be determined under the act as a matter of contract between the teacher and the school board. I agree with the Court of Appeals, “One school board may wish to allow its counselors to gain tenure while another may not.”
The school district and amicus curiae teacher unions contend that it is unwise and unfair from a policy standpoint to lay off a classroom teacher with greater seniority than a counselor who has acquired position-specific tenure. It appears that the school district and the union have implemented that view by providing, in a collective
III
The Tenure Commission created its own functional definition of “classroom teacher,” stating that a classroom teacher is a person whose “primary duties involve instruction or guidance of students,” and declared that counselors are classroom teachers because they provide instruction and guidance to students.6 Neither the Tenure Commission nor the school district have pointed to anything in the language of the act or the history of its enactment that supports substituting a functional definition for a literal definition of “classroom teacher.”
The Tenure Commission‘s functional definition ignores altogether the word “classroom.” A coun-
I agree with the circuit judge and the Court of Appeals that the term “classroom teacher” does not include a person who, while offering instruction and guidance to students, does not teach or provide instruction in a classroom setting.7
The school district would limit the term “other than as a classroom teacher” to persons performing administrative duties. 1963 PA 242, which expanded the authority of the school board to grant position-specific tenure by adding the words “other than as a classroom teacher, including but not limited to” before the words “superintendent, assistant superintendent [or] principal,” struck the words “in such administrative capacity” thereby indicating that position-specific tenure could be granted a nonclassroom teacher who did not have administrative duties.
I would affirm the Court of Appeals.
Notes
It is not asserted that the pertinent collective bargaining agreement addressed the specific question here presented. It appears that a subsequent collective bargaining agreement bars a member of the bargaining unit who has not previously attained tenure in a position other than as a classroom teacher from obtaining position-specific tenure.After the satisfactory completion of the probationary period, a teacher shall be employed continuously by the controlling board under which the probationary period has been completed, and shall not be dismissed or demoted except as specified in this act. If the controlling board shall provide in a contract of employment of any teacher employed other than as a classroom teacher, including but not limited to, a superintendent, assistant superintendent, principal, department head or director of curriculum, made with such teacher after the completion of the probationary period, that such teacher shall not be deemed to be granted continuing tenure in such capacity by virtue of such contract of employment, then such teacher shall not be granted tenure in such capacity, but shall be deemed to have been
Plaintiff Hanley was first employed in January, 1967, as a teacher and in September, 1970, was assigned to a counselor position which she maintained until June, 1981, when she was laid off effective September, 1981.
Plaintiff Zervas was first employed in August, 1971, as a teacher and was assigned to a counselor position in August, 1976, which she held, with the exception of the period in which she was assigned to the position of English teacher, from September, 1979, to November 19, 1979, until June, 1981, when she was laid off, effective September, 1981.
Plaintiff Stanbury was employed as a teacher in 1957 and worked until 1960 when she resigned her position with the defendant school district. On August 30, 1972, she was rehired and was employed as a teacher during the 1972-73 school year. For the 1973-74 school year she was assigned to a counselor position which she held until June, 1981, when she was notified of her layoff due to a necessary reduction in personnel. Prior to the start of the 1981-82 school year she was assigned to a position as a special education teacher and served in that position during the 1981-82 and 1982-83 school years.
After the satisfactory completion of the probationary period, a teacher shall be employed continuously by the controlling board under which the probationary period has been completed, and shall not be dismissed or demoted except as specified in this act. If the controlling board shall provide in a contract of employment of any teacher employed other than as a classroom teacher, including but not limited to, a superintendent, assistant superintendent, principal, department head or director of curriculum, made with such teacher after the completion of the probationary period, that such teacher shall not be deemed to be granted continuing tenure in such capacity by virtue of such contract of employment, then such teacher shall not be granted tenure in such capacity, but shall be deemed to have been granted continuing tenure as an active classroom teacher in such school district. [The Tenure Commission also said that the term “other than as a classroom teacher” excludes any position that carries a specific certification requirement. The State Board of Education has established a specific certification requirement for counselors. There is not, however, such a limitation in the act.
In an earlier decision, Leonard v Center Line, unpublished opinion of the Michigan Tenure Commission decided December 22, 1982 (Docket No. 81 TC 82), the Tenure Commission had held that the counselors there had acquired position-specific tenure.
The original tenure act, art 3, contained two sections, the second of which provided:
In the event that a teacher on continuing tenure is employed by another controlling board, he shall not be subject to another probationary period of more than one year, and may at the option of the controlling board be placed immediately on continuing tenure.
The provision as amended in 1941 provided:
That when the controlling board of any school district shall specifically provide in each contract of employment of any teacher employed as superintendent, assistant superintendent, or principal, made with such teacher after the completion of the probationary period, that such teacher shall not be deemed to be granted continuing tenure in such administrative capacity by virtue of such contract of employment, then such teacher shall not be granted tenure in such administrative capacity, but shall be deemed to have been granted continuing tenure as an active class room teacher in such school district. [1941 PA 119.]
That section of the code provides:
The board may employ assistant superintendents, principals, assistant principals, guidance directors, and other administrators who do not assume tenure in position, for terms, not to exceed 3 years, fixed by the board and shall define their duties. The employment shall be under written contract. Notification of nonrenewal of contract shall be given in writing at least 60 days before the contract termination date or the contract is renewed for an additional 1-year period. [
MCL 380.132(2) ;MSA 15.4132(2) .]
The dissent‘s reliance on Goodwin and Smiley, supra, is misplaced, as these cases have application only after the threshold issue is addressed, that is, whether the position in question is “‘other than a classroom teacher, including but not limited” for purposes of the statute. Post, p 594.
In Goodwin, p 566, the Court of Appeals addressed the issue whether a tenured teacher who accepts an administrative position which does not require certification can be granted tenure in that position. The panel held that if a contract of a tenured teacher acting as an administrator does not specify the individual is to be denied tenure, tenure is granted in the position, regardless of whether certification is required.
Both the Court of Appeals and the dissent in the present case have applied the holdings of the aforementioned cases without answering the threshold question whether the position is an administrative position within the defendant school district.
However, neither the Court of Appeals nor the dissent has indicated which provision of the Administrative Procedures Act it relied on in its decision to reverse the decision of the Tenure Commission. The scope of review of an administrative agency is delineated in § 106 of the Administrative Procedures Act which provides:
(1) Except when a statute or the constitution provides for a different scope of review, the court shall hold unlawful and set aside a decision or order of an agency if substantial rights of the petitioner have been prejudiced because the decision or order is any of the following:
(a) In violation of the constitution or a statute.
(b) In excess of the statutory authority or jurisdiction of the agency.
(c) Made upon unlawful procedure resulting in material prejudice to a party.
(d) Not supported by competent, material and substantial evidence on the whole record.
The growth of the tenure movement was facilitated by a recognition that the instability of the teaching body was the result of the unlimited power of school boards to hire and fire their employees at will. The large turnover in the profession was due to certain practices which were widespread throughout the country. Noted among them were discharge 1) for political reasons, 2) to allow for placement of friends and relatives of board members or influential citizens, and 3) to effect economies by creating vacancies to be filled by lower salaried, inexperienced employees.
Of these practices the first was exceedingly influential in challenging the attention of the public to the injury of professional morale and efficiency resulting from the misuse of control vested in administrative agencies. The remedy for such abuses was sought in legislation designed to strip the school boards of their autocratic power. Comment, Teachers’ tenure legislation, 37 Mich LR 430, 431-432 (1939).
