A15A0401, A15A0402. DAY v. FLOYD COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION; and vice versa.
A15A0401, A15A0402
Court of Appeals of Georgia
JULY 14, 2015
775 SE2d 622
ELLINGTON, Presiding Judge.
Swift, Currie, McGhee & Hiers, Terry O. Brantley, Alicia A. Timm, for appellants.
Goldstein & Hayes, James A. Goldstein, Jared M. Lina; Christopher J. Adams, for appellee.
ELLINGTON, Presiding Judge.
Gilda Day‘s teaching contract with the Floyd County Board of Education, a/k/a the Floyd County School District (“the Local Board“), was not renewed following a system-wide reduction in force, a decision ultimately upheld by the Superior Court of Floyd County.1 In Case No. A15A0401, Day
The facts relevant to the appeal and the cross-appeal are the same. In 2007, Day was employed as a counselor at Coosa High School, which was part of the Floyd County school district. In 2010, the Floyd County school district became a charter system under the Charter Schools Act of 1998,
In 2013, the Local Board implemented a system-wide reduction in force (“RIF“) of about 120 employees in response to decreased state funding and a projected deficit of $10 million for the 2013-2014 school year. The RIF plan was created by the school superintendent and implemented by a team comprised of the superintendent, the human resources director, and a data analyst. In deciding which employees to let go, the team first selected those with poor performance evaluations and those with “repeated performance concerns.” Day was not in this initial group. Thereafter, the team grouped the remaining employees into categories based upon position (e.g., teachers, guidance counselors, etc.) and status (e.g., tenured, nontenured, and classified employees). The team then determined how many positions in each category it needed to operate the school system and then offered contracts for the 2013-2014 school year to employees with the most seniority in each position. The team determined that it could operate the system with 13 of its 24 guidance counselors. Because Day ranked seventeenth in terms of seniority, she was not offered one of the thirteen positions.
By letter dated March 22, 2013, the school superintendent notified Day that her employment contract was not being renewed and, citing
Day appealed to the State Board, which reversed the Local Board. The State Board ruled that the Local Board was not exempt from the FDA. It concluded that the Local Board had adopted the procedures of the FDA and waived any exemption from the FDA by giving Day a hearing pursuant to the FDA. Next, the State Board found that the necessity of the RIF was supported by the evidence and that the Local Board identified appropriate factors (e.g., performance and length of service) for implementing the RIF. However, the State Board concluded that the Local Board had violated its charter by failing to involve the LSGTs in the system-wide RIF decision-making process. Because of this failure, the State Board characterized the Local Board‘s “actions as being arbitrary and capricious because the decision on who to RIF may have ended in a different result if the proper procedures had been followed.”
The Local Board appealed to the superior court, and the superior court reversed the
In Case No. A15A0401, Day argues that (1) the Local Board is bound by the FDA, even though it is a charter system; and (2) the State Board had the authority to address the Local Board‘s alleged violation of its charter contract (i.e., its failure to involve the LSGTs in the RIF process). The Local Board argues, inter alia, that the superior court erred in finding that the State Board had subject matter jurisdiction to entertain Day‘s appeal. This argument also forms the first claim of error in the Local Board‘s cross-appeal in Case No. A15A0402. For the reasons that follow, we hold that, under the circumstances presented here, the Floyd County charter system was exempt from the FDA and its administrative appeals process pursuant to the general waiver of
Case No. A15A0401
1. This Court has held that “an appellate court or tribunal only has the power to review a judgment or decision of a lower court or tribunal if it has jurisdiction over the appeal.” (Footnote omitted.) Clayton County Bd. of Ed. v. Wilmer, 325 Ga. App. 637, 643 (1) (753 SE2d 459) (2014). See also Fullwood v. Sivley, 271 Ga. 248, 250-252 (517 SE2d 511) (1999) (Unless an appellate court has jurisdiction over a case, “it is without power or authority to render a judgment upon review.“) (citation and punctuation omitted). As a threshold matter, we must address whether the State Board, as an appellate tribunal, had jurisdiction to entertain an administrative appeal from the Local Board‘s decision not to renew Day‘s employment contract. The State Board‘s authority to hear an appeal from the Local Board is found in
Day proceeded in this case under the assumption that the FDA provided her with administrative remedies following the nonrenewal of her employment contract, even though her contract of employment was with a charter system. Charter schools and charter systems are governed by the Charter Schools Act of 1998. See
Except as provided in this article or in a charter, a charter school, or for charter systems, each school within the system, shall not be subject to the provisions of this title or any state or local rule, regulation, policy, or procedure relating to schools within an applicable school system
regardless of whether such rule, regulation, policy, or procedure is established by the local board, the state board, or the Department of Education; provided, however, that the state board may establish rules, regulations, policies, or procedures consistent with this article relating to charter schools. A waiver granted pursuant to this Code section for a charter system shall apply to each system charter school within the system....
(Emphasis supplied.) Because the FDA,
system‘s charter does not incorporate the FDA nor does it expressly allow for the promulgation of local rules or policies embracing the FDA. And none of the exceptions to
Day argues, however, that the FDA is implicitly included within an exception to the broad waiver of
In determining whether to approve a charter petition or renew an existing charter, the local board and state board shall ensure that a charter school, or for charter systems, each school within the system, shall be: ... [s]ubject to all federal, state, and local rules, regulations, court orders, and statutes relating to civil rights; insurance; the protection of the physical health and safety of school students, employees, and visitors; conflicting interest transactions; and the prevention of unlawful conduct[.]
Day contends that, as a tenured teacher, she is entitled to due process before she is deprived of her tenure, a vested property right, and that such due process is a “civil right.” She argues, therefore, that the FDA is among the “statutes relating to civil rights” referenced in
Because the Floyd County charter system is not subject to the FDA, Day was not entitled to any of the procedural rights and administrative remedies afforded to tenured, noncharter public school employees pursuant to the FDA. See Patrick v. Huff, 296 Ga. App. 343, 345-347 (1) (674 SE2d 398) (2009) (A public school employee is not entitled to the procedural rights and administrative remedies afforded by the FDA unless the employee is a covered employee within the ambit of the Act.). Because Day, as an employee of a charter system, was not entitled to the hearing and process that the Local Board gratuitously provided to her in connection with its decision not to renew her employment contract,7 she cannot be aggrieved by a decision of the Local Board affirming what it already had a right to do. Under such circumstances, there is no right to an appeal to the State Board. See
issue after a hearing shall have the right to appeal therefrom to the State Board of Education.“). See also Owen v. Long County Bd. of Ed., 245 Ga. 647, 649 (2) (266 SE2d 461) (1980) (“[O]nly the decisions of the county board made on disputed issues are appealable. If there has been no issue heard and decided by the county board, there can be no parties and no testimony which the law authorizing an appeal contemplates.“) (citation omitted; decided under former Ga. Code Ann. § 32-910).
Consequently, we reverse the order of the superior court and remand the case to the superior court with instruction that it vacate the order of the State Board and reinstate the decision of the Local Board.
2. Given our holding in Division 1 that the State Board had no authority to hear Day‘s appeal from the Local Board‘s decision not to renew her employment contract, her remaining claim of error concerning whether the State Board correctly determined that the Local Board failed to involve the LSGTs in the RIF process (an alleged violation of its charter) is moot.
Case No. A15A0402
3. For the reasons set forth in Division 1 of this opinion, the Local Board‘s cross-appeal is moot.
Judgment reversed and case remanded with direction. McFadden, J., concurs. Dillard, J., concurs fully and specially.
DILLARD, Judge, concurring fully and specially.
Moreover, footnote 6 of the majority opinion relies on the legislative history of Title 20 of the Official Code of Georgia, such as the floor debates and proposed legislation that never passed. Suffice it to say, I do not consider extratextual sources of this nature in interpreting statutes. As Justice Antonin Scalia has aptly noted, “legislative history [is] the equivalent of entering a crowded cocktail party and looking over the heads of the guests for one‘s friends.”10 Thus, while I completely understand the majority‘s desire to reference legislative history in the case sub judice for contextual reasons, I wish to make it abundantly clear that I categorically reject relying on legislative history in interpreting the statutes passed by our General Assembly. Indeed, like Justice Scalia (and many other textualists), I am of the view that the “greatest defect of legislative history is its illegitimacy.”11 As Georgians (and Americans), we are “governed by laws, not by the intentions of legislators.”12 And as judges, we should only be concerned with what laws actually say,13 “not by what the people who drafted the laws intended.”14
That having been said, I commend the majority for its thoughtful and well-reasoned opinion, and I fully concur in same.
DECIDED JULY 14, 2015
Williams Oinonen, Mario B. Williams, Julie J. Oinonen, for appellant.
Brinson, Askew, Berry, Seigler, Richardson & Davis, C. King Askew, I. Stewart Duggan, Samuel L. Lucas, Lee B. Carter, for appellee.
John F. Beasley, Jr.; Harben, Hartley & Hawkins, Phillip L. Hartley, amici curiae.
