35 A.2d 900 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1943
Argued December 8, 1943. The plaintiff had been employed as a teacher by the school district of the Borough of Shenandoah, Schuylkill County, since 1926. Her contract was renewed on June 3, 1937, after the effective date of the Teachers' Tenure Act of April 6, 1937, P.L. 213. She was "suspended indefinitely" on January 9, 1941, because of her marriage to Harry Goff some four months previously. She filed a petition for an alternative writ of *240 mandamus seeking reinstatement and damages. Issue was joined and a trial had, which resulted in the court's directing verdict for plaintiff for damages and ordering her reinstated, holding that defendants presented no valid defense to the writ. This appeal followed.
The board proposed to establish by the testimony of past and present secretaries of the school board that there was a rule, regulation, custom, or usage to suspend female teachers upon their becoming married; that this fact was known to all female teachers including the plaintiff; and that several teachers, who married while in service, in recognition of that rule resigned. Concededly, no rule or regulation was ever formally passed or reduced to writing. There was no attempt to show that any teacher previously had been suspended or dismissed by the board because of her marriage. The court refused to admit that evidence, holding that if such a rule were properly established it would not be a cause for suspension under the Teachers' Tenure Act.
It is conceded on both sides that marriage of a female teacher is not one of the grounds for suspension mentioned in section 2(b) of the Teachers' Tenure Act of 1937, supra, as amended by the Act of June 20, 1939, P.L. 482, 24 P. S. § 1126, which enumerates the following causes: (1) substantial decrease in pupil enrollment; (2) curtailment or alteration of the educational program; and (3) consolidation of schools. Those are the legal standards to be applied in determining whether a teacher should be suspended. Appellants argue, however, that section 404 of the School Code of May 18, 1911, P.L. 309, as amended,
In Jones v. Kulpmont Borough School District, *241
In Sinton's Case,
In Ganaposki's Case,
No one can successfully question the right of school *242
boards to adopt and enforce such reasonable rules and regulations governing the management of their affairs and the conduct of teachers and other employes as they may deem proper: AmbridgeBorough School District v. Snyder,
The causes for dismissal are likewise specifically enumerated under section 2(a) of the 1937 act, supra, and certain procedural formalities must be followed including preferring of charges and hearings: Bragg v. Swarthmore School District et at.,
Assuming for the moment that a valid rule was established and defendant's offer of proof was improperly rejected, we do not think the violation of a rule forbidding married female teachers to continue is enough ground for termination of the contract under the Teachers' Tenure Act of 1937, as amended by the Act of 1939, in this state. That is a matter of legislative, rather than judicial, action. A violation of the rule attempted to be invoked by the appellants would *243 not come within any commonly accepted meaning of the term "persistent negligence." It can hardly be conceived that the legislature left such important and much discussed matters as suspension or dismissal of married female teachers to the discretion of each school board in the state. To give such a broad interpretation to section 2 of the Tenure Act, as amended, would in our judgment amount to judicial legislation.
Why should a female teacher be suspended or dismissed for getting married? It is not immoral or improper to enter into that relationship, which is encouraged and protected by public policy. Nor does marriage bear any direct relation to a teacher's fitness or capacity to do her work capably. The inefficiency, negligence, immorality, etc. of a teacher is entirely another matter. We are aware that in other jurisdictions local rules of the school district dismissing a female teacher because of marriage under the particular Teachers' Tenure Act of the State involved have been sustained. In a leading case, McQuaid v. State ex relSigler, Ind.,
In Houghton v. School Committee of Somerville, Mass.,
Previous decisions in this state have indicated that marriage of a female teacher is not a ground for termination *244
of her contract under the Tenure Act. In Colyer v. Granville Twp.School District et al.,
Recently we held in Brown's Case,
Judgment of the court below is affirmed. *245