65 A.2d 420 | Pa. | 1949
This is an appeal from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County reversing an order of the Superintendent of Public Instruction which directed reinstatement of Harry E. Houtz, appellant, to the position of principal of schools of the School District of the Borough of Coraopolis.
The School District of the Borough of Coraopolis is a third-class district having no district superintendent. At a meeting of the board of school directors, on May 29, 1946, the resignation of A. G. Clark, then supervising principal of the district, was accepted, and on the same date appellant, a professional employe of the district since September, 1929, was assigned to duty as "principal of schools", effective July 1, 1946. A written contract was thereupon entered into between appellant and the board in the form designated by the Teachers' Tenure Act, Act of 1937, P. L. 213, as amended, 24 PS 1121 et *539 seq., employing appellant to "teach in the said school district" for a term of twelve months, effective July 1, 1946, at an annual salary of $4500, "under authority of the said board and its successors and subject to the supervision and authority of the properly authorized superintendent of schools or supervising principal."
Following a recommendation of the county superintendent of schools, the school board, on June 11, 1947, duly adopted a resolution stating its intention to fill the vacancy in the position of supervising principal, and at the same meeting adopted a second resolution abolishing the office of principal of schools and suspending appellant from employment "as of July 1, 1947, and until such time as the office of Principal of Schools may be recreated." A report of this action, submitted to the Superintendent of Public Instruction, was returned, marked "Approved", with a covering letter stating: "I am returning to you herewith, properly endorsed, approval of the plan of reorganization of the educational program in the Coraopolis Borough School District, Allegheny County." At that time appellant had not qualified for a certificate of eligibility and was therefore ineligible for appointment to the position of supervising principal.1
On July 9, 1947, the school board elected Dr. Guy N. Harringer to fill the vacancy in the position of supervising principal, and a contract was duly executed employing him "to perform the duties of supervising principal, in the said school district," at an annual salary *540
of $5,500. On the same date, following official notice of his suspension, appellant instituted a mandamus action in the court below to compel his reinstatement. After hearing, an order was entered directing the board to reinstate appellant "as a professional employe and to pay him his monthly salary at the rate of $4500.00 per year." On appeal by the school board to this Court, the order was affirmed: Houtz v. Coraopolis SchoolDistrict,
On November 19, 1947, nine days after the filing of the opinion of this Court, the school district adopted a resolution reinstating appellant as a professional employe, without any reduction in salary, and assigning him to duties as principal of the three elementary schools of the district. Contending that this assignment constituted a demotion in type of position, appellant demanded a hearing in accordance with section 3 of the Teachers' Tenure Act, supra.2 A hearing was duly held and the board made a finding that appellant's assignment to duty as principal of the three elementary schools did not constitute a demotion. Thereupon he appealed to the Superintendent of Public Instruction who reversed the board and directed that appellant be reinstated "to the position of 'Principal of Schools', with the same powers, privileges and responsibilities as he held in that office when he was wrongfully removed therefrom on July 1, 1947." On appeal by the board to the common pleas, an order was entered reversing and setting aside the order of the Superintendent of Public Instruction, and this appeal was taken. *541
Appellant contends that as a result of our prior decision he "enjoyed a status as a Professional Employe of the School District unaffected by the School Board's action of June 11, 1947." Such is not the effect of that decision. All that was decided was that performance by appellant of the administrative and supervisory duties assigned to him by the board, to the exclusion of classroom teaching, did not constitute an abandonment of his tenure contract "to teach", and that abolition by the board of the position of principal of schools did not result in termination of such contract under the circumstances. In this connection, appellant concedes that the order of the Superintendent of Public Instruction, insofar as it ordered appellant's reinstatement to the position of principal of schools, "goes beyond the statutory authority thus vested in the Superintendent and was both unnecessary and improper." It is urged, however, that while the board is vested with full power and authority to administer the school affairs of the district and, in so doing, to assign professional employes to any duties for which they may be qualified (Ganaposki's Case,
We are of one mind that no demotion in type of position is involved within the meaning and intendment of the statute. Appellant's contract with the board, on which his rights are dependent (Pittsburgh School District Appeal,
In Com. ex rel. v. Sunbury School District,
Order affirmed. Costs to be paid by appellant.