Johnny KEY, in his Official Capacity as Commissioner of The Arkansas Department of Education; Samuel Ledbetter, in his Official Capacity as Chairman, Arkansas State Board of Education; Toyce Newton, in her Official Capacity as Vice-Chairman, Arkansas State Board of Education; Joe Black, in his Official Capacity as Member, Arkansas State Board of Education; Alice Williams Mahony, in her Official Capacity as Member, Arkansas State Board of Education; Mireya Reith, in her Official Capacity as Member Arkansas State Board of Education; Vicki Saviers, in her Official Capacity as Member, Arkansas State Board of Education; Jay Barth, in his Official Capacity as Member Arkansas State Board of Education; Diane Zook, in her Official Capacity as Member, Arkansas State Board of Education; and Kim Davis, in his Official Capacity as Member, Arkansas State Board of Education, Appellants, v. Diane CURRY, C.E. McAdoo, Jim Ross, and Doris L. Pendleton, Appellees.
No. CV-15-224
Supreme Court of Arkansas.
October 29, 2015
2015 Ark. 392
Willard Proctor, Jr.; Marion A. Humphrey, and Rickey Hicks, Little Rock, for appellees.
ROBIN F. WYNNE, Associate Justice
Appellants have filed an interlocutory appeal pursuant to
In May 2014, the Arkansas Department of Education (ADE) notified the Little Rock School District (District) that six schools within the District met the criteria for being classified in academic distress. The list included one elementary school, two middle schools, and three high schools. In July 2014, the Arkansas State Board of Education (State Board) classified the schools as being in academic distress. On January 28, 2015, the State Board voted at a public meeting to retain the District superintendent on an interim basis, immediately remove all members of the District‘s board of directors, and direct the commissioner of education (Commissioner) to assume the authority of the Board of Directors for the day-to-day governance of the District.
On February 24, 2015, appellees—three former members of the District board of directors and a parent whose children attend school in the District—filed a first amended and substituted, verified complaint for declaratory judgment, writ of mandamus, writ of prohibition, and injunctive relief. In the complaint, appellees alleged that the actions of the State Board were unconstitutional and in excess of that body‘s statutory authority. They also alleged that the actions were ultra vires, arbitrary, capricious, and wantonly injurious.
Appellants filed a motion to dismiss on March 16, 2015, on the ground that the action was barred by sovereign immunity. The trial court entered an order on March 17, 2015, in which it denied the motion to dismiss. This interlocutory appeal followed.
While an appeal may typically not be taken from an order denying a motion to dismiss, such an appeal may be taken from a denial under
Appellants assert on appeal, as they did below, that the complaint is barred by sovereign immunity. The defense of sovereign immunity arises from
This court has recognized exceptions to the defense of sovereign immunity.
In their complaint, appellees requested (1) that the trial court enter an order declaring the acts of the State Board to be arbitrary, capricious, in bad faith, wanton, ultra vires, and unconstitutional; (2) issue a writ of mandamus and writ of prohibition ordering appellants to return control of the District to the District‘s board of directors; (3) grant a temporary restraining order or preliminary injunction enjoining appellants from operating the District, in the event immediate control was not returned to the board of directors; (4) order appellants to provide a clear statement of the reasons for the takeover and the steps necessary to return control to the board of directors; and (5) award them attorney‘s fees and costs. The parties do not dispute that a judgment in favor of appellees on their complaint would operate to control the actions of the State Board, triggering the application of the defense of sovereign immunity.
What the parties do dispute is whether the facts pled in the complaint demonstrate an exception to the application of sovereign immunity applies. In the complaint, appellees allege that the actions of the State Board were ultra vires, in excess of its statutory authority, and in violation of the Arkansas Constitution. Specifically, appellees allege that the actions of the State Board are in excess of the authority granted to it under the Arkansas Comprehensive Testing, Assessment, and Accountability Program Act (ACTAAPA), codified at
The supervision of public schools, and the execution of the laws regulating the same, shall be vested in and confided to, such officers as may be provided for by the General Assembly.
Appellees assert in their responsive brief that they pled noncompliance with
Appellees also argue in their brief that
Appellees alleged in their complaint that, to the extent the State Board was operating within its statutory authority, the statute granting that authority,
Appellees note in their complaint that school boards are statutory entities and that such entities may be dissolved by the general assembly. Robinson v. White, 26 Ark. 139 (1870). The fact that school boards of directors are mentioned in the state constitution is not sufficient to convert them to constitutional entities, in light of the fact that
Appellees further alleged in the complaint that the actions of the State Board were arbitrary, capricious, in bad faith, and will cause wanton injury. They allege instances in which the State Board did not take over districts with schools in academic distress as well as instances they assert demonstrate that the state‘s assumption of control over a district was not beneficial to that district. As recited by the trial court in its order, the complaint also alleged the following with regard to the State Board‘s decision being arbitrary, capricious, in bad faith, and wantonly injurious: (1) the standards established under Arkansas law do not allow the State Board to take control of a school district that is not in academic distress when that action is not necessary to remedy schools in academic distress; (2) there are no established criteria for taking over a district in which the great majority of the schools are not in academic distress, and it has never been done before; (3) ADE staff has said that the District is implementing the right kinds of innovations in the six schools with a sense of urgency; (4) the fact that the decision was arbitrary, capricious, and wanton is evidenced by the decision to retain the superintendent; and (5) it does not appear that the ADE has developed any plan that would significantly change the improvement efforts currently underway in the six schools.
Most of the allegations recited above are not factual; they are instead largely legal conclusions and speculation.
Reversed and dismissed.
Hart, J., concurs.
I agree that this case must be reversed, but I write separately to state my rationale for rejecting the appellees’ argument that appellants’ action in taking control of the Little Rock School District was arbitrary and capricious. In my view, the general assembly has, through
ROBIN F. WYNNE
ASSOCIATE JUSTICE
