*275
The propriety of a summary judgment in an action for a declaratory judgment is governed by the same rules applicable to other actions.
Blades v. City of Raleigh,
Resolution of this question in the present case depends upon the legal effect of plaintiffs election to accept disability retirement and upon the existence of any facts which might alter that legal effect. There is no dispute that prior to 1 January 1977 plaintiff was a “career teacher” within the meaning of G.S. 115-142, known as the Tenure Act. As such, she possessed all of the rights and privileges accorded on account of such status. Plaintiff contends that the action of the School Board in refusing to reinstate her as a career teacher in August 1977 and in treating her as a new applicant denied her several of those rights. She relies upon the following provisions of G.S. 115-142:
G.S. 115-142(c)(5):
Leaves of Absence. — A career teacher who has been granted a leave of absence by a board shall maintain his career status if he returns to his teaching position at the end of the authorized leave.
G.S. 115-142(d)(l):
A career teacher shall not be subjected to the requirement of annual appointment nor shall he or she be dismissed, demoted, or employed on a part-time basis without his or her consent except [for reasons] provided in subsection (e).
The following undisputed facts in the present case are determinative of the applicability of G.S. 115-142(c)(5) and G.S. 115-142(d)(l): Plaintiff submitted her application to the Teachers’ and State Employees’ Retirement System on 29 November 1976 seeking disability retirement effective 1 January 1977. On 7 December 1976 she was notified by an adminis *276 trative officer of the System that her application was being reviewed and would be submitted to the System’s Medical Review Board for consideration. On 15 February 1977 plaintiff was further notified that her application for retirement had been approved with payment of retirement allowance effective retroactive to 1 January 1977. During the period plaintiffs application for disability retirement was pending, she had submitted a written request to John S. Jones, Superintendent of the Montgomery County Schools, requesting a medical leave of absence “as of December 31st to the end of this school year (1976-’77),” which request was granted at a regular session of the Montgomery County Board of Education on 6 December 1976.
Upon these facts it is clear that defendant did not breach any statutory duty imposed by G.S. 115-142(c)(5) or G.S. 115-142(d)(l) with respect to plaintiffs status as a “career teacher.” Plaintiff voluntarily elected to apply for disability retirement status. Article I of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes governs the administration of the Teachers’ and State Employees’ Retirement System. G.S. 135-5(c) provides that disability retirement benefits are available to any employee eligible by virtue of years of service upon a certification of the System’s medical board “that such [person] is mentally or physically incapacitated for the further performance of duty, that such incapacity was incurred at the time of active employment and has been continuous thereafter, that such incapacity is likely to be permanent, and that such member should be retired.” (emphasis added). Thus, implicit in the granting of plaintiffs application for disability retirement benefits in the present case was a finding that her disability was “likely to be permanent.” This finding renders her status as a disabled retiree wholly inconsistent with her former status as a “career teacher.” In the absence of any contrary legislative indication in Chapter 115, we hold that the effect of the Retirement System’s determination of plaintiffs eligibility to receive disability retirement benefits was to operate as an acceptance of her resignation by implication and to terminate her status as “career teacher” by operation of law. Because plaintiff’s loss of her status as a “career teacher” occurred by operation of law upon her voluntary election to accept retirement benefits, the protections of G.S. 115- *277 142(d)(1) are inapplicable here, since that section by its express terms applies only to actions by school administrators constituting dismissal, demotion, or employment on a part-time basis “without the [career teacher’s] consent.”
Neither is plaintiff aided by G.S. 115-142(c)(5) which preserves the career status of a career teacher who returns to her teaching position at the end of an authorized leave of absence. It is true that plaintiff applied for and was granted a medical leave of absence by defendant for the second semester of the 1976 school year. That leave of absence, however, was granted prior to consideration and approval of her application for disability retirement. Even if it be conceded that plaintiffs request for, and the Board’s grant of, that leave of absence constituted a modification of plaintiffs contract to teach for the full 1976-77 school year, we conclude that any such contractual modification and any statutory right accruing to plaintiff under G.S. 115-142(c)(5) because of it, were superseded by the grant of disability retirement status on 15 February 1977.
Having determined that plaintiff’s status as a “career teacher” terminated by operation of law, we next consider whether, upon this record, defendant may be estopped from denying plaintiff that status. Defendant contends that plaintiff is not entitled to raise the question of estoppel on appeal because she did not plead it. We disagree. Although G.S. 1A-1, Rule 8(c) requires that a party affirmatively plead estoppel, that rule applies only to responsive pleadings. Plaintiff clearly was not required to allege estoppel in her complaint when the answer raising the defense that her acceptance of retirement benefits terminated her career status had not yet even been filed, and under G.S. 1A-1, Rule 7, she was precluded from alleging it in a responsive plea to that answer.
The elements of equitable estoppel were defined by our Supreme Court in
Hawkins v. Finance Corp.
Applying these principles to the present case, we conclude that there was a genuine issue of material fact as to whether defendant may be estopped from refusing to recognize plaintiff as a “career teacher.” Both the superintendent of schools and the finance officer admitted in their affidavits that they did not know at the time plaintiff talked with them concerning the possibility of disability retirement that she would, in effect, be resigning her position as a career teacher. In a verified affidavit submitted in opposition to defendant’s motion for summary judgment, plaintiff stated that she met with the finance officer of the Montgomery County Schools, James Woodruff, to whom the superintendent of schools had referred her in late November 1976 to discuss her options during the time she would be receiving medical help. At that meeting they discussed several options and ultimately, Woodruff recommended disability retirement: “He assured me that the retirement aspect was just a formality because the State regulations provide that the benefits stop automatically when one returns to work. He certainly did not indicate that the application, or its acceptance, would have any bearing whatsoever on my return .... Obviously, I would not have pursued disability retirement if I had any suspicion, or if I had been advised, that such would be the case.” The finance officer was an agent of defendant, and he is chargeable *279 with knowledge of the implications of a teacher’s election to apply for disability retirement benefits. Plaintiff’s sworn statement is sufficient to raise the legitimate inference that the finance officer’s representation was false, that it was reasonably calculated to convey the impression that plaintiff would not lose any status previously attained, and that such representation was calculated to and did induce plaintiff to act to her prejudice in electing disability retirement. Although defendant contends that plaintiff did have the means of knowledge of the truth as to the effect of her election, we do not agree that plaintiff was required to make extensive inquiry for herself after being advised that “the retirement aspect was just a formality.” There is also evidence in the record that, at the time plaintiff sought to claim the benefits of career status, she continued to receive disability retirement benefits. This fact alone, however, does not defeat her claim of estoppel; rather, it is merely a factor to be considered in determining whether she is entitled to the benefits of equitable principles.
It is true that the Montgomery County Board of Education is an administrative agency of the State, G.S. 115-35, and as such is not subject to an estoppel to the same extent as a private individual or a private corporation.
See, Henderson v. Gill, Comr. of Revenue,
Because of the existence of disputed issues of material fact, the judgment appealed from is reversed, and the case is remanded.
Reversed and Remanded.
