Lead Opinion
ORIGINAL PROCEEDING IN PROHIBITION
This is a proceeding in prohibition. Relator, Clint Yarber, asks this Court to determine the proper venue for judicial review of a decision by the Mountain Grove School District denying him a semester of high school credit hours because of excessive absences. Yarber contends that venue is proper in Cole County because the underlying case is a “contested case” as that term is used in the Missouri Administrative Procedure Act (MAPA), set out in chapter 536, RSMo. Respondent, Hon. James F. McHen-ry of the Circuit Court of Cole County, determined that the case is not a “contested case” and ordered that it be transferred to the Circuit Court of Wright County where Yar-ber resides and where the school district is located. The Missouri Court of Appeals, Western District, issued a preliminary writ of prohibition at Yarber’s request after which this Court granted transfer. Rule 83.OS.
I.
Clint Yarber attends Mountain Grove High School, which is operated by the Mountain Grove R-III School District. The school district has an attendance policy for the high school that states in pertinent part as follows:
I. Any student who misses more than six days in any given class in a semester will have the opportunity to make up class time or lose credit for that semester.
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II. For the seventh and subsequent absences, students will attend “Saturday School” to make up time missed and receive credit for the semester.
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V. If a student misses more days than available make-up days would accomodate [sic] (due to major illness, accident, or death in his/her immediate family), that student could file an appeal along with his or her parent/guardian(s) to be released from those days missed.
Yarber was accused of violating the attendance policy during the fall 1993 semester. The school notified him that he would be required to make up three days over Christmas vacation and one day during the month of January. Yarber attended two of the scheduled make-up days, but when his mother allegedly saw students in the make-up classes eating pizza and watching a movie, she took him out of the classes and did not send him back for the remaining days.
On January 12, 1994, Yarber, who had accrued credit for his class work, was notified by the school district that he had lost that credit for the semester because of the attendance policy violation.
Yarber, by and through his mother and next friend, Cheryl Yarber, then filed a three-count petition in the Circuit Court of Cole County, naming the school district, members of the board, and various administrators as defendants. In Count I, Yarber seeks judicial review under § 536.150, RSMo 1986, governing review of noncontested cases. Count II is brought, in the alternative, under §§ 536.100 to 536.140, RSMo 1986, governing review of contested eases. Count III is a claim for damages and injunc-tive relief pursuant to 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983 and 1988 for violation of Yarber’s constitutional right to due process.
In the petition, Yarber alleged that venue was proper in Cole County under § 536.110.3, RSMo 1986, which states: “The venue of [contested] cases shall, at the option of the plaintiff, be in the circuit court of Cole County_” Defendants filed a motion to transfer the case to Wright County on the ground that the case was not a contested case. Judge McHenry sustained the motion to transfer, but several days thereafter he stayed the transfer to allow Yarber to seek a writ of prohibition. In the meantime, however, the case files were transferred to Wright County. When advised of the stay order, Wright County officials sent the files back to Cole County.
The principal issue before us is whether Yarber’s case is a contested ease. If so, then Yarber is correct that venue is proper in Cole County. § 536.110.3, RSMo 1986. Otherwise, the ease can be brought only in Wright County. § 508.010(1), RSMo 1986.
II.
A contested case is defined in § 536.010(2), RSMo 1986, as “a proceeding before an agency in which legal rights, duties or privileges of specific parties are required by law to be determined after a hearing.” Local school boards such as that in Mountain Grove qualify as agencies under this definition because they are created by Missouri statutes from which they derive their rule-making and adjudicatory authority. § 536.010(1), RSMo 1986. See also Hagely v. Board of Education of Webster Groves School District,
A.
We would note, preliminarily, that the failure in this case of the Mountain Grove
A hearing that is not held pursuant to the procedural format necessary under MAPA does not qualify as a contested case, even though the hearing is required by law.
Id. at 668-69. However, as pointed out in Weber v. Firemen’s Retirement System,
B.
The “law” referred to in the contested ease definition encompasses any statute or ordinance, or any provision of the state or federal constitutions that mandates a hearing. Weber,
In order to be entitled to a hearing under due process of law, a plaintiff must have either a life, liberty, or property interest protected by the Constitution. Board of Curators of the University of Missouri v. Horowitz,
Any governmental taking of a property right implicates the right to procedural due process and thus requires notice and an opportunity to be heard. Weber,
In Yarber’s case, the penalty imposed — loss of a semester’s worth of credit hours — is in no way de minimus; it is instead a considerable infringement on Yar-ber’s property interest. For that reason, we hold that procedural due process requires a hearing with more formal and extensive procedures than that provided in Goss. This, in turn, triggers the contested case provisions of MAPA.
The school district, citing State ex rel. Leggett v. Jensen,
C.
The Supreme Court, in Horowitz, qualified its decision in Goss by determining that procedural due process does not require a hearing when the deprivation is for academic reasons rather than disciplinary reasons. Horowitz,
The educational process is not by nature adversary; instead it centers around a continuing relationship between faculty and students, “one in which the teacher must occupy many roles—educator, adviser, friend, and, at times, parent-substitute.” ... In Goss, this Court concluded that the value of some form of hearing in a disciplinary context outweighs any resulting harm to the academic environment. Influencing this conclusion was clearly the belief that disciplinary proceedings, in which the teacher must decide whether to punish a student for disruptive or insubordinate behavior, may automatically bring an adversary flavor to the normal student-teacher relationship. The same conclusion does not follow in the academic context. We decline to further enlarge the judicial presence in the academic community and thereby risk deterioration of many beneficial aspects of the faculty-student relationship.
Id at 90,
Accordingly, this Court must determine what constitutes an academic as opposed to a disciplinary sanction. In Horowitz, the plaintiff was dismissed from medical school because of her inadequate performance, erratic attendance and lack of personal hygiene. The plaintiff argued that the latter two criteria constituted disciplinary, as opposed to academic, reasons for her dismissal. However, the Court determined otherwise, finding that factors other than grades can also be a part of an individual’s academic performance. Thus, a dismissal or other sanction can be based on factors other than grades and yet be considered academic in nature. Id. at n. 6.
As we understand Horowitz, if the sanction relates to the academic evaluation of the student, it is academic rather than disciplinary. Conversely, if the sanction does not bear upon the academic evaluation of the student, it is disciplinary rather than academic. The distinction, we observe, will often be difficult to make as nearly every aspect of a student’s conduct has some potential bearing on academic performance.
The question then is squarely posed: Is the attendance policy of Mountain Grove High School academic or disciplinary in nature? If disciplinary in nature, then a hearing is required, and the underlying suit is a contested case. Therefore venue would be proper in Cole County. On the other hand, if the nature of the attendance policy is academic, then a hearing is not required, and the underlying suit is not a contested case. Therefore venue would be proper only in Wright County.
We hold that the Mountain Grove attendance policy, as written and as applied to Yarber, is disciplinary in nature. The policy states that if the student fails to make up the absences, he or she will “lose credit for that semester.” As conceded in the school district’s pleading here, this provision takes away previously earned credit as punishment for unsatisfactory attendance. While an attendance policy might conceivably be structured to relate to academic performance, the policy in this case does not do so.
Our research has produced only two cases addressing the right to procedural due process in relation to school attendance policy
We are aware that in Knapp v. Junior College District of St. Louis County,
III.
Finally, the school district argues that the petition for writ of prohibition should be dismissed for the reason that Judge McHen-ry had no jurisdiction over the case at the time the petition was filed. According to the school district, once the judge ordered the change of venue and the case was transferred to Wright County, his purported stay order was of no effect, even though the case files were indeed returned to Cole County.
Having decided that Judge McHen-ry had no authority to transfer the case to Wright County in the first place, the order to transfer, itself, was void. Had the case not been returned from Wright County to Cole County, it would have been necessary for relator to join the appropriate Wright County judge as a party-respondent. See State ex rel. Malone v. Mummert,
We make absolute the preliminary writ in prohibition. The trial court shall vacate its order transferring this case to Wright County and shall exercise jurisdiction over the case.
Notes
. On transfer, the Missouri School Boards Association, with leave of court, filed a brief as ami-cus curiae.
. In his petition, Yarber alleges that “he had accrued credit for class work sufficient to entitle him to receive academic credit,” but that he had “lost [that] credit solely by operation of the attendance policy.” On motion for rehearing, the school district, for &e first time, disputes this allegation. However, in its brief to this Court, the school district stated that "Relator had lost credit on all classes due to his violation of the attendance policy Moreover, the school district admitted in its answer to Yarber’s petition for writ of prohibition the allegation that "all of relator’s class credits were taken away.” Indeed, even at oral argument, counsel for the school district stated that there was no indication that Yarber had failed any exams. Therefore, for purposes of the petition for writ of prohibition and the underlying motion for change of venue, the allegation was uncontroverted.
. The applicability of the MAPA to colleges and universities may now be a moot point because the general assembly has enacted § 536.018, RSMo 1994, which states that the term "agency” does not include an institution of higher education that has otherwise established constitutionally adequate safeguards.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I concur completely in the majority opinion. I write separately to note that secondary and elementary schools may want to consider addressing the possibility of exclusion from the full panoply of process dictated by Chapter 536 when a case is deemed to be contested because a hearing is required by law, as did certain institutions of higher education through enactment of section 536.018,
The provisions of the Act itself subsume the question of how much process, as a constitutional requirement, would be due in this case. While Goss v. Lopez,
