STATE OF NEBRASKA, APPELLANT, V. ERIC C. THACKER, APPELLEE. STATE OF NEBRASKA, APPELLANT, V. GAIL L. MORGAN-THACKER, APPELLEE.
Nos. S-12-895, S-12-896
Nebraska Supreme Court
May 31, 2013
286 Neb. 16
VI. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court‘s dismissal of the Estate‘s complaint. The Estate must seek compensation from the employer for Teague‘s death exclusively from the Workers’ Compensation Court.
AFFIRMED.
CASSEL, J., not participating.
Filed May 31, 2013. Nos. S-12-895, S-12-896.
- Statutes. Statutory interpretation presents a question of law.
- Appeal and Error. An appellate court reviews questions of law independently of the lower court.
- Criminal Law: Statutes: Appeal and Error. It is a fundamental principle of statutory construction that courts strictly construe penal statutes, and it is not for the courts to supply missing words or sentences to make clear that which is indefinite, or to supply that which is not there.
- Criminal Law: Statutes: Legislature: Intent. A court gives penal statutes a sensible construction, considering the Legislature‘s objective and the evils and mischiefs it sought to remedy.
Criminal Law: Statutes. A court will not apply a penal statute to situations or parties not fairly or clearly within its provisions. - ____: ____. Ambiguities in a penal statute are resolved in the defendant‘s favor.
- Schools and School Districts: Parent and Child.
Neb. Rev. Stat. § 79-201(2) (Cum. Supp. 2010) does not require parents to enroll their child in a legally recognized school until they obtain the State‘s recognition of an exempt homeschool. - Words and Phrases. The word “or,” when used properly, is disjunctive.
- Schools and School Districts: Time. Under
Neb. Rev. Stat. § 79-201(2) (Cum. Supp. 2010), an exempt school‘s ability to complete the minimum instruction hours is the only timing requirement imposed upon an exempt school‘s calendar year.
Appeals from the District Court for Dawson County, JAMES E. DOYLE IV, Judge, on appeal thereto from the County Court for Dawson County, CARLTON E. CLARK, Judge. Exceptions overruled.
Michael R. Johnson, Deputy Dawson County Attorney, for appellant.
Mark R. McKeone, of Mark R. McKeone, P.C., L.L.O., and Michael P. Farris and Peter K. Kamakawiwoole, Jr., of Home School Legal Defense Association, for appellees.
HEAVICAN, C.J., WRIGHT, CONNOLLY, STEPHAN, MILLER-LERMAN, and CASSEL, JJ.
CONNOLLY, J.
SUMMARY
Eric C. Thacker and Gail L. Morgan-Thacker (collectively the Thackers) sought to homeschool their children but did not obtain state recognition of their homeschool until October 2011. They did not enroll their five children in any legally recognized school before then. In a joint trial, the county court convicted Eric and Gail individually of five misdemeanor counts—one for each child—for violating Nebraska‘s compulsory education statute.1 The county court convicted the Thackers of violating the statute from August 17, 2011 (when the public school calendar year began), to October 4 (when
The State contends that
We conclude that
BACKGROUND
In March 2011, the Thackers moved to Farnam, Nebraska, from New Jersey. Farnam is in the Eustis-Farnam Public Schools district. In 2011, the public school calendar year started on August 17. The principal of the public school learned about the Thackers in March. After a couple of weeks, when the family did not enroll their children in school, he contacted the county attorney.
In April 2011, a sheriff‘s officer contacted Eric about the children‘s not being in school. Eric told the officer that he and Gail were homeschooling their children but that they had finished the curriculum for their 2010-11 school year before they moved to Farnam. The officer informed Eric that they must file paperwork with the State and contact the school district or that they could be violating the law. Eric then contacted the principal, who told Eric that they must file paperwork with the Department of Education (the Department) over the summer if they intended to homeschool their children. The Thackers did not enroll their children in public school. Around the middle of September, the principal
Gail testified that after the family moved to Farnam, Eric received a job offer in Kentucky and they believed they would be moving there at the end of September 2011. Instead, Eric received a promotion at his job in North Platte, Nebraska, and the Thackers planned on homeschooling. Based on their religious objections, they applied to the Department for an exemption from state approval and accreditation requirements for schools. Gail said that they sent in the paperwork to the Department about the end of September but that the envelope was returned because she had not addressed it properly; she resent the envelope. Their signatures on the forms were notarized on September 27, 2011.
The Commissioner of Education acknowledged receipt of the Thackers’ documents on October 6, 2011. On the same day, the commissioner sent a report to all public school superintendents listing the parents from whom the commissioner had received the required forms for homeschooling by October 4. The report stated that the commissioner recognized the Thackers’ homeschool as of October 6. Gail testified that they planned to start homeschooling on November 14. On October 11, the State charged the Thackers with violating
At trial, the Thackers argued that they did not violate
The county court found that the Thackers could complete the required hours by the end of the school year. But it determined that they were guilty of violating
The district court reversed the decisions and remanded the causes with instructions for the county court to vacate the Thackers’ convictions and sentences. The court concluded that for the first year of operation, the statutes and regulations required only that the Thackers begin the operation of their homeschool so that they could complete the required minimum hours of instruction by June 30, 2012. The Department‘s regulations set June 30 as the end of the school year for the Thackers’ homeschool. The court concluded that the Thackers were not required to enroll their children in the public schools pending the start of their exempt homeschool. It further concluded that the Thackers’ compliance with
ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
The State assigns, restated, that the district court erred as follows:
(1) determining that
(2) determining that
(3) determining that the evidence admitted at trial was insufficient to support the convictions.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[1,2] Statutory interpretation presents a question of law.2 We review questions of law independently of the lower court.3
ANALYSIS
The State contends that
The Thackers contend that
We agree with the Thackers. We view the State‘s argument through the prism of statutory construction principles that apply to penal statutes.
[3-6] It is a fundamental principle of statutory construction that we strictly construe penal statutes, and it is not for the courts to supply missing words or sentences to make clear that which is indefinite, or to supply that which is not there.4 We give penal statutes a sensible construction, considering the Legislature‘s objective and the evils and mischiefs it sought to remedy.5 We will not apply a penal statute to situations or parties not fairly or clearly within its provisions.6 So, ambiguities in a penal statute are resolved in the defendant‘s favor.7
[E]very person residing in a school district within the State of Nebraska who has legal or actual charge or control of any child who is of mandatory attendance age or is enrolled in a public school shall cause such child to enroll in, if such child is not enrolled, and attend regularly a public, private, denominational, or parochial day school which meets the requirements for legal operation prescribed in Chapter 79, or a school which elects pursuant to section 79-1601 not to meet accreditation or approval requirements, each day that such school is open and in session, except when excused by school authorities or when illness or severe weather conditions make attendance impossible or impracticable.
(Emphasis supplied.)
Section
This filing requirement applies to any private, denominational, or parochial school that “elects not to meet state accreditation or approval requirements.”9 Private, unaccredited
The State contends that this filing requirement for exempt schools and other notification statutes support its position that parents must enroll their children in public school until they obtain State recognition of an exempt school (one that is not subject to accreditation or approval requirements). It argues that school districts have the duty to enforce the compulsory education statutes. And it argues that the notice requirements in Nebraska‘s statutes allow the superintendents of public school districts to track whether a child in their district is or is not attending a legally recognized school.
We agree that school districts have a duty to enforce school attendance requirements and that notice requirements help superintendents track children‘s school attendance in their districts.12 For example, each school must provide the public school superintendent with the children‘s names who are enrolled in their school and the names of any children who enter or withdraw from the school during the school session. This information is required so the superintendent can enforce
[7] But under the law as written, we do not agree that a child must be attending a recognized exempt school each day of the public school calendar year. Nor do we read
[8] The word “or,” when used properly, is disjunctive.15 So the requirement in
And
Furthermore, the Department‘s regulations do not require parents to ensure that their child attends a legally recognized school each day of the public school year.
It is true that
Any school which elects not to meet state accreditation or approval requirements and does not meet the requirements of subsections (2) through (6) of this section shall not be deemed a school for purposes of section 79-201, and the parents or legal guardians of any students attending such school shall be subject to prosecution pursuant to such section or any statutes relating to habitual truancy.
But neither Nebraska‘s statutes nor the Department‘s regulations set out a deadline for an exempt school to begin operations. The regulations require only that a notarized statement from an exempt school‘s parent representative be filed “[t]hirty days prior to the date on which the exempt school is to begin operation, and annually thereafter by July 15 . . . .”17 So although the regulations set a filing deadline for an exempt school‘s second year of operation, they conspicuously omit a filing deadline for the first year.
The only timing requirement for an exempt school‘s calendar year is imposed by the Department‘s regulations for minimal instruction hours:
Prior to the date that the exempt school begins operation, and annually thereafter by July 15, the parent representative will submit to the Commissioner or designee the following:
004.01 A calendar for the school year indicating a minimum instruction of 1,080 hours in secondary schools and 1,032 hours in elementary schools. During the first year of operation, the days of instruction may be prorated based upon the remaining balance of the school year.18
We recognize that at some point in the school year, an exempt homeschool would begin operations too late. That is, it could not reasonably prorate the required instructional hours in the remaining days if the students had not previously completed some instruction hours in a legally recognized school. But we need not decide when in the school year that point occurs. Here, the county court specifically found that the Thackers could complete the required instructional hours in the school year. Because the State did not show that the Thackers could not meet the only timing requirement imposed on their homeschool‘s operation, the district court correctly reversed the county court‘s decisions and remanded the causes with instructions for the county court to vacate the convictions and sentences.
EXCEPTIONS OVERRULED.
MCCORMACK, J., participating on briefs.
