Marilyn A. STRONG, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
BOARD OF EDUCATION OF the UNIONDALE UNION FREE SCHOOL
DISTRICT, Alan G. Hernandez, Individually and as
Superintendent of the Uniondale Union
Free School District,
Defendants-Appellees.
No. 1089, Docket 89-9038.
United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit.
Argued April 5, 1990.
Decided May 2, 1990.
Mary E. Moriarty, New York City (James R. Sandner, New York City, of counsel), for plaintiff-appellant.
Terence M. O'Neil, Mineola, N.Y. (Mark N. Reinharz, Rains & Pogrebin, Mineola, N.Y., of counsel), for defendants-appellees.
Before KAUFMAN, FEINBERG and WALKER, Circuit Judges.
IRVING R. KAUFMAN, Circuit Judge:
The primary issue presented is whether a local school board denied a tenured public school teacher due process by refusing to allow her to return from an extended medical absence before she provided medical records and submitted to a physical examination by the school board doctor. In affirming the grant of summary judgment below, we hold that procedural due process is satisfied when a teacher in such circumstances is provided notice and an opportunity to respond to the adverse action of the school board, and when the state also affords a mechanism for obtaining judicial review of the board's decision on a subsequent petition for reinstatement. In addition, we find no constitutional violation of appellant's interest in privacy.
BACKGROUND
Appellant Marilyn Strong has been employed since 1980 by the Uniondale Union Free School District, in Nassau County, New York (School District). She has taught sixth grade at Northern Parkway Elementary School since 1981, and was awarded tenure in 1984.
From May 17, 1988 through the end of the academic year in late June, Strong was absent from the classroom because of illness. On June 8, after the School District inquired into the condition of its employee's health, it received a terse note from Strong's personal physician describing her as suffering from "severe nosebleed, vertigo, [and] arthritis."In addition, Strong signed an insurance form1 and forwarded it to the School District in July, indicating she was currently "disabled" and that the date of her return to work was "unknown." Significantly, the form contained an "Authorization to Obtain Information" clause directly above Strong's signature which explicitly authorized any doctor who had treated her to release "any and all information" concerning her medical history to the insurance company.
During the ensuing summer months, the School District sought in vain to communicate with Strong. Registered letters to her home address went unclaimed; repeated efforts to reach her by telephone proved futile. Moreover, Strong's mother purportedly refused to provide the School District with her daughter's current address. Strong explains by alleging that she was under doctor's orders not to contact her employers because it made her ill to do so.
Unsuccessful in its efforts to contact Strong directly, the School District sent a letter dated August 17, 1988 to Strong's counsel, who had been retained pursuant to an unrelated discrimination claim against it. The letter directed Strong to produce an evaluation by her treating physician of her medical condition indicating whether she would be capable of resuming her teaching post. The communication specifically required Strong to provide "the names of all doctors she has seen since the commencement of her illness, along with releases permitting such doctors to provide the District with her medical records."
In response, Strong's lawyers stated that she would be returning to work at the start of the 1988-89 school year, but omitted any discussion of their client's health or medical records. Accordingly, on August 29 the School District asserted that Strong needed to provide "her medical records and history" to the School District's physician and be examined by him before returning to the classroom. Strong did not comply.
When Strong attempted to resume teaching on the first day of the new school year, September 6, 1988, School District Superintendent Alan Hernandez informed her (both orally and in subsequent letters summarizing their conversation) that she could not return until she submitted to a medical examination and produced her records. Strong indicated her willingness to be examined by the School District's doctor, but steadfastly refused to provide her medical records, except for a doctor's note stating that she has been treated "for chest pains, arthritis, palpitations, [and] headaches" and asserting her ability to return to teaching. The School District's doctor, however, maintained that he could not certify a teacher as fit to return from an extended illness without medical reports from that teacher's treating physician and that the conclusory assertions of Strong's personal physician fell far short of the information necessary to render an informed medical opinion.
On November 22, 1988, the Board of Education passed a resolution, pursuant to Section 913 of the Education Law,2 instructing Strong to appear at the office of the School District's doctor for a physical examination. The resolution directed Strong to bring any and all medical records relating to her absence from school commencing May 16, 1988, to her examination so that the School District's physician could properly evaluate the status of her health. To date, Strong has neither submitted to an examination nor proffered her medical records. Since she has exhausted her accrued sick leave, Strong no longer receives a salary.
Strong initiated this suit in December 1988, alleging that the School District's actions violated her constitutional rights to privacy and due process and challenging the constitutionality of Education Law section 913. In March 1989 the School District moved to dismiss the complaint, in its entirety, for failure to state a claim. This motion was converted by the court below into a motion for summary judgment, Fed.R.Civ.P. 56, which the court granted.
DISCUSSION
I. Due Process
Strong urges that before the School District acted to bar her from the classroom she should have been notified of the "charges" against her, given an explanation of the School District's evidence, and provided an opportunity to present her side of the story.
Strong's procedural due process claim triggers analysis under a familiar framework. The threshold issue is whether Strong asserts a property interest protected by the Constitution. See Board of Regents v. Roth,
Strong's position as a tenured teacher is indisputably a property interest protected by the fourteenth amendment. Gargiul v. Tompkins,
Under New York law a tenured teacher may be removed only pursuant to certain substantive and procedural safeguards, including notice and a full-blown adversarial hearing. See N.Y.Educ.Law Sec. 3020-a. On the other hand, the New York Court of Appeals has held that a prior hearing is not necessary before placing a tenured teacher on involuntary sick leave, i.e., inactive status without pay due to illness. Brown v. Bd. of Educ.,
In the instant appeal, Strong has neither been "removed" from her teaching position, nor has she been involuntarily placed on sick leave. Under New York law, a teacher who is not permitted to return from an extended voluntary sick leave because of a failure to supply medical records is not considered suspended or terminated. Kurzius v. Board of Educ.,
We recognize that, ordinarily, procedural due process requires notice and an opportunity to be heard. But an important government interest, accompanied by a substantial assurance that the deprivation is not baseless or unwarranted may justify postponing the opportunity to be heard until after the initial deprivation. See, e.g., Federal Deposit Ins. Corp. v. Mallen,
The private interest affected--the right of a tenured teacher to continue practicing her profession and receiving her salary--is substantial indeed. On the other hand, the School District had a strong interest in safeguarding the health and welfare of the students in the teacher's class and the other children attending the school; also, it had ample reason to question Strong's physical fitness to teach and to require more than conclusory assertions that she had regained her health.
Moreover, Strong received adequate notice in the August letters to her counsel that she was required to provide her medical records to the School District's doctor prior to returning to work. Contrary to Strong's assertions, the letters could not have provided details as to the "charges" against her, since there are no pending charges. The letters were not disciplinary; they merely sought information from which the School District's doctor could make a reasoned professional judgment about her fitness to teach.
Although Strong urges that there should have been some type of hearing before she was barred from the classroom, it is difficult to envision what would have transpired at such a hearing. She was adequately notified that the School District needed her medical records to assess her fitness to teach. The parties were well aware of each other's assertions and any further hearing would have amounted to an empty formality. See Giglio v. Dunn,
Moreover, as we have noted, adequate "post-deprivation" procedures are available to protect Strong's property interest in her tenured teaching position. All the process that was due in this case has been provided. See Loudermill,
II. Right To Privacy
Strong also contends that even if the procedures for barring her from automatically returning to work were fair, compelling her to disclose her medical records amounts to an unconstitutional invasion of privacy.
Legitimate requests for medical information by those responsible for the health of the community do not rise to an impermissible invasion of privacy. See Whalen v. Roe,
III. Other Claims
Strong also urges that section 913 of the Education Law, which empowers the School District to require its teachers to undergo a medical examination, is unconstitutional because it does not provide for notification of the reason for the requested examination or that a copy of the medical report on the examination be given to the teacher. We see no merit to this contention. Even if we assume the accuracy of these assertions, we fail to see any harm suffered by Strong since she was informed of the reasons for the requested examination and, in view of her refusal to submit, there was no medical report to be given to her.3
Since we have dismissed plaintiff's federal claims we will exercise our discretion to dismiss her pendent state claims. United Mine Workers v. Gibbs,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.4
Notes
The form was a request by Strong to her insurance company to have certain premiums waived because of her disability
In pertinent part, section 913 provides that the board "shall be empowered to require any person employed by the board of education ... to submit to a medical examination by a physician ... in order to determine the physical or mental capacity of such person to perform his duties.... The findings ... may be referred to and considered for the evaluation of service of the person examined or for disability retirement."
28 U.S.C. Sec. 2403(b) provides that when the constitutionality of a state statute "affecting the public interest is drawn in question" in a suit in a federal court between private parties, the court is required to "certify such fact to the attorney general of the State," and to permit the State to intervene and argue on the constitutional question. Section 913 of the Education Law certainly affects the "public interest," yet this procedure was not followed in the district court. Certification is "a duty of the court that should not be ignored, even if the claim is obviously frivolous or may be disposed of on other grounds." Merrill v. Town of Addison,
The School Board has requested that sanctions be imposed on Strong for pursuing this appeal. That request is denied
