Ala. State Tenure Com'n v. Oneonta City, Bd. of Educ.
Ala. State Tenure Com'n v. Oneonta City, Bd. of Educ.
Opinion
This is a teacher tenure case. The issue is whether the Circuit Court of Blount County properly issued a writ of mandamus upon the petition of the Oneonta Board of Education directing the State Tenure Commission to dismiss the appeal of a teacher. We find the issuance of the writ erroneous and dismiss the writ.
Jasper F. Basye, intervening teacher, a teacher with continuing service status under the Alabama Teacher Law, §§
(b) The teacher shall have the right to appeal to
the state tenure commission, . . . such appeal shall be taken by filing within 15 days after the decision of the employing board a written notice of appeal with the superintendent or chairman *Page 198 of said board. . . . The commission shall set a date for the hearing. . . . The date of such hearing shall be within 40 days after the decision of the board, . . . .
The record indicates that the teacher properly and timely gave notice of an appeal to the Tenure Commission. All other procedural requirements of the appeal were timely performed. However, the parties were notified on October 25, the forty-first day after the decision of the board, that the Commission had been unable to set a date for the hearing because of the absence of its legal advisor and the inability to assemble a quorum. On October 30, the Commission set a hearing for November 8.
On October 31, the Oneonta Board of Education filed its petition for mandamus requesting the Blount County Circuit Court to order the Commission to cancel its hearing and dismiss the appeal because the Commission had failed to hear the appeal within forty days from the date of the decision of the Board. After hearing, the writ was granted.
It is first contended that the Circuit Court of Blount County had no supervisory power over the State Tenure Commission, a commission with state-wide jurisdiction with its principal place of business in Montgomery County. We agree with this contention.
The Board contends that the Circuit Court of Blount County has jurisdiction because of the provisions of §
It is because the Oneonta Board of Education had an adequate remedy by petition for writ of mandamus after the scheduled hearing of the Commission that we also agree with appellants' contention that the writ was issued with insufficient grounds. The common law writ of mandamus is properly available to enforce or coerce performance of a legal duty where performance has been delayed or refused. However, such extraordinary process is not to be issued unless there is no other adequate legal remedy. It is not to be permitted as a substitute for an appeal. Martin v. Loeb Co.,
The issue presented by appellants of whether the court below was correct in its holding that the Commission lost jurisdiction of the teacher's appeal by failing to hold a hearing within forty days is pretermitted at this time. It would be more properly presented upon appeal after being properly raised and ruled upon by the Tenure Commission. We hold that the writ was erroneously issued because the court was without either supervisory power or legal grounds. *Page 199
The writ of mandamus is set aside and the petition denied.
REVERSED AND RENDERED.
BRADLEY and HOLMES, JJ., concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Alabama State Tenure Commission and Jasper F. Basye v. Oneonta City Board of Education.
- Cited By
- 8 cases
- Status
- Published