Morgan v. HUNTSVILLE CITY BD. OF EDUC.
Morgan v. HUNTSVILLE CITY BD. OF EDUC.
Opinion
This is a breach of an employment contract controversy between three teachers (the plaintiffs) and their employer, the Huntsville City Board of Education (Board).
On September 26, 1985, the plaintiffs sued the Board, its superintendent, and its individual members. They averred that each of them had been employed by the Board for a sufficient number of years for each plaintiff to gain and possess continuing service status, that, prior to August 16, 1983, each plaintiff was employed under a continuing contract which required him/her to work for 10 calendar months or 196 work days, and that the Board unilaterally modified the plaintiffs' contracts of employment on August 16, 1983, by extending the contracts to 200 days, without additional compensation to the plaintiffs and without the agreement of the plaintiffs to such modification. They sought an injunction and the payment to them for each day which each of them has been required to work beyond 196 days per year. The trial court granted the defendants' motion to dismiss and thereby dismissed the plaintiffs' civil action upon the ground that the contracts forming the basis of the plaintiffs' cause of action are subject to the Teacher Tenure Act (the Act), §§
The plaintiffs contend that §
The terms and provisions of the Act are read into each and every employment contract between teachers and school boards.Haas v. Madison County Board of Education,
In Schneider v. Mobile County Board of School Commissioners,
The latest pertinent case holds as follows:
"A case in which a tenured teacher's contract has been cancelled will naturally carry with it a contention that tenure status has been lost by virtue of the cancellation, but in such a case, an administrative remedy certainly exists for the teacher. See, Code 1975, §§
16-24-8 , -9, -10. If it is uncontradicted that tenure status was originally gained, and the teacher's contract was thereafter cancelled, one disputing that cancellation must follow the administrative remedies set forth by the statutory scheme of the tenure act. Until this procedure is exhausted, the circuit court is without jurisdiction to issue an order on the merits of the case.
". . .
Alabama Association of School Boards v. Walker,"In the present case, the plaintiff had worked as an instructor in the Lawrence County school system for 12 consecutive years. There was no question that she was a tenured teacher, pursuant to Code 1975, §
16-24-2 , at the time this dispute arose, and her tenure status at the time of this dispute was never an issue. Therefore, an administrative remedy existed for the plaintiff to have the dispute settled."
The holding in the Walker case adequately disposes of the present appeal. Here, the plaintiffs are tenured teachers. They should have proceeded under, and their remedy was in accordance with, the provisions and procedures as established by the Act.Walker,
The foregoing opinion was prepared by Retired Circuit Judge EDWARD N. SCRUGGS while serving on active duty status as a judge of this court under the provisions of §
AFFIRMED.
All the Judges concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Bruce Morgan, Richard Chambers, and Patricia Hall v. Huntsville City Board of Education.
- Cited By
- 4 cases
- Status
- Published