ROLAND L. BELSOME, Judge.
This class action arises out of the mass reduction in force of the Orleans Parish School Board following Hurricane Katrina. After a bench trial on the merits, the trial court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs and against the Orleans Parish School Board and the Louisiana Department of Education, jointly and solidarily, for compensatory damages. The judgment: 1) denied all peremptory exceptions filed by the defendants; 2) found that there was a due process violation which resulted in wrongful termination; 3) found that there was intentional and tortious interference of contract by the Louisiana Department of Education; and 4) found that the Orleans Parish School Board and the Louisiana Department of Education were partners, which created joint and solidary liability. Subsequently, the State Defendants and the Orleans Parish School Board sought this Court's appellate review.
Upon careful consideration of all the assignments of error raised by the Appellants
Effective November 6, 2003, an amendment to Article VIII, § 3(A) of the Louisiana Constitution authorized the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education (BESE) to take control of a public elementary or secondary school which has been determined to be failing.
The following year, the Louisiana Department of Education (LDOE) called for an audit of the Orleans Parish School Board (the Board) to account for the expenditure of approximately $70 million dollars in federal Title I funds. The audit revealed deficiencies in the Board's accounting system and it was placed on "high-risk" status by the LDOE.
Shortly after the beginning of the 2005-2006 school year, a mandatory evacuation was issued for the City of New Orleans, in preparation for Hurricane Katrina. On August 29, 2005, Hurricane Katrina struck the City of New Orleans, causing devastation to life and property. Due to the level of destruction in the City, hundreds of thousands of New Orleans' citizens were displaced. The Board immediately set up a call center for employees to provide contact information and have their questions answered.
In September, 2005, the Board established a hotline to collect information regarding which employees were able to return to work and to determine which students would be returning to school. Meanwhile, Acting Superintendent of the Board, Dr. Ora Watson, along with the assistant superintendent, Darryl Kilbert, devised a plan to re-open fifty-two schools by the end of the 2005-2006 school year. At a meeting on September 15, 2005, Dr. Watson presented a formal proposal to the Board for the immediate opening of eight New Orleans public
During that period of time, Supt. Picard sought to have certain charter school policies and statutes waived and/or suspended. That request resulted in Governor Kathleen Blanco's Executive Order No. KBB 2005-58 "Emergency Suspensions to Assist in Meeting Educational Needs of Louisiana Students." On that same day, the Board voted to have thirteen public schools located in Algiers, including the eight that Dr. Watson proposed opening, converted to charter schools under a newly organized corporation, Algiers Charter Schools Association (ACSA). Meanwhile, the Board worked to locate qualified available teachers to reopen fifty-two New Orleans public schools.
On November 30, 2005, the Louisiana Legislature enacted Act 35. Act 35 created La. R.S. 17:10.7, which allowed for the automatic transfer of failing schools to the Recovery School District (RSD), if that school was in a district that was "academically in crisis." La R.S. 17:10.6(B) defined "academically in crisis" as "any local system in which more than thirty schools are academically unacceptable or more than fifty percent of its students attend schools that are academically unacceptable." The overall result of the newly enacted legislation was that 102 of 126 Orleans Parish public schools were transferred to the RSD.
Once Act 35 was passed, the Board determined that a reduction in force (RIF) was warranted. The employees previously placed on "Disaster Leave Without Pay" were sent notification advising them of their termination. During the course of these developments, this lawsuit was filed. The initial petition filed on October 28, 2005, sought a temporary restraining order and preliminary and permanent injunctive relief to prevent the Board from converting New Orleans' public schools to charter schools. A later filed amendment attempted to inhibit the Board from terminating their employees. Though the process was somewhat delayed, the employees were ultimately terminated effective March 24, 2006. At that time, this case evolved into a wrongful termination suit seeking damages. Later, the case was certified as a class action.
This Court reviews questions of law de novo, while questions of fact are considered under a manifestly erroneous/clearly wrong standard.
In its determination that the Appellees were wrongfully terminated, the trial court found that their due process rights were violated. The Board, in its defense, claims that the circumstances following Hurricane Katrina, more specifically the automatic transfer of a majority of the Board's schools to the RSD pursuant to Act 35, warranted a reduction in force. We do not disagree that the Board was legally permitted
The procedures for the implementation of an RTF are codified in La. R.S. 17:81.4. By way of 17:81.4, the Board was required to develop and adopt rules and policies that delegate RTF decisions. Pursuant to that mandate, the Board established Policy 4118.4, which dictates the procedures to be followed when implementing an RTF. Section D of the Board's Policy is captioned "Recall" and reads in pertinent part:
Based on the clear language of the Board's Policy, the Recall List is not optional, regardless of the circumstances surrounding the RIF. As the trial court found, evidence was produced that indicated information on more than 7,000 employees displaced by Hurricane Katrina had been compiled and used to identify employees that would be able to resume their employment as schools reopened. Yet, the names and other information were not used to create the mandated RIF Recall List. By failing to compose a recall list, the Board clearly violated its own Policy.
In order for due process to attach, the Appellees must prove a substantive right exists. Even though it is well established that a teacher's right in employment is a statutorily created vested property right protected by federal and state constitutions, requiring that certain procedural steps are followed before a teacher is terminated,
However, the Illinois Supreme Court recently addressed this specific question in a similar case, Chicago Teachers Union v. Bd. of Educ.
In response to the certified question, the Illinois Supreme Court found that the section of the School Code governing tenure
Using the well-reasoned analysis of the Illinois Supreme Court, we are able to establish that the Appellees had a substantive right to be recalled. State law mandates that the Board create an RIF procedure and in doing so the Board intentionally included mandatory recall language. Once property interests are created, they may not be removed without adequate legal process.
In the instant case, the Appellees were entitled to, but not granted, the procedural protections of the Board's Policy. A requirement of the Board's Policy was that employees affected by an RIF had recall rights for two years.
Once the trial court found that the Board was liable to the Appellees, it further determined that the State was also liable to them under two separate theories of law:
The trial court relied on 9 to 5 Fashions v. Spurney,
In 9 to 5, the Louisiana Supreme Court set forth five elements that must be proven to succeed in a claim for tortious interference of contract:
In this case, the trial court found that Supt. Cecil Picard and Bill Roberti, neither of whom were named defendants, caused the Board's funding and school properties to be transferred to the Recovery School District, which resulted in the Appellees' termination. The trial court further found those actions to be an intentional and tortious interference with the Appellees' vested property rights in their employment. In its analysis, the trial court determined that Supt. Picard owed a fiduciary duty to LDOE and the Appellees and by failing to distribute funds to the Board, he breached that duty resulting in the Appellees' termination.
In order to find that there was a tortious interference of contract, all five elements must be proven. In our discussion of the wrongful termination, we acknowledged that the Appellees had a vested property right in their employment. However, we also recognized that the right is not absolute.
We do however find that even though the State had the authority to take these actions, they were statutorily mandated to give priority consideration to the certified teachers that taught in the failing schools prior to the schools being transferred. La. R.S. 17:1990(D)(1) provides that:
The trial court found that the defendants created a contractual partnership when they signed a "Memorandum of Understanding" (MOU). Although the preamble of the MOU mentions a partnership, it does not demonstrate the elements required by La. C.C. art. 2801.
The use of the word "partnership" in the MOU between the State entities and the Board does not create the relationship necessary to find a legal partnership as defined by LCC art. 2801 where State entities and the Board "combine their efforts [and] ... collaborate at mutual risk for their common profit." The trial court determined that the language in the Statement of Purpose section of the MOU established a relationship analogous to the partnership described in La. C.C. art. 2801.
The MOU established that the Board had the duty to fund the "external vendor," but any further distribution of risk, profits, or losses between the State and the Board is absent from the MOU. The State agreed to select the vendor, provide guidance, assign staff, review vendor invoices, and receive reports from the Board and the external vendor. The State entities are constitutionally bound to supervise and control schools. Therefore, the MOU clarifies the specific roles of State entities, but does not demonstrate intent to exceed this duty and share risks or profits with the OPSB.
The trial court relies on Gabriel v. Hobbs
Additionally, the State entities' right of control was limited to the functions set forth in La. Const. Art. VIII § 3(A). The MOU clarifies the State entities' duties to
The trial court erred when it determined that the MOU created a legal partnership between the State and the Board. Accordingly, we reverse the court's ruling regarding partnership.
The trial court awarded five elements of damage to the Appellees: 1) lost wages; 2) benefits and emoluments; 3) accumulated annual leave; 4) state supplemental pay (where applicable); and 5) reimbursement of difference between health insurance procured during the period of wrongful termination.
The Appellants disagree with the award of any damages to the Appellees. However, if damages are to be awarded, the Appellants assert several errors in the trial court's calculation of damages. First, the trial court's reasons for judgment indicate that it agreed that any lost wage claim should be reduced by the amount of unemployment compensation received by each Appellee, yet it failed to make any such adjustment. That reduction would also have an overall effect on the amount of fringe benefits awarded. Additionally, only employees that participated in the health insurance plan prior to termination should be eligible for the fringe benefit award. The last argument is that there was no evidence to establish that five years of back pay was appropriate compensation for the Appellees' damages. For the following reasons, we find the Appellants' arguments have merit and adjust the damages award accordingly.
In its award of damages, the trial court adopted the calculations of Appellees' expert, Forensic Economist Dr. Shael Wolfson. Dr. Wolfson's methodology took into account earnings information, tax returns, W2s, and pay scale information for the terminated employees. Based on that information, Dr. Wolfson calculated five years of back pay and fringe benefits. He testified to first establishing a pay rate for the time period in question, then applied incremental increase of 5.14 percent annually to the base rate to project the back pay. Next, he determined that the fringe benefits were 25 percent of the established back pay amount. He further testified that adjustments were made to account for income earned during that time from other employment. We do not find error with the trial court's acceptance of Dr. Wolfson's general methodology and use of a 5.14 percent annual increase to calculate back pay and the 25 percent value for fringe benefits.
However, as discussed in Dr. Wolfson's cross-examination, and the direct examination of Appellants' expert, Forensic Economist Dr. Kenneth Boudreaux, damages for fringe benefits should be reduced for employees who did not participate in the benefit during their employment.
Lastly, the Appellants contend that the trial court erred in awarding five years of back pay and fringe benefits, and we must agree. The record in this case gives no reasonable factual basis to support a five year award. In accordance with this Court's findings that the Board's implementation of the RIF deprived the Appellees of their constitutionally protected property right without due process of law, the Board is liable to the Appellees for two years
In the trial court, the State Appellants and the Board filed exceptions of res judicata.
The Appellants seek this Court's review of whether an arbitration settlement and subsequent dismissal of several similar pending lawsuits has a preclusive effect on this litigation.
The record before this Court indicates that there were a total of six arbitrations. Three of the arbitrations,
Later, a settlement was reached by the Union and the Board for $7,000,000
Ordinarily, judicial proceedings afford preclusive effect to arbitrations that have already adjudicated the same claims or defenses.
When addressing employment lawsuits, courts have been critical of union proceedings waiving or barring an employee's right to seek judicial review of claims arising out of state and/or federal statutes.
Likewise, this Court has acknowledged that "[t]he overruling of an exception of res judicata will lessen judicial efficiency and increase the need for litigation"; however, "[t]hose harms are sometimes preferable to the loss of plaintiff's substantive rights without the merits being decided."
A. A judgment does not bar another action by the plaintiff:
Thus, La. R.S. 13:4232(A)(1) "provides discretion to decline preclusion" and "lends authority to the notion of not using the res judicata `scythe' to deny a litigant his rights."
This Court found that "Dr. Fine's alleged damages for personal injuries were not litigated or settled and La. R.S. 13:4231(3) does not support res judicata."
In reaching this conclusion, the Fine Court also acknowledged that the Third Circuit had applied La. R.S. 13:4232, noting that "[a]n insurance company's failure to provide the policy at issue until a few days before trial so that plaintiff was unaware of a medical payments provision and could not seek to enforce the provision or
In Igbokwe, Linus Igbokwe and Joshua Moser were involved in an automobile accident. Linus and Terralene Igbokwe filed a petition, asserting that Moser was at fault and that the accident occurred while Moser was in the course and scope of his employment with Southbrook Christian Church. The petition also named Southbrook and its insurer, Erie, as defendants. Southbrook and Erie were properly served, but Moser, a resident of Ohio, was not served, and the trial court dismissed the plaintiffs' claims against Moser without prejudice. The plaintiffs did not appeal that judgment.
Thereafter, the plaintiffs filed a second petition for damages, naming Joshua Moser as the sole defendant. The second petition was docketed with the same district court case number as the original petition, however, and was date stamped on March 28, 2008, the date the original petition was filed. Moser was properly served with the second petition. Moser filed various exceptions, including prescription and insufficiency of service of process, and the trial court granted the exceptions, dismissing all claims against Moser with prejudice. That judgment was affirmed on appeal.
Southbrook and Erie subsequently filed a motion for summary judgment and/or exception of res judicata, contending that because Moser had been dismissed with prejudice, there was no basis to hold Southbrook liable under the doctrine of respondeat superior, nor any basis for an action against Erie, as the insurer. The trial court granted the motion for summary judgment and/or exception of res judicata and dismissed the plaintiffs' claims against Southbrook and Erie with prejudice.
This Court reversed the trial court's judgment, holding that res judicata did not apply, specifically relying upon its reasoning in Fine:
Thus, this Court "conclude[d] that a rigid application of res judicata to the facts of [the Igbokwe ] case [wa]s not warranted." Id.
This Court also applied La. R.S. 13:4232 to bar res judicata in Simmons v. Baumer Foods, Inc.
Here, even though the Union settlement may support preclusion under normal circumstances, the matter sub judice represents a truly exceptional situation as to warrant this Court's discretion in barring the application of res judicata pursuant to La. R.S.13:4232. Just as in the cases discussed, we are presented with plaintiffs asserting claims that have not previously been litigated or adjudicated.
Through the enactment of Act 35 the legislature gave the State the authority to implement the unprecedented takeover of the majority of Orleans Parish schools. To further undermine the Orleans Parish schools and employees, Supt. Picard successfully persuaded Governor Blanco to
We find this case worthy of exercising this Court's authority under the statute to apply equitable discretion in balancing the principle of res judicata with the interests of justice. It would be inequitable, unjust, and illogical for this Court to find that the minimal consideration received by the employees through the Union settlement would bar or waive their right to have their claims litigated and adjudicated through judicial proceedings. As previously stated, the Board was fully aware that this case was pending prior to the Union settlement and did not seek dismissal at that time. For these reasons, we find no error in the trial court's denial of the exceptions of res judicata.
The State Appellants and the Board contend that the Appellees' claims for wrongful termination are prescribed by law. The trial court rejected this argument denying the previously filed exceptions of prescription. For the reasons that follow, we find that the trial court was correct in its denial of the exceptions.
The Appellees filed the following petitions:
On appeal, the State Appellants and the Board seek this Court's review of their exceptions of prescription. The State Defendants and the Board contend that the Board's letter, sent February 22, 2006, notified the plaintiffs of the upcoming termination effective March 24, 2006 and thus all claims for wrongful termination prescribed on February 22, 2007.
An action for wrongful discharge or termination is a delictual action, which is prescribed one year from the day injury or damage is sustained.
Generally, the burden of proof rests with the party pleading prescription.
Article 1153 provides that when the action or defense asserted in the amended petition or answer arises out of the conduct, transaction, or occurrence set forth or attempted to be set forth in the original pleading, the amendment relates back to the date of filing the original pleading.
The standard asserted in Article 1153 is broad; if the claims in the amendment arise "out of the conduct, transaction, or occurrence" originally asserted then the doctrine applies. In interpreting Article 1153, Louisiana courts have taken a case by case approach focusing on fair notice.
In the instant case, the Appellees gave a broad accounting of the factual scenario that gave rise to the causes of action in their original petition. Although the original petition is one for injunctive and declaratory relief to prevent the OPSB from establishing charter schools, the petition consistently referenced the plaintiffs' right to maintain their employment along with the effects of mass termination.
Additionally, the State maintains that even if the Fourth Amending Petition is found to be timely, the Fifth Amending Petition filed in 2010 is undoubtedly prescribed and cannot relate back. More specifically, the State argues that prior to the filing of the Fifth Amending Petition, the cause of action against the State was intentional interference with contract, not wrongful termination and that the two causes are wholly unrelated, and thus allowing the amendment to relate back under Article 1153 would be highly prejudicial. They further argue that the allegation of solidary liability between the State and the Board cannot relate back because it asserts a new theory and factual scenario. We disagree.
The State was first named as a defendant in the Second Amending Petition, but was subsequently dismissed by the plaintiffs who reserved the right to bring the State back in at a later date should the litigation reveal facts that would show the State to be liable. The State was renamed as a defendant in the Third Amending Petition filed on July 26, 2006. The State was timely named as a defendant to the suit and had fair notice of all the facts, circumstances, and allegations set forth by the Appellees. Through the Third Amending Petition, the State was aware that judicial relief was being sought for the firing of the plaintiffs, and thus the claim for wrongful termination asserted in the Fifth Amending Petition and the allegations directly arise out of the same transaction, occurrence and conduct that support a claim of intentional interference with the teachers' employment contracts and the effects of Act 35.
Louisiana jurisprudence provides that where an amended petition that simply adds a new claim based on the same factual situation as the claim set forth in the original petition, and both claims are made against the same defendant, the filing of the amendment relates back to the date of the filing of the original petition.
In Rivard v. Petroleum Transport Co., Inc.,
Similarly, in this case, allegations that the State and the Board are solidarily liable for the wrongful termination of the school board employees simply changes their capacity in a suit of which they were already a part. Allowing the Fifth Amending Petition does not violate the State's right to fair notice and Appellants have failed to prove that the State was prejudiced by the amendment. Therefore, we find the State's exception of prescription was correctly denied.
On appeal, this Court:
The matter is remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Where an award is vacated and the time within which the agreement required the award to be made has not expired, the court may, in its discretion, direct a rehearing by the arbitrators.
Simmons, 2009-1739, pp. 8-9, 55 So.3d at 793-94.