Opinion
Docket No. 89611.
Decided December 15, 1986.
Foster, Swift, Collins Coey, P.C. (by David J. Houston), for petitioner.
Thrun, Maatsch Nordberg, P.C. (by Donald J. Bonato), for respondent.
Petitioner, a tenured teacher employed by the respondent board of education, appeals as of right from an order of the Ingham Circuit Court affirming a decision of the State Tenure Commission, which denied petitioner's claim. We affirm.
The facts are largely undisputed. In August, 1973, petitioner was hired by the respondent board of education as a half-time kindergarten teacher and she achieved tenure in 1975. Thereafter, petitioner submitted written requests to respondent to be assigned to full-time status on February 27, 1978, May 29, 1979, and December 3, 1979. Petitioner, however, remained a half-time teacher until the 1980-81 school year, when she was placed in a full-time position approximately sixteen days into the school year.
During the 1978-79 school year, respondent hired a probationary teacher to fill a second half-time kindergarten position. In September, 1979, the probationary teacher was selected over petitioner for a full-time kindergarten position that was created for the 1979-80 school year. It is uncontested that petitioner was certified and qualified for this position, and it was the assignment of the probationary teacher to this position which generated this suit.
In her petition filed with the commission, petitioner maintained that the respondent's failure to assign her to the full-time position violated her rights under the teacher tenure act, MCL 38.71 et seq.; MSA 15.1971 et seq. In its decision and order dated February 8, 1985, the commission dismissed the petition.
Petitioner filed a petition for review with the circuit court on June 10, 1985. Following a hearing conducted September 27, 1985, the court affirmed the commission in an opinion and order dated December 10, 1985.
Petitioner essentially raises three arguments on appeal. First, petitioner argues that the decision by the commission violates the general favored status which the tenure act accords to tenured teachers. Second, petitioner maintains that by assigning the probationary teacher to the full-time position, respondent violated Art IV, § 5 of the act, MCL 38.105; MSA 15.2005, by failing to "recall" petitioner to fill the "vacancy." Finally, petitioner maintains that the respondent's failure to place her in the full-time position violated her rights under Art III, § 1 of the act, MCL 38.91; MSA 15.1991. These arguments will be addressed seriatim.
I
Plaintiff's first argument is that the holding of the commission, that her rights under the tenure act were not violated by respondent, is contrary to the underlying policy of the act to "accord to tenured teachers rights equal to or greater than those enjoyed by probationary teachers."
In Rockwell v. Crestwood School Dist Bd of Ed, 393 Mich. 616, 632; 227 N.W.2d 736 (1975), app dis 427 U.S. 901; 96 S Ct 3184; 49 L Ed 2d 1195 (1976), our Supreme Court, quoting from its previous decision in Rehberg v. Bd of Ed of Melvindale, Ecorse School Dist No 11, 330 Mich. 541, 545; 48 N.W.2d 142 (1951), summarized the following goals sought to be achieved by enactment of the teacher tenure act:
to "maintain an adequate and competent teaching staff, free from political and personal arbitrary interference"; to promote "good order and the welfare of the State and of the school system by preventing removal of capable and experienced teachers at the personal whims of changing office holders"; and "to protect and improve State education by retaining in their positions teachers who are qualified and capable and who have demonstrated their fitness and to prevent the dismissal of such teachers without just cause."
See also Tomiak v. Hamtramck School Dist, 138 Mich. App. 644; 360 N.W.2d 257 (1984), lv gtd 422 Mich. 974 (1985).
This statement clearly indicates that in enacting this piece of legislation, the Legislature was primarily concerned with protecting qualified teachers against arbitrary dismissals. Moreover, the cases cited by petitioner in support of her position largely involve layoff and recall. However, as respondent notes, petitioner erroneously relies on such cases in maintaining that the act should be interpreted in a manner which grants favored status to tenured teachers over probationary teachers in all situations. Although the Legislature has provided certain benefits only to tenured teachers in order to promote the purposes of the act, the Legislature did not mandate that full-time positions be offered to part-time tenured teachers before they may be offered to nontenured teachers. This Court cannot add requirements which the Legislature has chosen to exclude from the act. A change of this character must come from the Legislature itself. Steeby v. Highland Park School Dist, 56 Mich. App. 395, 398; 224 N.W.2d 97 (1974), lv den 393 Mich. 802 (1975). Petitioner's argument is consequently without merit.
II
Petitioner also argues that respondent failed to "recall" her to the "vacancy" (the full-time kindergarten position), for which she was qualified and certified, in violation of Art IV, § 5 of the act, MCL 38.105; MSA 15.2005. This provision reads as follows:
Any teacher on permanent tenure whose services are terminated because of a necessary reduction in personnel shall be appointed to the first vacancy in the school district for which he is certified and qualified.
The commission found that this statute was inapplicable to the instant case because petitioner's services had never been terminated due to a necessary reduction in personnel. We agree. Express, unambiguous language of the act may not be disregarded by the interpreter in deference to what he invokes is the spirit of the act. Street v. Ferndale Bd of Ed, 361 Mich. 82, 86-87; 104 N.W.2d 748 (1960); LeGalley v. Bronson Community Schools, 127 Mich. App. 482, 486; 339 N.W.2d 223 (1983). As aptly noted by respondent, the plain language of this statute merely requires the recall of laid-off tenured teachers to vacancies within the school district. To find that petitioner had been laid off within the meaning of this provision because she initially accepted a part-time position although preferring a full-time position (as petitioner argued to the commission) would strain the express language of the statute.
Resolution of this issue on the basis that petitioner's services had never been terminated renders it unnecessary to consider petitioner's argument that the full-time kindergarten position was a "vacancy" contemplated by the quoted statute.
III
Finally, petitioner argues that she was entitled to be assigned to the full-time position by virtue of the mandates of Art III, § 1 of the act, MCL 38.91; MSA 15.1991, which provides in part:
After satisfactory completion of the probationary period, a teacher shall be employed continuously by the controlling board under which the probationary period has been completed, and shall not be dismissed or demoted except as specified in this act. MCL 38.74; MSA 15.1974 defines "demote" to mean "to reduce compensation or to transfer to a position carrying a lower salary." Petitioner argued unsucessfully below that the board's failure to assign her to the full-time position was an improper demotion, but apparently has abandoned that claim on appeal.
Still, relying on the STC opinion in Baretta v. Plymouth-Canton Bd of Ed, STC No. 82-62, petitioner argues that the commission erroneously rejected her claim that Art III, § 1, MCL 38.91; MSA 15.1991, required respondent to promote her to the full-time assignment ahead of the probationary teacher.
In Baretta, the petitioner was a full-time tenured teacher who voluntarily requested and was granted a transfer to a part-time teaching assignment. Subsequently, she filed a petition with the State Tenure Commission after a request to be returned to full-time employment was denied. The commission found that the petitioner's right to be reassigned to a full-time position was protected by Art III, § 1, supra:
We find that this provision guarantees to a full-time teacher who satisfactorily completes the required probationary period, the right to continuous full-time employment in that school district. . . . It is clear that the mere interruption or termination of full-time employment does not by itself result in the loss of a full-time tenured teacher's right to a full-time position. We conclude, therefore, that a full-time tenured teacher, who requests and is granted a part-time position, does not relinquish his/her right to full-time employment merely by virtue of requesting and accepting the part-time employment. [STC Opinion, pp 6-7.]
Here, the commission declined to find that Baretta warranted reassignment of petitioner to full-time status. It reasoned that just as the full-time teacher in Baretta was entitled to continuous full-time employment, the petitioner herein, a part-time teacher, was entitled to continuous part-time employment.
Although we decline at this time to respond to respondent's assertion that Baretta was erroneously decided, we nonetheless affirm the commission's conclusion below. We cannot interpret Art III, § 1, MCL 38.91; MSA 15.1991, as requiring anything more than that a tenured teacher be provided with continuous employment and not be dismissed or demoted except as otherwise specified in the act.
Petitioner was continuously employed by the respondent in a half-time position from the end of her probationary term until the time she finally obtained full-time status during the 1980-81 school year. In addition, she was never transferred to a position carrying a lower salary, thereby precluding a finding that she was demoted in violation of the act. Thus, petitioner's rights under Art III, § 1, MCL 38.91; MSA 15.1991, were not violated. Bearing in mind once again that this Court can not add what the Legislature has chosen to leave out from the act, this provision should not be construed as requiring that a part-time tenured teacher be transferred to a full-time position in preference to a non-tenured teacher.
Affirmed.