[Cite as Cox v. Dayton Public Schools Bd. of Edn., 2018-Ohio-2656.]
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
MONTGOMERY COUNTY
GEORGIA B. COX :
:
Plaintiff-Appellee : Appellate Case No. 27613
:
v. : Trial Court No. 14-CV-1422
:
DAYTON PUBLIC SCHOOLS : (Civil Appeal from
BOARD OF EDUCATION : Common Pleas Court)
:
Defendant-Appellant :
...........
OPINION
Rendered on the 6th day of July, 2018.
...........
GEORGIA B. COX, 4191 Mapleleaf Drive, Dayton, Ohio 45416
Plaintiff-Appellee, Pro se
BEVERLY MEYER, Atty. Reg. No. 0063807, 312 Patterson Boulevard, Suite 200, Dayton,
Ohio 45402
and
JASON STUCKEY, Atty. Reg. No. 0091220, 312 Patterson Boulevard, Suite 200, Dayton,
Ohio 45402
Attorneys for Defendant-Appellant
.............
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DONOVAN, J.
{¶ 1} This matter is before the Court on the Notice of Appeal of the Dayton Public
Schools Board of Education (“Board”). The Board appeals from the trial court’s May 15,
2017 “Decision, Entry and Order Vacating Portion of Arbitrator’s Award.” We hereby
reverse and vacate the trial court’s decision.
{¶ 2} In Cox v. Dayton Public Schools Bd. of Edn., 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 26382,
2015-Ohio-620, ¶ 4-10, this Court set forth the course of proceedings herein as follows:
This is the second appeal initiated by Cox regarding the
consequences of an event that occurred on October 10, 2012 in connection
with her employment as a teacher at Meadowdale High School. The first
appeal, State v. Cox, 2014–Ohio–2201, 12 N.E.3d 446 (2d Dist.), affirmed
a felony conviction for assault of a functionally impaired student. We
concluded that “the evidence in the record permitted the jury reasonably to
find that Cox hit the victim's upper right chest, in the area of his shoulder,
and the jury could reasonably infer that she intended to cause the victim
physical harm in the form of pain.” Cox at ¶ 2.
All of the actions taken by the parties in response to the event that
occurred on October 10, 2012, are governed by a collective bargaining
agreement, referred to as a “Master Contract” between the teacher's union
and the school board. Cox was immediately placed on paid administrative
leave pending an investigation of the incident. On October 16, 2012,
criminal charges were initiated against Cox in Vandalia Municipal Court. On
October 16, 2012 the Director of Human Resources prepared a “Notice of
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Charges and Specifications,” and set it for hearing on October 30, 2012.
Based on advice of counsel, Cox attempted to have the hearing continued
until after the completion of the criminal case.
On November 6, 2012, Cox was notified that her paid leave status
would change to unpaid leave as of November 12, 2012. The union
representing Cox, the Dayton Education Association (DEA), filed a
grievance over the untimeliness of the Notice of Charges, alleging that the
collective bargaining agreement required the notice to be issued within 24
hours of a suspension. In response, the October 16th Notice of Charges
was rescinded and reissued with a statement that the hearing would be
reset “on a yet to be determined date and pending the criminal charges
arising out of the same.”
When the hearing was set for December 19, 2012, Cox's attorney
requested a continuance, stating that Cox would not participate in the
hearing until after the completion of the criminal case. In response, the
Notice of Charges was again reissued with a new hearing date of January
9, 2013. On January 8, 2013, Cox again requested a continuance because
the criminal charges were still pending. Notwithstanding the request for a
continuance, the hearing was conducted on January 9, 2013; Cox did not
appear.
Shortly before the hearing, the DEA filed two grievances, contesting
the decision to convert Cox to unpaid leave and the failure to continue the
hearing until after the criminal case was complete. After the hearing, Cox
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was served with a Notice of Intent to Terminate. The DEA elected to submit
the matter to arbitration. The arbitrator made a finding that three matters
were properly before him: the two grievances filed by the DEA; and the
termination of Cox's employment.
The arbitrator conducted a hearing on September 17–19, 2013. Cox
appeared, represented by counsel. A representative of the DEA also
participated in the hearing. The arbitrator issued a decision on December
10, 2013, finding that the District had good and just cause to terminate Cox
and that the two grievances should be denied. The arbitrator's decision
does not contain a certificate of service to identify the date or method of
service of the decision, does not state that it is a final and binding order,
and contains no statement regarding any post-arbitration remedies to seek
judicial review of the decision. The parties have acknowledged that the
decision was emailed to all parties on December 10, 2013. The record also
contains a resolution of the Board, dated December 18, 2013, adopting the
decision of the arbitrator and directing that a copy of its order be served on
Cox by certified mail.
On March 10, 2014, Cox, pro se, filed her motion to vacate, modify,
or correct the arbitration decision with the common pleas court. The motion
did not contain a certificate of service, but at the time of filing Cox separately
filed a praecipe for service of the motion to the appellee, Dayton Public
Schools Board of Education. The docket reflects that the Clerk of Courts did
issue service of the motion to the Board on March 10, 2014. The certified
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mail receipt reflects that the Board received the motion on March 12, 2014.
The Board filed a motion to dismiss, upon the grounds that Cox's motion
was untimely filed and that she lacked standing to seek judicial review of
the arbitrator's decision. The trial court granted the motion to dismiss,
finding that the court lacked jurisdiction because Cox failed to comply with
the filing requirements of R.C. 2711.13, and because only the DEA had
standing to pursue a review of the arbitration decision. From the judgment
dismissing her motion to vacate the arbitration award, Cox appeals, pro se.
{¶ 3} This Court determined in part, at ¶ 16, as follows:
The record supports that Cox complied with R.C.2711.13 by filing the
motion to vacate within three months of the issuance of the arbitrator's
decision. The Board asserts that compliance with the statute was not
complete until it actually received a copy of the motion, which did not occur
until three days after the three-month filing deadline. We find that Cox
complied with Civ.R. 5 when the motion was filed timely and when the clerk
of courts issued service of the motion on the day of filing. Civ.R.
5 unequivocally provides that “service” is complete upon mailing or upon
delivery to the carrier. Neither Civ.R. 5, nor R.C. 2711.13 require actual
delivery of the motion or receipt of the motion by the adverse party prior to
the filing deadline in order for service to be complete.
{¶ 4} Regarding Cox’s standing to pursue a judicial review of her termination, this
Court concluded in part, at ¶ 20-27, as follows:
The trial court found that Cox lacked standing to pursue a motion to
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vacate the arbitration decision because she was not a party to the arbitration
proceeding. The court relied on Section 3.07.2(D)(1) of the Master Contract,
which states that only the DEA shall have the right to appeal any grievance
to arbitration. This section of the collective bargaining agreement is
applicable to the two grievances that were reviewed by the arbitrator.
However, different sections of the Master Contract apply to the termination.
The trial court did not review or consider Article 46 or Article 48 of the Master
Contract, which are directed to the procedures that must be followed for
termination actions. Section 46.01.1 of the Master Contract provides in
pertinent part:
The procedures the Board must follow in terminating a
contract of a Professional Staff Member are outlined in Ohio
Revised Code, Section 3319.16 and Article Forty–Eight. Any
employee who has received a notice of intention to terminate
his/her contract by the Board shall have the right, within 10
days of the receipt of the notice, to proceed with a case
under Section 3319.16, Revised Code, or to have his/her
case decided by an arbitrator pursuant to Article 3.07.2D
(Arbitration).
Section 46.01.2 of the Master Contract further provides that: “[a]ny
Professional Staff Member who has been notified of intent to dismiss under
this section must be informed of his/her right to counsel or Association
assistance and representation, if desired.” Article 48 of the Master Contract
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establishes a “due process procedure” for the disciplinary and termination
process, which includes specific notices directed to the teacher and the
Association, and the opportunity to be heard at a prompt hearing.
Therefore, Articles 46 and 48 of the Master Contract specifically
provide individual rights to a teacher to be notified of the intent to terminate,
to attend an immediate hearing, to retain a personal attorney and to make
a personal decision whether to arbitrate the termination action or whether
to exercise her statutory rights instead of her contractual rights. Construing
the intent of these sections of the Master Contract, in pari materia, with the
arbitration provisions of the contract leads to the conclusion that the teacher
is a party to any action involving the teacher's termination. This is consistent
with the content of the arbitrator's action, which treated the termination as a
separate issue from the two grievances, and allowed Cox to participate in
the arbitration with counsel. The arbitrator, however, does not state whether
Cox was given any personal choice over the decision whether to proceed
to arbitration or to pursue a review of the termination under her statutory
rights. The arbitration decision does include a statement that the choice to
proceed with arbitration was made by the DEA.
R.C. 3319.16 provides a specific statutory procedure for termination
of any teacher contract by a Board of Education. The statute requires the
Board to furnish the teacher with a written notice of its intention to terminate
the teacher's contract, and allows the teacher to demand a hearing. The
statute allows the Board to refer the hearing to a referee, but makes no
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reference to arbitration. After the hearing is conducted, the Board must take
action to adopt or reject the recommendation for action and its order must
be reflected in its minutes, and notice of the order must be served on the
teacher. R.C. 3319.16 provides for judicial review of the Board's order as
follows:
Any teacher affected by an order of termination of
contract may appeal to the court of common pleas of the
county in which the school is located within thirty days after
receipt of notice of the entry of such order. The appeal shall
be an original action in the court and shall be commenced by
the filing of a complaint against the Board, in which complaint
the facts shall be alleged upon which the teacher relies for a
reversal or modification of such order of termination of
contract.
There is no question that a teacher has standing to appeal her
termination to the common pleas court, if she chooses the statutory
procedure rather than the arbitration procedure. No provision in the Master
Contract provides that the teacher is specifically choosing to forfeit her
statutory right to judicial review when she chooses to have the hearing
conducted by an arbitrator instead of a member of the Board or a referee.
In fact, the language of Article 46 of the Master Contract acknowledges that
termination procedures are governed by both the Master Contract and R.C.
3319.16, and that the teacher has the right to choose how to proceed with
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her case. This choice gives the teacher standing in the termination process.
* * * In the present case, the court erred by failing to acknowledge
that Section 46.01.1 of the Master Contract does specifically give the
teacher the independent right to submit her termination to arbitration.
The effect of holding that the teacher has no standing to pursue a
judicial review of her termination is a waiver of her statutory rights. The
U.S. Supreme Court has recognized that an arbitration clause in a collective
bargaining agreement can waive the members’ rights to judicial review of
statutory claims if the waiver is “clear and unmistakable.” Wright v.
Universal Maritime Service Corp., 525 U.S. 70, 119 S.Ct. 391, 142 L.Ed.2d
361 (1998). Ohio courts have recognized that in some cases, a party’s
statutory rights can differ from contractual rights she may have under a
collective bargaining agreement, in which case an incident that raises
multiple issues can result in having a grievance reviewed by arbitration,
while the statutory claim can proceed for court review. Haynes v. Ohio
Turnpike Comm., 177 Ohio App.3d 1, 2008-Ohio-133, 893 N.E.2d 850, ¶
18 (8th Dist.) See also, Chenevey v. Greater Cleveland Regional Transit
Auth., 2013-Ohio-1902, 992 N.E.2d 461, ¶ 17 (8th Dist.)[.]
The record is not clear whether Cox's waiver of her statutory rights
was clear and unmistakable. Even though the Master Contract gives Cox
the right to choose the statutory process or arbitration for a review of her
termination, it is not clear whether she affirmatively assigned that right to
her union, DEA, or made the choice to arbitrate with the knowledge that her
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choice to do so would materially affect her post-hearing review rights. In
addition to different filing deadlines under R.C. 3319.16 and 2711.13, the
standard of review for the common pleas court to review a teacher
termination under R.C. 3319.16 and the standard of review for the common
pleas court to consider a motion to vacate an arbitration award pursuant
to R.C. 2711.13 are materially different. R.C. 3319.16 provides that the
judicial review of a teacher termination is a “special proceeding,”
commenced by the filing of a complaint. R.C. 3319.16 provides that the
common pleas court may conduct hearings and take additional evidence,
whereas the review process dictated by R.C. 2711.13 limits the common
pleas court to a review of the arbitrator's decision to determine if it is
“unlawful, arbitrary or capricious”. Martins Ferry City School Dist. Bd. of
Edn. v. Ohio Assn. of Pub. School Emps., 7th Dist. Belmont No.12 BE
15, 2013–Ohio–2954, ¶ 18.
Therefore, based on her statutory and contractual rights, Cox does
have standing to pursue judicial review of her termination. On remand, the
court must review the merits of Cox's motion to vacate, modify or correct
the arbitrator's award by determining if it is contrary to law, arbitrary or
capricious, which should include, but is not limited to, whether Cox's waiver
of her statutory rights was clear and unmistakable. If Cox did not clearly
waive her statutory rights, the court is authorized by R.C. 2711.10(D) to
vacate that part of the award terminating her contract, and remand the
matter to the Board for proceedings consistent with law.
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{¶ 5} On March 27, 2015, the Board filed a motion to stay proceedings “pending
disposition of Defendant’s request that the Ohio Supreme Court accept jurisdiction and
review” this Court’s February 20, 2015 opinion. This Court granted the motion on March
30, 2015, and on August 25, 2016, the Ohio Supreme Court affirmed this Court’s decision
and remanded the matter to the trial court. On September 21, 2016, this Court issued
an “Entry Lifting Stay and Setting Supplemental Briefing Schedule.”
{¶ 6} On October 20, 2016, the Board filed “Defendant Board of Education’s
Memorandum in Opposition to Plaintiff’s Motion to Vacate, Modify, or Correct Arbitration
Award.” On the same date, the Board filed a “Notice of Filing Exhibit,” thereby giving
notice “of its filing of Arbitration Board Exhibit 26 (a video of the incident involving Georgia
Cox occurring on October 10, 2012) to the September 17, 18, and 19, 2013 arbitration
hearing.” The Board argued that “Georgia Cox clearly and unmistakenly waived her
statutory rights arising under R.C. 3319.16 and 3319.161.” The Board further asserted
the arbitrator’s award should not be vacated or altered in any way. The Board asserted
that there “is no evidence of partiality or misconduct on the part of the arbitrator, and he
properly executed his powers.” The Board argued that the “form of the December 10,
2013 opinion and award is proper.” The Board asserted that Cox’s “motion to vacate the
arbitrator’s award is moot in relation to her pursuit of reinstatement and Grievance 12-17,
and the court lacks subject matter jurisdiction over those issues.”
{¶ 7} Finally, the Board concluded as follows:
Plaintiff has approached this Court seeking vacation or modification
of a valid, final, and binding arbitration award pursuant to R.C. 2711.10 and
2711.11 without properly supported reasons. The arguments and
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allegations contained in Plaintiff’s Motion to Vacate reveal that it is her
personal dissatisfaction with the Arbitrator’s interpretation of the factual
evidence before him and his application of that evidence to the provisions
of the Master Contract that serves as the purported basis for her Motion.
The Arbitrator’s Award cannot be vacated or altered on that basis, and
Plaintiff has presented no valid reason upon which the Court may revise or
set aside the Arbitrator’s binding determinations.
Georgia Cox clearly and unmistakably waived her right to a R.C.
3319.16 hearing and its attendant processes when she chose to submit the
question of good and just cause to final and binding arbitration under the
Master Contract. She cannot now argue that such submission was invalid
simply because she is dissatisfied with the result. Regardless, the Ohio
Department of Education has permanently revoked her teaching license
and Ms. Cox has failed to further appeal that revocation, so the vacation of
the Arbitrator’s Award in relation to her pursuit of reinstatement of her
teaching contract is moot.
{¶ 8} On November 8, 2016, Cox filed a document captioned “Filed with Leave of
Court: Plaintiff’s Opposition to Defendant’s Memorandum in Opposition to Plaintiff’s
Motion to Vacate, Modify or Correct Arbitration Award.” The same day, “Defendant
Board of Education’s Motion to Strike Plaintiff’s November 8, 2016 Filing and Limit Public
Access with Supporting Memorandum” was filed. The Board argued that Cox “untimely
filed a memorandum opposing the Board of Education’s timely-filed submission, nineteen
days after the deadline established by the Court and without first seeking leave from the
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Court.” The Board further requested that “the Court order the removal of Plaintiff’s
Exhibits D1 through D7 from public view because they contain personally identifiable
student information not made publicly available by the parent(s) of the students.”
{¶ 9} On November 9, 2016 the trial court issued a “Decision, Entry and Order
Sustaining Defendant’s Motion to Strike,” noting that Cox’s November 8, 2016 document
was “not filed with leave of court, nor did Ms. Cox even request the court’s leave.” The
court concluded that “because Ms. Cox included photographs of students among the
attachments, the court orders that there shall be no remote access by the public to the
filing.”
{¶ 10} On November 17, 2016, Cox filed a “Response to Judge’s Decision to:
Sustain Defendant’s Motion to Strike Plaintiff’s Motion filed after Failure to Notify Plaintiff
to Vacate, Modify, or Correct Arbitration Award,” attached to which was Cox’s affidavit.
Cox asserted that she did not receive the court’s September 21, 2016 entry and that the
deputy clerk refused to allow her to file a motion seeking leave to file her brief out of time.
{¶ 11} On January 10, 2017, the trial court issued a “Decision, Entry and Order
Deferring a Final Ruling on Plaintiff’s Motion to Vacate and Ordering an Evidentiary
Hearing.” The court found “that the arbitrator’s decision should not be vacated, modified
or corrected for the reasons offered by Ms. Cox in her motion under R.C. 2711.13, but it
[deferred] a final decision on the motion until an evidentiary hearing can be held on the
question of whether Ms. Cox clearly and unmistakably waived her rights under R.C.
3319.16.”
{¶ 12} The trial court initially disputed this Court’s February 20, 2015 decision,
noting that the “only procedures established by the Master Contract for resolving disputes
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between professional staff members and the Board are set forth in Article 3, captioned
‘Grievance Procedure,’ though Article 2 and Article 32 include provisions directed at two
other types of dispute.” The court noted that Article 46 “establishes merely the standard
for termination of a professional staff member’s employment,” and Article 48 “establishes
a system for progressive discipline.” The court noted that “the unavoidable conclusion
is that a challenge raised to the termination of a professional staff member’s employment
constitutes a ‘grievance’ as that term is defined in § 3.01.” The court noted that the
formal procedure for resolving a grievance consists of four levels, namely submitting a
written grievance to the principal, appeal to the superintendent, mediation by mutual
assent, and arbitration. The court noted that Section 3.07.02(D)(1) provides: “Only the
ASSOCIATION shall have the right to appeal any grievance, as defined in Section3.01[,]
to arbitration.” Section 46.01.1 provides in part, “Any employee who has received a
notice of intention to terminate his/her contract by the BOARD shall have the right, within
ten (10) days of the receipt of notice, to either proceed with a case under Section 3319.16,
Revised Code, or to have his/her case decided by an arbitrator pursuant to Article 3.07.2
D (Arbitration),” and according to the trial court, the “significance of § 46.01 is not that it
invests an employee with an independent right to appeal a termination to arbitration, but
that in such a case, the Association is affirmatively required to seek arbitration at the
employee’s request. Otherwise, the decision whether to submit a dispute is left, under §
3.07.2(D)(1), to the Association’s discretion.” The court concluded that this Court “for its
part, seems to have ignored the restrictive clause in [§3.07.2(D)], ie., the phrase ‘pursuant
to.’ ”
{¶ 13} Regarding the merits of Cox’s motion, the court noted that Cox argued that
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the arbitrator’s decision “reveals evident ‘[p]artiality on [his] part.’ * * * Specifically, she
faults the Board for failing to present her with notice of the charges against her within 24
hours of the incident on October 10, 2012, and for not holding a conference to ‘allow[]
[her] to participate in the investigation’ of the charges.” The court noted further that aside
“from arguments directed to procedural irregularities and the Board’s alleged failure to
honor her rights under the Master Contract, Ms. Cox argues that the arbitrator lacked
sufficient evidence to find that the Board terminated her employment for just cause.”
According to the court, Cox’s “arguments regarding the sufficiency of the evidence,
however, consist of little more than disagreements with the arbitrator’s interpretation of
the testimony, and in essence, she contends that the arbitrator was not impartial because
he believed the testimony of the Board’s witnesses, rather than her testimony.” The court
concluded that “the arbitrator had evidence that Ms. Cox struck the student; in the context
of Ms. Cox’s motion, the court may not second-guess the arbitrator’s factual findings or
legal conclusions.”
{¶ 14} The court determined as follows:
On review of the arbitrator’s decision and the transcript of the
arbitration proceeding, the court finds that the decision should not be
vacated, modified or corrected because Ms. Cox has not established that it
was contrary to law, arbitrary or capricious, or that it was otherwise improper
or unlawful. At the same time, the court defers a final decision on Ms.
Cox’s motion until an evidentiary hearing can be held on the other question
the Second District remanded for consideration: whether Ms. Cox’s waiver
of her statutory rights was clear and unmistakable.
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The Board provides two affidavits as evidence that Ms. Cox
knowingly waived her statutory rights. * * * Both of the affiants, in nearly
identical language, include averments stating that at a meeting on January
25, 2013:
1. An attorney for the Association “explained the differences
between the arbitration hearing process and the statutory hearing process”
and indicated that a “court of common pleas would apply different standards
of review depending on whether Ms. Cox appealed the ruling from an
arbitrator or appealed from an adverse decision from a referee or the Board:
and
2. The Association’s president explained that if “Ms. Cox * * * chose
to proceed to arbitration, [then] the [Association] would have to approve.”
* * * In Exhibit 2, the affiant is the president of the Association. His
description of the attorney’s remarks is hearsay, and the court has not
considered that portion of his affidavit testimony. Similarly, the court has
not considered the corresponding averments in Exhibit 3 because they are
entirely hearsay.
The president of the Association also averred that, “[d]uring the
January 25th meeting, [Ms.] Cox chose to appeal the proposed termination
through the arbitration provisions of the Master Contract rather than pursue
a statutory hearing.” * * * Other than circumstantial inferences, this is the
only evidence that Ms. Cox waived her rights under R.C. 3319.16. Given
that the Second District directed this court to determine whether Ms. Cox’s
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waiver of her statutory rights was “clear and unmistakable,’ the court finds
that the evidence presented on record is insufficient for this purpose. * * *
The foregoing averment nearly suffices, though it does not clarify whether
Ms. Cox clearly and unmistakably relinquished her right to proceed with a
case under R.C. 3319.16 on her own behalf.
{¶ 15} The court scheduled an evidentiary hearing “exclusively concerning the
waiver issue” for May 11, 2017. At the hearing, the Board called Cox to testify. Cox
testified that she has a master’s degree in education as well as a Master’s of Business
Administration. She stated that in the course of her employment with Dayton Public
Schools she served as a “building rep” for the DEA as well as a “negotiations chairperson”
as part of the executive committee at the DEA. She stated that she served as the
negotiations chairperson “towards the end of the school year of the 2011-’12. So I went
in starting the 2012-’13 school year.” Cox stated that her responsibilities in that role were
to “help negotiate a contract with the administration on behalf of the membership, support
the [union] president in getting a contract through.” Cox acknowledged that it “would be
fair” to say that she was very familiar with the Master Contract
{¶ 16} Cox identified the Master Contract, and she stated that Section 46.01 has
been in the series of Dayton Public Schools collective bargaining contract for many years.
She acknowledged that the section offers a teacher whose termination has been
recommended the option of pursuing arbitration or a case pursuant to R.C. 3319.16.
Cox stated that she was presented with the option, and she stated that she did not choose
to arbitrate her termination. Cox acknowledged that she had ten days to elect to pursue
an R.C. 3319.16 hearing, and if she did so, that a hearing officer or referee would be
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appointed, and a decision would be issued. Cox acknowledged that she would then have
the option to appeal an adverse decision to the court of common pleas. According to Cox,
“[t]hat’s what I was told.”
{¶ 17} The following exchange occurred:
Q. * * * And you started inquiring about that before you made a
decision concerning which way to go; didn’t you?
A. Yes.
Q. So at the time you made a decision, you were aware of all those
things we just talked about?
A. Yes.
Q. And you were also aware that you had the opportunity to go to
arbitration, right?
A. This says it was either or. So yes. * * *
Q. It was a choice?
A. Yes.
{¶ 18} Cox testified she had two pending grievances “that should have been
processed through arbitration.” She asserted that “those grievances and the termination
were two separate things. And they should have been handled differently and
separately. They kept insisting that they be treated the same. I could not take my
grievances through the 3319.16 procedure.” Cox stated that she wanted her “termination
to be handled by a separate, independent body and the grievances, which I had no choice
over, I had been railroaded about * * *.” Cox testified that she preferred the R.C. 3319.16
procedure relative to her termination.
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{¶ 19} Cox identified as Exhibit B the January 23, 2013 notification she received
from the Board of its intent to terminate her teaching contract and acknowledged that after
she received it, she had 10 days to decide whether to pursue an R.C. 3319.16 process
or arbitration. Cox testified that on January 25, 2013, she met with David Romick, the
president of the Dayton Education Association, Sean Thompson, the Ohio Education
Association’s Labor Relations Consultant, and Susan Jansen, OEA’s legal counsel, at
Jansen’s office, for approximately two hours to discuss the termination notice. At the
meeting, Cox stated that Jansen gave her “materials to read, because I was asking
questions to help me make my decision” between arbitration and the statutory process.
Cox denied that she indicated a desire to go to arbitration at the meeting.
{¶ 20} Cox testified that after that meeting, she attended the DEA’s executive
board meeting, where she “asked for arbitration for my grievances, not for my
termination.” Cox identified Exhibit C as a copy of a letter she received on or about
January 29, 2013, that notified Lori Ward, who was then superintendent of DPS, of the
DEA’s intent to submit her termination to arbitration under the Master Contract. Cox
stated that she did not contest the DEA’s intent to the Board in writing, “but I
communicated with the union.” Cox testified that she advised the union that “[t]his was
not what I was agreeing to when I went to the * * * meeting. My grievances were
supposed to have been processed first. I had ten days to make a decision, * * * but the
actions regarding my termination were to be subsequent to the hearing of my grievances.
And the arbitration that I was interested in was regarding my grievances and not my
termination.” Cox acknowledged that on January 29, 2013, she was still within the 10-day
period to file a written demand for a hearing pursuant to R.C.3319.16. The following
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exchange occurred:
Q. And despite what you’re characterizing as your disagreement
with this decision, as you sit here today, you didn’t send anything to the
Board saying, stop, wait, I don’t want arbitration; did you?
A. I did not.
{¶ 21} The Board next called David Romick to testify. Romick stated that he has
been the president of the DEA since July 1, 2010. When asked to characterize his
familiarity with the Master Contract, Romick replied, “I pretty much know it in my sleep.”
He identified, as Exhibit A, the copy of the Master Contract that was in effect June 7, 2012
through June 6, 2013. When asked about Section 46.01 of the contract, Romick testified
that “in a termination situation, where the Board has elected to terminate a professional
staff member, it allows that professional staff member choice in how they want to pursue
appealing that termination.” He stated that the teacher can choose between “the
statutory process contained in article 3319.16 of [the] Ohio Revised Code or the
association’s arbitration process.” Romick testified that once “the member received
notification of the termination from the Board, there is a ten-day window, in which we work
with the member * * * to make whatever decision is appropriate.”
{¶ 22} Romick testified that if a teacher chooses the R.C. 3319.16 process, “the
association would pretty much turn over the case (sic) to the OEA plan attorney who is
representing that particular professional staff member, in addition to all evidence,
documentation, et cetera * * * and assist that OEA plan attorney as necessary, during that
process.” If the teacher chooses arbitration, Romick testified that “it becomes incumbent
upon the president to get approval from the DEA executive board for that arbitration. We
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call that taking a termination to arbitration.” He stated that “approval is necessary,
because there is a financial cost to the association * * * in sharing the cost for that
arbitration, and any financial costs expended by the association must be approved by our
executive board.”
{¶ 23} Romick testified that Cox chose arbitration. He stated that he received a
copy of Exhibit B, and that “the receipt of the letter would start that clock on the ten-day
timeline present in the master agreement.” According to Romick, upon receipt of the
letter, he and “our labor relations consultant at the time, Sean Thompson * * *
communicated with Ms. Cox, in terms of getting her into the office with our OEA plan
attorney, so that we could discuss the options at that point and make a decision within
that ten-day timeline.” Romick stated that he met with Cox on January 25, 2013,
consistent with Cox’s testimony. He testified that the purpose of the meeting was to
provide Cox with information “on both options for dealing with this notice of termination
and to come out of that meeting with a decision about how to proceed, because given
whatever choice is made dictates the union’s role and what actions need to be taken
next.” Romick testified that he explained to Cox, if she chose arbitration, “what the
association’s next steps would be; how that worked; why the issue had to be taken to the
executive board for approval, given then financial consideration, and then what would
occur from there.” When asked if Cox made statements about the arbitration process,
Romick stated that “there was a statement made to the effect of since she was an active
member of the executive board, she felt confident the executive board would approve this
intent to terminate for arbitration, and we could move forward.” Romick stated that Cox
“chose to go through the arbitration route.”
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{¶ 24} Romick stated that “my course of action, once arbitration is decided, is to
call a meeting of our executive committee to get this on the agenda, so that it can be
approved to arbitration.” According to Romick, Cox subsequently advised him that she
wished to address the executive committee regarding the arbitration. He stated that Cox
appeared at the January 29, 2013 executive board meeting. Romick testified that Cox
“addressed the executive board in terms of * * * their eventual vote to take this to
arbitration. She was advocating for herself, which is appropriate. We set aside some
time during that meeting, so that that could occur.” Romick stated that the executive
board approved Cox’s request and committed to arbitrating her termination grievance.
{¶ 25} Romick identified Exhibit C and testified that Sean Thompson immediately
sent the January 29, 2013 letter to Lori Ward “advising her that we intended to arbitrate
this issue.” When asked if Cox elected anything other than arbitration within the ten-day
period, Romick responded negatively. Romick testified that arbitration occurred in the
fall of 2013, and that “the Board’s intent to terminate was upheld in that arbitration.”
{¶ 26} Sean Thompson testified that he is employed by the Ohio Education
Association, which is “the teacher’s union, one of the teacher’s unions in Ohio that
represent over 120,000 teachers and educational support staff throughout the state.”
Thompson stated that he is the labor relations consultant, and that he was familiar with
Cox’s termination process. He identified Exhibit B as “the written notice to Ms. Cox that
the Board of Education is considering the termination of her continuing contract.”
Thompson stated that he attended the January 25, 2013 meeting with Cox that was
scheduled upon receipt of Exhibit B. Consistent with Romick’s testimony, Thompson
testified that the purpose of the meeting “was to explain to Ms. Cox the option that the
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master agreement provided her, whether to pursue contesting her termination through
the statute or through arbitration.” According to Thompson, in the R.C. 3319.16 process,
“a referee * * * is assigned to the case, holds a hearing where the teacher would present
their side, the Board would present their side. * * * [T]he referee then gives a ruling,
which is submitted to the Board of Education, and the Board of Education can either
accept or deny that and act however the[y] decide in the end.” Thompson stated that the
Board can reject any decision by the referee not to terminate a teacher.
{¶ 27} Thompson testified as follows regarding the arbitration process:
[If] they elect to contest the termination via an arbitration, [we] notify
the Board, and then we submit to the American Arbitration Association for
a list of potential arbitrators. And then I would contact, representing the
Dayton teachers, the Board attorney to review the list and do what we call
a strike, where we determine which arbitrators on the list that * * * we would
like to use. Then we would contract the arbitrator, ask for dates, hold the
arbitration, and then [the] arbitrator would give his ruling. In Dayton, the
arbitration is binding.
{¶ 28} Thompson stated that binding means “it’s the final say. It is the decision.
The Board cannot act in any other manner.” Thompson stated that the arbitration
process was explained to Cox on January 25, 2013. Thompson stated that Cox’s “choice
was to pursue arbitration. * * * I heard her say, I would like to pursue arbitration over the
statute.” Thompson stated that the executive committee of the DEA met to approve
arbitration on or around January 29, 2013. Consistent with Romick, Thompson stated
that Cox attended the meeting to “advocate for her position to move her termination to
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arbitration,” and that the executive board approved her request. He stated that he
notified the superintendent as reflected in Exhibit C. Thompson stated that he would
have sent a different letter to Lori Ward if Cox elected the statutory process. Thompson
testified that arbitration of Cox’s termination occurred in mid-September 2013, and that
he was present. Thompson stated that he met with Cox multiple times ahead of the
arbitration to prepare her. When asked if Cox, during those multiple meetings, ever
indicated that she did not want to arbitrate her termination, Thompson responded
negatively.
{¶ 29} On cross-examination by Cox, Thompson testified that he does not “know
that there are any barriers in the contract” that would have kept her from contacting the
Board in reference to Exhibit C. Thompson stated that Cox emailed him on March 6, 2013
that “she would like an arbitration of the grievances, two grievances dated 12/16 and
12/17 arbitrated first, * * * followed by the arbitration for the wrongful termination.” On re-
direct examination, Thompson stated that March 6, 2013 is past the ten day deadline in
the Master Contract. At the conclusion of Thompson’s testimony, Exhibits A, B, and C
were admitted without objection.
{¶ 30} The following exchange occurred in the course of Cox’s testimony:
Long and short, it is an unconscionable deal. I - - in the long meeting
that we had, some of the questions that I asked, well, what were the terms?
What were * * * the details for the arbitration? They would not be given. *
**
So I knew that it would be contrary to law. I also knew that if push
came to shove, at worst-case scenario, they were still trying to punish me
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for something, justify something, that they had rescinded. And this whole
cycle just did not make sense.
So there was no point fighting. I was looking forward to facing the
arbitration to deal with those grievances, but when it came to that date, then
we tried to postpone it. We even tried to postpone it to - - as - - as further
proof that my intent was to deal with grievances, because that’s what was
on the books. My only alternative for dealing with grievances was
arbitration. It did not have to be for my termination.
But I could see that that’s where the people I had to work with were
leaning. So [I] went with it, knowing that I could come back. I had a way
outside of the Board. The law allowed me to come to the common pleas
court and appeal the decision. So I opted for that. I didn’t opt for it. I just
went along with it, and played along, because I really had no other option.
In fact, in trying to - - to - - I saw where the cost - - cost became a
concern, what it was going to cost, to the point where you, Ms. Meyer,
offered to pay me - -
MS. MEYER: Objection, Your Honor.
MS. COX: - - $500 - - $5,000 - -
THE COURT: I’ll overrule it. Go ahead. Tell us - - tell us what
was - -
MS. COX: She made an offer that I not go to arbitration and accept
a payment of $5,000 because that’s what it was going to cost. I rejected
that.
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THE COURT: Okay. Is there anything else you want to say on this
issue of whether or not you waived your right to the - -
MS. COX: I - - yeah.
THE COURT: - - statutory process?
MS. COX: It is clear I did not waive my right.
THE COURT: Okay.
MS. COX: I was pushed into it, and I could see that that was the
only way either my grievances were going to be heard or anything else was
going to be heard.
THE COURT: All right. And as I understand it, and then I’ll have
Ms. Meyer’s ask questions if she wishes, you thought if you got the two
grievances arbitrated that would make the termination go away?
MS. COX: Yes.
THE COURT: Is that the sum and substance - -
MS. COX: Yes.
THE COURT: - - of what you said?
MS. COX: Yes.
THE COURT: Okay. And you went along with arbitration because
you had out [sic]. You thought you had an out?
MS. COX: Well, yeah, but - - but the main thing was my arbitration.
And even the - - the grievances - - but even if they had - - when I came to
realize they put the termination on there is all three [sic], I realized that I
could come to - - it could have been - - the decision would have - -
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THE COURT: And that’s the - - that’s the out that you were - -
MS. COX: Yes.
THE COURT: - - talking? Okay.
MS. COX: Because the facts just clearly presented me with an out.
THE COURT: All right. You may examine.
MS. MEYER: I have no questions.
{¶ 31} Cox’s Exhibits 1 and 2, copies of email exchanges, were admitted over
objection.
{¶ 32} In its “Decision, Entry and Order Vacating Portion of Arbitrator’s Award,”
the trial court determined as follows:
The Board’s two witnesses, David Romick – president of the DEA –
and Sean Thompson – an OEA labor relations consultant assigned to the
DEA – testified consistently that once Cox was notified of the Board’s
intention to terminate her, a meeting was commenced January 25, 2013,
with Cox, Romick, Thompson and Susan Jansen, the OEA plan attorney.
The purpose of the meeting was to determine whether to utilize
arbitration or the R.C. 3319.16 statutory procedure to contest the Board’s
intended action. Both procedures were discussed and Cox chose
arbitration. Thompson sent a letter dated January 29 to the school
superintendent, Lori Ward, stating that the DEA intended to submit the
“decision” (to terminate) to arbitration. Def. Ex. C. Cox was copied on the
letter but did not respond that she didn’t want arbitration. Thompson met
with Cox several times to prepare for the arbitration of the termination and
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Cox never said she didn’t want arbitration.
Cox gave a conflicting account. She testified that she didn’t want
her termination arbitrated although she did eventually agree to arbitration of
her termination. She testified that she did have two grievances that she
wanted arbitrated and that she wanted these grievances arbitrated before
her termination was arbitrated.
Although there is no documentary evidence to support Cox’s claim
that she did not want her termination arbitrated, she claimed she so
informed the DEA. She said she ultimately decided to go along with
arbitration of her termination because she couldn’t alter the intention of the
DEA to take her termination to arbitration and because she could utilize the
R.C. 3319.16 process if the arbitration didn’t go well, (which it didn’t).
The Board argues that the evidence establishes that Cox agreed to
arbitrate her termination, despite Cox’s assertion that she didn’t want her
termination arbitrated.
Although the Board presented compelling evidence that Cox chose
arbitration, the ultimate factual question before the Court is not whether Cox
chose arbitration, but, rather, whether Cox clearly and unmistakably waived
her statutory right to proceed under R.C. 3391.16.
The court of appeals made clear that the choice to have a termination
arbitrated does not, without more, work a forfeiture of the statutory right to
judicial review. [Cox v. Dayton Public Schools Bd. of Edn., 2d Dist.
Montgomery No. 26382, 2015-Ohio-620, at] ¶ 23. The court observed that
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arbitration review and court review are not necessarily inconsistent. Id. ¶
25.
Upon consideration of all the evidence, the court is not persuaded
that there was a clear and unmistakable waiver by Cox of her right to invoke
R.C. 3391.16 (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1 and 2 were not considered in arriving at
this determination).
Accordingly, pursuant to the remand of the Court of Appeals, Id. ¶
27, the award of the arbitrator, to the extent that it terminated Cox’s contract,
is vacated, and the matter is remanded to the Board “for proceedings
consistent with law.” Id. ¶ 27. This court infers that the court of appeals
expects the Board to afford Cox statutory review under R.C. 3391.16.
{¶ 33} The Board asserts three assignment of error herein. For ease of analysis,
we will first consider Cox’s second assignment of error. It is as follows:
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN DETERMINING THAT GEORGIA
COX DID NOT CLEARLY AND UNMISTAKABLY WAIVE HER
STATUTORY RIGHT TO PROCEED UNDER R.C. 3319.16.
1. Ms. Cox clearly and unmistakably waived her right to proceed
under R.C. 3319.16 when she did not submit a written demand for a hearing
to the board within 10 days.
2. The evidence in the record demonstrates that Georgia Cox
clearly and unmistakably waived her right to a R.C. 3319.16 hearing.
{¶ 34} The Board initially notes that as “a result of Ms. Cox’s felony conviction and
actions toward a student, the Ohio Department of Education * * * recommended to the
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Ohio State Board of Education * * * that Ms. Cox’s teaching license be revoked.”
According to the Board, on March 10, 2015, the Ohio Department of Education
“permanently revoked Ms. Cox’s license and will not allow Ms. Cox to apply for a teaching
license again in Ohio. * * * Ms. Cox appealed the [Ohio Board of Education’s] decision to
the Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas, where the trial court upheld the * * *
decision.”
{¶ 35} In its second assignment of error, the Board argues that the “trial court erred
in holding that Ms. Cox did not clearly and unmistakably waive her rights to a R.C. 3319.16
hearing” because she waived her right when she “did not demand a hearing in writing
within 10 days of the [Board’s] notice of intent to consider termination,” as required by
R.C. 3319.16, and because “the trial court ignored ample evidence in the record which
pointed to Ms. Cox’s waiver of a R.C. 3319.16 hearing.” The Board argues that the “ten-
day limit cannot be extended.” The Board argues that Cox received notice on January
23, 2013, and her “inaction belies the convenient protests that she made at the May 11,
2017 evidentiary hearing that she did not choose arbitration and intended to avail herself
of the R.C. 3319.16 process if she needed to.” According to the Board, the “only written
notice received by the [Board] in regard to Ms. Cox’s termination was the intent to proceed
with arbitration, which was mailed to the superintendent on January 29, 2013.” The
Board asserts that Cox “needed to submit her demand for a hearing within ten days - - on
or before approximately February 2, 2013.”
{¶ 36} The Board further argues that Cox “so strongly chose to pursue arbitration
that she personally appeared at the DEA executive board meeting to gain support for her
desire to pursue arbitration,” and that Cox did not “object to the letter sent by the DEA to
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the [Board], which clearly stated that Ms. Cox was proceeding with arbitration.” The
Board notes that Cox “was an active participant in her arbitration proceeding and at no
point did she object to the proceedings.”
{¶ 37} The Board further argues that on January 25, 2013, Cox met with
Thompson, Romick, and Jansen, and that at that time, “the hearing process options - -
arbitration and R.C. 3319.16 - - were explained to Georgia Cox.” The Board argues that
Cox “was told during the meeting that a decision to arbitrate had to be taken to the
executive board for approval for financial reasons.” The Board argues that Cox
“explained during the meeting she felt confident the executive board would support her
decision to arbitrate since she was an active member of the board.” The Board argues
that in the meeting, Cox “responded with questions, and at the conclusion of the two-hour
meeting, Georgia Cox chose to pursue arbitration.” The Board argues that Cox’s
“assertions that she was pushed into arbitration directly conflict with her own actions in
January of 2013, when at two separate meetings, she met with her plan attorney and
chose to arbitrate and then met with the DEA Executive Board to advocate for arbitration
of her discharge.”
{¶ 38} The Board argues that Cox’s receipt of her notice regarding termination of
her contract “initiated the ten calendar day period pursuant to 46.01.1 - - which mimics
the ten day period in R.C. 3319.16 - - to choose either arbitration under the [Master]
Contract or the R.C. 3319.16 hearing process.” According to the Board, on “January 29,
2013, Ms. Cox’s union sent a letter to the superintendent notifying her of the intent to
submit Ms. Cox’s termination to arbitration,” and Cox was copied on the letter. The
Board notes that as of that date, three days remained “in which Ms. Cox could send her
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own correspondence to the [Board] if she wished to have a R.C. 3319.16 hearing instead.”
{¶ 39} The Board argues that at the arbitration “the parties entered a stipulation on
the record, and in the presence of Ms. Cox, that the issue of whether good and just cause
existed for Ms. Cox’s termination was properly before the arbitrator and ready for his
determination with no objection voiced by Ms. Cox.”
{¶ 40} Cox responds that the “trial court correctly determined that Ms. Cox did not
clearly and unmistakably waive her right to proceed under R.C. Section 3319.16.” Cox
“holds the Board lacked a grievance on which to base a good and just cause for seeking
any discipline against her; even more so an action to terminate her continuing contract,”
since “the only infraction that had only been alleged against [her had] been rescinded in
proper form on November 12, 2012.” She argues that “the trial court’s May 11, 2017
Evidentiary Hearing ruling does not at all conflict with the Appellate Court’s February 20,
2015 Opinion.” Cox asserts that the Board “raised the issue about Ms. Cox’s licensure.
It is irrelevant to the responsibility given to the trial court.” Cox asserts that the evidence
against her in her criminal case “did not support the verdict,” and that “[t]his case at bar,
substantiates what her claim.”
{¶ 41} In reply, the Board argues that the “record shows that Ms. Cox waived her
statutory right to proceed under R.C. 3319.16.” According to the Board, “Ms. Cox’s
failure to submit a timely written demand for a[n] R.C. 3319.16 hearing constitutes a
waiver of her statutory rights to proceed under R.C. 3319.16.” The Board asserts that
the “trial court erred in holding that Ms. Cox needed to specifically negate her pursuit of
a[n] R.C. 3319.16 hearing.” Finally, the Board argues that “Ms. Cox is limited to the
issues she raised before the trial court,” and that her “termination was correctly before the
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arbitrator.” The Board “requests that this [C]ourt reverse the trial court’s decision
vacating a portion of the arbitrator’s award and uphold the December 10, 2013 arbitration
award in its entirety without any further proceedings.” The Board asserts that Cox’s
“inability to obtain a teaching license is central and dispositive in this case.”
{¶ 42} As noted above, this Court determined that even “though the Master
Contract gives Cox that right to choose the statutory process or arbitration,” it was “not
clear whether she affirmatively assigned that right to her union, DEA, or made the choice
to arbitrate with the knowledge that her choice to do so would materially affect her post-
hearing review rights.” Cox, 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 26382, 2015-Ohio-620, at ¶ 26. We
agree with the Board that the waiver of Cox’s statutory rights was clear and unmistakable,
and that the trial court erred in vacating the termination of Cox’s contract. As this Court
noted, the Master Contract allows a teacher faced with termination “to make a personal
decision whether to arbitrate the termination action or whether to exercise her statutory
rights instead of her contractual rights.” Id. at ¶ 21. Section 46.01.1 of the Master
Contract provides in part, “Any employee who has received a notice of intention to
terminate his/her contract by the BOARD shall have the right, within ten (10) days of the
receipt of the notice, to either proceed with a case under Section 3319.16, Revised Code,
or to have his/her case decided by an arbitrator pursuant to Article 3.07.2D (Arbitration).”
R.C. 33.19.16 provides in part: “Within ten days after receipt of the notice from the
treasurer of the board, the teacher may file with the treasurer a written demand for a
hearing before the board or before a referee, and the board shall set a time for the hearing
which shall be within thirty days from the date of receipt of the written demand.” The
January 23, 2013 notice to Cox of the Board’s intent to consider the termination of her
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contract provides in part: “You are further advised that you may, within ten days after
receipt of this notice, demand a hearing before the Board of Education or a referee.
Section § 3319.16 and § 3319.161 of the Ohio Revised Code set forth the rights granted
to you in such a hearing.”
{¶ 43} Cox, who is very well-educated, and who was involved in contract
negotiations in the course of her employment at Meadowdale, testified she was very
familiar with the Master Contract, and that Section 46.01 thereof has been in a series of
previous Master Contracts. Pursuant to Section 46.01, and R.C. 3319.16, a hearing is
triggered by a teacher’s written demand, and Cox acknowledged that she had ten days,
after receiving the notice of an intent to terminate her employment, to file a written demand
for a hearing before the board or before a referee, pursuant to R.C. 3319.16. She further
acknowledged her understanding of her right to appeal her termination to the court of
common pleas. Cox further acknowledged that the Master Contract “says it was either
[the R.C. 3319.16 process] or” arbitration, and the trial court determined that the Board
presented “compelling evidence that Cox chose arbitration.” That the DEA appealed
Cox’s grievances to arbitration did not preclude Cox from filing an R.C. 3319.16 written
demand for a hearing on the issue of her termination, at which time the Board “shall”
schedule the hearing. In her testimony, Cox does not explain her failure to file an R.C.
3319.16 demand letter. In the absence of a demand letter, Cox’s assertion that she “was
pushed into” arbitration lacks merit. Since Cox failed to affirmatively request an R.C.
3319.16 proceeding, we conclude that her waiver of her statutory rights is clear and
unmistakable. Accordingly, the Board’s second assignment of error is sustained.
{¶ 44} The Board’s remaining assignments of error are as follows:
-35-
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN VACATING A PORTION OF THE
ARBITRATOR’S AWARD.
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN ITS INTERPRETATION AND
APPLICATION OF THE FEBRUARY 20, 2015 OPINION OF THE SECOND
APPELLATE DISTRICT.
{¶ 45} Based upon our resolution of the Board’s second assignment of error,
further analysis of the Board’s remaining assignments of error is moot.
{¶ 46} The judgment of the trial court vacating the award of the arbitrator, to the
extent that it terminated Cox’s contract, is reversed and vacated.
WELBAUM, P.J., concurring:
{¶ 47} While I agree with the majority opinion, I write this concurrence to briefly
express my opinion that this case is moot as well as barred by Cox’s failure to timely
pursue her statutory right to an appeal. The concept is well established that courts
should not decide moot cases. See, e.g., In re A.G., 139 Ohio St.3d 572, 2014-Ohio-
2597, 13 N.E.3d 1146, ¶ 37. Cases become moot when courts cannot possibly grant
meaningful relief, even if they were to rule in favor of the party seeking relief. (Citation
omitted.) Gold Key Realty v. Collins, 2d Dist. Greene No. 2013-CA-57, 2014-Ohio-4705,
¶ 23. My opinion that this case is both moot and barred by Cox’s failure to pursue her
statutory appeal is based on the following points.
{¶ 48} First, the issue of whether Cox clearly and unmistakably waived her rights
to a R.C. 3319.16 termination proceeding is moot because the Ohio State Board of
Education adopted a resolution on March 10, 2015, permanently revoking Cox’s teaching
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license and prohibiting her from applying for a teaching license in the future, based on a
felony conviction involving a student victim. Cox filed an administrative appeal of the
resolution to the Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas, which affirmed the State
Board’s decision on April 19, 2016. See Doc. #11, Montgomery C.P. No. 2015-CV-1735,
Decision, Order and Entry Overruling Appellant’s Administrative Appeal; Affirming
Decision of the Ohio State Board of Education (Apr. 19, 2016).
{¶ 49} However, Cox failed to further appeal the common pleas court’s decision.
As a result, the prior decision is final, and future litigation challenging the validity of Cox’s
termination is barred by the doctrine of res judicata. See State v. Swayne, 4th Dist.
Adams Nos. 12CA952, 12CA953, and 12CA954, 2013-Ohio-3747, ¶ 24) (where “a party
fails to timely appeal a final order, matters that could have been reviewed on appeal
become res judicata and cannot be reviewed in related or subsequent proceedings or
appeals”). See also Barton v. Barton, 2d Dist. Greene No. 2015-CA-53, 2016-Ohio-
5264, ¶ 23 (claims that could have been raised in a prior case are barred by res judicata).
Furthermore, if we granted the relief sought by this appeal and ordered the Dayton Board
of Education to conduct R.C. 3319.16 termination proceedings, the prior outcome could
not be changed, since the Ohio State Board of Education has concluded that Cox cannot
lawfully be employed as a teacher. Therefore, we cannot presently grant Cox
meaningful relief on this issue.
{¶ 50} The case is also moot or barred because Cox failed to timely submit a
demand for a hearing as required by R.C. 3319.16. Cox received notice of the Board’s
intent to terminate her teaching contract but never filed a written demand with the
treasurer as required under the statute. Consequently, there was no timely demand for
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a hearing. See Mellion v. Akron City Sch. Dist. Bd. of Edn., 9th Dist. Summit No. 23227,
2007-Ohio-242, ¶ 10.
{¶ 51} According to Cox, the DEA (her union) misled her in a way that negates her
waiver of statutory rights to proceed with a termination process under R.C. 3319.16.
Whether the DEA improperly steered Cox toward arbitration under the negotiated Master
Contract, or did so against her expressed wishes, is a matter of contention between Cox
and the DEA, rather than the Board. Because the DEA is not a party to this case, we
cannot possibly give Cox meaningful relief, even if we found her allegations to be true.
{¶ 52} I would also point out that our prior opinion in this case should not be read
as requiring boards of education to ascertain the legitimacy of a party’s waiver when the
choice between arbitration and the statutory proceedings was decided between that party
and his or her union. In Cox v. Dayton Pub. Schools Bd. of Edn., 2d Dist. Montgomery
No. 26382, 2015-Ohio-620, we concluded that the record was not “clear and
unmistakable” with respect to whether Cox had waived her statutory rights under R.C.
3319.16. Id. at ¶ 27. Our opinion in Cox noted that:
No provision in the Master Contract provides that the teacher is specifically
choosing to forfeit her statutory right to judicial review when she chooses to
have the hearing conducted by an arbitrator instead of a member of the
Board or a referee. In fact, the language of Article 46 of the Master
Contract acknowledges that termination procedures are governed by both
the Master Contract and R.C. 3319.16, and that the teacher has the right to
choose how to proceed with her case. This choice gives the teacher
standing in the termination process.
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Id at ¶ 23.
{¶ 53} Because the record before us did not indicate whether Cox’s wavier was
clear and unmistakable, we remanded the case so that the trial court could decide the
issue. As the majority opinion indicates, the trial court held hearings on remand and
ultimately concluded that Cox did not waive her rights. Notably, the facts produced in
these evidentiary hearings on remand, and recited by the majority opinion, reveal that the
Board had no involvement in any discussion of whether Cox wished to choose arbitration
or the statutory remedy. Instead the discussion occurred during a meeting between Cox
and DEA members or affiliated representatives, which included the DEA president, an
OEA labor relations consultant assigned to the DEA, and the OEA plan attorney.
Majority Opinion at ¶ 32. The record does not indicate that the Board or its members
were either present at the meeting or had any involvement with Cox’s decision to arbitrate.
After the meeting, the OEA labor relations consultant sent the school superintendent a
notice that the DEA intended to arbitrate. Id.
{¶ 54} R.C. 3319.16 sets forth requirements that boards of education must follow
in terminating contracts. In the initial step, a board must “furnish the teacher a written
notice signed by its treasurer of its intention to consider the termination of the teacher's
contract with full specification of the grounds for such consideration. The board shall not
proceed with formal action to terminate the contract until after the tenth day after receipt
of the notice by the teacher.” If a teacher chooses to file a notice with the treasurer
within ten days after receiving the notice of intent to terminate, the board must then set a
time for hearing “within thirty days from the date of receipt of the written demand, and the
treasurer shall give the teacher at least twenty days' notice in writing of the time and place
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of the hearing.”
{¶ 55} R.C. 3319.16 provides for other things that boards must do, including
allowing cross-examination of witnesses and making a record of the proceedings.
However, the statute does not require the board to act on a teacher’s behalf or to interact
with a teacher in this situation in any way, other than giving the teacher notice of the
grounds for termination and complying with procedural requirements as to notices and
hearings.
{¶ 56} Implicit in the very nature of termination proceedings is that a board of
education does not represent the party it is attempting to terminate. Furthermore,
requiring a board to be involved in any manner beyond what is statutorily or contractually
required would be contrary to normal relationships between contracting parties. See R.C.
3319.08(A), which requires boards to enter into written contracts for employment and
reemployment of teachers. While every contract contains implied duties of good faith
and fair dealing, this duty is not breached where a party seeks to enforce an agreement
as written. Lucarell v. Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co., 152 Ohio St.3d 453, 2018-Ohio-15, 97
N.E.3d 458, ¶ 5; Third Fed. S. & L. Assn. of Cleveland v. Formanik, 2016-Ohio-7478, 64
N.E.3d 1034, ¶ 45 (8th Dist.). In the case before us, there is no indication that either the
Master Contract or R.C. 3319.16 imposed a duty on the Board to determine whether Cox’s
waiver was clear and unmistakable.
{¶ 57} Thus, in addition to the reasons given to reverse the trial court that are set
forth in the majority opinion, I would either reverse or dismiss the appeal because the
issues advocated by Cox are both moot and barred by her failure to pursue an R.C.
3319.16 appeal.
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HALL, J., concurring:
{¶ 58} I concur in Judge Donovan’s opinion and in Judge Welbaum’s concurring
opinion.
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Copies mailed to:
Georgia B. Cox
Beverly Meyer
Jason Stuckey
Hon. William H. Wolff Jr., by Assignment