(dissenting).
I respectfully dissent.
This is an appeal by a tenured school teacher after the circuit court affirmed a decision of the School Board of the City of St. Louis to discharge him because he violated Board of Education regulations 5210 and 5346. Our duty is to analyze the charges, the findings of fact and the conclusions of law and determine whether the decision of the Board is supported by competent and substantial evidence upon the whole record. Bell v. Board of Education of City of St. Louis, 711 S.W.2d 950, 955 (Mo.App.1986). The majority opinion cites the same standard. The standard of review is meaningful, however, only in light of the two charges, the findings of fact and *383the legal conclusions of the Board. In my view the majority opinion does not analyze what was charged, what the district attempted to prove and what the Board found as support for terminating appellant’s contract. Both charges allege Toole was directed to complete appropriate forms for an assigned field trip. The charges and the findings of fact which will be set forth verbatim required the district to prove it had authority to order Toole to sign a Leave of Absence form.
The majority opinion suggests that the form is used to account for teachers when they are away from their assigned school building. That is clearly not the purpose of the form nor was there evidence to support that reading. It is a form used by the teacher to request consideration for a leave of absence which may or may not be granted by school authorities. The true purpose of the form was never proven by any evidence, competent and substantial, or otherwise. The form is a contradiction in terms. If the Board had authority to order a teacher to make an extended field trip it had no need or authority to order the teacher to request permission to volunteer to make the trip. The majority opinion attributes confusion to the form. There is nothing whatever confusing about the form. It is clear and unambiguous. A copy is attached as Exhibit A. It is a form whereby the teacher can request the Board to permit him, or her, to be absent from teaching duties for: (1) personal illness; (2) for study; and, (3) for reasons other than illness or study, “(i.e.) educational conferences, personnel, military, etc.” It is not a form to reflect teaching duties. If Toole was ordered to make an extended field trip and if the district had authority to order such trip then Toole would not have been absent he would have been on duty. It is important to note that the school district did not charge Toole on either charge with refusing to make a trip in a charge separate and apart from refusing to sign “appropriate personnel forms” and make the trip. In this light and under the appropriate standard of review the Board did not prove what it charged by competent and substantial evidence.
It should also be noted that the Board bore the burden of proof that Toole violated a lawful order. A determination of lawful necessarily implies proof of authority where authority is questioned. The majority opinion cannot and does not cite any proof of facts or legal authority that it can order a tenured school teacher in the City of St. Louis to leave the State of Missouri for any purpose whatever. The opinion acknowledges that the teacher contract provides no agreement for assigned duties out of the State of Missouri. The opinion relies upon some agreement between the school board and the Department of the Navy. That agreement does not require any extended field trips outside of the state of Missouri. The Board of Education had no contractual duty to conduct such trips. They were optional. Courts cannot add terms to a contract.
With these general observations in mind we look to Toole’s first claim of error, “that the Superintendent failed to show by competent and substantial evidence that principal Lofton or N.S.I. Gabryshak [the person the charges alleged issued the orders] had authority to order plaintiff to volunteer for an extended field trip.” The statement of charges was as follows:
You, Edgar Toole Jr., military science teacher assigned to the Cleveland Navy Junior ROTC Academy, are hereby charged with the following misconduct:
Charge No. 1: You violated Board of Education Regulations 5210 and 5346 (copies of which are attached hereto and incorporated herein by reference) in that you failed to obey a lawful order and directive issued by a superior, Ivory Lof-ton, Cleveland NJROTC Academy Principal, that you accompany thirty-seven Cadets on an educational field trip to Pensacola, Florida, on December 15, 1986. On November 13, 1986, Mr. Lofton directed you by written memorandum to complete the appropriate forms for the assigned field trip and return them to him no later than Monday, November 17, 1986. On November 17, 1986, you returned the forms to Mr. Lofton without the requested information, stating in *384writing, “I must assume that if you have the authority to order me to take a trip, you also have the authority to grant or authorize the time required for the trip. Moreover, should I volunteer as an escort on a field trip, I will submit the appropriate forms.”
Charge No. 2: You violated Board of Education Regulations 5210 and 5346 (referenced above) in that you failed to obey a lawful order and directive issued by a superior, Military Science Coordinator Lieutenant Commander Betty Ga-bryshak, that you complete and execute appropriate forms to accompany Cadets on an educational field trip to Norfolk, Virginia, on April 27, 1987. On or about March 23, 1987, LCDR Gabryshak contacted you to ascertain why you had not completed the forms. You informed her that you were not going on the Norfolk trip and, further, that you would tell the Captain, Jones, and whomever else, that you were not going because they were not paying you and that you will see us in court. (Our emphasis).
The relevant findings of fact and conclusions of law of the school board are as follows:
4. On or about November 13, 1986, Ivory F. Lofton, Cleveland NJROTC Academy principal, directed Edgar Toole to accompany 37 cadets on an educational field trip to Pensacola, Florida, scheduled for December 15, 1986. In conjunction therewith, Mr. Lofton requested that Edgar Toole complete the appropriate personnel forms and return them to him no later than November 17, 1986. Mr. Toole refused to obey the request and returned the incomplete forms, stating in writing, “I must assume that if you have the authority to order me to take a trip., you also have the authority to grant or authorize the time required for the trip. Moreover, should I volunteer as an escort on a field trip, I will submit the appropriate forms.” As principal of the Cleveland NJROTC Academy, Ivory Lofton has ultimate supervisory responsibility for all employees assigned to his building location.
5. On or about March 23, 1987, Lieutenant Commander Betty Gabryshak requested completed forms for an educational field trip to Norfolk, Virginia, for which Edgar Toole had been assigned. Mr. Toole again refused to complete the forms and advised LCDR Ga-bryshak that he was not going on the Norfolk, Virginia, trip scheduled for April 27, 1987. He further advised that he would tell the Captain, Jones, and whomever else that he was not going because they were not paying him and he would see them in court. LCDR Gabrys-hak is jointly employed by the Board of Education as a military science coordinator and the U.S. Department of the Navy as a naval science instructor. LCDR Ga-bryshak has supervisory responsibilities for Mr. Toole. (Our emphasis).
* * * * * *
D. The conduct of Edgar Toole Jr., described in paragraph 4 of the above Findings of Fact, constitutes failure to obey the lawful order and directive of a superior, Principal Ivory Lofton, to complete necessary forms and to accompany 37 cadets on a field trip to Pensacola, Florida, and is therefore a violation of Board Regulations 5210 and 5346. It is the conclusion of the Board that Edgar Toole’s violation of Regulations 5210 and 5346 in this instance is sufficiently serious standing alone to warrant his dismissal as an employee of the Board of Education of the City of St. Louis.
E. The conduct of Edgar Toole Jr., described in paragraph 5 of the above Findings of Fact, constitutes failure to obey the lawful order and directive of a superior, LCDR Betty Gabryshak, to complete necessary forms and to accompany cadets on a field trip to Norfolk, Virginia, and is therefore a violation of Board Regulations 5210 and 5346. It is the conclusion of the Board that Edgar Toole’s violation of Regulations 5210 and 5346 in this instance is sufficiently serious standing alone to warrant his dismissal as an employee of the Board of Education of the City of St. Louis. (Our emphasis).
*385The narrow issue on this claim of error is whether the Board of Education proved by competent and substantial evidence that Toole failed to obey “lawful orders and directives issued by their superiors” as required by Board Regulation 5210 and was subject to discipline, including dismissal, under Board Regulation 5346. He claims he was fired for refusing to volunteer for two extended field trips.
We note, generally, that Toole was charged with failing to complete “appropriate forms” for extended field trips to begin on November 17, 1986 and April 27, 1987. The only “appropriate form” mentioned in evidence was a “LEAVE OF ABSENCE” form utilized by the school board. That form begins “I request a leave of absence in accordance with the regulations of the Department of Instruction as indicated below.” (Our emphasis). Thereafter follow three columns denoting three separate categories for the request. They are: (1) for personal illness; (2) for study; and, (3) for reasons other than illness or study, “(i.e.) educational conferences, personal, military, etc.” The form required a signature and provides for a counter signature of approval by a principal or director of personnel. Each category requires documentation and refers to “total school days absent.” Someone on behalf of the school board prepared the Leave of Absence form which Toole was ordered to sign. Toole’s position before his superiors and the board was that he would not volunteer for extended field trips; and, the leave of absence form, in form and substance, was a document indicating a voluntary request. If Toole is not absolutely correct that the form was a device to volunteer then the words “I request” are rendered meaningless and execution of the document is a falsehood. Surely the conclusion the Board can fire a teacher for refusing to make a false statement to the Board is untenable. The majority opinion has that effect. It must be noticed the district and the Board made the execution of the form a critical event, the event tested by charge, findings and conclusion of law. We also observe that the form for the April, 1987 trip, prepared by a superior of Toole, does not state any reason in the “reason category.” It merely notes a destination of “Naval Base, Norfolk, Va.”
The charges and the findings are directed toward a failure to sign “appropriate forms,” as charged, or “necessary forms” as set forth in the findings of fact. The record is barren to prove either that the Leave of Absence form was an appropriate or a necessary form. It is not possible from a study of all the evidence to determine the reason the Leave of Absence document was required. Further, the form of the Leave of Absence document is in the nature of a petition by a teacher subject to approval of a superior. Any allusion to use of the form to keep track of a teacher proves nothing if a teacher is on a trip planned and ordered by the Board. This is entirely inconsistent with the board’s position that an ANSI teacher could be ordered to make extended field trips as a part of his teaching duties. It follows that an order that the teacher sign the document in order to comply with a part of his teaching duties is a contradiction in terms. If the Board or any superior had authority to issue a lawful order that Toole accompany students outside the State of Missouri on an extended field trip, no teacher request for leave approval of an absence was necessary. In the absence of evidence justifying the order, neither the board nor the circuit court was justified in speculating as to the reason for the directive to sign the form.
Significantly, prior to either of the orders of superiors to sign the Leave of Absence form and accompany students Toole requested from the Superintendent of Schools advice on whether ANSI’s were required to go on extended field trips and, if so, under what circumstances. The reply was equivocal on whether “field trips” were required. Even if the expression of “belief” is sufficient, the answer did not address extended field trips, including those outside the school district and outside the State of Missouri. Nor did the reply respond by any advice on circumstances. This is particularly meaningful because the reply did not inform Toole that he had to volunteer by signing a request for leave of *386absence. Accordingly, there was no evidence from which the board or the circuit court could find that the Leave of Absence form was appropriate or necessary as charged, but not proven, and as found.
The charges were not that Toole refused to make extended field trips. Both charges alleged Toole refused to complete the appropriate forms, the Leave of Absence form. Charge 2 is limited to this violation only. Charge 1 may appear different but it is not. It refers to a direction of November 13, 1986 from Mr. Lofton directed to Toole. The entire written memorandum dated November 13, 1986 reads as follows:
Pursuant to our conference, you will find attached the appropriate forms to effectuate your Leave of Absence for your assigned field trip.
The attached form shall be returned to my office not later than Monday, November 17, 1986.
This memorandum does not order Toole to make a trip. The evidence, taken as a whole, together with all reasonable inferences, is entirely silent on whether the Leave of Absence form which Toole admittedly refused to sign because he refused to volunteer was an appropriate or necessary form. In the absence of such evidence it is not possible to determine that the order to sign the form was “authorized” or “lawful.”
It is not necessary for us to decide whether the School Board for the City of St. Louis has authority to require a teacher to accompany students outside the school district or outside the State of Missouri or both. This broader question is not resolved by evidence or any findings of fact or a conclusion of law. When asked, the Superintendent of Schools office did not define the circumstances under which permanent school teachers could be required to make such trips. The teacher contract executed by the Board of Education and Toole does not resolve this question and no legal precedent has been cited to this court to decide that question. Had there been evidence regarding the appropriateness or necessity for signing the Leave of Absence form then supporting evidence or legal authority of the board to order a teacher may have been necessary. The school board has cited no authority before this court to support the order. By its brief the board claims that the letter of Doris D. Eldridge, dated September 22, 1986, stated that extended field trips were a performance requirement for ANSI’s. We have already noted it is not what the letter of September 22, 1986 accomplished. It stated only a “belief” and mentioned field trips, not extended field trips, if there is a difference. Further, it did not, as requested, define the circumstances under which extended field trips might be ordered. It did not define execution of the form as a circumstance. The more general question, the authority, if there was any, for the “belief,” has never been noted in the record.
The majority opinion emphasizes Toole’s responses but ignores the charges and findings. It also ignores the fact that he constantly informed authorities that he would not volunteer for extended field trips. He was never ordered to go except by signing a form which can have no meaning except “I volunteer.” Accordingly, it makes no difference that he also requested additional pay and an alternative selection format. These were matters relevant to his decision whether to volunteer. If he was charged with refusing to make an extended field trip after a direct order that he make such trip and without regard to a preliminary, but integral part of the order that he sign the form volunteering to go, we would be reviewing a case that was never presented to the Board or to the circuit court, we would be reviewing the case which the majority reviews.
We are not authorized to make different findings for the Board than the Board itself made. Finding No. 5 does not mention any order to make an extended filed trip. It finds only that “Mr. Toole again refused to complete the forms.” It does not find that he was ordered to make a trip on April 27, 1987 apart from completing forms. A full reading of finding No. 4 reached the same result but also discloses how the Board viewed Toole’s position, as a person refusing to volunteer by noting his statement that if the Board had authority to *387order him to take a trip it also had authority to grant or authorize the time required for the trip. In analyzing the two charges the majority opinion recognizes that the second charge involved only a lawful order and directive that he complete and execute appropriate forms. However, the opinion does not recognize that the first charge also included refusal to obey Mr. Lofton’s directive to complete appropriate forms. Nor does the opinion recognize that the findings of fact in response to the first charge is a combined finding of refusing to execute the forms and to make the trip. This would account for the difference between finding proof of the charge by competent and substantial evidence and a finding that it was not proven by that standard.
The misdirection of the majority opinion is highlighted by the footnote regarding “volunteer.” The majority relegates “volunteer” to an expression of preference for assignment to a particular field trip. That observation is incorrect. Proof of the fact that it is incorrect lies initially in charge No. 1 which quotes Toole’s letter of November 17, 1986. Volunteer was used in the letter, in the charge and throughout the hearing, in its ordinary and usual sense of request for permission. It was used as the opposite of obeying a lawful order. The approach of the footnote totally ignores the charge the Board considered, the position of Toole, and the finding of the Board. In this respect, the word “appropriate” is very significant. That word was utilized in the charges and in the findings of fact. In the conclusions of law the Board changed the language to read “complete necessary forms.” If the forms were not appropriate, and they clearly and patently were not, then they certainly were not necessary. There was no evidence from which the Board could find either that they were appropriate or necessary. It is both appropriate and necessary to face this issue to decide appellant’s claim of error that school officials “had no authority to order plaintiff to volunteer for an extended field trip.”
The majority opinion discusses the Superintendent’s Statement of Personnel Practices of July 9, 1986. The difficulty with that discussion is that it ignores Tooles’ argument that authorities could not order him to volunteer for extended field trips. That is how he was charged, that was the substance of the findings of fact and conclusions of law but that is not the subject of the discussion in the opinion. The Statement of Personnel Practices in July 9,1986, does not mention a Leave of Absence form submitted by a tenured teacher who is requesting permission for an extended field trip. Any order that he sign such form is not supported by the Statement of Personnel Practices. The opinion contains a statement, “[njothing in the record indicates that a concern was raised as to whether ANSIs were required to go on field trips.” But, on August 27, 1986, Toole wrote a letter to Jerome B. Jones, Superintendent of Schools, in which he addressed seven questions to the superintendent. Question no. 7 was “Are ANSI’s required to go on extended field trips? If so, what are the circumstances?” The letter or August 27, 1986, was Superintendent’s Exhibit 5. Clearly, the record demonstrates that the concern was raised long before Toole was told to sign the Leave of Absence form and go on an extended field trip on December 15, 1986. An Assistant Superintendent of Schools responded by expressing a belief “that field trips are a performance requirement.” No response to “extended field trips” was given and no response to the requested description of circumstances was made. The further statement that the Board could have reasonably believed that Toole knew that extended field trips were a requirement of the position is wholly unsupported because all trips prior to those which are the subject matter of Charge 1 and Charge 2 were handled on a volunteer basis. There was no evidence to the contrary. There was no evidence Toole signed a leave of absence form before prior extended field trips. Accordingly, the prior trips offer no support for the Board’s belief, if it had one, that Toole knew extended field trips were a requirement of the position. The record is exactly the opposite.
Finally, the majority opinion says Toole abandoned reliance on his Permanent *388Teacher Contract. On page 11 of the appellants’ brief the following appears:
Toole had a permanent teacher contract with the Board of Education. (Superintendent’s Exhibit 4). However, the court’s order states as a finding that he was jointly employed by the Board of Education and the Navy. The evidence does not support this finding. The agreement between the St. Louis, Missouri Public Schools and the Navy is attached as Superintendent’s Exhibit 7. The agreement states in paragraph 0 that ‘the institution will give each N.J.R. O.T.C. instructor • a written contract which stipulates the duration of his employment, including identification of the specific periods during which the instructor will be performing duties in direct support of the N.J.R.O.T.C. program, and the amount of his salary.’ (Superintendent’s Exhibit 7 at page 2). The agreement further states: p ... ‘in the event that the employing institution desires N.J.R.O.T.C. instructors to perform such other duties (i.e., non-N.J.R.O.T.C. classes or study halls) the institution will contract separate agreements with the N.J.R.O.T.C. instructor to perform such duties ... ’ (Superintendent’s Exhibit 7 at page 3). By giving Toole a regular teacher contract the Board of Education was in direct violation of the very agreement under which the Board sought to force Toole to go on extended filed trips under Board authority.
The general claim of error was absence of competent and substantial evidence of authority to order plaintiff to volunteer. The specifics related to the Board agreement with the Navy, the Statement of Personnel Practices and the Permanent Teacher Contract. All were argued in the argument portion of the brief and none were abandoned. It is therefore necessary to view the contract which is an exhibit. The relevant provisions are: (1) the teacher shall serve as a permanent employee of the Board of Education; (2) teacher agrees to be in attendance at work beginning on the first scheduled day of duty and thereafter in accordance with the schedule established by the Board of Education for each school year; (3) teacher’s employment shall be subject to all provisions of Missouri law applicable to permanent teachers employed by metropolitan school districts and to the rules, regulations, policies and policy statements of the Board of Education in effect during the school year. All such provisions are expressly made a part of the contract. It is evident that the trial court’s finding that Toole was jointly employed by the Board of Education and the Navy is unsupported and incorrect. That finding is also in conflict with the agreement of the Board with the Department of the Navy. CNE-TINST 1533 .F 404(e) requires an ANSI to have “civilian status.” It follows that the teacher contract controls and no military order is involved in the direction that Toole sign a Leave of Absence form and make an extended field trip.
In the absence of any proof representatives of the school district could order a permanent tenured teacher to request of the district a leave of absence the charges, the findings of fact and conclusions of law are unsupported by any evidence whatever. Nor could there have been such proof because the charges, findings and conclusions are contradictions in terms. Nor was this a mystery to the Superintendent or the Board. Toole informed the superintendent that if it had authority to order him to go then a request for permission to go initiated by Toole was not appropriate, necessary, or authorized. The charges alleged, as fact, that he was ordered to sign the forms, that he refused to sign the forms, but the forms were appropriate. More than words or the meaning of words such as “volunteer” is at stake. Fair treatment of an employee, under the law, is at stake. The school district never ordered Toole to make the trip except after signing forms. If the forms were appropriate or necessary the Board had every opportunity to prove why they were appropriate or why there were necessary. That is what they charged and found. Those findings are wholly unsupported by any evidence. The judgment of the trial court should be reversed. This court should remand with *389instructions that the findings and conclusions of the School Board be reversed and that a hearing be held on appellants’ application for unpaid wages.
APPENDIX
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