IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
NO. 94-CA-00394-SCT
BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE JACKSON PUBLIC SCHOOL DISTRICT
v.
BISHOP EARL KNOX
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 04/22/94
TRIAL JUDGE: HON. W. O. DILLARD
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: HINDS COUNTY CHANCERY COURT
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: JAMES A. KEITH
OTTOWA E. CARTER, JR.
PERRY SANSING
JOANNE NELSON
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: NATHAN W. KELLUM
STEPHEN M. CRAMPTON
NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - OTHER
DISPOSITION: REVERSED AND RENDERED - 2/13/97
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED: 3/6/97
BEFORE PRATHER, P.J., PITTMAN AND McRAE, JJ.
PRATHER, PRESIDING JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
I. INTRODUCTION
¶1. This Court is called upon in the present appeal to review the reversal by the Hinds County
Chancery Court of the one-year suspension of Dr. Bishop Knox from his duties as principal of
Wingfield High School by the Jackson School Board. The School Board suspended Dr. Knox in
response to his actions in permitting the reading of prayers over the Wingfield High School intercom
in spite of advice from the School District's counsel that the reading of the prayers was
unconstitutional. This Court concludes that the lack of professional judgment shown by Dr. Knox in
the present case constitutes "other good cause" entitling the School Board to suspend Dr. Knox
under Miss. Code Ann. § 37-9-59 and that the Board did not act arbitrarily or capriciously in
suspending Dr. Knox. This Court accordingly reverses the Chancellor's ruling and affirms the
suspension of Dr. Knox by the School Board.
II. STATEMENT OF THE FACTS
¶2. At the beginning of the 1993-1994 school year, Dr. Bishop Knox, then serving as principal of
Wingfield High School, considered a request by several students that they be allowed to read a prayer
over the school's intercommunication system (intercom) at the beginning of each school day. On
November 2, 1993, Dr. Knox informed Dr. Sanders, serving as both assistant superintendent and
deputy superintendent, of the students' plans to read the daily prayer. Although he was told by Dr.
Knox that the proposed prayers were permissible under applicable legal authority, Dr. Sanders
recommended that Dr. Knox consult Ms. JoAnne Nelson, the staff attorney, for her input. Dr. Knox
indicated that he had conducted his own research into this issue and that he intended to proceed with
plans for a vote regarding the prayers among the student body of Wingfield High.
¶3. Dr. Knox did consult Ms. Nelson, who informed Knox that she considered the proposed prayers
to be unconstitutional, but she stated that she would conduct additional research and advise him
accordingly. Dr. Knox presented the issue of the prayers to the student body of Wingfield High, who
on November 5, 1993 voted 490-96 to allow the prayers to be read. Prior to allowing the prayers to
be read for the first time, Dr. Knox awaited the opinion of Ms. Nelson, who responded on November
8, 1994 with an opinion that the Clear Creek decision permitting prayers at graduation (and cited by
Knox in support of the prayers) was inapplicable to the present situation and that the proposed prayer
was unconstitutional.
¶4. Dr. Knox mentioned the possibility of calling the prayers "announcements", but Ms. Nelson
rejected this assertion as being inconsistent with legal precedent. Knox requested that Ms. Nelson
research the matter further, and she agreed but advised him to contact the central office and the
School Board before reading the prayers and thus subjecting the district to possible legal action. Dr.
Knox attempted unsuccessfully to reach Dr. Sanders by telephone, and he informed Ms. Nelson that
he planned to proceed with the prayers as planned. The first prayer, which was non-sectarian and
non-prostelyzing in nature, was read on Tuesday, November 9, 1993.
¶5. The following day, Ms. Nelson reiterated her opinion that the prayer was unconstitutional. Dr.
Knox asked her to supply a memorandum in support of that opinion, which she supplied that
afternoon. Knox acknowledges that Ms. Nelson stressed that the district might have to pay opposing
attorney's fees if a lawsuit were filed against the District and he acknowledges that Ms. Nelson
instructed him to consult with the Superintendent prior to continuing the prayers. Nevertheless,
prayers were offered on both November 10 and November 11 even though no consultation with the
Superintendent was made. Deputy Superintendent Sanders placed Dr. Knox on administrative leave
on November 11. Sanders testified that he considered this action necessary because Knox was "not
taking heed of the directives that were given to him both verbally and in writing."
III. STATEMENT OF THE CASE
¶6. On November 24, 1993, Superintendent Benjamin Canada of the Jackson Public School District
dismissed Dr. Bishop Knox as principal of Wingfield High School. On December 15, 1993, the
School Board modified the Superintendent's dismissal and suspended Dr. Knox without pay for the
remainder of the school year. Dr. Knox appealed the Board's decision to the Hinds County Chancery
Court, which on April 22, 1994 ordered the Board to reinstate Dr. Knox with full back pay and to
prepare guidelines for school prayer consistent with that court's ruling.
¶7. On April 26, 1994, the Board filed a motion to stay execution pending appeal before this Court.
This Court rejected the motion, ruling that the Board had not demonstrated a "strong likelihood of
success on the merits" of their appeal. The present appeal represents the appeal on the merits of the
Chancery Court's ruling in reversing Dr. Knox's suspension.
IV. ISSUES
A. A high school principal consciously disregarded his school district's position regarding
a legal issue, as stated to him on four occasions by the district's attorney. As a result, the
school board suspended the principal for "lack of professional judgment" pursuant to
Miss. Code Ann. § 37-9-59 (1990), which permits suspension for "incompetence, neglect
of duty, immoral conduct, intemperance, brutal treatment of a pupil or other good
cause." The question is whether "lack of professional judgment" can qualify as "other
good cause" under § 37-9-59.
B. In setting aside the school board's action, the Chancery Court based its decision on the
constitutionality of the principal's decision to allow a student to recite a prayer over the
school's intercom system. Did the Chancery Court err by not applying the standard of
review mandated by state law and instead basing its decision on an issue that was not
before the court?
C. Was the school board's decision to suspend the principal supported by substantial
evidence and not arbitrary or capricious?
¶8. The Board's points of error are combined as they all deal with the issue of whether the suspension
of Knox was properly overturned on appellate review by the Chancery Court. The primary issue in
the present appeal centers around whether the Board acted within the authority granted it by Miss.
Code Ann. § 37-9-59 in suspending Knox for his actions in permitting the reading of the prayers. In
spite of the fact that the present case tangentially involves the much-litigated and discussed issue of
the constitutionality of school prayer, the present case is in actuality one of statutory interpretation.
Miss. Code Ann. §37-9-59, "Suspension or removal of principal or teacher; prohibited grounds for
denying employment or reemployment," provides that:
For incompetence, neglect of duty, immoral conduct, intemperance, brutal treatment of a pupil
or other good cause the superintendent of schools may dismiss or suspend any certificated
employee in any school district.
This Court noted in Madison County Board of Education v. Miles, 173 So.2d 425 (Miss. 1965) that
the "legislative intent in enacting this section was to make teachers and principals reasonably secure
in their jobs and subject to removal only for serious causes."
¶9. In Merchant v. Board of Trustees of Pearl Mun. Separate School. Dist, 492 So.2d 959 (Miss.
1986) this Court affirmed the dismissal by a school board of a coach for a variety of insubordinate
actions, including repeated violations of school financial policies. Specifically, this Court found that
the coach had failed to account for monies belonging to the system by selling football jerseys to
senior members of the team without authority and without turning the money into the district.
Merchant, 492 So.2d at 963. This Court noted that:
Considering in the aggregate the matters outlined above, we have no authority to reverse. No
objective observer could doubt that there was before the School Board substantial credible
evidence suggesting the correctness of each finding. Nor could an objective observer dispute
that the Board, considering these findings in the aggregate, could reasonably have concluded
that incompetence, neglect of duty, and insubordination justif(y) dismissal within Miss. Code.
Ann. §37-9-59 (Supp. 1985). Merchant, 492 So.2d at 963.
¶10. In Byrd v. Greene County School Dist., 633 So.2d 1018 (Miss. 1994), this Court reversed the
termination by a school district of a teacher's employment based on a financial crisis in the school
district. This Court agreed with the teacher that the "other good cause" under § 37-9-59 is "triggered
only by personal misconduct" on the part of the teacher and accordingly reversed the school district's
dismissal of the teacher. Byrd, 633 So.2d at 1023. In Spradlin v. Board of Trustees of Pascagoula
Mun. Separate School Dist., 515 So.2d 893 (Miss. 1987), this Court affirmed the dismissal of an
administrator based on a single misrepresentation which the administrator had made to the school
board regarding a failure to comply with purchasing requirements. Spradlin, 515 So.2d at 897.
¶11. In the present case, the conduct by Dr. Knox arguably did not rise to the level of the
insubordinate, given that he was never directly ordered by one of his superiors to not permit the
prayers to be read over the intercom. However, Dr. Knox can be said to have demonstrated a lack of
judgment in having the prayer read in face of serious concerns expressed by the school district's
attorney that said activities could result in costly litigation for the school district. The Board argues
that such a "lack of professional judgment" should be held by this Court to constitute "other good
cause" permitting a school board to suspend a principal or teacher. The term "lack of professional
judgment," however, is so broad as to be almost meaningless as a grounds for suspension or
dismissal, and it is thus proper for this Court to instead examine the specific actions of Dr. Knox in
the present case.
¶12. The Board is correct in asserting that the present case does not center around the issue of the
constitutionality of prayer in schools. The Board is further correct in arguing that the Chancellor was
incorrect in apparently basing his ruling in part upon his own strongly held personal views regarding
prayer in school and a number of other issues irrelevant to the issue of whether the School Board
exceeded its statutory authority in suspending Knox. The Chancellor's ruling is replete with the
Chancellor's personal views regarding the alleged decline in moral values in this country's schools and
a litany of other social and political issues.
¶13. The fact that the Chancellor gave improper weight to the issues surrounding the constitutionality
of prayer in schools does not mean that his ruling in overruling the School Board's actions was
incorrect. The dismissal of Dr. Knox by the Board should be affirmed if said action was supported by
substantial evidence and was therefore not arbitrary and capricious, and this Court must also consider
the intent of the Legislature in limiting the grounds for suspension or termination of a principal.
¶14. In the view of this Court, the actions of Dr. Knox in disregarding the legal advice of the staff
attorney and proceeding to have the school prayers read in spite of a lack of any urgency for doing
so, constitutes "other good cause" in support of his suspension by the School Board. In this age of
litigious students and parents and of shrinking school budgets, a school district must have the ability
to control its employees in such a manner as to protect itself from having to defend against lawsuits
which may arise from the conduct of a principal or teacher.
¶15. The school environment is unique with regard to the extent to which decisions by principals and
teachers can give rise to lawsuits on constitutional and other legal grounds. The funds spent by a
school district in responding to legal challenges constitute resources that could be spent much more
productively in the education of students. A holding by this Court reversing the Board's suspension of
Knox could have the harmful effect of encouraging actions by principals or teachers who desire to
use their position to promote their own political, social or religious agendas or who merely desire to
gain publicity for themselves. A holding by this Court excusing Dr. Knox's actions because he had not
been specifically ordered to disallow the prayers could also set a harmful precedent by allowing
teachers or principals to conduct sensitive activities as long as they had not been specifically ordered
not to do so by their superiors.
¶16. This Court noted in Hoffman v. Board of Trustees, East Mississippi Junior College, 567
So.2d 838 (Miss. 1990) that:
Our scope of review in these matters is quite limited. We accept our duty of deference to the
hearing officials and this is no different when those officials are the ultimate legal authority for
the school district. We look to see whether the decision of the Board is supported by substantial
evidence, was arbitrary or capricious, was beyond the power of the Board to make, or violated
some statutory or constitutional right of the complaining party. . . . Most assuredly, by way of
contrast, the test is not what we would have decided had we been the trier of the issues in
dispute. Hoffman, 567 So.2d at 842.
It can not be said that the Board's actions in dismissing Knox were arbitrary or capricious where
Knox permitted the reading of the school prayers in spite of specific advice from the school district
attorney that said actions were unconstitutional and had the potential to subject the school district to
considerable expenses.
¶17. There are undoubtedly emergency situations in which a principal is required to make a hasty
decision regarding an important matter without guidance from the school district officials, but the
present case does not involve such a situation. It is true that the incident in question was an isolated
one, and Dr. Knox's actions did not have the potential of placing any students in any real danger. This
Court's holding in Spradlin, however, indicates that the misconduct in question need not constitute a
course of conduct, nor need any danger to the students arise as a result of the misconduct in
question. Accordingly, the suspension of Dr. Knox by the School Board is affirmed and the
chancellor's ruling is reversed.(1)
¶18. REVERSED AND RENDERED.
SULLIVAN, P.J., PITTMAN, BANKS AND McRAE, JJ., CONCUR. DAN LEE, C.J.,
DISSENTS WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION JOINED BY ROBERTS AND SMITH,
JJ. MILLS, J., NOT PARTICIPATING.
DAN LEE, CHIEF JUSTICE, DISSENTING:
¶19. With respect for the view of the majority, I believe they have misinterpreted the law of this State
in finding that the "lack of professional judgment shown by Dr. Knox in the present case constitutes
'other good cause' entitling the School Board to suspend Dr. Knox under Miss. Code Ann. § 37-9-59
and that the Board did not act arbitrarily or capriciously in suspending Dr. Knox." This singular
charge is not and should not be recognized by Miss. Code Ann. § 37-9-59 as a valid reason to
suspend. Dr. Knox, although possibly deserving of some disciplinary action, was wrongfully removed
from his contracted position. The School Board's actions were improper, arbitrary and capricious. I
fear that the result reached by today's majority will result in an unreasonable and unnecessary
expansion of the law relative to dismissals and nonrenewals of school employees and a move
backward for employment law in the State of Mississippi. Therefore, I respectfully dissent.
¶20. The Jackson Public School District recommended that Dr. Knox be terminated from
employment, citing the following reasons: insubordination, neglect of duty, intentional disregard of
district policy and lack of professional judgment. Upon review of the record before it, the School
Board rejected all but the last reason brought by the District, finding that Dr. Knox was not
insubordinate, that he did not neglect any of his duties as principal and that he did not intentionally
disregard any school district policy. Unfortunately, the Board did find that the actions of Dr. Knox
"demonstrated a lack of professional judgment" and, upon such finding, they suspended Dr. Knox for
the remainder of the school year.
¶21. Miss. Code Ann. § 37-9-59 provides the statutory authority for the dismissal or suspension of
certificated personnel and it states, in part:
[f]or incompetence, neglect of duty, immoral conduct, intemperance, brutal treatment of a pupil
or other good cause the superintendent of schools may dismiss or suspend any certificated
employee in any school district.
Through this statute, the legislature attempted to make school principals and teachers reasonably
secure in their jobs. They were subject to removal only for serious causes. Madison County Bd. of
Educ. v. Miles, 173 So. 2d 425 (Miss 1965).
¶22. The charge of "lack of professional conduct" is an ambiguous catch-all phrase and is not
enumerated by statute as a ground for dismissal or suspension of certificated employees.
Subsequently, the charge must fall under the enumerated ground of "other good cause." However,
this Court has never held that a school employee's "lack of professional judgment" constitutes "other
good cause" warranting suspension or dismissal. We have recognized insubordination, general
uncooperativeness and incompetence and repetitious or persistent unprofessional conduct as
"misconduct" included within the meaning of "other good cause." See Byrd v. Greene County
School Dist., 633 So. 2d 1018 (Miss. 1994); Everett v. Bd. of Trustees, 492 So. 2d 277 (Miss.
1986); Sims v. Bd. of Trustees, 414 So. 2d 431 (Miss. 1982); Stegall v. Jones, 241 So. 2d 349
(Miss. 1970).
¶23. This Court has limited the phrase "other good cause" to pertain only to charges of the same
class as those specified. Byrd, 633 So. 2d at 1023; Miles, 173 So. 2d at 427. The term "lack of
professional judgment" does not even encompass the correctness of the decision itself, but merely
whether poor judgment was employed in reaching the decision. Poor judgment in a given instance
does not proximate the seriousness of the grounds enumerated by the statute. The Board itself found
that "lack of professional judgment did not rise to the level of insubordination, neglect of duty or
intentional disregard of school district policy." That being true, and recognizing the rule of ejusdem
generis, "lack of professional judgment" is not the same kind, class or nature as the enumerated
grounds for dismissal provided in Miss. Code Ann. § 37-9-59.
¶24. The actions by Dr. Knox do not rise to the level of the enumerated grounds for suspension or
dismissal nor to they merit such disciplinary action. This case should be affirmed. Therefore, I
respectfully dissent.
ROBERTS AND SMITH, JJ., JOIN THIS OPINION.
1. This Court declines to consider "points of error" purportedly raised by Knox regarding alleged
violations of his due process rights(2)
2. Knox asserts that he was deprived of his right to procedural due process, including the right to
question witnesses and to examine evidence prior to the hearing in question. Knox also asserts that he
was denied a fair hearing based on the fact that one of the school board members had expressed the
opinion in an interview prior to the hearing the opinion that the suspension of Knox was justified. - "
"