IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
Cornwall-Lebanon School District :
:
v. : No. 814 C.D. 2016
: ARGUED: December 12, 2016
Cornwall-Lebanon Education :
Association, :
Appellant :
BEFORE: HONORABLE ROBERT SIMPSON, Judge
HONORABLE JOSEPH M. COSGROVE, Judge
HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Senior Judge
OPINION NOT REPORTED
MEMORANDUM OPINION BY
SENIOR JUDGE LEADBETTER FILED: February 3, 2017
Cornwall-Lebanon Education Association (the Association) appeals
from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Lebanon County that (1) granted
Cornwall-Lebanon School District’s (the District) petition to vacate an arbitrator’s
award sustaining in part and denying in part the consolidated grievances of teacher
Luke Scipioni (grievance sustained by arbitrator as to improper relationship with
student and unlawful possession of music downloads, but denied as to lying to
Superintendent about relationship and improper review and preservation of
inappropriate e-mail images on a district computer); and (2) modifying the
arbitrator’s remedy of suspension, with a serious contingency and penalty,1 to
1
The contingency and penalty were as follows:
(Footnote continued on next page…)
termination of employment. Before common pleas, the District conceded that the
arbitrator’s award satisfied the essence test but maintained that it should be vacated
based on the Supreme Court’s narrow public policy exception providing that, “a
court should not enforce a grievance arbitration award that contravenes public
policy.” Westmoreland Intermediate Unit #7 v. Westmoreland Intermediate Unit
#7 Classroom Assistants Educ. Support Pers. Ass’n, PSEA/NEA (Westmoreland I),
939 A.2d 855, 863 (Pa. 2007). In this regard, it is important to note that it is the
award which must be found to contravene public policy, not the underlying
behavior itself. We conclude that common pleas erred in granting the District’s
petition to vacate the arbitration award and, accordingly, reverse.
_____________________________
(continued…)
Mr. Scipioni’s termination should be mitigated to a year-
long suspension without pay or District contributions to any
benefits for the school year 2014-2015, followed by his
reinstatement for school year 2015-2016. However, the District
may at its discretion and upon written notice to the Association
reinstate him at his salary for the 2013-2014 school year without
increment, if any, and without a negotiated increase for the 2015-
2016 year. That is, if he is still in the “step” system, he is not to be
granted credit for the year of his suspension and if he is at the top
step in his education column on the guide, his percentage of dollar
increase will be calculated on his 2013-2014 salary rather than the
salary he would have earned had he not been suspended for the
2014-2015 year.
In addition, Mr. Scipioni may be, at the District’s discretion
and upon written notice to him and the Association, placed on
probationary status for the duration of his employment with the
District. Should he be found guilty by an independent tribunal of
any further material dishonesty with the District, he may be
terminated at the District’s discretion.
August 16, 2015, Arbitration Award at 25-26; Reproduced Record (R.R.) 96-97a.
2
The relevant facts as found by the arbitrator are as follows.2 The
District employed Scipioni as a high school social studies teacher. During the
2003-2004 school year, he was head coach of the girls’ high school basketball
team. Sometime late in the season, senior “AH” related to Scipioni and the
coaching staff that she had been the victim of sexual abuse. They immediately
reported the matter to the authorities and the local police started an investigation
that night. Although AH later repudiated her allegations, a male was removed
from her home and faced criminal charges. In any event, following significant
contact between AH and Scipioni and her eighteenth birthday in May 2004, their
relationship culminated in a sexual encounter on graduation night in June 2004.
Although they continued their relationship throughout the summer, exchanging a
number of phone calls and text messages, it came to an end around the time AH
reported to college in late August or early September 2004.
After the 2004 season, rumors of the relationship continued to
circulate and Scipioni did not coach after that time allegedly due to family
pressures. When he subsequently expressed interest in coaching again, he was told
that the District did not want him to do so due to those rumors. Regarding those
rumors, the high school principal credibly testified that when he questioned
Scipioni about them both in 2010 and 2012, the teacher denied having an
inappropriate relationship with AH. August 16, 2015, Arbitration Award at 12 and
23; Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 83a and 94a. Scipioni admitted to the principal,
however, that he had gotten “too close” to AH and that it had caused him “a lot of
2
An arbitrator’s “findings of fact are not reviewable on appeal, and as long as he has
arguably construed or applied the collective bargaining agreement, an appellate court may not
second-guess his findings of fact or interpretation.” Coatesville Area Sch. Dist. v. Coatesville
Area Teachers’ Ass’n, PSEA, 978 A.2d 413, 415 n.2 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2009).
3
marital problems.” Id. at 12; R.R. at 83a. Nonetheless, he continued teaching
from September 2004 forward without incident.
Subsequently, when Scipioni was in protracted matrimonial litigation
in the early summer of 2014, the District received an anonymous phone call from
someone claiming knowledge of the 2004 relationship. The Superintendent carried
out an investigation, which resulted in the District’s suspension and subsequent
termination of Scipioni’s employment. Ultimately, the District alleged that the
teacher committed five violations: (1) failing to be frank, candid, and intellectually
honest and acting in an insubordinate manner; (2) being immoral by lying to the
Superintendent; (3) engaging in a physical, sexual relationship with an eighteen-
year old female student, beginning shortly after her graduation; (4) repeatedly and
willfully failing to comply with various laws, official directives, and policies by
illegally downloading and saving music onto a district computer; and (5)
repeatedly and willfully failing to comply with various laws, official directives,
and policies by reviewing and preserving e-mails with inappropriate and offensive
photographs and captions on his work computer. Id. at 6-7; R.R. at 77-78a.
Following the Association’s grievances on Scipioni’s behalf, both of
which were related to the District’s alleged violation of the just cause provision of
the parties’ collective bargaining agreement, the matter went to arbitration with the
stipulated issue of whether the District had just cause to suspend and,
subsequently, to terminate Scipioni’s employment and, if not, the appropriate
remedy. Ultimately, the arbitrator determined that the District failed to establish
just cause and that the interests of justice warranted mitigation of the District’s
termination of the teacher’s employment.
4
Subsequently, the District filed a petition to vacate the arbitrator’s
award, arguing that it contravened public policy. Common pleas granted the
petition, concluding that termination was the best option because it
will serve to ensure that other students will not be subject
to inappropriate conduct on the part of Scipioni in the
future. Moreover, it is unreasonable to expect the
District to subject its students to a teacher who has
outright lied to both his principal and his superintendent
and who has taken advantage of a District student to the
extent that it not only impaired her wellbeing at the time
of the affair, but also disrupted her college career and her
life as a wife and mother years later. This is not the type
of mentor who should be entrusted with the District’s
implementation of its duties to protect and serve its
students.
April 21, 2016, Common Pleas’ Opinion at 20. The Association’s appeal to this
Court followed.3
On appeal, the issues are as follows: (1) whether common pleas erred
in vacating the arbitrator’s award based on the public policy exception to the
essence test; and (2) whether the court improperly modified the arbitrator’s award.
It is now axiomatic that “an arbitration award will be upheld if it can rationally be
derived from the collective bargaining agreement, unless it contravenes public
policy.” City of Bradford v. Teamsters Union No. 110, 25 A.3d 408, 413 (Pa.
Cmwlth. 2011). Our three-step analysis for application of the public policy
exception provides that the court 1) identify the nature of the conduct leading to
the discipline; 2) determine if that conduct implicates a well-defined and dominant
public policy; and 3) determine if the arbitrator’s award poses an unacceptable risk
3
The determination of whether the award violated public policy is a question of law, subject
to our plenary review. Phila. Hous. Auth. v. Am. Fed’n of State, County, and Mun. Employees,
Dist. Council 33, Local 934, 52 A.3d 1117, 1121 (Pa. 2012).
5
that it will undermine the implicated policy and cause the public employer to
breach its lawful obligations or public duty, given the particular circumstances at
hand, including any attendant aggravating or mitigating factors, and the factual
findings of the arbitrator. Id. at 414. Although resolution of the third step is
determinative, we briefly review the first two steps to provide context for our
analysis.
Pursuant to the first step, the nature of the conduct leading to the
discipline primarily consists of the relationship that Scipioni had with a troubled
female student in 2004, his subsequent failure to be candid with District superiors,
and his review and preservation of inappropriate e-mails. Turning to the second
step, the District maintained that some of the well-defined and dominant public
policies implicating that conduct were the District’s duty to assure that staff
members were not acting inappropriately with students, duty to ensure the safety of
pupils for whom it had a direct responsibility, and duty to terminate an employee
who violated the duty of honesty to his employer. Assuming arguendo that the
District met the first two steps, we conclude that common pleas erred in
determining that it satisfied the third.4
In support of its determination that the District satisfied the third step,
common pleas concluded that, taking into consideration the collective conduct of
the teacher, the District proved that there was an unacceptable risk that the one-
year suspension, with a contingency and penalty, would undermine the implicated
policies or cause the District to breach its lawful obligations or public duty such
4
As the party below asserting that the award contravened public policy, the District carried
the burden of establishing that the award violated positive law. Pa. Tpk. Comm’n v. Teamsters
Local Union No. 250, 948 A.2d 196, 207 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2008).
6
that Scipioni should not be permitted to return to a classroom. In making its
determination, however, the court ignored both the factual findings and the actual
violations found by the arbitrator.
Although the arbitrator concluded that the pair was involved in a
physical, sexual, and romantic relationship beginning on or shortly after AH’s
graduation and ending in August 2004, he nonetheless sustained the grievance as to
the charge of having an inappropriate relationship. In so ruling, he observed that
the District did not contend that Scipioni had an improper relationship with AH
before graduation and that, “the evidence that the two had significant
communication and more interaction than usual between a coach or former coach
and athlete while AH was still a student does not demonstrate any impropriety.”
August 16, 2015, Arbitration Award at 20; R.R. at 91a. Accordingly, the arbitrator
concluded that Scipioni did not have culpability for whatever relationship he had
with AH after graduation when she was over eighteen and no longer a student.
In contrast, common pleas reweighed the facts relating to the timing
of the relationship, concluding that the “sexual/romantic relationship had its roots
firmly planted during the time that AH was a District student, with plans being
made to consummate that relationship as soon as she had her diploma in hand. We
do not believe that public policy condones such conduct.” April 21, 2016,
Common Pleas’ Opinion at 17. However, the arbitrator made no such finding of
fact.5 While it is true that the timing of the relationship was highly unfortunate for
a lot of reasons, the arbitrator took that factor into account in rendering his
5
Although the arbitrator credited testimony of AH’s sister that AH wished to consummate a
sexual relationship after her graduation, no evidence showed that Scipioni made such a
suggestion or engaged in such planning.
7
decision. By reweighing that timing and determining that public policy justified
reinstating the penalty of termination, common pleas improperly reinterpreted the
arbitrator’s fact-findings and substituted the court’s judgment as to the
appropriateness of the award. A reviewing court, however, may not second-guess
an arbitrator’s findings of fact or interpretation. Coatesville Area Sch. Dist. v.
Coatesville Area Teachers’ Ass’n, PSEA, 978 A.2d 413, 415 n.2 (Pa. Cmwlth.
2009). In addition, it may not review the merits or reasonableness of an award.
See Westmoreland I, 939 A.2d at 863. Finally, the court’s analysis erroneously
focused on whether the conduct violated public policy rather than whether the
award did so. We turn now to the teacher’s failure to be honest with district
officials.
The arbitrator found Scipioni’s falsehoods to be “somewhat excusable
and understandable,” while at the same time acknowledging that the denials were
self-serving. He opined as follows:
By divulging the truth, [Scipioni] would have put AH at
risk of embarrassment. It should be noted that up until
this investigation, AH, who has had a troubled life,
appears to have been in a stable marriage with her
husband and two sons. In addition, an admission by Mr.
Scipioni may have damaged his position in his divorce
proceedings and jeopardized his relationship with his
children, particularly the remaining minor child from his
marriage. Third, divulgence would have meant that all
actors in what was a tumultuous period in the life of AH,
Mr. Scipioni, Ms. Hartman and others would be subject
to re-opening old wounds. . . . With the exception of Mr.
Scipioni—and him only to a degree—none of the actors
here deserved to suffer having the zombies of their past
roam mercilessly through their present . . . .
August 16, 2015, Arbitration Award at 25; R.R. at 96a. Nonetheless, the arbitrator
denied the grievance as to the charge of lying, concluding that because the
8
timetable of the pair’s relationship justified the suspicion that it may have been
improper during AH’s school days, the District had a right to question Scipioni and
that, as its employee, he had a duty to be honest. Id. at 24; R.R. at 95a.
Accordingly, taking into account the fact that the teacher owed the District a duty
of honesty, the arbitrator also weighed the teacher’s “otherwise good and lengthy
record with the District” in determining that he should be afforded a second chance
“albeit one with a serious contingency and penalty.” Id. at 25; R.R. at 96a.
In contrast, common pleas concluded that a teacher who lied to his
superiors was not the type of mentor who should be entrusted with the District’s
implementation of its duties to protect and serve its students and, therefore, should
be subject to termination. Common pleas, however, inappropriately weighed the
harshness of the award and deemed it to be too lenient for the conduct at issue. See
Westmoreland I, 939 A.2d at 863. The arbitrator dealt with the dishonesty issue
and, in so doing, weighed the reasonableness of the appropriate consequences. We
turn now to the e-mail images found on Scipioni’s work computer.
The arbitrator denied the grievance as to the teacher’s receipt,
retention, and forwarding of certain e-mail images found on his district computer,
(1) rejecting his explanation as to how the images came to be there and were
forwarded; and (2) concluding that he deliberately downloaded and retained them.
August 16, 2015, Arbitration Award at 20; R.R. at 91a. Regarding the content of
the e-mails, the arbitrator determined as follows:
There is no question that the . . . four e-mails cited
by the District are incompatible with professionalism.
Some are variously scatological, misogynistic,
homophobic, sexist, insensitive as to the plight of
exploited children, sexually suggestive, and one—
mocking poverty in a Black dialect—is racist. The vast
majority of the 90 email images, however, are simply
9
examples of crude, vulgar, jejune humor, more typical of
adolescents than adult professionals. Importantly, not
one is pornographic.
Besides the technical fact that none of them belong
on a District-owned computer, I find there are only four
with content that would reasonably trouble the District.[6]
Id. at 19; R.R. at 90a (footnote added). Accordingly, observing that the number of
e-mails was miniscule, that there was no evidence that Scipioni ever displayed
them to anyone in the school community, and that none of the individuals depicted
were members of that community, the arbitrator determined that they warranted a
penalty short of discharge. Id.
Acknowledging that, standing alone, the e-mails would not justify
anything more than suspension, common pleas nonetheless made a leap and
concluded that, when combined with the teacher’s improper relationship and
dishonesty, they warranted a greater penalty. April 21, 2016, Common Pleas’
Opinion at 19. In concluding that the e-mails did not form the basis for a
termination case, however, the arbitrator examined the e-mails and considered the
teacher’s explanations regarding them. Accordingly, in reweighing the arbitrator’s
6
The arbitrator described the troublesome e-mails as follows:
One is a Black dialect image captioned “Why does poor
People be Poor?” as though all poor people are Black. The others
depict young women of likely high school age. One of those is of
a girl leaning over an instructor’s desk with the caption “Booty.
The difference between getting an A and just barely passing.” A
second shows a young woman in a roadway with the caption “Play
Dumb. If she looks TOO young…just assume she is 18.” And the
third shows what looks like a high school girl in a micro skirt in a
hallway lined with lockers with the caption “Every Male Teacher
That Day contemplated the consequences.”
August 16, 2015, Arbitration Award at 19; R.R. at 90a.
10
findings and penalty for the e-mails, common pleas improperly acted as a
superarbitrator.
Pursuant to our comparison of the arbitrator’s fact-findings and
common pleas’ decision, we conclude that the court improperly reweighed the
evidence and, as well, the reasonableness of the award. In so doing, it erred in
determining that the District met the third step to the public policy exception to the
essence test. In that regard and contrary to common pleas’ implication, the
arbitrator rendered an award with serious consequences for a tenured teacher.7
Further, in mitigating the remedy of termination, the arbitrator weighed Scipioni’s
failure to meet his obligations to the District and his otherwise good and lengthy
record with the District. In so doing, the arbitrator, inter alia, took into account the
mitigating factor of the long and otherwise uneventful gap between the relationship
and the termination, including the fact that the subsequent investigation occurred
ten years after the fact and had unfortunate consequences for everyone involved.8
In conclusion, the parties bargained for the award and the District did
not dispute that it satisfied the essence test. Keeping in mind that the public policy
exception is narrow, we must agree with the Association that the arbitrator’s
modification of Scipioni’s penalty did not contravene public policy. Accordingly,
we must reverse.
_____________________________________
BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER,
Senior Judge
7
See supra note 1.
8
The arbitrator observed that the unintended result of the investigation was to further
alienate AH from her sister, disrupt AH’s marriage, humiliate Scipioni before his children, and
aggravate the grief of Scipioni’s estranged wife over her husband’s now eleven-year old
infidelity. August 16, 2015, Arbitration Award at 25; R.R. at 96a.
11
IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
Cornwall-Lebanon School District :
:
v. : No. 814 C.D. 2016
:
Cornwall-Lebanon Education :
Association, :
Appellant :
ORDER
AND NOW, this 3rd day of February, 2017, the order of the Court of
Common Pleas of Lebanon County is hereby REVERSED.
_____________________________________
BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER,
Senior Judge