IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
ALLISON-BRISTOW COMMUNITY SCHOOL DISTRICT; ALLISON-BRISTOW SCHOOL BOARD MEMBERS AND PRESIDENT, BERNARD FRANKEN; ALLISON-BRISTOW COMMUNITY SCHOOLS; and DEAN UHLENHOPP, SUPERINTENDENT OF ALLISON-BRISTOW COMMUNITY SCHOOLS, Petitioners-Appellees,
VS.
IOWA CIVIL RIGHTS COMMISSION, Respondent-Appellant,
VS.
BERNARD W. ROWLAND, Intervenor.
Appeal from the Iowa District
Court for Butler County (No. 17009), Jon Stuart Scoles, Judge.
The Civil Rights Commission
appeals the district court's finding that the school district's
discharge of a high school principal had not been discriminatory
and was not in violation of the Iowa Civil Rights Act. REVERSED.
Thomas J. Miller, Attorney
General, and Teresa Baustian. Assistant Attorney General, for
respondent-appellant.
Lawrence P. McLellan and William F. Fanter of Bradshaw, Fowler, Proctor & Fairgrave, Des Moines, for petitioners-appellees.
Victoria L. Herring, West Des Moines, for intervenor.
Heard by Schlegel, P.J., and Sackett and Habhab, JJ.
PER CURIAM
In 1981 Bernard Rowland
was fired as a high school principal by the Allison-Bristow Community
School District. Rowland asserts he was fired because he sought
the dismissal of a teacher, DeWild, who had made racist comments
and had objected on racist grounds to working with a black student
teacher.
The school district asserts
that Rowland was fired in part because of unrelated derelictions
of duty and in part because he had not followed proper procedures
in seeking the dismissal of the racist teacher. In support of
its allegations of improper procedures in seeking DeWild's dismissal,
the school district makes three allegations: (1) At the time of
the racial incident in January 1981, Rowland mentioned the possibility
of firing DeWild but then acquiesced in the school board's decision
merely to reprimand DeWild; (2) At the time of routine teacher
contract discussions in March 1981, Rowland made no objection
to the renewal of DeWild's contract; and (3) Only later, in May
1981, did Rowland begin to agitate for DeWild's dismissal.
Rowland acknowledges that
he acquiesced in the mere reprimand of DeWild and in the subsequent
renewal of DeWild's contract. Rowland states he later sought DeWild's
discharge because of regret and guilt over the fact that the black
student teacher had not been accepted due to DeWild's objections.
After the school district
fired Rowland, Rowland responded by filing a complaint with the
Iowa Civil Rights Commission. Rowland alleged that his discharge
was discriminatory and was a violation of Iowa Code section 601A.
11(2) of the Iowa Civil Rights Act. Section 601A.11(2) provides
that it is an unfair or discriminatory practice to discriminate
against a person "because such person has lawfully opposed
any practice forbidden under this chapter. "
The Civil Rights Commission
found that the school district had unlawfully discriminated against
Rowland by terminating his employment because of lawful opposition
to a discriminatory practice. The Commission awarded Rowland various
damages.
The school district challenged
the Civil Rights Commission's agency action by filing a petition
for judicial review. After a hearing, the district court overturned
the Civil Rights Commission's award to Rowland. The district court
concluded there was no substantial evidence to support the Commission's
conclusion that Rowland was fired because of his objections to
racist remarks or practices.
The Civil Rights Commission
has appealed from the district court's ruling. The Civil Rights
Commission contends that its conclusions were supported by substantial
evidence and that the district court erred by holding otherwise.
The Civil Rights Commission also contends the district court erroneously substituted
its own factual findings for those of the Commission, thereby
exceeding the limited standard of review applicable in challenges
to administrative agency actions under Iowa Code Chapter 17A.
We must determine whether
there is substantial evidence in the record, viewed as a whole,
to support the findings of the Iowa Civil Rights Commission in
its recommended order of December 27, 1985. We find there is.
On purely factual matters
such as this, both the district court and this court exercise
a limited scope of review. Fact findings of an agency are binding
on the courts when they are supported by substantial evidence.
Norland v. Iowa Dep't of Job Serv., 412 N.W.2d 904, 913
(Iowa 1987). Evidence is not insubstantial merely because it would
have supported contrary inferences. Id. at 913. It is substantial
when a reasonable mind would accept it as adequate to reach the
same findings. Id. When there is a conflict in the evidence
or when reasonable minds might disagree about the inferences to
be drawn from the evidence, the decision of the agency should
be affirmed. Id. at 908. In short, the findings of an agency
are binding on appeal unless a contrary result is demanded as
a matter of law. Id. The limited scope of factual review
is warranted by the presumably greater expertise an agency has
over matters within its purview. Id. The possibility of
drawing two inconsistent conclusions from the evidence does not
prevent an agency's finding from being supported by substantial
evidence. Peoples Memorial Hosp. v. Iowa Civil Rights Comm'n,
322 N.W.2d 87, 91 (Iowa 1982).
Rowland had to establish
a prima facie case of discrimination. In order to do that, Rowland
had to establish (1) statutory protected expression, (2) an adverse
employment action, and (3) a causal link between the protected
expression and the adverse action. Payne v. McLemore's Wholesale
& Retail Stores, 654 F.2d 1130, 1140-42 (5th Cir. 1981).
Both the Commission and
the trial court found that Rowland had established a prima facie
case. The Allison-Bristow School District then proffered legitimate
reasons for its termination of Rowland. The issue then became
whether or not Rowland could prove that the reasons proffered
by the school district were pretextual.
In its notice of termination to Rowland, the school district listed five ways in which the principal's job performance was deficient. These were the school district's reasons for Rowland's termination. The hearing officer of the Commission examined those five reasons. His examination of the entire record, together with the demeanor of the witnesses, led him to a finding that Rowland was not terminated because of poor job performance, as listed by the five reasons given by Allison-Bristow, but because of his lawful opposition to policies which he viewed as racially discriminatory. The hearing officer for the Commission, therefore, concluded that retaliation was a factor in the bad performance reviews and the ultimate decision of the high school to terminate Rowland and that the decision of the high school constituted intentional discrimination in violation of the Iowa Civil Rights Act.
The trial court, on the
other hand, found that the five reasons listed by the high school
in its termination notice constituted the reason that Rowland
was terminated. The trial
court stated:
When considering all the facts and circumstances in this case, including those not specifically referred to above, the Court concludes that Rowland was not terminated because of his opposition to the remarks made by DeWild, but rather because of his complete and utter disregard for his duties and for his decision not to cooperate with the school board or its administration. While the Court agrees the remarks made by DeWild were obscene and reprehensible, Rowland's opposition to those remarks was not the cause of
his termination.
The trial court then determined
that the Commission's decision was not supported by substantial
evidence.
After reviewing the record before us as a whole, we must hold
contrary to the trial court. We find that the Commission's findings
are substantial because a reasonable mind would accept it as adequate
to reach the same findings. We must ask "not whether the
evidence might support a different finding, but whether the evidence
supports the findings actually made' by the Commission. Norland
v. Iowa Dep't of Job Serv., 412 N.W.2d at 908. Upon doing
this, we find that there was substantial evidence to support the
findings by the Commission. By so finding, we do not determine
that the trial court's findings were unreasonable. However, when
reasonable minds might disagree
about the inferences to be drawn from the evidence, the decision
of the agency should be affirmed. Id. at 908.
The trial court did not find that the evidence in the record was
not that which a reasonable mind would accept as adequate support
for the agency's findings of fact or conclusions of law. Rather,
as the court viewed evidence differently than the agency
had, and drew different inferences from that evidence, it concluded
that the agency decision was not supported by substantial evidence.
The trial court's decision is, therefore, contrary to the standard
of review prescribed by Iowa Code section 17A.19(8) (1987).
REVERSED.
Not Published and
Therefore May Not
Be Cited As Authority