IN THE MATTER OF THE SUSPENSION OF THE CERTIFICATES OF CHAE HYUK IM, SCHOOL DISTRICT OF THE TOWNSHIP OF WAYNE, PASSAIC COUNTY (COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION) ( 2018 )


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  •                      NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
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    parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-3847-16T3
    IN THE   MATTER OF THE SUSPENSION
    OF THE   CERTIFICATE(S) OF CHAE HYUK IM,
    SCHOOL   DISTRICT OF THE TOWNSHIP OF
    WAYNE,   PASSAIC COUNTY.
    Argued July 2, 2018 – Decided July 20, 2018
    Before Judges Carroll and Rose.
    On appeal from the Commissioner of Education,
    Docket No. 357-12/14.
    Louis P. Bucceri argued the cause for
    appellant Chae Hyuk Im (Bucceri & Pincus,
    attorneys; Louis P. Bucceri, of counsel and
    on the briefs).
    John G. Geppert, Jr., argued the cause for
    respondent Wayne Township Board of Education
    (Scarinci Hollenbeck, LLC, attorneys; John G.
    Geppert, Jr., of counsel; Shana T. Don and
    Craig A. Long, on the brief).
    Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney General, attorney
    for respondent Commissioner of Education (Joan
    M. Scatton, Deputy Attorney General, on the
    statement in lieu of brief).
    PER CURIAM
    Appellant   Chae    Hyuk     Im   appeals    the   final    administrative
    decision    of     the    Commissioner        of    Education      (Commissioner)
    suspending his teaching certificates for one year.                 The suspension
    was based on the Commissioner's determination that Im was guilty
    of    unprofessional      conduct    pursuant      to   N.J.S.A.    18A:28-8   for
    failing to provide the requisite sixty-day notice before resigning
    his teaching position with the Wayne Township Board of Education
    (BOE).    We affirm.
    Im began his employment with the BOE as a chemistry teacher
    in September 2005, and became tenured in September 2008.                 In 2011,
    while still employed by the BOE, Im applied for a position with
    the   Federal    Bureau    of   Investigation        (FBI).     The   application
    remained inactive for several years due to a federal hiring freeze.
    On May 15, 2014, Im received a letter from the BOE listing
    his salary for the 2014-2015 school year.               In that letter, the BOE
    also advised Im that if he should have reason to believe he would
    be unable to serve for that school year he should inform the Wayne
    school district (District) immediately.
    Among other things, the FBI application process required Im
    to undergo a background investigation and a physical fitness test
    (PFT).    In May 2014, FBI agents contacted the BOE as part of Im's
    background check.        In July 2014, Im was told he was listed for a
    September 2014 training start date.                In anticipation of entering
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    the FBI Academy in September, Im wrote a letter to the BOE on July
    23, 2014, requesting a one-year leave of absence.     The BOE agreed
    to grant the leave, if it was needed.
    On August 7, 2014, Im failed his PFT, and he was removed from
    the September training start date.   Consequently, Im advised the
    BOE's administration that he would be starting the 2014–2015 school
    year as usual.
    Im decided not to retake the PFT in September 2014, because
    he did not have time to sufficiently train for it.      Instead, he
    opted to take the PFT again on October 9, 2014, and was told he
    passed it.   Im again requested a leave of absence, but the BOE
    denied the request at its October 16, 2014 meeting.    The next day,
    Im resigned from his teaching position to accept employment with
    the FBI, where he presently works as a Special Agent.
    At the time of his resignation, Im was teaching four sections
    of high school chemistry, and he was unaware which teachers would
    take over his classes.   He arranged to leave binders of documents
    he had prepared for use by whoever was assigned to replace him.
    Four teachers who were currently teaching in the District's science
    department and a per diem substitute were paid to cover Im's
    classes until the District hired a replacement teacher in January
    2015.   The parties stipulated that the costs expended by the BOE
    to replace Im during the sixty-day notice period were less than
    3                           A-3847-16T3
    the cost of the salary and benefits the BOE would have paid Im had
    he worked during that same period.
    On    December   1,   2014,     at       the   request    of   the   BOE,    the
    Commissioner entered an order directing Im to show cause why his
    teaching certificate should not be suspended for unprofessional
    conduct pursuant to N.J.S.A. 18A:28-8, which provides:
    Any teaching staff member, under tenure of
    service, desiring to relinquish his position
    shall give the employing board of education
    at least [sixty] days written notice of his
    intention, unless the board shall approve of
    a release on shorter notice and if he fails
    to give such notice he shall be deemed guilty
    of    unprofessional    conduct     and    the
    [C]ommissioner may suspend his certificate for
    not more than one year.
    Im filed an answer, and the Commissioner subsequently transferred
    the matter to the Office of Administrative Law as a contested
    case.
    On August 13, 2015, the BOE filed a motion for summary
    decision.       On May 18, 2016, an administrative law judge (ALJ)
    found there were no material disputed facts and the matter was
    "ripe     for   partial    summary    decision         as     to    the   issue    of
    'unprofessional conduct.'"         The ALJ noted the central purpose of
    N.J.S.A. 18A:28-8 is "to provide notice to the school so that a
    suitable replacement can be hired without adversely impacting
    students."      Looking to the language of the statute, the ALJ found
    4                                 A-3847-16T3
    it    "quite    clear"    that     an     employee     who   fails       to    provide   the
    requisite       notice    "shall        be    deemed      guilty    of    unprofessional
    conduct."       The ALJ reserved the issue of an appropriate sanction
    and consideration of any appropriate mitigating factors for a
    future hearing.
    On June 30, 2016, the Commissioner adopted the ALJ's partial
    initial decision.             The Commissioner agreed with the ALJ that the
    language of N.J.S.A. 18A:28-8 was mandatory.                            Specifically, an
    employee who fails to give a board of education sixty days' notice
    of his or her intention to resign "shall" be deemed guilty of
    unprofessional conduct.
    The     Commissioner       rejected         Im's    argument       that    the    ALJ
    erroneously prevented him from presenting evidence at a hearing
    regarding the impact of a finding of "unprofessional conduct" on
    his    FBI     employment.         The       Commissioner      found      this     argument
    "misguided because there is no genuine issue of fact as to [Im's]
    failure to provide the [BOE] with the requisite notice; the
    material       facts     in     dispute      only    pertain       to    the     mitigating
    circumstances that could impact the potential suspension of his
    [teaching] certificate."            The Commissioner concluded:
    Notwithstanding the finding of unprofessional
    conduct, [Im] will be afforded a hearing to
    determine whether a certificate suspension is
    appropriate in this case. To that end, [Im]
    will be given a full opportunity to present
    5                                    A-3847-16T3
    evidence of mitigation, including the fact
    that he left his teaching post to take a job
    with the FBI.
    A hearing on the appropriate penalty followed.         Two witnesses
    testified for the BOE, including the Wayne superintendent of
    schools and the high school principal.           Im testified and also
    presented the testimony of a chemistry teacher who served as one
    of his replacements after he resigned.
    The ALJ recounted the testimony and evidence presented at the
    hearing and made detailed findings of fact and conclusions of law
    in her comprehensive twenty-seven-page initial decision.           At Im's
    request, the ALJ agreed to consider the "Giglio Policy," an FBI
    policy   "Regarding   the   Disclosure   to   Prosecutors   of   Potential
    Impeachment   Information      Concerning     Law   Enforcement     Agency
    Witnesses."    Ultimately, however, the ALJ accorded the policy
    little weight because Im "failed to introduce any additional
    evidence to buttress his assertion that the imposition of a one-
    year penalty will have any different effect on his ability to
    testify or perform his [FBI] job [duties] than a shorter suspension
    period."
    Additionally, the ALJ found:
    It was clear from the testimony of the
    District's    witnesses that,   while    the
    disruption to Mr. Im's students was not
    catastrophic,     there   were    definitely
    consequences to his leaving early.     While
    6                               A-3847-16T3
    permanent teachers took on all but one of Mr.
    Im's classes, because of scheduling difficulty
    for labs, each student had three to four
    teachers from September until January. While
    it is true, as [Im] argued, that there would
    have been a disruption no matter when Im left,
    the District would have had more time to try
    to find a replacement for Im and some of the
    disruption could have been alleviated had he
    waited the sixty days. In addition, at least
    one parent complained that the quality of the
    teaching of the substitute teacher was not up
    to the standards of the permanent teachers,
    and the principal had to talk to the
    substitute about the quality of his teaching.
    . . . The principal of the school, . . . who
    was sympathetic toward Im, acknowledged that
    Im did not find a replacement for himself, nor
    did he recall Im offering to do so.          A
    replacement was found because a newly hired
    teacher had a friend who decided to apply for
    the opening. [The principal] also testified
    that at the time Im left, he was not aware
    that [Im] had left his materials for the
    replacement teachers.    Nor did [Im] talk to
    the principal about the students and any
    special needs.
    [(Footnote omitted).]
    "Weighing all of the mitigating factors," the ALJ recommended a
    six-month suspension of Im's teaching certificates.
    The Commissioner rejected the ALJ's recommendation in her
    final agency decision issued on April 6, 2017.          The Commissioner
    instead   determined   that    Im's   teaching   certificates   should    be
    suspended for one year.       Citing numerous administrative decisions
    that addressed the issue, the Commissioner explained:
    7                            A-3847-16T3
    The decision to suspend a teaching
    certificate pursuant to N.J.S.A. 18A:28-8 is
    discretionary   and   the   Commissioner   has
    historically    evaluated     all    attendant
    circumstances on a case-by-case basis. As a
    general rule, however, given the underlying
    purpose of the statute, teachers who have
    been found guilty of unprofessional conduct
    for failing to provide the requisite [sixty]-
    day notice receive a one-year certificate
    suspension.    The one year suspension is
    routinely issued where the facts demonstrate
    that individuals have violated the [sixty]-
    day notice requirement for strictly personal
    reasons, putting their own self-interest above
    the   interests   of    students   and   their
    professional obligation to provide adequate
    notice to the board.
    Despite the general rule of a one-year
    suspension, there are rare instances where the
    Commissioner has found justification for a
    lesser penalty in cases where compelling
    mitigating circumstances exist for the lack
    of the requisite notice. A common theme in
    many of these cases was the existence of a
    suitable alternative who was available to
    replace   the   resigning   teacher,   thereby
    minimizing the impact on the students. . . .
    Unlike these cases - which have justified
    an exception to the customary one-year
    suspension - the facts in this matter are
    neither exceptional nor do they warrant the
    exercise of the Commissioner's discretion.
    Rather, in the instant matter, [Im's] desire
    for the early release from his professional
     The Commissioner recognized, as the ALJ did previously, that
    "[t]he obvious purpose of N.J.S.A. 18A:26-10 [and N.J.S.A. 18A:28-
    8] is to provide notice to the school so that a suitable
    replacement can be hired without adversely impacting students."
    (citing Penns Grove-Carneys Point Bd. of Educ. v. Regina Leinen,
    94 N.J.A.R.2d 405, 407 (EDU)).
    8                          A-3847-16T3
    obligations was based solely on       personal
    motives and his own convenience.
    . . . .
    The Commissioner recognizes [Im's] goal
    of becoming an FBI agent and his concern that
    if he did not begin training in October 2014,
    he may have missed out on his opportunity.
    However, there is no question that [Im]
    violated the statute, and his departure
    resulted in a disruption to his classes -
    which is the very consequence that the statute
    seeks to minimize when a teacher resigns from
    the school district.       Nor should it be
    overlooked that the [BOE] originally granted
    [Im] a one-year leave of absence when he made
    the request prior to the start of the 2014-
    2015 school year; it was only because of
    [Im's] own actions, i.e. failing the August
    2014 [PFT] and deciding not to take the test
    again in September 2014, that [Im] declined
    the proffered leave of absence and began
    teaching at the beginning of the 2014–2015
    school year. Further, the circumstances here
    are not analogous to several cases where a
    lesser penalty was imposed, because in this
    case there was not a replacement teacher
    available to ensure a smooth transition and
    to   minimize    the   impact    on   students.
    Additionally, resigning without providing the
    requisite notice to seek an alternate career
    is not akin to resigning without the requisite
    notice because of a debilitating health issue.
    Despite the fact that [Im] provided teaching
    materials for his successor's use when he
    resigned,   his   untimely    resignation   had
    significant consequences: it left four high
    school chemistry classes without a permanent
    teacher until January 2015; the [BOE] had to
    scramble to find a suitable replacement on
    short notice; and the quick departure resulted
    in an increased workload for co-workers, who
    had to cover [Im's] classes between October
    2014 and January 2015.
    9                           A-3847-16T3
    [Im] maintains that he should not receive
    a   license   suspension   because   it   will
    significantly impact his ability to function
    as an FBI agent and that impact far exceeds
    anything allegedly suffered by the District.
    [Im] stresses that the damage to his career
    as an FBI agent that would occur if his
    certificates are suspended is illustrated by
    the Department of Justice's stated policy of
    disclosure   to   prosecutors   of   potential
    impeachment information. [Im] maintains that
    the Giglio Policy requires the disclosure of
    all instances where an agent's reputation has
    been impugned; thus, any reputational defect
    - not just those related to veracity - must
    be disclosed and may lead to a preclusion of
    the agent's ability to function as a witness.
    The Commissioner fully accepts [Im's] argument
    that he will have to disclose to the
    prosecutor in the case where he is a potential
    witness that he was found to be guilty of
    unprofessional conduct pursuant to N.J.S.A.
    18A:28-8. The fact that [Im] will likely have
    to disclose that his certificates were
    suspended because of his unprofessional
    conduct is not a compelling mitigating
    circumstance, especially coupled with the fact
    that his unprofessional conduct was self-
    serving and adversely impacted his students.
    Therefore, the Commissioner is not compelled
    to exercise her discretion by ordering an
    exception    to   the    customary    one-year
    suspension.
    [(Citations and footnotes omitted).]
    On appeal, Im challenges the Commissioner's decisions finding
    him guilty of unprofessional conduct and suspending his teaching
    certificates for one year.   He argues the decisions are incorrect
    as a matter of law, and they deprived him of his constitutional
    right to a hearing prior to finding him guilty of unprofessional
    10                         A-3847-16T3
    conduct.    Im further contends the one-year penalty imposed by the
    Commissioner is arbitrary and capricious and is not based on
    substantial evidence in the record.      We disagree.
    "[T]he Commissioner of Education has primary jurisdiction to
    hear and determine all controversies arising under the school
    laws."     Bower v. Bd. of Educ. of E. Orange, 
    149 N.J. 416
    , 420
    (1997).    As a result, her "statutory interpretation is entitled
    to considerable weight, where not inconsistent with the statute
    and in harmony with the statutory purpose."          Kletzkin v. Bd. of
    Educ. of Spotswood, 
    136 N.J. 275
    , 278 (1994).        We will ordinarily
    uphold the Commissioner's determination unless it is "arbitrary,
    capricious, or unreasonable or is not supported by substantial
    credible evidence in the record as a whole."          G.D.M. v. Bd. of
    Educ. of the Ramapo Indian Hills Reg'l High Sch. Dist., 
    427 N.J. Super. 246
    , 259 (App. Div. 2012) (quoting Dennery v. Bd. of Educ.
    of Passaic Cty. Reg'l High Sch. Dist. # 1, 
    131 N.J. 626
    , 641
    (1993)).
    The deferential standard to which we adhere "applies to the
    review of disciplinary sanctions as well."          In re Herrmann, 
    192 N.J. 19
    , 28 (2007) (citing Knoble v. Waterfront Comm'n of N.Y.
    Harbor, 
    67 N.J. 427
    , 431-32 (1975)).         The test for reviewing an
    administrative    sanction   is   "whether   such   punishment   is   'so
    disproportionate to the offense, in light of all the circumstances,
    11                            A-3847-16T3
    as to be shocking to one's sense of fairness.'"                    In re Polk, 
    90 N.J. 550
    , 578 (1982) (citation omitted).
    We have considered Im's arguments in light of the applicable
    standard of review and the facts developed in the record.                         We
    affirm substantially for the reasons expressed by the Commissioner
    in   her    June    30,    2016,    and      April    6,    2017   administrative
    determinations,      which    are    supported        by    sufficient    credible
    evidence.    R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(D).
    Nor     does    the     one-year        suspension      of    Im's   teaching
    certificates shock our sense of fairness.                  The result we reach is
    not intended in any way to be critical of Im's laudatory goal of
    serving his country as an FBI agent.                 Nonetheless, we recognize,
    as did the ALJ, that "[w]hile being an FBI agent may be more
    important to [Im] than being a teacher, that is a personal choice"
    and "it is a dangerous path to start deciding what jobs are more
    important and therefore worthy of more consideration."
    To the extent that we have not specifically addressed Im's
    remaining arguments, we conclude they lack sufficient merit to
    warrant discussion in a written decision.                  R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).
    Affirmed.
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