Torin Misko v. State of Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction ( 2023 )


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  •        COURT OF APPEALS
    DECISION                                                NOTICE
    DATED AND FILED                            This opinion is subject to further editing. If
    published, the official version will appear in
    the bound volume of the Official Reports.
    July 27, 2023
    A party may file with the Supreme Court a
    Samuel A. Christensen                  petition to review an adverse decision by the
    Clerk of Court of Appeals               Court of Appeals. See WIS. STAT. § 808.10
    and RULE 809.62.
    Appeal No.        2022AP1810                                                   Cir. Ct. No. 2021CV1002
    STATE OF WISCONSIN                                             IN COURT OF APPEALS
    DISTRICT IV
    TORIN MISKO AND AUTUMN MISKO,
    PLAINTIFFS-RESPONDENTS,
    V.
    STATE OF WISCONSIN DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION,
    DEFENDANT-APPELLANT,
    WEST ALLIS - WEST MILWAUKEE SCHOOL DISTRICT,
    DEFENDANT.
    APPEAL from an order of the circuit court for Waukesha County:
    MICHAEL P. MAXWELL, Judge. Reversed.
    Before Blanchard, P.J., Kloppenburg, and Nashold, JJ.
    Per curiam opinions may not be cited in any court of this state as precedent
    or authority, except for the limited purposes specified in WIS. STAT. RULE 809.23(3).
    No. 2022AP1810
    ¶1      PER CURIAM. The State of Wisconsin Department of Public
    Instruction (“the Department”) appeals a circuit court order reversing a decision
    by the School District Boundary Appeal Board (“the Board”). 1 The Board denied
    Torin and Autumn Misko’s petition to detach their single parcel from the West
    Allis-West Milwaukee School District (“West Allis”) and attach it to the New
    Berlin School District. The Department argues that the Board properly applied the
    statutory criteria and that the Board’s decision has a rational basis. We agree and
    reverse the court’s decision.
    BACKGROUND
    ¶2      The Miskos live in a single-family residence in the City of New
    Berlin, and their property is in the West Allis district. The properties surrounding
    the Miskos’ property are also in the West Allis district. The Miskos’ two children
    attend Hoover Elementary School in the West Allis district. In January 2021, the
    Miskos filed a petition for reorganization with the school boards of West Allis and
    New Berlin, seeking to detach their property from the West Allis district and
    attach it to the New Berlin district. The West Allis school board denied the
    petition, and the New Berlin school board approved it. This constituted a denial of
    the petition because both districts must approve the reorganization for the
    1
    The School District Boundary Appeal Board has statewide jurisdiction and is attached
    to the State of Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction; it is comprised of members from
    various sized districts’ school boards and the Department Secretary’s designee. See WIS. STAT.
    § 15.375 (2021-22). All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2021-22 version unless
    otherwise noted.
    Separately, we note that the Miskos proceeded pro se before the Board and the circuit
    court, as they now do on appeal.
    2
    No. 2022AP1810
    reorganization to occur. See WIS. STAT. § 117.12(3). The Miskos appealed the
    denial by the West Allis school board to the Board.
    ¶3     At the Board hearing, the Miskos expressed several reasons for
    wanting to detach from the West Allis district and become part of the New Berlin
    district. Their concerns included the fact that the West Allis district does not have
    “New Berlin” in the district name, the West Allis district’s alleged undue delay in
    returning to in-person instruction amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, ratings from
    the Department showing that the West Allis district has an overall lower “report
    card” score than the New Berlin district, and that the Miskos’ values are better
    aligned with those of the New Berlin district. The Miskos conceded that they had
    approval for their children to attend the New Berlin district through an open
    enrollment program but argued that this was impractical because of a West Allis
    district policy that does not allow buses from outside districts to transport students
    within the West Allis district’s borders.
    ¶4     In response, the West Allis district noted that other school districts
    that include parts of New Berlin within their boundaries also do not include the
    name “New Berlin” in their district names.         As to the West Allis district’s
    COVID-19 policies, the West Allis district stated that it followed the guidance of
    the health department that covers the county in which a majority of the students
    live. In terms of its “report card,” the West Allis district stated that its score has
    been improving over the last few years.         Regarding the transportation issues
    associated with open enrollment, the district argued that the policy of restricting
    outside districts from picking up or dropping off students in another district is a
    “very common practice across the state.”        The district further stated that the
    Miskos had not made a formal request to the district for an exception to the policy.
    3
    No. 2022AP1810
    ¶5      In addition, the West Allis district focused on the potential effects of
    allowing detachments such as the one requested by the Miskos. It asserted that
    there are 257 students similarly situated to the Miskos’ children who live in New
    Berlin but who attend the schools in the West Allis district.                        Based on
    demographic data it provided to the Board, the West Allis district argued that if
    these other children also attended school in the New Berlin district, “the racial and
    economic balance” of the two districts could “shift significantly,” with “whiter and
    wealthier students mov[ing] to a whiter and wealthier school district, [and] poorer
    students of color [being] more concentrated in a higher poverty school district.”
    The district also argued that if the other similarly-situated students detached, there
    would be a significant increase in the mill rate2 in the West Allis district, resulting
    in an annual increase in property taxes. Relatedly, the district argued that it cannot
    grow revenue through the expansion of territory, meaning that maintaining current
    boundaries is critical for its financial stability.
    ¶6      Further, the West Allis district noted that the Miskos’ parcel is
    located in the “middle of a block” of other parcels in the West Allis district. It
    argued that detachment of the Miskos’ “island” parcel would create boundary
    confusion for the Miskos’ neighbors and for area realtors because the properties
    surrounding the Miskos’ property would remain in the West Allis district. The
    district stated that it was not aware of a detachment, such as the one proposed by
    the Miskos, in which a single property was completely removed from the school
    district while surrounded by other properties within that school district.                   The
    district noted that all of the students who live in New Berlin and attend Hoover
    A mill rate is a tax rate for assessing the value of real property. See mill rate, BLACK’S
    2
    LAW DICTIONARY (11th ed. 2019).
    4
    No. 2022AP1810
    Elementary School are bused to school, as the Miskos’ children are. It argued that
    creating changes like the requested detachment would add more busing and traffic
    to the neighborhood. The district also took the position that additional, similar
    detachments would have the potential to force the closure of Hoover Elementary
    School and disrupt the West Allis district’s long-range facility master planning
    process.
    ¶7       The Board affirmed the West Allis district’s denial of the Miskos’
    petition. In reaching its decision, the Board considered the criteria under WIS.
    STAT. § 117.15,3 which delineates eight, nonexclusive criteria that a school board
    3
    WISCONSIN STAT. § 117.15 provides:
    117.15 Criteria for school district reorganizations.
    In making any decision under [WIS. STAT. §§] 117.08 to
    117.132, a school board, the board and an appeal panel shall
    consider the following factors as they affect the educational
    welfare of all of the children residing in all of the affected school
    districts, and may consider other appropriate factors:
    (1) The geographical and topographical characteristics
    of the affected school districts, including the estimated travel
    time to and from school for pupils in the school districts.
    (2) The educational needs of all of the children residing
    in the affected school districts, the educational programs
    currently offered by each affected school district and the ability
    and commitment of each school district to meet those needs and
    continue to offer those educational programs.
    (2m) If territory is proposed to be detached from one
    school district and attached to an adjoining school district or
    proposed to be included in a new school district under [WIS.
    STAT. §] 117.105, whether the proposed detachment will have
    any adverse effect on the program currently offered by the
    school district from which the territory is proposed to be
    detached, including both curricular and extracurricular aspects of
    that program.
    (3) The testimony of and written statements filed by the
    residents of the affected school districts.
    (continued)
    5
    No. 2022AP1810
    must consider in making school district reorganization decisions such as
    detachments. The Board concluded that three of the eight criteria are pertinent:
    § 117.15(4), (5), and (6).
    ¶8     Regarding WIS. STAT. § 117.15(4), the “estimated fiscal effect of the
    proposed reorganization on the affected school districts,” the Board found that
    although there would not be an immediate financial effect from the Miskos’
    proposed detachment, “in the future the [West Allis] district could be adversely
    affected if the creation of one noncontiguous island encouraged other[] similar
    petitions.”
    ¶9     The Board next considered WIS. STAT. § 117.15(5), “[w]hether the
    proposed reorganization will make any part of a school district’s territory
    (4) The estimated fiscal effect of the proposed
    reorganization on the affected school districts, including the
    effect of the apportionment of assets and liabilities.
    (5) Whether the proposed reorganization will make any
    part of a school district’s territory noncontiguous.
    (6) The socioeconomic level and racial composition of
    the pupils who reside or will reside in territory proposed to be
    detached from one school district and attached to an adjoining
    school district, in territory proposed to be included in a new
    school district under [WIS. STAT. §] 117.105 or in school
    districts proposed to be consolidated or in a school district
    proposed to be dissolved; the proportion of the pupils who reside
    in such territory who are children at risk, as defined under [WIS.
    STAT. §] 118.153(1)(a); and the effect that the pupils described
    in this paragraph will have on the present and future
    socioeconomic level and racial composition of the affected
    school districts and on the proportion of the affected school
    districts’ enrollments that will be children at risk.
    (7) The results of any referendum held under [WIS.
    STAT. §] 117.10.
    6
    No. 2022AP1810
    noncontiguous.” See § 117.15(5). The Board found that the Miskos’ proposed
    detachment would create a noncontiguous parcel in the affected district because it
    would be an “island of New Berlin territory surrounded by the West Allis-West
    Milwaukee school district.”
    ¶10    The Board also discussed WIS. STAT. § 117.15(6), which requires the
    Board to consider
    [t]he socioeconomic level and racial composition of the
    pupils who reside or will reside in territory proposed to be
    detached from one school district and attached to an
    adjoining school district, in territory proposed to be
    included in a new school district under s. 117.105 or in
    school districts proposed to be consolidated or in a school
    district proposed to be dissolved; the proportion of the
    pupils who reside in such territory who are children at risk,
    as defined under s. 118.153(1)(a); and the effect that the
    pupils described in this paragraph will have on the present
    and future socioeconomic level and racial composition of
    the affected school districts and on the proportion of the
    affected school districts’ enrollments that will be children
    at risk.
    The Board found that although the Miskos’ proposed detachment would not have
    an immediate effect, “in the future” the West Allis district “could be adversely
    affected if significant parts of the district in the city of New Berlin were to be
    detached, given the large differences in racial composition and socioeconomic
    level between the New Berlin and the West Allis-West Milwaukee parts of the
    West Allis … district.”
    ¶11    The Miskos appealed the Board’s decision to the circuit court, which
    reversed the Board. The Department appeals.
    7
    No. 2022AP1810
    DISCUSSION
    I. Standard of Review and General Principles Governing Board Decisions
    ¶12    On appeal, we review the decision of the Board, not the circuit
    court’s decision. School Dist. of Waukesha v. School Dist. Boundary Appeal
    Bd., 
    201 Wis. 2d 109
    , 116, 
    548 N.W.2d 122
     (Ct. App. 1996). Our review is
    limited to “whether the Board acted within its jurisdiction and whether its order
    was arbitrary and capricious.” Stockbridge School Dist. v. Department of Public
    Instruction School Dist. Boundary Appeal Bd., 
    202 Wis. 2d 214
    , 219, 
    550 N.W.2d 96
     (1996). Because there is no dispute regarding the Board’s jurisdiction,
    the only issue for our review is whether the Board’s order is arbitrary and
    capricious. See School Dist. of Waukesha, 201 Wis. 2d at 116. The Board’s
    actions are arbitrary and capricious “when the findings of the agency are
    unreasonable or without a rational basis.” Id. “An action is arbitrary if it is the
    result of an ‘unconsidered, wilful and irrational choice’ and not the result of the
    “winnowing and sifting” process.’” Id. (quoted source omitted). In applying the
    rational basis test, “rational speculation is enough.” Brown v. DCF, 
    2012 WI App 61
    , ¶38, 
    341 Wis. 2d 449
    , 
    819 N.W.2d 827
     (applying rational basis test in
    constitutional challenge to statute).
    ¶13    “School district reorganization is a legislative policy-making
    function, and as such has been delegated by the legislature to local boards.”
    School Dist. of Waukesha, 201 Wis. 2d at 113. The Board’s review “is not a
    judicial or quasi-judicial undertaking in which the panel is required to restrict its
    decision to the facts appearing of record.” Id. at 119. Instead, the Board’s action
    is “an independent, legislatively delegated re-evaluation of the proposed
    reorganization.” Joint Sch. Dist. No. 2 v. State Appeal Bd., 
    83 Wis. 2d 711
    , 720,
    8
    No. 2022AP1810
    
    266 N.W.2d 374
     (1978). The Board’s decision addresses what is “best for the
    educational system involved,” 
    id. at 721
    , and its decision can be “a matter of
    educational philosophy,” City of Beloit v. State Appeal Board, 
    103 Wis. 2d 661
    ,
    668, 
    309 N.W.2d 392
     (Ct. App. 1981). Thus, “courts do not review the policy,
    wisdom or fairness of a particular reorganization decision, except to determine
    whether the Board’s decision was arbitrary and capricious.” Stockbridge, 
    202 Wis. 2d at 227
    .
    ¶14     The Miskos filed their petition under WIS. STAT. § 117.12, which
    provides for the “[d]etachment and attachment of a small territory initiated by the
    owner.” Sec. 117.12. In making its decision to grant or deny the petition, the
    Board is required to consider the factors set forth in WIS. STAT. § 117.15 and is
    also permitted to consider any “other appropriate factors[.]” Sec. 117.15. The
    Board considers the factors “as they affect the educational welfare of all of the
    children residing in all of the affected school districts.” Sec. 117.15. Although the
    Board “is statutorily bound to consider all of the factors enumerated in § 117.15,
    … the agency may, in its discretion, consider information from other sources as
    well.” School Dist. of Waukesha, 201 Wis. 2d at 116. For example, “[i]t is
    proper for the [Board] to consider ‘matters within its knowledge and expertise in
    the field of educational policy.’” Id. (quoting Joint Sch. Dist. No. 2 v. State
    Appeal Bd., 
    83 Wis. 2d 711
    , 720, 
    266 N.W.2d 374
     (1978)).
    II. Analysis
    ¶15     The Department argues that, applying the proper standard of review,
    the Board’s decision must be affirmed because a rational basis supports it. The
    Department contends that the Board considered the required—but nonexclusive—
    factors in WIS. STAT. § 117.15 and that, consistent with that statute and pertinent
    9
    No. 2022AP1810
    case law, it properly considered other appropriate factors as well. We agree and,
    for the reasons explained below, reject the Miskos’ arguments to the contrary.
    ¶16    As noted, in reaching its decision, the Board considered each of the
    required criteria in WIS. STAT. § 117.15.        The Board determined that only
    § 117.15(4), (5) and (6) were relevant to its determination. Neither party disputes
    the conclusion that these are the relevant criteria, nor does either party make
    additional arguments based on the other required statutory factors. The Board
    considered these factors as they relate to the Miskos’ specific detachment request.
    Moreover, in discussing factors (4) and (6), the Board also considered these
    factors in relation to potential future detachments of similarly situated properties if
    the Miskos’ detachment request were granted.
    ¶17    On appeal, the Miskos advance the same positions as those relied on
    by the circuit court in reversing the Board’s decision.          As to the Board’s
    application of WIS. STAT. § 117.15(5), the factor addressing noncontiguous
    parcels, the Miskos argue that detachment of island parcels is permissible under
    Stockbridge, 
    202 Wis. 2d at 219
    , presumably suggesting that the Board’s reliance
    on this factor was irrational. As to WIS. STAT. § 117.15(4) and (6), the Miskos
    argue that the Board may not consider the effects of any future detachments if the
    Miskos’ petition were granted but instead may consider only the effects of the
    Miskos’ specific detachment.       As discussed below, these arguments are not
    persuasive.
    A. WISCONSIN STAT. § 117.15(5) and Stockbridge
    ¶18    As stated, WIS. STAT. § 117.15(5) requires the court to consider
    “[w]hether the proposed reorganization will make any part of a school district’s
    territory noncontiguous.”      There is no dispute that the Miskos’ proposed
    10
    No. 2022AP1810
    reorganization would make the Miskos’ parcel noncontiguous to the New Berlin
    district’s territory. Thus, this factor unequivocally operates in the Department’s
    favor.
    ¶19   The Miskos argue that Stockbridge allows their requested
    detachment, and suggests that the Board was therefore required to approve their
    petition. However, Stockbridge does not support this position.
    ¶20   Stockbridge involved a jurisdictional challenge. The Stockbridge
    School District challenged the Board’s orders allowing for detachment of forty-
    one “island” parcels, arguing that the Board “lacked jurisdiction to order the
    detachment,” in part, because “the parcels to be detached had no common
    boundary with the proposed school district of attachment.” Stockbridge, 
    202 Wis. 2d at 218
    . Our supreme court rejected this position, concluding that WIS.
    STAT. § 117.12 “does not require that the detaching parcel border the school
    district of attachment,” Stockbridge, 
    202 Wis. 2d at 223
    , and that the statute
    instead “allows for the detachment of such ‘island’ parcels,” 
    id. at 217
    . Notably,
    in affirming the Board’s decision, the supreme court emphasized that it “has long
    held that school district reorganization represents the determination of policy
    questions of a legislative nature which the legislature has delegated to the Board.”
    
    Id. at 227
    .
    ¶21   Thus, Stockbridge does not support the proposition that it would be
    irrational for the Board to deny such petitions based on the noncontiguity factor.
    Here, the Board determined that the Miskos’ parcel would create a noncontiguous
    island of New Berlin district territory surrounded by the West Allis district. The
    Miskos’ parcel is in the middle of a block of West Allis district parcels and there is
    no other single-parcel island detachment in the district. It is rational to avoid
    11
    No. 2022AP1810
    structuring a district to resemble a checkerboard, which can break up
    neighborhoods, add busing, and create confusion. The Board considered this
    information along with the other factors under WIS. STAT. § 117.15 and made its
    decision to deny the Miskos’ petition. Although the Board could have allowed
    detachment of an island parcel under Stockbridge, the Board made a rational
    decision to deny the petition here based on this and other factors, because those
    factors “affect the educational welfare of all of the children residing in all of the
    affected school districts.” See § 117.15.
    B. Future Consequences
    ¶22    The Miskos argue that the Board incorrectly applied WIS. STAT.
    § 117.15(4) and (6) because these provisions address only the effects of the
    Miskos’ detachment and do not allow the Board to consider the effects of any
    future detachments if the Miskos’ petition is granted. We reject this argument,
    concluding that the Board may properly consider such future consequences.
    ¶23    As noted, the Board concluded that, although granting the Miskos’
    petition would not have an immediate financial effect, the West Allis district could
    experience adverse fiscal effects if the Miskos’ detachment encouraged other
    similar detachments.    The Board also concluded that, although granting the
    Miskos’ petition would not make a significant difference in the racial and
    socioeconomic composition of students in the two districts, the West Allis district
    could be adversely affected if significant numbers of parcels in the district located
    in the city of New Berlin also detached, given the “large differences in racial
    composition and socioeconomic level between the New Berlin and West Allis-
    West Milwaukee parts” of the West Allis district.
    12
    No. 2022AP1810
    ¶24    The Board is permitted to consider these potential consequences as
    “other appropriate factors” in addition to the specific factors listed in WIS. STAT.
    § 117.15. See § 117.15. Moreover, the Board properly considered these potential
    consequences because it is not required to “restrict its decision to the facts
    appearing of record” and may “consider ‘matters within its knowledge and
    expertise in the field of educational policy’” in arriving at its decision. School
    Dist. of Waukesha, 201 Wis. 2d at 116, 119. The Board’s denial of the petition
    based on its consideration of these potential consequences, together with other
    required and appropriate factors, has a rational basis.      For reasons explained
    below, we are not persuaded by the Miskos’ positions to the contrary.
    ¶25    The Miskos argue that the Board does not specify that its decision is
    based on any other factors, nor does the Board identify other factors that it
    considered in reaching its decision.      After discussing the delineated statutory
    factors in WIS. STAT. § 117.15, the Board states in its decision that it “did not
    identify any other factors for the record.”
    ¶26    On judicial review, the burden is on the petitioner “to establish that a
    claimed procedural error is prejudicial.” See RURAL v. PSC, 
    2000 WI 129
    , ¶48,
    
    239 Wis. 2d 660
    , 
    619 N.W.2d 888
    . We conclude that even if the Board erred in
    stating that it did not consider “other factors” when it in fact did so, the Miskos
    have not met their burden of showing that any such procedural error was
    prejudicial. There is no dispute that, in addition to discussing the effects under
    WIS. STAT. § 117.15(4) and (6) if the Miskos’ specific petition were granted, the
    Board also considered the potential future effects if, following the Miskos’
    detachment, other similarly situated residents followed suit. Therefore, to the
    extent that potential future detachments and consequences are not encompassed by
    the specific statutory language of § 117.15(4) and (6), this information properly
    13
    No. 2022AP1810
    constitutes “other” information not included in these provisions. See School Dist.
    of Waukesha, 201 Wis. 2d at 116. That the Board considered these potential
    consequences through the lens of § 117.15(4) and (6), rather than through specific
    reference to “other appropriate factors” in § 117.15 or “other information” in the
    case law that allows for their consideration, does not mean that the Board’s
    consideration of this information is arbitrary or capricious. The Board’s decision
    provides the Miskos with all of the underlying reasons, including the potential
    future consequences, for its decision and the Miskos fail to show that any error in
    its labeling or characterization of this information prejudiced them.         This is
    especially true given that “[t]he board is not required to make formalized findings
    of fact.” Joint Sch. Dist. No. 2, 
    83 Wis. 2d at 720
    .
    ¶27    The Miskos also argue that, “[s]ince being able to tell the future is
    impossible,” the Board’s discussion of the potential consequences of granting their
    petition is not rational. As explained above, the Board based its decision on the
    information presented at the hearing, including the data on the current
    demographics of the districts and the implications for those demographics of
    granting the Miskos’ petition, as well as data regarding the fiscal implications of
    granting the petition. It is rational for the Board to consider its best understanding
    of the potential future effect on the current racial and economic composition of the
    districts, as well as the potential fiscal effect. And the Miskos have failed to show
    that it is arbitrary or capricious for the Board to consider these potential future
    impacts given that: school district reorganization is a legislative policy-making
    function that has been delegated to the Board, School District of Waukesha, 201
    Wis. 2d at 113; the Board may consider facts outside the record, id. at 119, and
    base its decision on what is “best for the educational system involved,” Joint
    14
    No. 2022AP1810
    School District No. 2, 
    83 Wis. 2d at 721
    ; and a “rational basis” may be based on
    “rational speculation,” Brown, 
    341 Wis. 2d 449
    , ¶38.
    ¶28    In sum, we conclude that the Board’s decision reflects a “sifting and
    winnowing process” and that a rational basis supports the Board’s conclusion. See
    School Dist. of Waukesha, 201 Wis. 2d at 116. Accordingly, we reverse the
    circuit court’s order and reinstate the Board’s decision.
    By the Court.—Order reversed.
    This    opinion   will   not    be   published.   See   WIS. STAT.
    RULE 809.23(1)(b)5.
    15
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2022AP001810

Filed Date: 7/27/2023

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 9/9/2024