Donna L. Crispen
E. Michael Crispen
Pro Se
William R. Wooton, Esquire
The Wooton Law Firm
Beckley, West Virginia
Attorney for Appellees WVSSAC
and Warren Carter
Roberta F. Green, Esquire
Shuman, Annand, Bailey, Wyant & Earles
Charleston, West Virginia
and
Molly K. Underwood, Esquire
Pullin, Knopf, Fowler & Flannigan
Charleston, West Virginia
Attorney for Appellees Aldridge and Ashworth
The Opinion of the Court was delivered PER CURIAM.
JUSTICE SCOTT did not participate in the decision in this case.
JUDGE ROBERT B. STONE, sitting by temporary assignment.
Per Curiam:
This is a pro se appeal by Donna L. Crispen and E. Michael Crispen, as the
natural guardians and next friends of Joseph Scott Crispen, from an order of the Circuit Court
of Mason County dismissing a civil action which they had instituted in Mason County. The
court dismissed the action on the ground that venue for the case did not lie in Mason County.
In the present appeal, the appellants claim that the circuit court erred in concluding that
venue for their case does not lie in Mason County.
In 1994, the appellants, who were then residents of Jackson County, and who
were home schooling their 14-year-old son Joseph, approached the Jackson County Board
of Education and requested that Joseph be allowed to play soccer on the Ravenswood High
School varsity soccer team during the 1994-95 school year. The Jackson County Board of
Education granted the request contingent upon an opening being available on the soccer team
and contingent upon all documents for participation being signed by appropriate school
officials and being approved by the West Virginia Secondary Schools Activities
Commission.
Joseph played soccer during the 1994 school season and was honored at an end
of season banquet conducted at Ravenswood High School in December 1994. Subsequently,
the West Virginia Secondary Schools Activities Commission ruled that Joseph was ineligible
to play soccer, and Joseph was also declared ineligible to participate in athletics in Jackson
County during the 1995-96 school year. As a consequence, Ravenswood High School
refused to allow Joseph to play during that school year. The appellants appealed the ruling
of the West Virginia Secondary Schools Activities Commission through administrative
channels, but ultimately that ruling was upheld.
The appellants moved to Mason County in October 1995 and contacted the
Mason County Board of Education about the possibility of Joseph participating in athletics
in that county. The Mason County authorities, who were apparently aware of the prior ruling
relating to Joseph's ineligibility, concluded that under the rules of the West Virginia
Secondary Schools Activities Commission, Joseph could not participate in athletics in Mason
County for the 1995-96 school year.
After making additional attempts to enroll Joseph in athletics in Mason County,
the appellants, in September 1997, instituted the present civil action in the Circuit Court of
Mason County. The action was brought against the West Virginia Secondary Schools
Activities Commission; Warren Carter, Executive Secretary of the West Virginia Secondary
Schools Activities Commission; Fred Aldridge, former principal of Ravenswood High
School; Stephen Ashworth, the coach at Ravenswood High School, and the members of the
West Virginia Secondary Schools Activities Commission. The appellant did not name the
Board of Education of Mason County or any individual resident in Mason County as a party
defendant.
In their complaint in the Circuit Court of Mason County, the appellants alleged
that the defendants had unconstitutionally discriminated against Joseph, had defamed him,
and had violated various of his constitutional rights. Prior to undertaking an actual defense
of the action, the defendants moved to dismiss on the ground that the circuit court of Mason
County lacked venue to try the action.
A hearing was conducted in the matter on August 26, 1998. At that hearing, Joseph, as well as his father E. Michael Crispen, both affirmatively stated to the court that they wished to have the matter dismissed and that they understood that if the case was dismissed, their claims were gone. After engaging in a colloquy with the individuals, the court granted the motion and, in a dismissal order, stated that since they wanted their case dismissed, E. Michael Crispen and Joseph Scott Crispen were dismissed in accordance with their request. Additionally, the court dismissed the action as to Donna L. Crispen on the ground that the court lacked venue to entertain the case.
West Virginia Code 56-1-1 [1986] establishes venue for civil actions brought
in the State of West Virginia. That statute provides in relevant part:
(a) Any civil action or other proceeding, except where it is
otherwise specially provided, may hereafter be brought in the
circuit court of any county:
(1) Wherein any of the defendants may reside or the cause of
action arose, except that an action of ejectment or unlawful
detainer must be brought in the county wherein the land sought
to be recovered or some part thereof, is; or
(2) If a corporation be a defendant, wherein its principal office
is, or wherein its mayor, president or other chief officer resides;
or if its principal office be not in this state, and its mayor,
president or other chief officer do not reside therein, wherein it
does business; or if it be a corporation organized under the laws
of this state, which has its principal office located outside of this
state, and which has no office or place of business within the
state, the circuit court of the county in which the plaintiff resides
or the circuit court of the county in which the seat of state
government is located shall have jurisdiction of all actions at
law or suits in equity against such corporation, where the cause
of action arose in this state or grew out of the rights of
stockholders with respect to corporate management; . . .
In Crawford v. Carson, 138 W. Va. 852, 78 S.E.2d 268 (1953), the Court
examined the requirements of our venue statute and concluded in Syllabus Point 2 that:
Venue of an action exists by virtue of law. The residence of a
plaintiff, without more, is not a valid ground of venue in the
absence of a statute or other principle of law authorizing it, as
provided in Code, 56-1-1, subparagraph (b).
The evidence developed in the present case shows that none of the individual
defendants named by the appellants in the complaint instituting the present action in the
Circuit Court of Mason County resided in Mason County. Specifically, the evidence shows
that the defendants Fred Aldridge and Stephen Ashworth were residents of Jackson County
at all times during and since the time Joseph Crispen played soccer at Ravenswood High
School located in Jackson County. Defendant Warren Carter was, and has at all times during
and since Joseph Crispen played soccer at Ravenswood High School been, a resident of
Wood County. Finally, the West Virginia Secondary Schools Activities Commission's home
office was located in Wood County, and has been located in Wood County at all times during
and since Joseph Crispen played soccer at Ravenswood High School.
Further, the evidence shows that the Crispens resided in Jackson County during
the 1994-95 school year when Joseph was declared ineligible to participate in secondary
school athletics. They continued to reside in Jackson County when they pursued their
administrative appeal from the ruling of the West Virginia Secondary Schools Activities
Commission. Lastly, the West Virginia Secondary Schools Activities Commission did not,
and does not, have a principal office in Mason County.
The record suggests that the only nexus between the appellants and Mason
County is the fact that, at the time of instituting the proceeding as plaintiffs, the appellants
were residents of Mason County, and, as stated in Syllabus Point 2 of Crawford v. Carson,
id., the residence of a plaintiff, without more, is not a valid ground of venue.
Given the fact that W. Va. Code 56-1-1 prescribes that a civil action shall be
brought where the individual defendants reside, where the cause of action arose, or where a
corporate defendant has a principal place of business, and given the facts of the present case,
this Court cannot conclude that the trial court erred in concluding that venue for this action
did not lie in Mason County and in dismissing the action for that reason. If the action had
actually arisen in Mason County, or if one of the defendants had been a resident of Mason
County, our decision on this point would have been different.
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the Circuit Court of Mason County is
affirmed.