Private school teacher loses case over ‘little bitch’ comment

Parents of male student made complaint against teacher at south Dublin school

Mr Justice Michael Twomey ruled Pierce Dillon was not entitled to judicial review against Catholic University School. Photograph: Alan Betson/The Irish Times
Mr Justice Michael Twomey ruled Pierce Dillon was not entitled to judicial review against Catholic University School. Photograph: Alan Betson/The Irish Times

A teacher at a south Dublin private fee-paying school has lost his High Court case over how it dealt with a complaint alleging he called a male student a "little bitch".

Mr Justice Michael Twomey ruled Pierce Dillon was not entitled to judicial review against Catholic University School for reasons including a final written warning issued to the teacher has expired, there is no record of it on his personnel file and because scarce court time should not be allocated to small matters.

Mr Dillon (55) sought a judicial review of the formal procedure adopted by CUS in dealing with a complaint by the boy's parents over events on May 8th and May 9th, 2014.

The teenage student claimed that after he was late on May 8th, 2014, for Mr Dillon’s class due to talking to another teacher, Mr Dillon told him he was continually disrupting the class, always moaning and was a “little bitch”.

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Denied

The student also claimed, after telling Mr Dillon the following day he could not attend class due to a school sports’ commitment, he was told he would be kicked out of class for three weeks.

The boy alleged he told Mr Dillon he was not allowed call him a “little bitch” and Mr Dillon had denied doing so.

After the complaint was substantiated, a meeting was held on March 27th, 2015, to discuss disciplinary action, leading to a final written warning being issued to Mr Dillon in April 2015.

Mr Dillon was told this was a Marist Catholic school known for the kindness and humanity with which it treats pupils, his behaviour fell short of its expectations and the final warning would be active for 12 months after which, subject to his satisfactory performance, it would expire. It has done so.

His case centred on claims the school applied the incorrect procedure for dealing with the complaint.

He claimed the handling of the complaint was unfair, breached his rights and the school’s own procedures, and caused him hurt and distress after 34 years’ service as a teacher. He also claimed it allowed no appeal.

Asked to intervene

The school argued it implemented the appropriate procedure and Mr Dillon was treated fairly.

Mr Justice Twomey, in a summary of his judgment delivered on Wednesday, said the court was being asked to intervene to quash a final written warning to a teacher concerning one incident of inappropriate name calling.

The court should not intervene on grounds of mootness (pointlessness) because, when the matter was first heard, the warning had expired.

It had also been removed from his record within 12 months.

The judge said he was also refusing judicial review on the de minimis principle (a legal principle by which the court refuses to consider small matters) as the final warning was “just a warning” to be removed after 12 months and treated as it if had not existed. There was no imposition of any liability, he said.

He would also refuse judicial review based on the need to avoid unnecessary use of the scarce public resource of court time, he added.

Costs issues will be addressed next week.

Mary Carolan

Mary Carolan

Mary Carolan is the Legal Affairs Correspondent of the Irish Times