Rio Rancho Public Schools Board of Education and certain school officials appeal a district court decision denying their motion to dismiss based on qualified immunity. Exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we reverse.
See Mitchell v. Forsyth,
I. Background
The following facts are alleged in the amended complaint. One day, Mr. Joshua Butler borrowed his brother’s car and drove to his public high school. Mr. Butler parked the car in the faculty parking lot without a permit. A school security guard noticed the vehicle did not have a *1199 permit and ran a registration check. The registration check revealed the vehicle belonged to Mr. Butler’s brother.
During this time, the security guard “observed the butt end of a knife sticking up from between the passenger seat and the center console.” He contacted Mr. Butler and had him open the vehicle. The security guard found a “sheathed hunting knife” in the vehicle. The security guard also found a handgun, ammunition, and drug paraphernalia. Mr. Butler denied knowing the items were in the car. The knife, gun, and ammunition belonged to Mr. Butler’s brother.
Initially, the principal of the high school suspended Mr. Butler. After a disciplinary hearing, a hearing officer concluded Mr. Butler should be suspended for one year. Mr. Butler appealed the hearing officer’s decision to the school board. After a hearing, the school board upheld the hearing officer’s decision.
Mr. Butler’s parents sued on his behalf the school board and various school officials, among others, (collectively the “School”) in the United States District Court for the District of New Mexico pursuant to 42 U.S.C. §§ 1988, 1985. In relevant part, the Butlers claimed the School violated Mr. Butler’s substantive due process right “to a free public education.” They also requested, and the district court granted, a preliminary injunction allowing Mr. Butler to attend school and “participate in the commencement exercises and graduation related social events.” The School appealed the court’s decision, but we dismissed it as moot because Mr. Butler had already “graduated from school and received his diploma.”
Butler v. Rio Rancho Pub. Sch. Dist.,
The School subsequently filed a motion to dismiss the Butlers’ complaint, arguing the complaint failed to state a claim and the School was entitled to qualified immunity. The district court granted the motion on several claims but denied it on the Butlers’ substantive due process and supplemental state law claims. The School moved the district court to reconsider its ruling that the School was not entitled to qualified immunity on the Butlers’ substantive due process claims. The district court denied the motion. The School appeals.
II. Discussion
On appeal, the School argues the district court should have granted its motion to dismiss based on qualified immunity because it did not violate Mr. Butler’s substantive due process rights. In the alternative, the School argues Mr. Butler’s substantive due process rights were not clearly established. 1
We review the district court’s denial of a motion to dismiss based on qualified immunity de novo.
See Currier v. Doran,
Since the School raised the defense of qualified immunity in its motion to dismiss, we first examine whether the Butlers asserted a violation of federal law in their complaint.
See Currier,
If we conclude the Butlers properly alleged a violation of federal law, we next “determine whether the [law] was clearly established such that a reasonable person in the [School’s] position would have known that his or her conduct violated [the law].”
Tonkovich,
The Butlers alleged in their complaint the School violated Mr. Butler’s substantive due process right “to a free public education” by suspending him for one year “without finding that he knowingly/intentionally brought, carried or kept a weapon or firearm on school grounds.” 2 The district court, without reviewing the decisions of the hearing officer or the school board, concluded the Butlers alleged a due process violation because “suspending a student for unknowingly transporting a weapon onto the school campus does not rationally support the legitimate state interest in maintaining school safety and discipline.”
The Supreme Court has not clarified what type of interest triggers substantive due process guarantees.
3
The case law in this circuit is also unclear.
See, e.g., Jacobs, Visconsi & Jacobs, Co. v. City of Lawrence,
“The Due Process Clause not only provides a procedural safeguard against deprivations of life, liberty, and property but also protects substantive aspects of those interests from unconstitutional restrictions by government.”
Harris v. Blake,
Contrary to the Butlers’ allegations and the district court’s decision, the School in this case did not suspend Mr. Butler for “unknowingly” bringing a knife onto school property. Although the hearing officer initially found only that Mr. Butler possessed weapons on school property in violation of school policy, 5 the school board later concluded “[Mr.] Butler should have known, as the driver of the vehicle, that he was in possession of and transporting a weapon onto school grounds.” This was because “the knife was in plain view and readily identifiable as a knife to persons standing outside the vehicle looking in.” The board also concluded “[Mr.] Butler knew, or should have known that he was responsible for the vehicle he brought onto school property and the contents thereof.”
As a result of the board’s decision, we need not decide whether suspending a high school student for “unknowingly” bringing a weapon onto school property violates the student’s substantive due process rights.
See Seal v. Morgan,
There is no doubt the School has a legitimate interest in providing a safe environment for students and staff. It is not unreasonable for the School to conclude that student possession of weapons on school property threatens this interest. In order to protect against this threat and further the School’s interest in safety, we believe there is a rational basis for the School to suspend Mr. Butler, even for one year, when he should have known he brought a weapon onto school property. The School’s decision was not arbitrary, nor does it shock the conscience. Accordingly, the decision did not violate Mr. Butler’s substantive due process rights, if any. Since the Butlers failed to state a substantive due process violation, we conclude the School is entitled to qualified immunity on the Butlers’ substantive due process claims.
III. Conclusion
For the reasons discussed above, we REVERSE the district court’s order denying the School’s motion to dismiss the Butlers’ substantive due process claims and REMAND to the district court. The Butlers’ request for costs and attorney’s fees is denied.
Notes
. Both parties argue cases involving criminal statutes support their respective positions. We do not find either party's analogies to scienter in the criminal context helpful or persuasive in this case.
. The Butlers also claimed the School was "deliberately] indifferen[t]'' to Mr. Butler's substantive due process right "to a free public education” for various reasons, but, given our conclusion below, these claims necessarily fail.
. While the Supreme Court has made clear the right to a public education is not a fundamental right,
see, e.g., San Antonio Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Rodriguez,
. Although we questioned in
Tonkovieh
whether the “shock the conscience” standard applies to all due process violations,
see Tonkovich,
. Although the School's policy does not expressly require knowledge, the policy does state it is to be "interpreted to conform to provisions of applicable law,” and the New Mexico statute pursuant to which the School enacted the policy requires knowledge. See N.M. Stat. Ann. § 22-5-4.7 (1995).
