Case Information
*1 Before EDMONDSON and BIRCH, Circuit Judges, and HENDERSON, Senior Circuit Judge.
EDMONDSON, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiffs in this action, minors TP and CB, sued their former high school principal, Dr. Driscoll, and superintendent, Mr. Corry, in Defendants' individual and official capacities under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The claims asserted were for constitutional injuries allegedly suffered when Defendants suspended Plaintiffs from school. The district court granted summary judgment to Defendants. And, in the light of the exceedingly limited rights of public school students facing school discipline, we affirm.
I. Facts
TP was involved in a fight at the Greene-Taliaferro Comprehensive High School, where she was a student. According to school administrators, TP refused to calm down when teachers arrived, attempted again to attack the other student, and screamed *2 obscenities and threats. A teacher eventually carried her to the principal's office, where TP continued to shout obscenities and to disobey the school administrators' instructions to remain seated and to wait quietly. Dr. Driscoll also says—without contradiction—that TP injured her as administrators tried to calm TP in the principal's office. The police were summoned, and TP was taken to the station. From there, she called her mother, who retrieved her.
TP and her mother discussed the incident later that same day with Dr. Driscoll by phone. TP told Dr. Driscoll that the other student had started the fight. She claims, however, that Driscoll was uninterested in her story, and TP argues that the decision to suspend her had already been made. Dr. Driscoll is herself unsure whether the decision to suspend TP was made before or after the phone conversation.
School policy authorizes administrators to suspend students up to nine days following a conference; longer suspensions and expulsions require that the Board of Education first hold a more formal hearing. Superintendent Corry explained to TP's mother that TP was entitled to no formal hearing. TP then enrolled in a neighboring school district and filed this lawsuit.
About a week after the TP incident, Assistant Principal Johnson was told by a student that CB was going to make a drug sale at school later in the day. The informant had been told by another student that CB had hidden the drugs in CB's coat. In response, Driscoll and Johnson went to CB's class, asked him to follow them to the hallway, and informed him that it had been reported that he *3 was in possession of drugs. They asked CB to empty his pockets, and CB removed from his coat two plastic packets of what appeared to be marijuana. CB maintained he knew nothing about the packets. Dr. Driscoll permitted CB to return to class. At a conference attended by CB's grandparents, CB was given a chance to explain the source of the packets. Dr. Driscoll told CB that the police would test the substance and that she would continue investigating. She did not suspend him then.
The next week CB's father, stepmother, grandmother and aunt (who is also CB's attorney before this Court) attended a meeting with Driscoll and a Georgia Bureau of Investigation agent where CB was given the opportunity to explain himself again. Dr. Driscoll decided to suspend CB for nine days for the possession of a "look-alike" illegal substance. After the suspension, Driscoll decided that CB would—pending the outcome of the drug testing—be assigned to the "alternative school" where CB would do work assigned by the regular teachers, but would not attend regular classes. CB then withdrew from school and filed this lawsuit. Later, tests revealed the substance not to be marijuana.
The school handbook permits administrators to search the person effects of students when administrators reasonably suspect that the search will reveal evidence of a violation of law or school rules. Possession of both illegal drugs and substances that appear to be illegal drugs are prohibited by School Rule 23. CB admitted in his deposition that he was aware of the rules against illegal drugs, including the prohibition against "look-alikes." Everyone concedes the packets looked to contain marijuana.
Review of summary judgment is plenary; and this court will
affirm if, after construing the evidence in the light most
favorable to the non-moving party, it concludes that no genuine
issue exists on a material fact and that the moving party is
entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Delancey v. St. Paul Fire
and Marine Insurance Co.,
II. TP's Due Process Claims
A. Procedural Due Process
TP argues that her suspension for fighting, screaming obscenities, and refusing to cooperate with and assaulting faculty members was imposed with inadequate process. She says she received no notice or hearing and alleges the decision to suspend was made before the phone conference. [1]
The Supreme Court determined in Goss v. Lopez,
The dictates of Goss are clear and extremely limited: Briefly stated, once school administrators tell a student what they heard or saw, ask why they heard or saw it, and allow a brief response, a student has received all the process that the Fourteenth Amendment demands. The only other requirement arises from the Court's admonishment that the hearing come before removal from school "as a general rule," unless a student's continued presence is dangerous or disruptive. In these instances, removal can be immediate. Id.
When TP was removed from school, she posed a danger to persons or property or both and was disruptive. After fighting with two girls, she had had to be physically carried to the principal's office by a teacher; and while the details of what followed are contested, TP admits she was emotionally distraught and that she expressed to administrators her intention to "kill that girl" who had allegedly attacked her. She also admits that she refused to stay seated in the office and tried to run out of the office. Dr. Driscoll says (without contradiction) that she was injured in the attempts to calm TP in Driscoll's office. So, TP was first properly removed from school under the circumstances even if she was given no opportunity to explain herself. The important issue is whether she had the chance to explain her behavior before the decision setting the duration of the suspension—nine days—became *6 final.
Appellees assert that TP received her hearing by telephone later that day, when TP's mother phoned Dr. Driscoll at school. TP and her mother both took part in that call. [2] Dr. Driscoll admits that she cannot recall whether the initial decision to suspend was reached before or after that call.
Despite this uncertainty, Appellees are still correct that the
phone call satisfied the requirements of the due process clause.
This court had occasion to consider, shortly after Goss, the issue
of whether a hearing held after a suspension decision has been
announced, but in time to modify or to reverse the decision,
satisfies due process. In Sweet v. Childs,
Sweet teaches that when students are removed from school for creating a disturbance, a tentative decision to continue to suspend the students for some days may be made before a hearing as long as the disciplinarian goes on to hold a prompt—given the practicalities—hearing at which the preliminary decision to suspend can be reversed. Here, TP acknowledged in her deposition that, *7 within hours of leaving school, she was able to tell her side of the story to Dr. Driscoll on the phone: "I said [to Dr. Driscoll], no we were not fighting.... [T]hese girls jumped on me, and her sister was holding me." TP also told Dr. Driscoll her attacker jumped on her "for no reason." Dr. Driscoll then declined to alter the punishment. Under Sweet, that the hearing did not precede the initial determination of TP's punishment is not dispositive on whether due process was afforded. Therefore, because TP was apprised of the charges against her, and Dr. Driscoll soon heard TP's version of the morning's events, TP—given the circumstances—received sufficient process under Goss.
B. Substantive Due Process
TP claims that the procedural due process violation discussed above also constituted a violation of what the Supreme Court has called substantive due process: she says the nine-day suspension caused her injury of a "shocking and abusive nature." And, TP argues her substantive due process rights were violated because Driscoll, who made the decision to suspend, was biased because TP injured Driscoll in the struggle in the principal's office following TP's fight with other students.
These substantive due process claims are without merit.
Pursuant to this court's opinion in McKinney v. Pate,
Therefore, the "right" to avoid school suspension may be abridged as long as proper procedural protections are afforded; and TP's substantive due process challenge must fail. By the way, TP's quarrel with Driscoll's supposed bias is also properly seen as an alleged deprivation of procedural, not substantive, due process. McKinney, 20 F.3d at 1560-61. Thus, TP's effort to invoke substantive due process fails. [3]
III. CB's Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment Claims
A. Illegal Search and Seizure
CB argues that Driscoll lacked reasonable grounds to search
him because no administrator observed him with drugs, no
administrator observed him acting strangely, and the informant was
unreliable. Whether the facts construed in favor of CB show that
Driscoll had reasonable grounds to suspect the presence of banned
substances is a question of law and review is de novo. See United
States v. Harris,
In New Jersey v. T.L.O., 469 U.S. 325, 342, 105 S.Ct. 733,
743, 83 L.Ed.2d 720 (1985), the Supreme Court held that school
officials need only "reasonable grounds for suspecting" that a
search will turn up evidence that the student has violated either
the law or school rules. "Sufficient probability, not certainty,
is the touchstone of reasonableness under the Fourth Amendment."
T.L.O.,
A fellow student provided the information that CB carried
too complex. See, e.g., Schaper v. City of Huntsville, 813 F.2d
709, 715 n. 7 (5th Cir.1987) (citations omitted). This reasoning
applies with at least equal force in the school suspension
context. Even if Driscoll was not wholly impartial, we conclude
as a matter of law that Driscoll's involvement in the events in
the office did not preclude her from acting as the decisionmaker.
*10
drugs with the intent of selling them. The tip was provided to
administrators directly, rather than anonymously, and was thus more
likely to be reliable because the student informant faced the
possibility of disciplinary repercussions if the information was
misleading. Cf. United States v. Harris, 403 U.S. 573, 583, 91
S.Ct. 2075, 2082, 29 L.Ed.2d 723 (1971) (plurality opinion)
(stating "common sense" proposition that tip that places informant
at risk of prosecution is entitled to greater credit). Many courts
have approved reliance on tips from fellow students. E.g., S.C. v.
State, 583 So.2d 188, 192 (Miss.1991) (noting that tips from
students are less suspect than those from society in general). And
while the tip did not include the identity of the student who
observed the contraband firsthand, the Supreme Court has recognized
that information from an anonymous source can help provide the
"reasonable suspicion" necessary for a Terry stop. See Alabama v.
White, 496 U.S. 325, 331, 110 S.Ct. 2412, 2416, 110 L.Ed.2d 301
(1990). Administrators also received at least some corroboration
when they noted that CB, who was reported by the informant to have
the drugs in his "big old coat," did in fact have such a coat in
his possession when the search was initiated. See United States v.
Gibson,
B. Procedural Due Process
CB also argues that his procedural due process rights were
violated because he was suspended without adequate notice or
hearing. The District Court granted summary judgment on the merits
of this claim. Again, only a "rudimentary" hearing is required for
short-term suspensions. Goss,
C. Substantive Due Process
CB claims his substantive due process rights were violated by the decision to suspend him and then to send him to an "alternative school." The district court granted summary judgment on the merits of this claim.
Our holding in McKinney,
IV. Plaintiffs' Other Motions Below
The district court dismissed Plaintiffs' other pending motions as moot because he ruled on the summary judgment motion first. In the light of our holdings expressed above, we decline to review the merits of these motions.
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
[1] The district court originally determined that factual issues required a jury trial on the question of when (and if) TP's hearing was provided; but on reconsideration, the court held that TP received a hearing during the phone conversation between TP and Dr. Driscoll that satisfied due process regardless of whether or not it preceded the decision to suspend.
[2] Appellees do not argue that TP received a sufficient hearing in the principal's office, and therefore we do not consider this idea.
[3] We note that Driscoll's alleged bias amounts to no
deprivation of procedural due process either. In the school
context, it is both impossible and undesirable for administrators
involved in incidents of misbehavior always to be precluded from
acting as decisionmakers. Thus Justice White noted in Goss, 419
U.S. at 584,
[4] CB also fails to set out a persuasive procedural due
process claim based on the alleged vagueness of Rule 23
(possession of look-alike substances). See, e.g., Bethel Sch.
Dist. No. 403 v. Fraser,
[5] And, although we need not address the issue (because CB has
not alleged a violation of procedural due process based on the
transfer), we doubt CB has a property interest under Georgia law
in attending Greene-Taliaferro instead of the alternative school
to which he was assigned. See generally Doe v. Bagan, 41 F.3d
571, 576 (10th Cir.1994). In Bagan, the court stated,
It is obvious, however, that Doe was not denied his
right to public education. He was only denied his
request to attend the public school of his choice.
Plaintiffs cite no Colorado authority, and we have
found none, indicating that the right to a public
education encompasses a right to choose one's
particular school.
Id. Cf. Zamora v. Pomeroy,
