MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
These consolidated cases arise from allegations that plaintiffs C.T., G.B. and J.B. were sexually abused and harassed by defendant Johnny Aubrey, who was a volunteer weight training coach for student athletes in Liberal, Kansas. Plaintiffs assert claims against Mr. Aubrey, who is appearing pro se in this action, for childhood sexual abuse, battery, and breach of fiduciary duty. Additionally, they assert various claims against the school district and several individuals employed by the school district (collectively, “the school district defendants”) under Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, 20 U.S.C. §§ 1681 et seq., constitutional claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, and state law claims seeking to impose vicarious liability for Mr. Aubrey’s actions, negligent supervision of Mr. Aubrey, and negligent failure to supervise children.
This matter is currently before the court on the school district defendants’ Motions for Summary Judgment (doc. 262 in Case No. 06-2093, doc. 10 in Case No. 06-2359, and doc. 20 in Case No. 06-2360).
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For
STATEMENT OF MATERIAL FACTS
The parties have submitted voluminous statements of fact consisting of more than eight hundred fact paragraphs spanning hundreds of pages in each of the three separate cases. Many of those facts appear in the parties’ statements of facts in all three cases, but others do not. The court has thoroughly reviewed the parties’ statements of facts, but in the interests of brevity will not repeat them all here. Instead, the court has endeavored to condense and will recite only those facts that are most material to the court’s resolution of the current motions. Additionally, consistent with the well established standard for evaluating a motion for summary judgment, the court has viewed those facts in the light most favorable to plaintiffs, the nonmoving parties.
Defendant Johnny Aubrey was a volunteer weight training coach for student athletes in Liberal, Kansas. He ran a weight training program out of his home in which many youth in Liberal participated over the course of several years. The participants included, among others, plaintiffs C.T., J.B. and G.B. This lawsuit arises out of the fact that Mr. Aubrey’s program with plaintiffs included, to varying degrees, having them take nude baths at Mr. Aubrey’s house while Mr. Aubrey would sometimes come in and out of the room; Mr. Aubrey giving them body massages using an ultrasound machine
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on sore muscles, including sometimes massaging their groin areas and buttocks, while they lay naked on his bed (except for keeping a towel over their genitals); and having them conduct weigh-ins at the school in the nude when it was not wrestling season. Mr. Aubrey also engaged these teenage boys in conversa
The only summary judgment motions currently at issue are those filed by the school district defendants. Those defendants include the Liberal School District itself and various school coaches and administrators. Specifically, defendant Gary Cornelsen was a long time friend of Mr. Aubrey’s and was the school’s head football coach from 1991 through 2001, and again in 2003. He also was the school’s athletic director from the summer 2002 through April 2004. Defendant Tom Scott was the school’s wrestling coach from 1989 through 2001. Defendant Mike Pewthers was the school’s assistant wrestling coach from approximately 1992-1993 until Mr. Scott left in 2001, at which time Mr. Pewthers became the head wrestling coach. Defendant Dave Webb was the principal from 2001 to 2003. Defendant Jim Little was an assistant principal from 1998 until 2003, and he became the principal in 2003.
The predominant theme of the current motions for summary judgment is the extent to which the school district and/or its various employees can be held liable for Mr. Aubrey’s actions. The school district defendants maintain that Mr. Aubrey was not an employee of the school and his weight training program was not a school program and, as such, it cannot be held liable for his actions. They rely on the fact that the problems with Mr. Aubrey’s program did not come to light until the spring of 2003 when G.B. reported the matter to law enforcement officials. Plaintiffs C.T. and J.B. corroborated G.B.’s allegations against Mr. Aubrey. Plaintiffs experienced some backlash from the other student athletes, who did not believe the allegations against Mr. Aubrey. 4 Mr. Aubrey discontinued his program that same spring and the school district took measures to distance itself from Mr. Aubrey. Thus, the summary judgment record does not reflect that Mr. Aubrey engaged in any of the conduct that forms the basis of this lawsuit at any time after the spring of 2003.
Plaintiffs, on the other hand, seek to impose liability against the school district defendants because Mr. Aubrey ingratiated himself and became friends with the school district’s coaches and athletics di
With this general background in mind, the court will proceed to analyze the parties’ various specific arguments, and will discuss the facts (viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiffs) in more detail in connection with those arguments.
SUMMARY JUDGMENT STANDARD
Summary judgment is appropriate if the moving party demonstrates that there is “no genuine issue as to any material fact” and that it is “entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). In applying this standard, the court views the evidence and all reasonable inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.
Rost ex rel. K.C. v. Steamboat Springs RE-2 Sch. Dist.,
The moving party bears the initial burden of demonstrating an absence of a genuine issue of material fact and entitlement to judgment as a matter of law.
Libertarian Party v. Herrera,
If the movant carries this initial burden, the nonmovant may not simply rest upon his or her pleadings but must “bring forward specific facts showing a genuine issue for trial as to those dispositive matters for which he or she carries the burden of proof.”
Garrison v. Gambro, Inc.,
Finally, the court notes that summary judgment is not a “disfavored procedural shortcut;” rather, it is an important procedure “designed to secure the just, speedy and inexpensive determination of every action.”
Celotex, 477
U.S. at 327,
Before delving into the school district defendants’ motions for summary judgment, the court wishes to clarify that in resolving these motions the court is not expressing any opinion about whether Mr. Aubrey’s alleged actions were wrongful. Mr. Aubrey himself, who appears pro se in this action, has not moved for summary judgment on the plaintiffs’ claims against him for childhood sexual abuse, battery, and breach of fiduciary duty. Furthermore, as explained below, the only claims against the school district defendants that survive summary judgment are G.B.’s Title IX student-on-student harassment claim as well as all of the plaintiffs’ state law re-spondeat superior and negligent supervision, retention, and hiring claims. The school district defendants’ motions for summary judgment are otherwise granted as to all other Title IX claims, plaintiffs’ § 1983 claims, and plaintiffs’ state law ratification claims and claims for negligent failure to supervise children. Resolution of the issues raised in the school district defendants’ motions concerning the only surviving claims — G.B.’s Title IX peer harassment claim and the respondeat superior and negligent supervision claims— does not require the court to consider the issue of whether Mr. Aubrey’s alleged conduct was (or was not) wrongful. The surviving Title IX claim is based on school personnel’s response to conduct by other students. And, as to the state law claims, the school district did not seek summary judgment on the basis that Mr. Aubrey’s conduct was not actionable. Instead, as to those claims the school district’s motions were directed solely to the extent to which it could be held liable for Mr. Aubrey’s conduct. Thus, the court has not been called upon to evaluate the extent to which Mr. Aubrey’s alleged conduct toward the plaintiffs is actionable under any asserted claim. Having made this clarification, then, the court proceeds to analyze the school district defendants’ motions for summary judgment.
I. Title IX Claim
Title IX provides in pertinent part as follows: “No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance.” 20 U.S.C. § 1681(a). In this case, plaintiffs assert four different types of Title IX violations: (A) deliberate indifference to
A. Deliberate Indifference to Harassment by Mr. Aubrey
Plaintiffs’ claims that the school district violated Title IX by being deliberately indifferent to the harassment by Mr. Aubrey is foreclosed by the Supreme Court’s holding in
Gebser v. Lago Vista Independent School District,
Here, plaintiffs point out that Mr. Scott knew that Mr. Aubrey talked to the kids in his program about sex education-type topics, which Mr. Scott assumed to mean “keep your pants zipped, you know, don’t get a girl pregnant, you know, ruined your life, messes everything up.” But, there is nothing about this which would indicate that Mr. Scott knew that Mr. Aubrey was taking the matter any further than such general conversations. Plaintiffs also point out that Mr. Aubrey had them conduct nude weigh-ins at school. Certainly, the summary judgment record establishes that school officials were generally aware that Mr. Aubrey would take kids to the school to do weigh-ins. The court has carefully reviewed the deposition testimony cited by plaintiffs on this point, however, and finds no testimony from which a rational trier of fact could find that any school official would have known that these weigh-ins involved any inappropriate behavior. Mr. Scott’s testimony indicated that those weigh-ins occurred in his office, in connection with wrestlers attempting to make weight during the wrestling season, in a setting where nude weigh-ins were not uncommon. Even though Mr. Scott was not in the office at the time, he was in the next room and the weigh-ins were brief. According to C.T., he would enter and exit Mr. Scott’s office fully clothed. He would “just get nude, get on the scale and get out.” This summary judgment record does not establish that any school official with authority had actual knowledge that Mr. Aubrey’s behavior was inappropriate.
See, e.g., Rost ex rel. K.C.,
Any implication by the plaintiff that the school district can be held liable
In sum, a rational trier of fact could not conclude based on the summary judgment record that any school district personnel had actual knowledge that Mr. Aubrey posed a substantial risk of abuse to students. Therefore, the school district’s motions for summary judgment on these claims are granted. 6
B. Deliberate Indifference to Harassment by Other Students
In
Davis v. Monroe County Board of Education,
1. C.T.’s Student-on-Student Harassment Claim
The school district defendants’ motion for summary judgment on plaintiff C.T.’s peer harassment claim is granted because he has not raised a genuine issue of material fact sufficient to withstand summary judgment on several aspects of this claim. The only harassment of C.T. by another student was a single occasion in which that student called C.T. a “liar” and a “fag” in front of the rest of the football team at football practice. C.T. testified that he regarded the incident as “nothing major” and he “just blew it off.” No coaches were present, C.T. did not report the incident to any coaches, and no such event ever occurred again. No rational trier of fact could find that this single incident of harassment (which C.T. himself apparently did not even regard as particularly significant) was severe and pervasive or that the school was actually aware of the incident, a necessary predicate to finding deliberate indifference. Moreover, there is no evidence that this incident resulted in C.T. being denied access to any educational opportunity or benefit. He
2. J.B.’s Student-on-Student Harassment Claim
Summary judgment on J.B.’s peer harassment claim is granted for similar reasons. It is uncontroverted that J.B. was never subjected to harassment by other students while he was at school because of his accusations against Mr. Aubrey. The only time he was picked on occurred outside of school — a single incident where he and another student “exchanged words.” The other student confronted J.B. and told J.B. that he had made a big mistake. As with C.T.’s claim, no rational trier of fact could find that this single incident of harassment was severe and pervasive or that the school was actually aware of the incident. Furthermore, J.B. has not raised a triable issue of fact about whether this harassment resulted in him being denied access to any educational opportunity or benefit.
3. G.B.’s Student-on-Student Harassment Claim
Turning to G.B.’s peer harassment claim, however, the court finds that the record, when viewed in the fight most favorable to G.B., contains sufficient facts for G.B. to withstand summary judgment on this claim. After G.B.’s allegations concerning Mr. Aubrey became public in the spring of 2003, the student who exchanged words with J.B. assaulted him in the hallway at school and gave him a black eye. Mr. Cornelsen was aware of this incident and yet did not report it to the school administration to mete out formal discipline. Two students gave G.B. a death threat. G.B.’s father told Mr. Cornelsen about another incident of harassment that occurred in weight training at school. G.B. was called horrible names every day he went to school for the remainder of the school year in the spring of 2003. According to G.B.’s parents, they reported each incident to school officials and yet there is no evidence that these other students were meaningfully disciplined for the harassment.
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The next school year G.B. transferred to Turpin, Oklahoma, where he finished out his high school years. Although he had been a good wrestler when he was at Liberal his freshman year, he was not able to wrestle the rest of his high school years because Turpin did not have a wrestling program. A rational trier of fact could certainly conclude that the school district’s lack of response to this harassment, which occurred at school, amounted to deliberate indifference to harassment that was so severe, pervasive, and objectively offensive that it effectively barred G.B.’s access to completing his high school education in Liberal.
See generally, e.g., Theno v. Tonganoxie Unified Sch. Dist. No. 464,
The school district’s argument that the harassment was not sufficiently sexually charged to be actionable under Title IX is without merit. G.B. was physically assaulted because other students did not believe his accusations of sexual harassment and abuse by Mr. Aubrey. Students called him names such as “fag boy” and said things to him like “I hear you are Johnny’s little bitch” and “I hear you got butt raped by Johnny.” A rational trier of fact could certainly conclude that this harassment was sexual in nature. 9 Accordingly, the school district’s motion for summary judgment on this claim is denied.
C. Retaliation for Complaining About Sexual Harassment and Abuse (J.B. and G.B. Only)
Retaliation against a person because that person has complained of sex discrimination constitutes intentional discrimination “on the basis of sex” in violation of Title IX.
Jackson v. Birmingham Bd. of Ed.,
J.B. contends that the school district retaliated against him for testifying at Mr. Aubrey’s trial by targeting him with countless acts of unwarranted discipline, uneven justice, and even a physical assault
G.B. also asserted a retaliation claim against the school district in the pretrial order in his case. The school district moved for summary judgment on this claim and G.B. did not respond to the school district’s motion on this claim. The court is unable to evaluate this claim because its factual basis is not apparent. As such, the court grants summary judgment on this claim on the ground that G.B. is deemed to have abandoned this claim.
D. Failure to Implement Adequate Policies and Training
The plaintiffs’ final Title IX claims allege that the school district acted with deliberate indifference by establishing policies, procedures, and practices that caused or promoted an environment or program in which sexual abuse, harassment, and/or retaliation of students occurred or by acting with deliberate indifference to providing training and guidance that was obviously necessary for the implementation of school athletic programs. This claim is based on the case of
Simpson v. University of Colorado Boulder,
On appeal, the Tenth Circuit expressly rejected the notion that the claims should be characterized as ones for student-on-student harassment, reasoning that the assaults arose out of an official school program — the recruitment of high school athletes — in which the assaults were “the natural, perhaps inevitable, consequence of an officially sanctioned but unsupervised effort to show recruits a ‘good time.’” Id. at 1175. The court carefully examined the Supreme Court’s holdings in Gebser and Davis and the fact that Title IX liability is premised on the federal funding recipient having “actual notice” of sexual harassment such that a refusal to remedy the harassment constitutes deliberate indifference. The court distinguished the nature of the claims at issue in Gebser and Davis from the claims at issue in Simpson, as follows:
We find it significant that in those cases there was no element of encouragement of the misconduct by the school district. To be sure, in those cases the school district could anticipate that the very operation of a school would be accompanied by sexual harassment, but that is simply because, unfortunately, some flawed humans will engage in such misconduct when they are in the company of others. Here, however, the gist of the complaint is that CU sanctioned, supported, even funded, a program (showing recruits a “good time”) that, without proper control, would encourage young men to engage in opprobrious acts. We do not think that the notice standards established for sexual-harassment claims in Gebser and Davis necessarily apply in this circumstance.
Id.
at 1177 (emphasis added). The court concluded that Title IX liability can exist “when the violation is caused by official policy, which may be a policy of deliberate indifference to providing adequate training or guidance that is obviously necessary for implementation of a specific program or policy of the [federal funding] recipient.”
Id.
at 1178. The court adopted the “obvious”-need-for-training parameters as set forth in City of
Canton v. Harris,
Under this standard, the Tenth Circuit reversed the district court’s grant of summary judgment on the plaintiffs’ claims at issue in
Simpson.
The court discussed the importance of CU’s recruiting program to
In this case, plaintiffs, seek to withstand summary judgment on their claims under the theory that the school district failed to train its employees to handle recurring situations presenting an obvious potential for civil rights violations, where the risk of sexual harassment and abuse was obvious, and there were signs that the school’s policies were inadequate. In support of this theory, they point to literature showing that school districts have been aware of the risks of sexual misconduct by teachers and “trusted others” (i.e., Mr. Aubrey) for decades; that the school district had specific knowledge about prior instances of sexual harassment in the school district by a choir teacher, an athletic team physician, and a coach and teacher (defendant Cor-nelsen’s son), and various other incidents; that the school district had nonetheless failed to implement meaningful sexual harassment policies and adequately train its personnel; that the need for close supervision of “trusted others” was obvious; and that signs existed that training was inadequate because school administrators were generally unaware of the school district’s sexual harassment policies. Even accepting these allegations as true and viewing the summary judgment record in the light most favorable to plaintiffs, however, the facts of this case do not fall within the framework of the Tenth Circuit’s holding in Simpson.
The deliberate-indifference-to-obvious-need-for-training standard adopted by the Tenth Circuit in
Simpson
for Title IX claims is confined to circumstances where a federal funding recipient sanctions a specific program that, without proper control, would encourage sexual harassment and abuse such that the need for training or guidance is obvious. In that situation, the failure amounts to an official policy of deliberate indifference to providing adequate training or guidance that is
II. Section 1983 Claims
Plaintiffs assert claims pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988 against the school district and the individual school district defendants. In these claims, they allege that they were deprived of their constitutional rights to substantive due process and equal protection when they were sexually abused and/or harassed by Mr. Aubrey, who was acting under color of law, and that the school district defendants’ custom, policy, or widespread practice was a moving force behind those constitutional violations. The school district defendants now seek summary judgment on those claims on a variety of grounds, only one of which the court will address because plaintiffs have not raised a genuine issue of material fact to withstand summary judgment on the issue.
The school district defendants seek summary judgment on the basis that Mr. Aubrey was not a state actor. In support of this argument, they cite
Polk County v. Dodson,
Plaintiffs notably have not responded to the school district defendants’
Instead of directly responding to the school district defendants’ argument that Mr. Aubrey was not a state actor, plaintiffs apparently seek to avoid this issue by contending that even where a perpetrator is not a state actor an action can be maintained where the perpetrator’s supervisor or employer participated in or consciously acquiesced in the harassment, citing
Noland v. McAdoo,
III. State Law Claims
Plaintiffs’ state law claims against the school district defendants seek to impose liability against them for Mr. Aubrey’s conduct either directly through the doctrines of respondeat superior and ratification, or indirectly by alleging that they had a duty to supervise Mr. Aubrey to prevent the misconduct. These include claims against the school district for (1) responde-at superior for childhood sexual abuse by Mr. Aubrey, (2) ratification of childhood sexual abuse/battery by Mr. Aubrey, and (3) negligent supervision, retention, and hiring of Mr. Aubrey, as well as another claim against all of the school district defendants for negligent failure to supervise children. The school district defendants argue that summary judgment is warranted on these claims for several reasons.
A. Exercise of Supplemental Jurisdiction
The school district defendants contend that, to the extent that summary judgment is granted on plaintiffs’ federal claims, the court should decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over their state law claims. They point out that plaintiffs have never invoked the court’s diversity jurisdiction. These consolidated cases involve three separate cases, and the court is granting summary judgment on the federal law (Title IX and § 1983) claims of plaintiffs C.T. and J.B. Certainly, then, it would be within the court’s discretion to decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the remaining state law claims in their cases.
See
28 U.S.C. § 1367(c)(3) (permitting a district court to decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over state law claims if it “has dismissed all claims over which it has original jurisdiction”);
Summum v. Duchesne City,
In this case, these values would not be served by dismissing C.T. and J.B.’s remaining state law claims. All of the plaintiffs’ claims in these consolidated cases center around the same nucleus of operative facts — namely, the alleged sexual harassment and abuse by Mr. Aubrey in his weight training program with student athletes in Liberal, the extent to which the school district can be held hable for Mr. Aubrey’s actions, and the school district’s response once it learned about the plaintiffs’ accusations against Mr. Aubrey. It would be grossly inefficient and inconvenient to re-start C.T. and J.B.’s cases in state court at this late date and force the parties and the witnesses to participate in multiple trials on these claims. The court
B. Liability Under the KTCA
The school district contends that the fact that Mr. Aubrey was not an “employee” of the school district defeats its liability for his conduct. Its argument in this respect is that the school district, as a municipality, can be held liable in tort only for the acts of its “employees while acting within the scope of their employment.” The Kansas Tort Claims Act (KTCA) provides that a governmental entity is generally “liable for damages caused by the negligent or wrongful act or omission of any of its employees while acting within the scope of their employment under circumstances where the governmental entity, if a private person, would be liable under the laws of this state.” K.S.A. § 75-6103(a). The KTCA broadly defines the term “employee,” however, to include “persons acting on behalf or in service of a governmental entity in any official capacity, whether with or without compensation.” Id. § 75-6102(d) (emphasis added). This definition tracks the common law understanding of an agent, which can include unpaid volunteers. See generally Restatement (Second) of Agency § 225 (1958) (“One who volunteers services without an agreement for or expectation of reward may be a servant of the one accepting such services.”). Thus, the mere fact that Mr. Aubrey was not a formal “employee” of the school district does not entitle the school district to summary judgment.
C. Respondeat Superior Liability
The school district also contends that it cannot be held liable for the complained-of conduct by Mr. Aubrey because his actions did not occur in the scope of his “employment.” Under Kansas law, an employer is liable for injuries caused by an employee acting within the scope of his or her employment.
O’Shea v. Welch,
The jury ultimately may agree with the school district that Mr. Aubrey was not acting as its agent at all and/or that the scope of his “employment” as a volunteer was so narrow that the school district cannot be held liable for his conduct. But, at the summary judgment stage, the court must view the record in the light most favorable to plaintiffs and, viewed as such, a rational trier of fact could conclude that at least some of Mr. Aubrey’s alleged misconduct was reasonably incidental to his
D. Ratification Claim
The school district defendants seek summary judgment on plaintiffs’ ratification claims because once the school district heard about the allegations against Mr. Aubrey, “[tjhere is simply no evidence that the school in any way ratified anything Aubrey had done.” Ratification is the adoption or confirmation by a principal of an act performed on his behalf by an agent which act was performed without authority.
Schraft v. Leis,
As the school district met its initial summary judgment burden of pointing to the absence of a triable issue of fact to support this theory of liability, the burden shifted to plaintiffs to withstand summary judgment on this issue. Importantly, however, plaintiffs have not presented any meaningfully developed argument addressing why their ratification claims, in particular, should survive summary judgment. As explained above with respect to plaintiffs’ Title IX claims based on Mr. Aubrey’s alleged sexual harassment and abuse, the record does not contain any facts from which it could be inferred that the school district defendants were aware
E. Claim for Negligent Supervision, Retention & Hiring of Mr. Aubrey
The school district seeks summary judgment on plaintiffs’ claims that the school district negligently supervised, retained, and hired Mr. Aubrey for essentially the same reasons as discussed above with respect to plaintiffs’ respondeat superior claims. In short, the school district contends that Mr. Aubrey was not hired or retained by the school district. Although this certainly might be one view of the evidence if the record were viewed favorably to the school district, at this procedural juncture the court must of course view the record in the fight most favorable to plaintiffs. As discussed above, the extent to which Mr. Aubrey was an agent of the school district is a disputed issue. Consequently, the court cannot say as a matter of law that Mr. Aubrey was not “retained” or “hired” by the school district as a volunteer. Although the record does not identify any particular point in time when he might have come to be regarded as an agent of the school district, the question of whether and when he became so far ingrained in the school’s athletic programs as to have become its agent is a disputed issue. Consequently, the school district defendants’ motions for summary judgment on these claims are denied.
F. Claim for Negligent Failure to Supervise Children
The school district defendants seek summary judgment on plaintiffs’ claims for negligent failure to supervise children on a number of grounds. One of these arguments is that the school district cannot be held liable for failing to supervise children when the only harm to other students is emotional, as damages for emotional harm is the only form of damages sought by the plaintiffs in these consolidated cases. The court agrees. This court carefully and thoroughly considered this issue in a prior case and found no authority to support such a claim under Kansas law.
See Theno v. Tonganoxie Unified Sch. Dist. No. 464,
MOTION TO CONSOLIDATE CASES FOR TRIAL
The court previously consolidated these cases for pretrial purposes. Plaintiffs have now filed a motion to consolidate the cases for trial pursuant to Rule 42(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. This rule allows a court to consolidate “any or all the matters in issue in the actions” if
In this case, considerations of judicial efficiency weigh overwhelmingly in favor of consolidating the three cases for trial. The school district defendants originally opposed the motion to consolidate largely on the basis that it would have been premature to consolidate the cases in light of the fact that it was unclear what issues of fact and law remained to be resolved at trial. The motion and the school district’s response were filed more than four months ago in January of 2008, before the final pretrial conference in this case and before the parties submitted their summary judgment briefs. The court delayed resolution of the motion to consolidate because it needed to know which of the plaintiffs’ claims survived summary judgment and, correspondingly, the extent to which it appeared that those surviving claims would involve common questions of law and/or fact. Now that the court has resolved the school district defendant’s motions for summary judgment, it is abundantly clear to the court that most of the evidence in the three cases will be identical and all three cases will involve many common issues of law. It would be an undue burden on witnesses to present the same testimony in three separate trials, it would be an unnecessary expense on the parties to endure three separate trials, and it would be a grossly inefficient use of the court’s time and jury resources. The school district defendants also express some concerns about juror confusion and prejudice that may result from consolidation. While the court appreciates these concerns to a certain degree, the court does not believe that consolidation would deprive the school district defendants of a fair trial. Their concerns about juror confusion and possible prejudice can be cured easily with appropriate jury instructions at trial. In any event, any slight risk of juror confusion and prejudice is significantly outweighed by considerations of judicial efficiency, which clearly will be best served by consolidation.
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED BY THE COURT that the school district defendants’ Motions for Summary Judgment (doc. 262 in Case No. 06-2093, doc. 10 in Case No. 06-2359, and doc. 20 in Case No. 06-2360) are granted in part and denied in part as set forth above.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Plaintiffs’ Motion to Consolidate Cases for Trial (doc. 230 in Case No. 06-2093) is granted. The parties and the clerk are directed to docket all further pleadings in the lead case, Case No. 06-2093.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that plaintiffs’ Motions for Leave to File Surre-plies (doc. 286 in Case No. 06-2093, doc. 22 in Case No. 06-2359, and doc. 32 in Case No. 06-2360) are denied.
Notes
. Plaintiffs have filed Motions for Leave to File Surreplies (doc. 286 in Case No. 06-2093, doc. 22 in Case No. 06-2359, and doc. 32 in Case No. 06-2360). Under D. Kan. Rule 7.1(b), parties are permitted to file a dispositive motion, a response, and a reply. Surreplies typically are not permitted.
Metzger v. City of Leawood,
One of the arguments C.T. seeks to address, for example, is the school district's argument that he was not denied educational opportunities. The school district, however, raised this argument in its initial memorandum in support of its motion for summary judgment.
See
Mem. in Supp. of Mot. for S.J. (doc. 263 in Case No. 06-2093), at 41-42. Consequently, C.T. had an opportunity to respond to this motion in his memorandum in opposition to the motion. Also, he now seeks to rely on
Jennings v. University of North Carolina,
Plaintiffs also suggest that a random comment made by the school district in footnotes in each of the reply briefs conceded actual knowledge of the nude weigh-ins at school and that these "concessions severely undermine the Defendants' arguments that they had no knowledge of sexual harassment occurring in their program.” The court has reviewed these footnotes, however, and does not believe that they can fairly be construed to mean that defendants have conceded this issue that they so vigorously contested in the parties’ statements of facts.
The other arguments plaintiffs seek to raise in their surreplies — i.e., the extent to which the school district knew about sexual abuse by another school volunteer and arguments concerning a municipal custom — are simply immaterial to the manner in which the court has resolved the school district defendants’ motions for summary judgment. In sum, in resolving the school district defendants' motions for summary judgment, the court has not relied on any new information raised by the school district defendants in their replies with respect to the arguments plaintiffs now seek to address in their surreplies. Accordingly, plaintiffs’ motions for leave to file sur-replies are denied.
. The ultrasound machine emitted heat and vibrations to alleviate soreness.
. The court wishes to emphasize, as discussed in more detail below, that at this procedural juncture the parties have not raised the issue of the actionability of Mr. Aubrey’s conduct. Thus, the court does not at this time express any opinion about whether the plaintiffs’ allegations concerning Mr. Aubrey’s alleged misconduct would be sufficient to withstand a motion for judgment as a matter of law at trial on their childhood sexual abuse, battery, and breach of fiduciary duty claims against him.
. Criminal charges were ultimately brought against Mr. Aubrey, although the nature of those charges is unclear. It appears that Mr. Aubrey was acquitted of the charges.
. The school district defendants state that they object to the plaintiffs' assertion of their claim under Title IX for failing to implement adequate policies and training to protect them from harassment and also to plaintiffs' assertion of their claim pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Those claims were included in the pretrial orders by the magistrate judge subject to the school district defendants’ objections to them on the ground that they were not previously pled. A plaintiff's attempt to add a new claim to the pretrial order is the equivalent of asking leave to amend the complaint, and must be evaluated by the court under the standards set forth in Rule 15(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
Minter v. Prime Equip. Co.,
. Summary judgment on C.T.’s claim is also warranted on the basis that, as discussed below, he has not raised an issue of fact that the alleged harassment resulted in him being denied access to any educational opportunities or benefits.
. The court rejects the school district’s argument that it was unaware of most of the bullying plaintiff suffered. Because the court must view the summary judgment record in the light most favorable to G.B., the court must accept as true that school district personnel were aware of the severity and pervasiveness of the harassment and yet they failed to take prompt remedial measures reasonably calculated to end the harassment, as evidenced by the fact that the harassment was apparently so unbearable that plaintiff transferred to another school the following year.
. The court finds that the summary judgment record is sufficient for G.B. to withstand summary judgment on this claim based solely on the peer harassment that is alleged to have occurred at school. As such, the court declines to address any of the other incidents which occurred outside of school. Additionally, the school district's attempt to characterize Mr. Aubrey’s program as a private program that was run outside of the school is without merit with respect to this aspect of G.B.’s Title IX claim because the peer harassment that occurred at school is sufficient to survive summary judgment.
. In the school district's memorandum in support of its motion for summary judgment, it did not cite any legal authority in support of this argument. Rather, it simply argued— briefly — that as a factual matter this harassment was not sexually charged. As discussed above, the court disagrees. The court does not delve any further into the issue of the extent to which this type of harassment is actionable under Title IX because the school district did not present any legal authority on this issue.
. Pursuit of a supervisory liability theory would be further complicated by the fact that plaintiffs have asserted this claim against the individual defendants only in their official capacities, not in their individual capacities. These official capacity claims are not viable because officials acting in their official capacities are not “persons” subject to liability for
