ORDER
THIS CAUSE is before the Court on defendant Peter Bayer’s Motion to Dismiss [DE 6], The Court has received plaintiff Katherine Evans’s Response in Opposition [DE 8], and Peter Bayer’s Reply [DE 13],
Background
Katherine Evans (“Evans”) was a senior at Pembroke Pines Charter High School in November 2007. Peter Bayer (“Bayer”) was principal at that time. During the evening of November 9, 2007, Evans created a group on Facebook, a social networking website, entitled, “Ms. Sarah Phelps is the worst teacher I’ve ever met.” The group’s purpose was for students to voice their dislike of the Ms. Phelps. Evans posted the following:
Ms. Sarah Phelps is the worst teacher I’ve ever met! To those select students who have had the displeasure of having Ms. Sarah Phelps, or simply knowing her and her insane antics: Here is the place to express your feelings of hatred.
Three postings appeared on the page from other students supporting Ms. Phelps and debasing Evans for creating the group. The page included Ms. Phelp’s photograph. The posting did not contain threats of violence. This posting was made after school hours and from Evans’s home computer. Ms. Phelps never saw the posting and it did not disrupt school activities. Evans removed the posting after two days. After its removal, the posting came to the attention of Bayer.
Bayer, as principal, suspended Evans from school for three days and forced her to move from her advanced placement (“AP”) classes into lesser weighted honors courses. Evans’s “Notice of Suspension” states that she was suspended for, “Bullying/Cyber Bullying/Harassment towards a staff member” and “Disruptive behavior.” See DE 1 at Exh. B. Evans alleges that she engaged in an off-campus activity in a *1368 non-violent and non-threatening public forum and that her punishment resulted in an unjustified stain on her academic reputation and good standing.
Evans argues that Bayer’s actions violated her First and Fourteenth Amendment rights and that her rights may be redressed pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. She seeks an injunction enjoining Bayer from maintaining records relating to the suspension on her permanent school record and revoking, nunc pro tunc, the three-day suspension. Evans is also seeking nominal damages for the deprivation of her First and Fourteenth Amendment rights, as well as attorneys’ fees and costs.
Standard
In considering a motion to dismiss pursuant to Federal Rule 12(b)(6), all factual allegations must be taken as true and in the light most favorable to plaintiff.
See Erickson v. Pardus,
Analysis
Bayer’s primary argument is that qualified immunity shields him from litigation. Second, Bayer claims that even if he is not immune, he was acting pursuant to a school’s right to discipline students for potentially disruptive behavior. Last, Bayer claims that even if he acted inappropriately by his actions, the relief sought against Bayer can only be granted in his official capacity, not his individual. The Court will discuss Bayer’s arguments as they apply to each request for relief.
I. Injunction
The law is clear: Qualified immunity does not shield Bayer from an action for injunctive relief.
D'Aguanno v. Gallagher,
An issue remains, however, concerning whether injunctive relief can be sought against a defendant in his individual capacity if the act must be in his official capacity to have official consequences. The Court finds the answer to be no. Evans argues that the Court can compel Bayer to destroy the records in question and sanction those who inhibit his action. Bayer contends that the Court cannot compel him to act in violation of his employer’s policies or state law. Bayer’s first premise is dubious, his second may have merit. But in either event, the Court need not untangle this knot. Even if the Court could compel Bayer to act in his individual capacity, the compelled action would have no official consequences. The only decision the Court has found on point agrees. The District Court of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania wrote, “[w]e do not see how a court can order an officer in his personal capacity to take an official act.”
Barrish v. Cappy,
No. 06-837,
II. Nominal Damages
Plaintiff also sues Bayer for nominal damages. An official who is sued in his personal capacity may be shielded from damages by qualified immunity.
D’Aguanno,
To overcome qualified immunity, the plaintiff must show (1) that the defendant violated a constitutional right, and (2) that this right was clearly established at the time of the alleged violation.
Id.
(citing
Wilson v. Layne,
i. Constitutional Right
The speech clause of the First Amendment protects two rights: (1) the right to freedom of expression, and (2) the right to be free from compelled expression.
Holloman,
The seminal Supreme Court case dealing with student speech,
Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School Dist.,
established the backdrop for examining cases involving student speech.
[Cjonduct by the student, in class or out of it, which for any reason-whether it stems from time, place, or type of behavior-materially disrupts classwork or involves substantial disorder or invasion of the rights of others is, of course, not immunized by the constitutional guarantee of freedom of speech.
Id.
at 513,
Student off-campus speech, though generally protected, could be subject to analysis under the
Tinker
standard as well if the speech raises on-campus concerns.
See, e.g., J.S. v. Blue Mountain School Dist.,
During the Olympic torch relay, Joseph Frederick, a high-school senior, unfurled a banner that read “BONG HiTS 4 JESUS” across the street
from
his school.
Morse v. Frederick,
While the Frederick decision offers little aid in solving the specific issue of student speech published on the internet, it does, however, make clear that the operative test is not a simple one of geography. Where the speech is published is not the only question that needs to be asked.
In
J.S. v. Bethlehem Area School District,
the court was confronted with a website created by a student at home.
Generally, this decision follows a line of early cases that have determined that student speech concerns are implicated when speech published off-campus is brought on-campus. In
Boucher v. School Board of the School District of Greenfield,
the Seventh Circuit determined that an underground school newspaper, although unaffiliated with the school and printed off campus, was on campus student speech because the newspaper was distributed on school grounds and the article in question advocated on-campus activity.
The other possibility, referenced in
J.S.,
would be whether the speech is directed at a particular audience. This in some ways would be much more simple, but, would prohibit students from publishing a newspaper off-campus aimed at other students and distributing that paper off-campus, a scenario which has been decided in favor of the students.
See Thomas v. Board of Ed., Granville Central School Dist.,
Thus, the question is whether the fact that Plaintiffs speech was arguably aimed at a particular audience at the school is enough by itself to label the speech on-campus speech. While further development of the facts may result in a different determination, the Court finds that it is not. This is not to suggest that speech made off-campus and accessed on-campus cannot be handled as on-campus *1372 speech. As noted, this is not a novel situation and has been dealt with by other courts. But here we have speech that was made off-campus, never accessed on-campus, and was no longer accessible when the Defendant learned of it.
One of the most recent decisions regarding internet student speech is instructive. In
Layshock v. Hermitage School District,
the Third Circuit examined whether a school district can punish a student for expressive conduct that originated outside of the classroom, when that conduct did not disturb the school environment and was not related to any school sponsored event.
The district court entered summary judgment in favor of Layshock and against the school district for Layshock’s First Amendment claim. On appeal, the school district argued that it was allowed to regulate the plaintiffs conduct because there was a “sufficient nexus” between the creation and the distribution of the profile. This is because the “speech” initially began on-campus, with the misappropriation of the picture from the school’s website, the speech was aimed at the school district community and the principal, and was accessed on-campus by Layshock. The school district also argued that it was “reasonably foreseeable that the profile would come to the attention” of the district and the principal. Id. at 259.
The Third Circuit was not persuaded. It found the relationship between Layshock’s conduct and the school too attenuated to allow the school district to “stretch its authority so far that it reaches Justin while he is sitting in his grandmother’s home after school.” Id. at 260. The court explained:
It would be an unseemly and dangerous precedent to allow the state in the guise of school authorities to reach into a child’s home and control his/her actions there to the same extent that they can control that child when he/she participates in school sponsored activities. Allowing the District to punish Justin for conduct he engaged in using his grandmother’s computer while at his grandmother’s house would create just such a precedent and we therefore conclude that the district court correctly ruled that the District’s response to Justin’s expressive conduct violated the First Amendment guarantee of free expression.
Evans’s speech did not occur at a school sponsored activity, nor did she even go as far as the plaintiff in Layshock, and access the profile at school. Therefore, the Court finds that Evan’s speech — her publication of the Facebook page — is off-campus speech.
But, the inquiry does not end because schools can discipline off-campus speech if it is unprotected speech. For example, in
Fenton v. Stear,
a student called a teacher a “prick” in the parking lot of a shopping
*1373
center.
Bayer argues that under a
Tinker
standard, Evans’s speech would not be protected. Bayer contends that the manner in which Evans disparaged Ms. Phelps “has serious consequences for the potentially defamatory content and for which the teacher would be unable to properly respond.” DE 6 at 14. It is “this type of disruption” that school officials are entitled to protect against.
Id.
Bayer relies on
Layshock v. Hermitage School District,
for the proposition that “school administrators need not wait until a ‘substantial disruption’ has already occurred prior to taking action.”
However, the key is whether the school administrators have a well-founded belief that a “substantial” disruption will occur.
Tinker,
Nothing in the Complaint indicates that a well founded expectation of disruption was present. Perhaps as more facts develop, this will come to light, but at this point, no expectation has been demonstrated. Moreover, if school administrators were able to restrict speech based upon a concern for the potential of defamation, as Bayer claims, students everywhere would be prohibited from the slightest criticism of their teachers, whether inside or outside of the classroom. Regarding Bayer’s other premise, the Court is not convinced that whether a teacher is available to properly respond is a proper inquiry for a First Amendment claim and Bayer has not cited precedent to the fact.
Bayer also suggests that an analysis under
Bethel School Dist. No. 403 v. Fraser
offers an alternative option in deciphering the boundaries of protected speech. 478
*1374
U.S. 675, 681,
[T]hese “fundamental values” must also take into account consideration of the sensibilities of others, and, in the case of a school, the sensibilities of fellow students. The undoubted freedom to advocate unpopular and controversial views in schools and classrooms must be balanced against the society’s countervailing interest in teaching students the boundaries of socially appropriate behavior. Even the most heated political discourse in a democratic society requires consideration for the personal sensibilities of the other participants and audiences.
Id.
at 681,
Bayer, seemingly, also argues that Evans’s speech is not protected because it is libel and could trigger a defamation action. Libel or defamation is indeed an exception from that speech that is protected by the First Amendment. Florida courts follow the Restatement Second of Torts as to defamation actions.
Barnes v. Horan,
Regardless of the standard used, Evans’s speech falls under the wide umbrella of protected speech. It was an opinion of a student about a teacher, that was published off-campus, did not cause any disruption on-campus, and was not lewd, vulgar, threatening, or advocating illegal or dangerous behavior. Therefore, the Court finds that Evans had a constitutional right. The next inquiry is whether it was a clearly established right.
*1375 ii. Clearly Established
“It is ... appropriate for a district court to grant the defense of qualified immunity at the motion to dismiss stage if the complaint ‘fails to allege the violation of a clearly established constitutional right.’ ”
Gonzalez v. Reno,
Bayer argues that there is no established rule on student internet speech. This confusion certainly exists as to a number of questions (e.g., whether the speech was on campus or off; and the level of disruption or distraction tolerable). As one court has stated: “If courts and legal scholars cannot discern the contours of First Amendment protections for student internet speech, then it is certainly unreasonable to expect school administrators, such as Defendants, to predict where the line between on-and off-campus speech will be drawn in this new digital era.”
Doninger v. Niehoff,
Bayer relies on
Doninger v. Niehoff,
In
Doninger,
a group of four student sent an email, and then one of them posted a derogatory message on a blog, encouraging students to call and email the district superintendent to urge that a school event go on as scheduled.
Kubany
involved a principal being sued for taking disciplinary action against a
*1376
high school student who violated a school board policy against drinking alcohol.
Kubany,
While the controlling precedent may be unclear, this confusion cannot save Bayer when his actions do not even comport with the requirements for the regulation of on-campus speech. Tinker requires established prerequisites. As discussed, there must be an indication of disruption, future or present. While subsequent development of the facts may establish such disruption; the facts as pled, do not. In fact, the time line they establish contravenes even the implication. According to the alleged facts, Plaintiff created her page, received some negative comments from other students, and removed her page. Only after the page was removed, did the defendant learn of the page and discipline the student. In short, the potential spark of disruption had sputtered out, and all that remained was the opportunity to punish. If Defendant believed that Evans’s speech was on-campus there is clear precedent as to what standards Defendant was to apply. However, as determined, nothing about Evans’s speech gives the appearance of being on-campus.
Faced with a similar time line in
Layshock,
the District Court of the W.D. of Pennsylvania found the officials were entitled to qualified immunity because while the school’s discipline failed under the
Tinker
test, it was unclear what the test would be for off-campus student speech.
III. Attorneys’ Fees
Having determined that Bayer does not have qualified immunity, he is subject to the possibility of paying attorneys’ fees if Evans prevails pursuant to 42 TJ.S.C. § 1988. Section 1988 states:
[T]he court, in its discretion, may allow the prevailing party, other than the United States, a reasonable attorney’s fee as part of the costs, except that in any action brought against a judicial officer for an act or omission taken in such officer’s judicial capacity such officer shall not be held liable for any costs, including attorney’s fees, unless such action was clearly in excess of such officer’s jurisdiction.
Accordingly, Bayer’s Motion to Dismiss is DENIED as to Evans’s demand for attorneys’ fees. It is hereby
ORDERED that Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss is GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART as set forth above. Plaintiffs request for an injunction is hereby DISMISSED WITHOUT PREJUDICE. Plaintiff has leave to file an amended complaint.
Notes
. The Court notes Bayer’s additional argument that conflicting allegations in the Complaint exist between the allegations in the Complaint and an exhibit to the Complaint. The Notice of Suspension is attached to the Complaint. It lists the reasons for the suspension as: "Bullying/Cyber Bullying/Harassment towards a staff member” and "Disruptive behavior.” DE 1 at Exh. B. Bayer contends that the Notice is evidence that Evans broke the school’s policy and is contradictory of allegations in the Complaint. In the Court’s view, this is not interpreted as an admission or proof that Evans engaged in those acts. Rather, the Court perceives it as evidence of the punishment Evans received.
