FAIRFIELD-SUISUN UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. State of CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, Defendant-Appellee. Yolo County Office of Education, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. State of California Department of Education, Defendant-Appellee.
Nos. 12-16665, 12-16818.
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted Oct. 9, 2014. Filed March 16, 2015.
780 F.3d 968
AFFIRMED in part, REVERSED in part, and REMANDED.
Parties shall bear their own costs.
Kimberly A. Smith (argued), Roy A. Combs, Jan E. Tomsky, and Emily E. Sugrue, Fagen Friedman & Fulfrost, Oakland, CA, for Plaintiff-Appellant Fairfield-Suisun Unified School District.
Kimberly A. Smith (argued), Roy A. Combs, Elizabeth B. Mori, and Christopher J. Fernandes, Fagen Friedman & Fulfrost, Oakland, CA, for Plaintiff-Appellant Yolo County Office of Education.
Leonard Garfinkel (argued), Deputy General Counsel; Amy Bisson Holloway, General Counsel; and Edmundo Aguilar, Assistant General Counsel, California Department of Education, Sacramento, CA, for Defendant-Appellee.
OPINION
WATFORD, Circuit Judge:
The plaintiffs in these consolidated appeals are local educational agencies in California—one a school district, the other a county office of education. (For ease of reference, we will refer to both of them as school districts.) In separate, unrelated actions, they sued the California Department of Education in federal court. They allege that, in resolving disputes between parents and school districts, such as the disputes that led to these actions, the Department routinely violates certain procedural requirements imposed by the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) and its implementing regulations. The school districts seek a declaration that the challenged practices are unlawful and an injunction forbidding their use in resolving future disputes. In both cases, the district courts dismissed the actions with prejudice on the ground that Congress did not grant school districts the right to sue state agencies for violating procedural requirements imposed by the IDEA.
The details underlying each lawsuit are not important for our purposes, so we provide just a brief description here. In both cases, the parents of a disabled student filed a complaint against the school district with the California Department of Education. The complaints charged the school districts with violating the IDEA by failing to provide appropriate services to the students in question. The parents pursued their complaints through what‘s known as a “complaint resolution proceeding,” one of two dispute-resolution mechanisms States are required to maintain as a condition of receiving federal funds under the IDEA.
The other dispute-resolution mechanism required as a condition of funding—not involved here but relevant by way of background—is a “due process hearing.” Either parents or school districts may initiate a due process hearing, but those hearings are limited to “any matter relating to the identification, evaluation, or educational placement of the child, or the provision of a free appropriate public education to such child.”
In both of the cases before us, the complaint resolution proceedings ended with the Department of Education issuing a
Rather than pursue whatever relief might have been available in state court, the school districts sued the California Department of Education in federal court. The school districts allege that the challenged procedural violations are standard practice and will be repeated in future complaint resolution proceedings unless the injunctive relief they seek is granted.1
A plaintiff suing in federal court must establish not only a source of subject matter jurisdiction, provided here by
(2) Right to bring civil action
(A) In general
Any party aggrieved by the findings and decision made under subsection (f) or (k) who does not have the right to an appeal under subsection (g), and any party aggrieved by the findings and decision made under this subsection, shall have the right to bring a civil action with respect to the complaint presented pursuant to this section, which action may be brought in any State court of competent jurisdiction or in a district court of the United States, without regard to the amount in controversy.
The school districts concede that this provision does not grant them an express right of action to pursue the claims they have alleged. That concession is correct because these cases originated in com
Lacking an express right of action under
Our holding in Lake Washington controls the outcome here, for the school districts in this case stand on even weaker footing than did their counterpart in Lake Washington. The IDEA provides school districts with an express right of action to obtain judicial review of decisions rendered in due process hearings (albeit one limited to contesting the issues raised in the parents’ complaint). The case for recognizing an implied right of action to contest alleged procedural violations in connection with due process hearings is surely stronger than the case for doing so with respect to complaint resolution proceedings, since the IDEA makes no provision for judicial review of those proceedings at all. If school districts lack an implied right of action to challenge a State‘s non-compliance with the IDEA‘s procedural protections in the context of due process hearings, they also lack such an implied right of action in the context of complaint resolution proceedings.
Whether parents have an implied right of action to sue state educational agencies for violating the IDEA in the context of complaint resolution proceedings is a question we need not and do not decide.
AFFIRMED.
