Nаncy MOORE and Garry Moore, As Next Friends of Aaron Moore, Plaintiffs-Counter Defendants-Appellants, v. WILLIS INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT and Alan Beene, Defendants-Counter Plaintiffs-Appellees.
No. 99-21165.
United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit.
Dec. 1, 2000.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Eric W. Schulze (argued), Daniel Matthew Burns, Walsh, Anderson, Brown, Schulze & Aldridge, Austin, TX, for Defendants-Appellees.
Before KING, Chief Judge, WIENER, Circuit Judge, and LYNN*, District Judge.
WIENER, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiffs-Appellants are the parents of Aaron Moore, a minor, (collectively, “the Moores“) who, they allege, sustained serious injuries as a result of excessive exercise imposed as punishment by his middle school gym teacher. They ask us to reverse the district court‘s summary judgment dismissal of all their claims. We affirm the court‘s grant of summary judgment for the Moores’ failure to state a constitutional claim of deprivation of substantive due process under the Fifth or Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution,1 but we reverse the district court‘s exerсise of jurisdiction over the Moores’ supplemental state-law claims and remand them to be dismissed without prejudice.
I.
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
Taken in the light most favorable to the Moores, the facts are as follows. In February 1997, fourteen-year-old Aaron Moore was an eighth-grade student at Lynn Lucas Middle School in the Willis (Texas) Independent School District. Aaron was a student athlete who had just finished the season playing on the school‘s basketball team and was looking forward to trying out for thе track team. He and approximately eighty other boys were enrolled in an elective gym class of which Allen2 Beene was one of the teachers. On the day in question, Beene observed Aaron talking to a classmate during roll call, a violation of a class rule. As punishment, Beene told Aaron to do 100 “ups and downs,” also known as squat-thrusts.3 Aaron had not been subjected to similar punishment before, but he understood that if he stopped during this punishment, he either would be made to start over or would be sent to the principal‘s office. A classmate counted the 100 repetitions.
Aaron then participated in approximately twenty to twenty-five minutes of weight lifting required of the gym class that day. He did not complain to Beene of pain or fatigue, fearing that would make matters worse. In the following days, however, Aaron was diagnosed with rhabdomyolysis4 and renal failure; he also developed esophagitis/gastritis. Aaron was hospitalized and missed three weeks of school. He continues to experience fatigue, and has been unable to participate in school sports or physical education class.
Plaintiff-Appellant Nancy Moore, Aaron‘s mother, states that Beene told her the “ups and downs” were a means of punishment necessary to control middle school students. Mrs. Moore also states that Beene told her that he had intentionally inflicted pain on her son, explaining: “With high school kids you can have them do two ups and downs and they remember the next time. With junior high kids, you have to inflict pain or they don‘t remember.” Mrs. Moore further states that the school district‘s athletic director, Ron Eikenberg, told her that “the coaches at the junior high were out of control and they did their own thing.”
The Moores filed suit in federal district court against the school district and Beene under
The matter was referred to a magistrate judge. She recommended that the defendants’ motion for summary judgment be granted as to all claims after concluding
II
ANALYSIS
A. Summary Judgment Standard
This case is on appeal from a dismissal on summary judgment. Therefore, we review the reсord de novo, applying the same standard as the district court.5 A motion for summary judgment is properly granted only if there is no genuine issue as to any material fact.6 An issue is material if its resolution could affect the outcome of the action.7 In deciding whether a fact issue has been created, we must view the facts and the inferences to be drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.8
The standard for summary judgment mirrors that for judgment as a matter of law.9 Thus, the сourt must review all of the evidence in the record, but make no credibility determinations or weigh any evidence.10 In reviewing all the evidence, the court must disregard all evidence favorable to the moving party that the jury is not required to believe, and should give credence to the evidence favoring the nonmoving party as well as to the evidence supporting the moving party that is uncontradicted and unimpeached.11
B. Substantive Due Process
To state a claim under
The Moores cannot meet the initial requirement for stating a
We do recognize a student‘s liberty interest in maintaining bodily integrity. For example, wе found that right to have been violated by a teacher‘s conduct in Doe v. Taylor.18 But Taylor is distinguishable from Aaron‘s case. Taylor involved the sexual molestation of a student by her teacher, acts unrelated to any legitimate state goal. In contrast, this case involves excessive exercise imposed as punishment to maintain discipline, and discipline is clearly a legitimate state goal. It must be maintained in school classrooms and gymnasiums to create an atmosphere in which students can learn.
By now, every schоol teacher and coach must know that inflicting pain on a student through, inter alia, unreasonably excessive exercise, violates that student‘s constitutional right to bodily integrity by posing a risk of significant injury. This right is not implicated, however, when, as in this case, the conduct complained of is corporal punishment—even unreasonably excessive corporal punishment—intended as a disciplinary measure. “Our precedents dictate that injuries sustained incidentally to corporаl punishment, irrespective of the severity of those injuries or the sensitivity of the student, do not implicate the due process clause if the forum state affords adequate post-punishment civil or criminal remedies for the student to vindicate legal transgressions.”19
If the Moores have an adequate remedy under Texas law for Aaron‘s alleged mistreatment, they cannot state a constitutional claim and their federal claims must be dismissed. Accordingly, we must examine the state remedies available to the Moorеs and the adequacy of these remedies.
C. Availability and Adequacy of State Remedies
Texas law forbids excessive corporal punishment.
§ 9.62. Educator-Student
The use of force, but not deadly force, against a person is justified:
(1) if the actor is entrusted with the care, supervision, or administration of the person for a special purpose; and
(2) when and to the degree the actor reasonably believes the force is necessary to further the spеcial purpose or to maintain discipline in a group.
On the civil side, Texas law provides for liability of a school employee who is negligent or uses excessive force in disciplining students when such acts result in a student‘s bodily injury.20
D. Discovery
In addition to assigning error to the district court‘s summary judgment dismissal of their constitutional and state-law claims, the Moores complain that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment without allowing them leave to depose the defendants. We review a district court‘s discovery decisions for abuse of discretion and will affirm such decisions unless they are arbitrary or clearly unreasonable.25 The Moores have not shown that the district court abused its discretion. The Moores’ suit had been pending for fourteen months when the magistrate judge recommended that the district court grant summary judgment. The Moores make the conclusional argument that they should have been allowed to “fully explore the Defendants’ conduct, policy, procedures, and intentions by taking their depositions,” but do not state what relevant evidence they expected to uncover with additional discovery. There is nothing arbitrary or unreasonable about the court‘s ruling on this point.
III.
CONCLUSION
We affirm the dismissal of the
AFFIRMED in part, REVERSED in part, and REMANDED.
WIENER, Circuit Judge, Specially Concurring:
In recent years, this circuit has become increasingly isolated in our position that
Notes
To perform an up-down the student starts in the standing position, then squats until he can place his hands flat on the floor. When the hands have been placed on the floor the legs are then extended fully to the rear while the arms remain straight at the elbows with the torso elevated above the floor. The legs are then drawn back under the torso into a squatting position, and the exercise is completed by returning to a standing position.
Id. at 659 n. 12, 679 n. 47.A professional employee of a school district is not personally liable for any act that is
229 F.3d 1069.When the Supreme Court affirmed Ingraham v. Wright,1 a school paddling case and our leading corporal punishment decision, the Court ruled that subjecting students to corporal punishment without prior notice and a hearing did not violate procedural due process. The Court had limited its grant of certiorari in Ingraham, however, to two questions: whether there was a proсedural due process violation and whether corporal punishment at school represented cruel and unusual punishment.2 In so doing, the Court declined to review a third question that we had answered in the negative in Ingraham: Can severe corporal punishment constitute a substantive due process violation?3
Although it focused on procedural requirements, the Court in Ingraham did hold that corporal punishment implicates Fourteenth Amendment liberty interests.4 The Court also observed that “there can be no deprivation of substantive rights as long as disciplinary corporal punishment is within the limits of the common-law privilege.”5
The Supreme Court in Ingraham thus framed the threshold fact question whether corporal punishment may rise to a substantive due process violation: Did the corporal punishment imposed exceed the common-law privilege historically afforded to school authorities seeking to discipline students? I find more significant that which the Court did not hold: It did not proclaim thаt an adequate remedy provided by state law or procedure constitutes a per se bar to a student‘s ability to state a substantive due process claim based on excessive corporal punishment. This significance is heightened by the Supreme Court‘s subsequent writing to the effect that, unlike a procedural due process violation, a substantive due process violation is complete when it occurs, making irrelevant the availability of any post hoc state remedy.6
Over the past two decades, we have established a line of panel opinions, culminating in Fee v. Herndon,7 founded on the part of our Ingraham decision that was not reviewed by the Supreme Court. Through these holdings, we have solidly
In the instant case, the district court concluded that Coach Beene was immune from tort liability under Texas‘s common-law official immunity.9 To reach that result, the court had to find that Beene acted reasonably (and thus presumably within the common-law disciplinary privilege identified by the Supreme Court in Ingraham, signifying that no constitutional violation occurred).10 We acknowledged in Fee that, as to school corporal punishment cases in general, “under Cunningham [plaintiffs‘] choice of forum may be restricted to state courts.”11 I submit that, if all defendants in these cases prove to be immune from liability under Texas law, the question is presented whether the state really provides a remedy to injured students at all, much less an adequate one.
No other circuit has followed our lead on the issue of substantive due process in school corporal punishment cases. Relying on Ingraham and other Supreme Court decisions, the Third,12 Fourth,13 Sixth,14 Eighth,15 Tenth,16 and—most recently—the Eleventh17 circuits have determined that excessive corporal punishment can indeed violate a student‘s substantive due process rights, irrespective of the availability of an adequate state law remedy. Additionally, the Ninth Circuit has held that students are protected from excessive force under either the Fourth Amendment or the Due Process Clause,18 and the Seventh Circuit has held that unreasonable liberty restrictions or corporal punishment could violate a public school student‘s Fourth Amendment rights.19
The Eleventh Circuit concluded that the Supreme Court‘s decision in Ingraham “strongly suggested a favorable view” of the position that excessive corporal punishment can violate substantive due process rights.24 Through Neal, the Eleventh Circuit “join[ed] the vast majority of Circuits in confirming that excessive corporal punishment, at least where not administered in conformity with a valid school policy authorizing corporal punishment as in Ingraham, may be actionable under the Due Process Clause when it is tantamount to arbitrary, egregious, and conscience-shocking behavior.”25
It now seems clear to me that in Fee we placed too much reliance on the merе existence of putative state-law remedies when we answered in the negative the question “whether the federal Constitution independently shields public school students from excessive discipline.”26 The notion that no student injury inflicted under the banner of discipline—regardless of how shocking
Reluctant as each of us is to have the federal courts become any more involved than we must in such local concerns as school discipline—and rightly so—I respectfully but earnestly suggest that now is the time for this court, sitting en banc, to re-examine its position. Can we be the only circuit that is “in step” and all the rest out of step? We should not demur in our own housekeeping chores and merely leave to the Supreme Court the job of eliminating the existing split between this one circuit and all the rest that have announced an opposite position on the subject.
