Nicole Delgado, a former student at Western Illinois University, a state university, claims to have been harassed by a professor at the university named James Stegall. She filed this suit for damages against the university under Title IX of the Educational Amendments of 1972, 20 U.S.C. §§ 1681-1688, and against Stegall under the Civil Rights Act of 1871, 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The district judge granted summary judgment for both defendants. He ruled that Delgado had failed to establish a violation of Title IX by the university and that Title IX provides the exclusive federal remedy for a teacher’s misconduct toward a student; the latter ruling let Stegall off the hook.
Delgado, a music student at Western Illinois, was hired by her voice teacher, Stegall, to be his “office assistant” during her sophomore year. The record does not reveal the duties of the position except that they were somehow connected to Ste-gall’s job as choral director. Part-time work for professors is a common activity of college students, and although sexual harassment of university employees is not actionable under Title IX if the employee could obtain relief under Title VII,
Waid v. Merrill Area Public Schools,
Stegall made advances to Delgado after she became his office assistant, repeatedly asking her “Do you love me?” and “Would you ever marry a man like me?” He would also ask her for hugs, rub her shoulders, and tickle her. Troubled by these attentions, she confided her distress to another music teacher, a woman, who told her to “remove herself from the situation, get herself to counseling, get her parents involved, and go see the chair and/or the dean.” She did speak to a counselor about things that were bothering her, including “the uncomfortableness of the comments [Stegall] was making.” But neither the counselor nor the music teacher reported Stegall’s misconduct to his dean or any other university official. Eventually, however, though only after transferring to another college, Delgado filed a complaint with Western Illinois University against Stegall. The university responded by directing him to undergo training in proper behavior toward female students and by placing “a letter ... in Dr. Stegall’s personnel file, outlining the actions to be taken and the method for evaluating their effectiveness.”
It turns out that Stegall had made advances to three other woman students, but they had never filed complaints and his *671 conduct hadn’t come to the attention of the university administration. Actually there had been a fourth episode, ten years earlier, that had led to a complaint being made to the university about Stegall but Delgado makes nothing of this — in fact does not even mention it in her briefs.
Two years before Stegall’s alleged harassment of Delgado, his dean, James Butterworth, Dean of the College of Fine Arts and Communications at the university, had investigated possible sexual harassment by unnamed members of the art faculty. Stegall was and is a member of the music department, however, and no harassment by music faculty had been reported. Butterworth responded to the allegations concerning the art department by recommending to the university’s president and provost the elimination of alcohol from social events sponsored by the department at which both teachers and students were present, the convening of meetings with current and incoming students to discuss the university’s rules on fraternization and harassment, and the distribution of copies of the rules to all faculty. The recommendations were adopted and implemented.
Title IX prohibits sex discrimination in educational programs or activities supported by federal grants. 20 U.S.C. § 1681(a). The only remedy specified in the statute is the elimination of the federal funding, § 1682, but in
Cannon v. University of Chicago,
Here a peculiarity of the Supreme Court’s formula should be noted. Ordinarily, actual notice and deliberate indifference are alternative paths to proving knowledge. Deliberate indifference means shutting one’s eyes to a risk one knows about but would prefer to ignore.
Boncher v. Brown County,
There is less to the distinction than meets the eye. Obviously a school’s officials know in a general sense that there is a
risk
that one or more of its teachers will harass a student sexually, even if no such incident has ever occurred in the school. That is not the kind of knowledge that establishes recklessness should the officials take no action against the risk. When the cases speak of a “known” or “obvious” risk that makes a failure to take steps against it reckless they have in mind risks so great that they are almost certain to materialize if nothing is done,
Higgins v. Correctional Medical Services of Illinois, Inc.,
So if, for example, Stegall had been known to be a serial harasser, Butterworth might well be found to have had a sufficient approximation to actual knowledge that Delgado would be harassed to satisfy the Supreme Court’s standard. After all, in
Davis
the Court required knowledge only of “acts of sexual harassment” by the teacher,
Davis v. Monroe County Board of Education, supra,
Delgado’s second claim is against Stegall and is based not on Title IX (which it could not be based on because only the educational institution itself—the grant recipient—can be a defendant in a suit under that statute,
Boulahanis v. Board of Regents,
The doctrine to which Stegall appeals originated in
Middlesex County Sewerage Authority v. National Sea Clammers Ass’n,
The sea-clammers doctrine has been applied in a variety of contexts since its creation. See, e.g.,
PrimeCo Personal Communications, Ltd. Partnership v. City of Mequon,
It is easy to see why Title IX might be thought to supplant section 1983 suits against the school officials responsible for the policy or practice that violates Title IX, though not all courts agree. Compare
Pfeiffer v. Marion Center Area School District,
Stegall argues feebly that since states often indemnify their employees for tor-tious misconduct, the university may be harmed financially if he is held liable to Delgado under section 1983. If such liability pinches the university, then it can cease indemnifying such tortfeasors; no statutory change would be necessary, because Illinois law requires the state to indemnify its employees only for the torts they commit within the scope of their employment. 5 ILCS 350/2(d);
Nichol v. Stass,
Stegall is asking us in effect to rule that Congress in Title IX repealed by implication a swatch of section 1983, though there is no possible conflict between these two federal statutes in cases in which relief is sought against a teacher or other non-managerial employee and no hint of such a purpose in the background or history of Title IX. The Supreme Court has said that where two federal statutes can coexist, the later one is not to be deemed to have repealed the earlier one unless there is some indication of a congressional intent to do so, even though the result may be (though not in this case) to give the plaintiff a choice of federal remedies.
Branch v. Smith,
Affirmed in Paet, ReveRsed in Paht, AND Remanded.
