Patrick Navin, whose son J.P. Navin is enrolled in Park Ridge School District, disagrees with the way the school has addressed J.P.’s dyslexia. J.P.’s educational plan calls for 500 minutes of tutoring per week. Contending that the tutoring was being provided by a crossing guard supervisor with no skill (or at least no certification) in educating dyslexic youths, Patrick asked for a hearing under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, see 20 U.S.C. § 1415, and filed this suit when the hearing officer terminated the proceeding without addressing the merits. The district court dismissed the suit, ruling that non-custodial parents lack standing under the idea. Patrick is divorced from Margaret Murnighan, J.P.’s mother, and the divorce decree gives Margaret custody of J.P., including the right to make educational decisions. This means, the district court held, that Patrick lacks any legal interest in J.P.’s educational plan.
Two preliminary issues require attention. First, Patrick filed suit not only for himself but also on behalf of J.P., acting as J.P.’s next friend. It is doubtful that a non-custodial parent may use the next-friend device to seize control of the child’s educational decision making, when a divorce decree has given those choices to
If the divorce decree had given Margaret not only custody but also
every
instrument of influence over J.P.’s education, then the district court’s decision would be correct. Although the idea grants rights to “parents,” and the regulatory definition of “parent” includes all biological parents, see 34 C.F.R. § 300.20, which implies that a divorced parent retains statutory rights, nothing in the idea overrides states’ allocation of authority as part of a custody determination. See
Susan R.M. v. Northeast Independent School District,
Patrick sought the hearing because he believed not only that the school district’s plan for J.P.’s education was substandard but also that the school district was not providing all of the educational benefit required by the existing plan. Nothing in the divorce decree strips Patrick of his parental interest in these matters, so the hearing officer erred in dismissing the proceeding solely on account of the divorce, and the district court erred in dismissing the ensuing suit for want of standing.
On remand the district court must decide whether Patrick’s claims are incompatible,
not
with the divorce decree itself, but with Margaret’s use of her rights under the decree. Margaret has hired a private tutor to work with J.P. and appears to be content with the results — though she is not a party, and appearances thus may be deceiving. It is not clear whether Margaret hired the tutor because she wants to terminate the school district’s control (exercising a right to private education that all parents have, and that Margaret holds to the exclusion of Patrick) or because Margaret, like Patrick, believes that the
Vaoated and Remanded
Notes
Paragraph 7(1) of the decree provides: "Each party has authority to inspect the children's school records and to communicate with teachers, school personnel, and counselors, to discuss the children's standing and progress and to participate in school activities; the parties agree to share equally the tuition and costs incurred in connection with said education."
