Riсhard and Janet Roe, adoptive parents to Robert Booth Roe, a minor plaintiff, along with his conservator, brought suit under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981 and 1983 against defendants, employees of the Kansas Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services (“SRS”), for failing to conduct a proper inquiry into abuse by his natural parents, Terri and Booth Tuthill. They alleged that defendants had a duty to investigate concerns about possible abuse voiced before and after Robert’s birth, that defendants relied improperly on the Bureau of Indian Affairs (“BIA”) to look into and respond to the matter, and that this conduct reflected discrimination based on Robert’s status as a Native American. On cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court held that the evidence did not show any actionable discriminatory animus behind defendants’ conduct, and granted their motion on the basis of qualified immunity. This appeal followed. On de novo review,
see Olsen v. Layton Hills Mall,
I
There is little dispute about the events leading to Robert’s injury by his biological father; this case turns on the proper assessment of the legal significance of these events. Two months before Robert’s birth, an administrator at a mental-health center where Terri Tuthill was being treated for chronic mental illness sent a letter to SRS requesting a home study of the expectant parents. Defendant Mary Keady was assigned to the case by her supervisor, defendant Wayne Sramek, even though the requested home study was outside SRS policy, which did not contemplate action on behalf of a fetus absent a court order. The same day, after another party related concerns about drug use by the Tuthills, Keady went to their home and met with Terri Tuthill. Terri seemеd unreceptive and alarmed by the visit, an impression confirmed to Keady by Terri’s case manager at the mental-health center. On several subsequent occasions when Keady went to the Tuthill home, she received no answer.
The day after Robert was born, Keady attended a meeting with staff from both the mental-health cеnter and the medical facility where Terri gave birth to discuss the situation. Keady stated her understanding that, given Robert’s Native American heritage, she had to refer him to the BIA for child welfare and assessment services before any action could be taken by SRS. It was decided that the Tuthills should keep the baby and be given intensive suppоrt services. Keady contacted the BIA and arrangements were made for close supervision and frequent home visits
On a Friday in late September, Terri’s case manager at the mental-health center informed SRS of a report of suspected child abuse based on Terri’s claim that Booth had shaken the baby. Keady called the BIA but was unable to reach her contact person there. Early the next week, she arranged to meet the BIA social worker at the Tuthill home, but when she got there no one answered the door. Keady called Terri’s case manager at the mental-health center, and her notes recount that, by then, the case manager thought that the baby was all right, that Booth appeared to treat him well, and that the shaking accusation may have all been in Terri’s head. The case manager, however, denies telling Keady that she disbelieved what Terri said about Booth shaking the baby.
The next week, the case manager called to let Keady know that Terri had lеft the baby alone at home and refused to use a monitor, but that Booth had been contacted and came home from work to take care of him. Shortly thereafter, the case manager called to tell Keady that Terri had been sent to stay at a state hospital for a couple of weeks and that Bоoth and a babysitter were providing care for the baby. Four days later, Robert was taken to the University of Kansas Medical Center where he was diagnosed with a skull fracture and shaken baby syndrome. Ultimately, Booth admitted to shaking the baby.
II
In rejecting the § 1983 equal protection and § 1981 discrimination claims brought on behalf of Robert for lаck of a triable issue of discriminatory animus, the district court noted:
[T]here is no evidence in the record that defendants refused to offer or provide family services to [Robert] because of an intent to discriminate. Instead, the evidence indicates that defendants thought, perhaps mistakenly, that the BIA, rather than SRS, was the proper agency to provide family services and, in fact, social workers from the Seneca Cayuga Tribe provided family services such as visits to the Tuthill home.... Defendants’ failure to provide family services may be considered, at most, negligent, but there is no evidence from which this court can infer that defendants acted with racial animus.
District Court Order at 12-13 (rejecting § 1983 claim); see id. at 14-15 (rejecting § 1981 claim). On appeal, the Roes advance two arguments: (1) the district court applied an improper standard of proof by rejecting the discrimination claims solely for lack of evidence showing similarly-situated but differently-treated SRS clients; and (2) the evidence created a triable issue of actionable discrimination against Robert. In so arguing, the Roes misread the district court’s rationale. As the quoted passage reflects, the court did not peremptorily invoke a categorical evidentiary rule; rather, in enforcing the essential legal requirement of an intent to discriminate, the court discerningly invoked two interlinked principles that reveal a fatal substantive deficiency in the plaintiffs eviden-tiary showing.
The first focuses on the requirement of
intentional
conduct. It is hornbook constitutional law that mere negligence or mistake resulting in uneven
There may be some degree to which intentional conduct is involved here — because of Robert’s ancestry and defendants’ understanding of its legal impact on their duty to provide social services, defendants deliberately yielded direct responsibility for Robert’s welfare to the BIA. This brings into play the second principle alluded to above. To be actionable, defendants’ conduct must have been imbued with or directed toward an impermissible
discriminatory
purpose,
2
which “implies more than intent as violation or intent as awareness of consequences. It implies that a decisionmaker singled out [the plaintiff] for disparate treatment and selected [t]his course of action at least in part
for the purpose of causing its adverse effects.” Nabozny v. Podlesny,
We do not mean to imply that a malicious intent to inflict harm is required, as the Supreme Court disclaimed in
Bray v. Alexandria Women’s Health Clinic,
In sum, “[w]hether one agrees or disagrees with [the promotion of Native American social services for Native Americans], that goal in itself ... does not remotely qualify for such harsh description [as ‘invidious’], and for such derogatory association with racism.”
Bray,
That is not the end of the matter, as the Roes also contend that the stated reason fоr defendants’ conduct was not, in any event, the real reason. They insist that deference to the BIA was merely a pretext enabling defendants to evade their responsibility to provide social services based on Robert’s Native American heritage. The district court held that the record was devoid of probative evidence to support this allegation, and we agree.
In repeated variations of the same argument, the Roes claim defendants’ asserted (mis)understanding of the relevant legal directives is itself evidence of pretext. This is an unusual tack, in that it cites defendants’ non-discriminatory explanation as evidence that this very explanation is a pretext for discrimination. While there may be circumstances in which such an explanation is so facially dubious that it provides affirmative evidence of pretext in this manner, nothing like that is presented here. Right or wrong, it was not, for example, implausible to deem reliance on Native American fаmily services a proper means to monitor the situation and gather information relevant to (and contraindica-tive of) the need to pursue a preliminary inquiry regarding intervention under the state social-services scheme. It appears the approach alarmed no one at the time, and, indeed, was fоund appropriate by an expert witness who reviewed the record in this case.
We are referred to testimony from defendants’ co-worker, Vinnie Harmon, a Native American who evidently filed an employment discrimination claim against defendant Sramek, which the Roes contend constitutes indirect evidence of а discriminatory animus operative in this case. Neither the details nor the resolution of the complaint are explained and, as defendants point out, our record does not contain materials relating to this complaint or
That brings us to what the Roes characterize as “the most damning direct evidence of intent to discriminate on the part of Wayne Sramek.” (Appellant’s Br. at 22.) In an interview with the Kansas Human Rights Commission, apparently in connection with Harmon’s complaint, Keady related her perception of Sramek’s attitude toward minorities: 4
Well, Wayne seemed to have it in for minorities. Blacks in particular I would say. We had this meeting as we had these job positions come open and he stated at that one meeting we got an Indian applying so we have to have a minority sitting in on thе interview.
I had a case where we had this Indian baby. I wanted to talk to Vinnie about it and because I wanted to get ahold of the address and telephone number for the bureau of indian affairs down there in Oklahoma. Now that’s one thing Vin-nie is up on. She’s up on her indian stuff. My daughter-in-law is an indian. Well the thing that got me about this is that I know Vinnie keeps up on this stuff and I went to Wayne (Sramek) and told him about how I was going to go to Vinnie to ask about this indian baby and he said to leave Vinnie alone that he would make a call and get the address and telephone number himself. Well you know, like I said, it’s something I don’t understand because Vinnie keeps up on this and if he didn’t know she would have probably bеen the easiest person to have gotten the information from.
I don’t know he just said different things that you didn’t quite know how to take.
(Appellant’s App. at 269.) The district court observed that this statement was evidenced solely by an undated and unsigned loose typed sheet (marked “page 3”), and rejected it for non-compliance with evidentiary procedure. Discretionary authority over the admission or exclusion of evidence on summary judgment lies with the district court,
Sports Racing Servs., Inc. v. Sports Car Club of Am., Inc.,
Finally, we return to the Roes’ argument that the district court applied an unduly rigid standard of proof in dismissing the plaintiffs claims for lack of evidence of similarly-situated but differently-treated SRS clients. Questions of whether or when such proof may be a necessary condition for establishing a cause of action for discrimination are certainly important in the abstract, but are simply not pertinent in the context of the present appeal. The district court clearly gave consideration to alternative means of proof; notably, the “foremost” reason cited for granting summary judgment was not the absencе of specific comparisons to other SRS clients, but the failure of any other means of direct or circumstantial proof to demonstrate the required invidiously discriminatory intent. As we have
Ill
The judgment is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Such purposeful discrimination is a critical element for the claims asserted under both § 1981 and § 1983.
See Gant ex rel. Gant v. Wallingford Bd. of Educ.,
. As the Supreme Court explained while approving (benevolent) differential treatment of Native Americans in the employment context:
Literally every piece of legislation dealing with Indian tribes and reservations, and certainly all legislation dealing with the BIA, single out for special treatment a constituency of tribal Indians living on or near reservations. If these laws, derived from historical relationships and explicitly designed to help only Indians, were deemed invidious racial discrimination, an entire Title of the United States Code (25 U.S.C.) would be effectively erased and the solemn commitment of the Government toward the Indians would be jeopardized.
Morton v. Mancan,
. The Roes failed to include this statement in the appellate record, though the district court clearly reviewed it. The quotation above is from the “Additional Statements of Uncontro-verted Fact” included in a response to defendants’ motion for summary judgment. We do not condone reliance on such derivative sources; however, under the circumstances, we consider the statement and conclude that it would not, in any event, affect our disposition of the appeal.
