Charles Schanou (Schanou) appeals from a final judgment entered in the United States District for the District of Nebraska, holding that the policy of the Lancaster County School District No. 160 (“school district”) to allow the Gideons International (Gideons) to distribute bibles on a schpol sidewalk after school was not unconstitutional. For reversal, Schanou argues that the school district’s policy does not survive the test for an Establishment Clause violation set out in Lemon v. Kurtzman,
' I.
Schanou is a resident of Lancaster County, Nebraska, and the school district. Schanou served on the school board from January 1989 to February 1990. During a school board meeting on May 11, 1989, Schanou learned that the school board had a longstanding policy to allow the Gideons to distribute bibles once a ‘year to fifth grade students after school on a sidewalk just outside of the elementary school building. The sidewalk was, however, on school property. On the school grounds, there were two separate buildings, one for students from kindergarten through the fifth grade, and another for students in grades six through twelve. The two buildings were • approximately 150 feet apart. On the day of a typical distribution, fifth -grade teachers would inform their students that the Gideons would have a table set up on the sidewalk to distribute bibles, but the teachers would also tell the students that they had no obligation to take one. .At the May 11 school board meeting, the superintendent mentioned that, for a reason not revealed in the record, the Gideons did not distribute bibles in the previous year. Thus, it was suggested that the Gideons be allowed to distribute bibles to both fifth and sixth grade students to make up for their previous absence. Accordingly, the Gideons distributed bibles to fifth and sixth grade students in May 1989 with the permission and approval of the school board. The sixth grade distribution took place at the end of the school day in . a hallway of the upper class school building. In its memorandum opinion, the district court found, as to the sixth grade distribution, that no school board member had authorized the distribution to take place within the school building. Schanou v. Lancaster County Sch. Dist. No. 160,
At school board meetings in November and December of 1989, Schanou expressed his concern over the constitutionality of the board policy regarding the bible distribution, but the policy remained unchanged. In January 1990, Schanou resigned from the school board, and in May 1990, Schanou withdrew his son from the school district. Schanou claims that, as a result of his son’s experience with the bible distribution and the school board’s maintenance of a policy allowing such distribution, he had no choice but to remove his child from the school district, and send him to nearby Lincoln Public Schools. Scha-nou removed Jace approximately one year after he picked up a bible at the Gideon distribution. Thereafter, Schanou paid tuition for his son’s schooling from May 1990 until sometime in 1993. Since 1993, his family has qualified for a program which allows students to. attend schools outside of their home school district without paying tuition.
The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, and the district court heard argument on these motions on August 23, 1994. At this hearing, the potential problems involving standing, mootness, and the statute of limitations were discussed, Further, the district court noted that defendants had raised both standing and statute of limitations arguments. However, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of defendants, disposing of the case on the merits without reference to these threshold constitutional, statutory, and prudential concerns. Schanou appeals from the district court’s order denying his motion for summary judgment and granting summary judgment in favor of defendants.
II.
“Federal courts are not courts of general jurisdiction; they have only the power that is authorized by Article III of the Constitution and the statutes enacted by Congress pursuant thereto.” Bender v. Williamsport Area Sch. Dist.,
A.
We turn first to Schanou’s claim for injunc-tive relief. We are aided significantly in our examination of the standing and mootness problems in the present case by our court’s decision in Steele v. Van Buren Public Sch. Dist.,
B.
We next consider Sehanou’s claim for damages. Schanou asserted in his complaint that “[t]he unlawful acts of all of the Defendants have deprived [him] of rights secured to him by the First and Fourteenth Amendment ... and caused him to suffer mental distress, as well as monetary damages, including but not limited to those expenses incurred as a result of transferring his son to another school district.” Joint Appendix at 9. Both sides agree that the relevant statute of limitations period for this § 1983 action is four years. Schanou contends that the maintenance of the bible distribution policy was a continuing violation of his constitutional rights and thus no statutory bar applied. Defendants argue that, if Schanou suffered a constitutional injury at all, it occurred no later than the sixth grade bible distribution of May 1989 during which Jace picked up a bible. They reason, therefore, that, even assuming Schanou had standing as a parent to challenge the sixth grade bible distribution in May 1989, his claim, filed four and one-half years after this incident, is now barred by the statute of limitations. They also maintain that,' after May 1989, neither Schanou nor Jace suffered an injury which would give Schanou standing to sue for damages under § 1983.
Although Schanou’s claim for damages is very generally stated in his complaint, it can be broken down essentially into two distinct components for purposes of analysis because, viewing the allegations in the light most favorable to Schanou, there are two distinct alleged injuries to Schanou’s parental interest which might serve as bases for Schanou’s damages claim. One possible basis for this claim is the injury to Schanou’s parental interest which allegedly resulted from the May 1989 bible distribution to his son. The other involves the injury to his parental interest after May 1989 which allegedly resulted from the school board’s maintenance of its bible distribution policy. In response to the defendants’ statute of limitations argument, Schanou adopts this alternative basis. He contends that the school district’s maintenance of the bible distribution policy continually violated his constitutional rights and justified his removal of Jace from the school district in May 1990. See Reply Brief of Appellant at 11. Because Schanou’s complaint can be fairly read to assert either basis, we will examine his damages claim accordingly.
Assuming arguendo that Schanou had standing to sue under § 1983 for the injury to his parental interest resulting from the May 1989 bible distribution involving his son, it is clear that the statute of limitations bars him from recovery on that basis because his complaint was not filed until November 15, 1993, over four and one-half years after the alleged injury. Thus, in order for Schanou’s damages claim to survive, he has to allege some deprivation of his constitutional rights as a parent within the four years prior to the filing of his complaint. As noted above, Schanou has argued broadly that the school board’s maintenance of the bible distribution policy was a continuing violation of his constitutional rights. Id. However, on the record before us, we fail to see how, in the four years prior to the filing of Schanou’s com
While the doctrine of standing contains both prudential and constitutional elements, “the core component of standing is an essential and unchanging part of the case-or-controversy requirement of Article III.” Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
First, the plaintiff must have suffered an injury in fact — an invasion of a legally-protected interest which is (a) concrete and particularized and (b) actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical. Second, there must be a causal connection between the injury and the conduct complained of— the injury has to be fairly traceable to the challenged action of the defendant, and not the result of independent action of some third party not before the court. Third, it must be likely, as opposed to merely speculative, that the injury will be redressed by a favorable decision.
Id. at 560-61,
As noted above, Steele held that parents have a cognizable interest in them children’s religious education, and further, interpreting the Valley Forge Court’s interpretation of Schempp, Steele concluded that it was implicit in the Court’s reasoning that parents have a right “to have [their] children educated in public schools that do not impose or permit religious practices.” Steele,
We begin our analysis of the limits of parental standing with the precise language of Schempp. Specifically, the Court stated: “The parties here are school children and them parents, who are directly affected by the laws and practices against which their complaints are directed. These interests surely suffice to give the parties standing to complain.”
Our understanding of these cases is supported by the Tenth Circuit’s subsequent decision in Roberts v. Madigan,
We agree that each case cited by plaintiffs supports the notion that students and their parents may challenge unconstitutional actions in the public schools that directly affect the students. The cases cited, however, are distinguishable from the present case because each involved religious activities occurring school wide or within the plaintiffs’ own classrooms. Because none of the students involved in this suit were in Mr. Roberts’ class at the time this suit was filed, none of the students, and therefore none of their parents, were directly affected by the district’s actions in Mr. Robert’s classroom.
Roberts,
In Steele, our court stated that the mother’s parental interest would continue “so long as she ha[d] children in the local schools.” Id. at 1495. However, the language of that opinion cannot be divorced from its factual context. In addition to the daughter whose claim was mooted by graduation, Steele had two younger daughters, and she had alleged that they too “had been subjected to Bible reading and prayer at mandatory school functions.”
The party invoking federal jurisdiction bears the burden of - establishing the elements of standing. Lujan,
While Schempp and Steele recognize that parents have a personal cognizable interest in the religious education of their children, the Steele holding on mootness and the Roberts holding on standing remind us that this interest is derivative in nature. Accordingly, we think it is logically impossible for a parent to assert the unconstitutional infringement of a parental interest when the alleged unconstitutional policy or conduct in no way directly affects or threatens to directly affect his or her children. A contrary understanding would result in a significant expansion of parental standing. We do not believe that Schempp or Steele intended such a broad definition. Absent specific facts demonstrating the continuing or threatened direct effect of the allegedly unconstitutional policy on his child or himself, the mere fact that Schanou’s son was once a student in a school district which allows yearly bible distribution to fifth grade students after school does not confer standing upon Schanou to seek damages under § 1983.
III.
For the reasons discussed above, we vacate the order of the district court and remand the case to district court with instructions to dismiss the complaint.
Notes
. The district court in the present case should not have addressed the constitutional issues in order to avoid other threshold matters. It is a long-standing practice in our jurisprudence to avoid constitutional questions when they are unnecessary to the disposition of , a case.
. We have carefully reviewed the record including the entire transcripts of Schanou's deposition and the deposition of his son. We have found no evidence that cither Schanou or his son feared exposure to the yearly bible distribution, or that Schanou withdrew his son from the school district in order to avoid exposure to the bible distribution. Schanou has consistently maintained, throughout this litigation, that he withdrew his son in May 1990 because of his objection to the policy, and not because the policy continued to affect or might affect his son.
. Schanou may well have been able to allege facts which would confer parental standing upon him to challenge the maintenance of the bible distribution policy after May 1989. However, Schanou has simply failed to satisfy this burden.
.We express no opinion as to the constitutionality of the school district’s policy because we have disposed of the present case without reaching the merits of the constitutional challenge.
