SHARON GERNETZKE, INDIVIDUALLY, AND DOREEN BEZOTTE, PARENT AND LEGAL GUARDIAN OF JOSEPH BEZOTTE, PLAINTIFFS-APPELLANTS,
v.
KENOSHA UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 1, MICHAEL JOHNSON IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS SUPERINTENDENT OF KENOSHA UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 1,
AND CHESTER PULASKI IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS PRINCIPAL OF GEORGE N. TREMPER SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL, DEFENDANTS-APPELLEES.
No. 01-2084
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SEVENTH CIRCUIT
Argued October 29, 2001
December 14, 2001
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin. No. 00 C 201--Charles N. Clevert, Judge.
Matthew D. Starver (argued), Erik W. Stanley, Liberty Counsel, Longwood, FL, for Appellants.
Linda Stover Isnard (argued), Von Briensen, Purtell & Roper, Racine, WI, for Appellees.
Before Flaum, Chief Judge, and Posner and Diane P. Wood, Circuit Judges.
Posner, Circuit Judge.
Two high-school students sued a Wisconsin public school district and two of its administrators, the superintendent of the district and the principal of the plaintiffs' school (which is located in the City of Kenosha), charging violations of their constitutional and statutory rights to religious freedom. They sought both damages and injunctive relief. The individual defendants were sued only in their official capacities, so naming them as defendants added nothing to the suit. The plaintiffs appeal from the grant of summary judgment to the defendants.
The plaintiffs belonged to the Bible Club at their school. In response to the school's invitation to all student groups to paint murals in the main hallway of the school, the Club submitted a sketch for a mural 4 feet by 5 feet depicting a heart, two doves, an open Bible with a well-known passage from the New Testament (John 3:16: "For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life"), and a large cross. The principal approved all but the cross. He was afraid that the inclusion of so salient a Christian symbol would invite a lawsuit against the school based on the establishment clause of the First Amendment and might also require him to approve murals of a Satanic or neo-Nazi character, which would cause an uproar. The school body includes adherents of both these unlovely creeds--and in fact the Bible Club's mural was defaced with a witchcraft symbol, and a group of skinheads unsuccessfully petitioned the principal to allow them to paint a mural containing a swastika. (According to a newspaper article in the record, the school has "active [white] supremacists enrolled there" and there have been racial incidents.) The principal had also forbidden mention of a specific brand of beer in the mural proposed by the Students Against Drunk Driving.
The plaintiffs complain not only about the excision of the cross from their mural but also about the principal's refusal to allow one of them to distribute unspecified religious literature schoolwide. In support of the first charge they cite the Equal Access Act, 20 U.S.C. sec. 4071(a). The Act forbids a school to deny equal access to its premises to a student group merely on the basis of the content (e.g., religious) of the speech at meetings of the group. The school could therefore not discriminate against the Bible Club merely because it is a religious rather than a secular association. Had the school, therefore, while permitting the Bible Club to meet on school premises, forbidden it to announce its meetings or otherwise compete on equal terms with comparable but non-religious student groups, it would have violated the Act. Board of Education v. Mergens,
The principal's decision to forbid the display of the cross was in any event insulated from liability under the Act by the provision that "nothing in [the Act] shall be construed to limit the authority of the school . . . to maintain order and discipline on school premises." 20 U.S.C. sec. 4071(f). It is true that to suppress expression on the basis of the angry reaction that it may generate is precisely what the "heckler's veto" cases, most famously Terminiello v. City of Chicago,
The plaintiffs claim that the excision of the cross and the refusal to permit distribution of religious literature also interfered with the free exercise of their religion, in violation of the religion clauses of the First Amendment as interpreted in such cases as Good News Club v. Milford Central School,
The procedural vehicle for the constitutional claim is 42 U.S.C. sec. 1983, and an initial puzzle is why the plaintiffs did not sue the individual defendants in their individual capacities, where they would not face the Monell issue that we discuss below and show is fatal to the claim regardless of the claim's merits. We did not obtain a satisfactory response when we asked this question of the plaintiffs' lawyer at oral argument.
We pause here to express our doubts about the appropriateness of litigation that is intended, whether by the friends of religion or by its enemies, to wrest the day-to-day control of our troubled public schools from school administrators and hand it over to judges and jurors who lack both knowledge of and responsibility for the operation of the public schools. The plaintiffs' high school is an urban school with 2000 students and 42 student groups. The regulatory and disciplinary problems implied by these numbers are formidable. In her diary, which is part of the record, plaintiff Gernetzke wrote: "[T]here's something exciting[:] I'm suing Kenosha Unified School District #1 . . . . The law suit is getting very interesting. KUSD is getting themselves deeper in cow dung than what they realize!" Do we really need this?
Monell v. Department of Social Services,
Respondeat superior is of course the judge-made doctrine, applicable to most tort cases but not to section 1983 cases, that makes an employer liable even if faultless for the torts its employees commit in the course of their employment. So the plaintiffs in this case cannot prevail against the school district by showing merely that the superintendent of the district and the principal of their school, acting within the scope of these officials' employment and therefore under color of state law, deprived the plaintiffs of religious liberty. They must show that the district itself, which is to say the officials or official boards that constitute the relevant final decisionmaking authority (legislative or executive) within the district, was directly responsible for the deprivation. McMillian v. Monroe County,
This standard for municipal liability is often referred to as liability for "policy or custom," after language in Monell v. Department of Social Services, supra,
The bearing of delegation on the principle of Monell turns out to be critical in this case. The final decisionmaking authority of the school district is lodged in the district's school board, but the board has promulgated regulations that delegate the administration of the five high schools in the school district to the principal of each school. This delegation, the plaintiffs argue, makes the principal the final decisionmaker so far as the mural and the request to be allowed to distribute literature are concerned. That cannot be right. It would collapse direct and derivative liability. Every public employee, including the policeman on the beat and the teacher in the public school, exercises authority ultimately delegated to him or her by their public employer's supreme governing organs. A police officer has authority to arrest, and that authority is "final" in the practical sense that he doesn't have to consult anyone before making an arrest; likewise a teacher does not have to consult anyone before flunking a student. That is a perfectly good use of the word "final" in ordinary conversation but it does not fit the cases; for if a police department or a school district were liable for employees' actions that it authorized but did not direct, we would be back in the world of respondeat superior. To avoid this the cases limit municipal liability under section 1983 to situations in which the official who commits the alleged violation of the plaintiff's rights has authority that is final in the special sense that there is no higher authority. Partee v. Metropolitan School District,
It is true that by adopting an employee's action as its own (what is called "ratification"), a public employer becomes the author of the action for purposes of liability under section 1983. Kujawski v. Board of Commissioners,
Affirmed
