Case Information
*1 Before WILKINSON and WILLIAMS, Circuit Judges, and Roger W. TITUS, United States District Judge for the District of Maryland, sitting by designation.
Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Wilkinson wrote the opinion, in which Judge Williams and Judge Titus joined.
COUNSEL ARGUED: Terry N. Grimes, Roanoke, Virginia, for Appellants. Eliz- abeth Kay Dillon, GUYNN, MEMMER & DILLON, P.C., Roanoke, Virginia, for Appellee Jason Markham; Charles Robison Allen, Jr., Roanoke, Virginia, for Appellees Rita Evans, Erika Rosa, and Bote- tourt County School Board. ON BRIEF: Jim H. Guynn, Jr., GUYNN, MEMMER & DILLON, P.C., Roanoke, Virginia, for Appellee Jason Markham.
OPINION
WILKINSON, Circuit Judge:
One Wednesday afternoon, several students at Colonial Elementary School reported to their teacher that M.D., a ten-year-old classmate, had brought a gun to school. During the ensuing investigation, school administrators twice held M.D. in the principal’s office for question- ing. During the second detention, law enforcement officers also quizzed the child. M.D.’s mother, Jennifer Wofford, was not con- tacted until the police had departed.
Wofford claims that the school’s failure to notify her violated her rights to due process under the Fourteenth Amendment. She also alleges that the detainments violated M.D.’s Fourth Amendment right to be free from unlawful seizures. The district court dismissed these claims.
We now affirm. School officials must have the leeway to maintain order on school premises and secure a safe environment in which learning can flourish. Over-constitutionalizing disciplinary procedures can undermine educators’ ability to best attain these goals. Imposing a rigid duty of parental notification or a per se rule against detentions of a specified duration would eviscerate the ability of administrators to meet the remedial exigencies of the moment. The Constitution does not require such a result.
I.
An order dismissing a claim under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) and an
award of summary judgment are reviewed de novo. We apply the
same legal standard as the court below and construe the evidence in
the light most favorable to the non-movant.
Mylan Labs., Inc. v. Mat-
kari
,
On the eve of Thanksgiving in 2001, a teacher at Colonial Elemen- tary School in Botetourt County, Virginia, called Assistant Principal Rosa with some disquieting news. Several students had reported that their classmate M.D. had brought a gun to school. Rosa immediately located the accused pupil and escorted her to the assistant principal’s office. In the office, Rosa repeatedly questioned M.D. about the alle- gation. M.D. permitted Rosa to search her book bag and her class- room desk. Finding no weapon, Rosa escorted M.D. to the school bus that was waiting for her.
On the Monday following Thanksgiving, the assistant principal, now accompanied by Principal Evans, continued to investigate the incident. The two principals spoke with the children who had initially made the allegation. Several of them maintained that M.D. had brought a weapon to school the week before. One of these pupils, Josh Bane, said he had seen M.D. throw a black handgun into the woods adjoining the school. Their concerns rekindled, the school offi- cials contacted the police. Rosa and Evans summoned M.D. to the office once more and renewed their inquiries about the weapon. Dur- ing the questioning, M.D. complained of nausea and requested the presence of her mother. Neither school official obliged, however, and the investigation continued.
Three detectives arrived at the school in the middle of the morning. They spoke with M.D.’s four accusers before interviewing the student herself in the assistant principal’s office. In the presence of the school officials, they quizzed M.D. about the allegation once more. In response to the officers’ inquiries, the pupil repeatedly denied bring- ing a gun to school. On several occasions she asked for her mother, but the officers and school officials did not contact Wofford. M.D. even alleges that her interviewers ignored her request to visit the rest- room. While two officers continued their interrogation, Detective Markham sought out Josh Bane. Bane showed the officer and Rosa where he saw M.D. discard the gun. Markham swept the school grounds for a weapon, but found nothing.
Rosa, Evans, and Markham recall the questioning lasting about fif- teen minutes. M.D., by contrast, claims to have been with the police for at least an hour and a half. Despite M.D.’s requests, her mother was not contacted while the police were at the school. On his way back to the station, Markham called Wofford to inform her that her daughter had spoken to the police. M.D.’s mother arrived at the school shortly after receiving this news. She waited a further forty minutes before retrieving her daughter from the principal’s office.
Wofford and M.D. filed suit against Evans, Rosa, the Botetourt County School Board, Markham, and other unknown officers of the county sheriff’s department. They pressed several constitutional claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (2000). First, they asserted that the school’s disciplinary procedures violated Wofford’s right to due pro- cess under the Fourteenth Amendment. Second, they claimed that M.D. had been seized by school officials and police officers in viola- tion of the Fourth Amendment. [1]
[1]
Wofford and M.D. made four additional claims. First, they alleged a
free-standing violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The district court dismissed
this claim because § 1983 creates no substantive rights by itself.
See
Albright v. Oliver
,
II.
It is now a commonplace that students do not "shed their constitu-
tional rights . . . at the schoolhouse gate."
Tinker v. Des Moines Ind.
Cmty. Sch. Dist.
, 393 U.S. 503, 506 (1969). But the Supreme Court
has never held that the "full panoply of constitutional rules applies
with the same force and effect in the schoolhouse as its does in the
enforcement of criminal laws."
New Jersey v. T.L.O.
, 469 U.S. 325,
350 (1985)(Powell, J., concurring). Indeed, school officials have been
afforded substantial leeway to depart from the prohibitions and proce-
dures that the Constitution provides for society at large.
See, e.g.
,
Bethel Sch. Dist. v. Fraser
,
Such leeway is particularly necessary when school discipline is
involved. The Court has noted the "substantial interest of teachers and
administrators in maintaining discipline in the classroom."
T.L.O.
,
tation. The "education of the Nation’s youth is primarily the responsi- bility of parents, teachers, and state and local officials, and not of federal judges." Hazelwood Sch. Dist. v. Kuhlmeier , 484 U.S. 260, 273 (1988).
With these injunctions in mind, we decline to announce a require- ment of parental notification or a ban on detentions of a certain length when school officials are investigating a serious allegation of student misconduct. Such strictures would be particularly inappropriate when, as here, several students corroborate the accusation and an eyewitness shows the investigators where the transgression occurred.
The appellants’ proposed rules would force educators to choose
between abandoning their preferred method of discipline altogether or
complying with burdensome procedures decreed by federal courts.
The consequences of inaction in the face of dangerous conditions can
be grave. Teachers and administrators might face liability for omis-
sions that lead to student injury.
See generally Johnson v. Dallas
Indep. Sch. Dist.
,
Appellants protest that, in the age of cell phones and e-mail, a bright-line rule requiring parental notification would hardly burden school officials. They also suggest that student welfare would be improved if parents were present during questioning. But these rejoin- ders miss the mark. When faced with imminent danger to the safety of their students, school officials may well find an immediate inquiry in the absence of a parent a necessary investigatory step. Federal courts should be wary of removing such devices from the disciplinary tool-box with the blunt instrument of constitutional decree. It would be a misfortune to exchange the informality of the school setting for the adversarial atmosphere of formalized procedure. Although the rule appellants urge may appear clear, it invites a series of derivative questions: What efforts must school officials make to contact parents? Must both parents be alerted? May officials proceed if the parents cannot be reached? At what stage in an investigation must notification occur? Must parents be present at an interrogation or is notice alone sufficient? If their presence is required, how long do parents have to arrive before questioning can continue? And what exactly are the per- missible limits on parents’ roles once they appear? Expository litiga- tion to answer such questions would stretch out and out.
We are not unsympathetic to appellants’ claim that parental notifi- cation might maximize pupils’ well-being. But a federal court is not the best forum to address such concerns. Appellants note that state law and school board rules provide rights and remedies that bear on this question. The Virginia Code states that "the principal or his des- ignee shall . . . notify the parent of any student involved in an incident . . . [including] . . . the illegal carrying of a firearm . . . onto school property." Va. Code Ann. § 22.1-279.3:1 (Michie 2003). A school board rule requires the principal or his designee to make a "reasonable effort to contact the parent or guardian" before a law enforcement officer interrogates a student. J.A. 492. Wofford and M.D. might have pressed their grievances with the school board. Had they still been dissatisfied, they could have sought state judicial review of an adverse decision. See Va. Code Ann. § 22.1-87 (Michie 2003).
In the final analysis, the balance of rights and interests to be struck
in the disciplinary process is a task best left to local school systems,
operating, as they do, within the parameters of state law. The
Supreme Court has recognized as much.
See Kuhlmeier
,
III.
A.
With these principles established, we proceed to address appel-
lants’ particular claims. Wofford alleges that the school officials’ fail-
ure to contact her infringed her rights to due process. She notes that
the Supreme Court has recognized a parental interest in the "care, cus-
tody, and control of their children."
Troxel v. Granville
,
Appellants find an interference with their liberty interests in the
violations of school board policies and police regulations that they say
occurred here. The Supreme Court has cautioned, however, that "the
range of interests protected by procedural due process is not infinite."
Bd. of Regents v. Roth
, 408 U.S. 564, 570 (1972). The Constitution
requires such protection "only when a decision of the State implicates
an interest within the protection of the Fourteenth Amendment."
Ingraham
, 430 U.S. at 672. In this regard, we have held that viola-
tions of state law are insufficient by themselves to implicate the inter-
ests that trigger a due process claim.
See Weller v. Dep’t of Soc.
Servs.
,
Certainly, state social services cannot deny parents custody of their
children without notice and an adequate hearing.
See Stanley v. Illi-
nois
,
Our conclusion is strengthened by the absence of parental notifica- tion from the Supreme Court’s discussion of students’ due process rights. Referring to the procedures preceding a suspension of up to ten days, the Court indicated that "[t]here need be no delay between the time ‘notice’ is given and the time of the hearing. In the great major- ity of cases the disciplinarian may informally discuss the alleged mis- conduct with the student minutes after it has occurred." Goss , 419 U.S. at 582. Of course, students’ rights are conceptually distinct from parental interests in their children’s liberty while at school. But if these latter concerns were expansive enough to require parental notifi- cation here, it would be odd for the Supreme Court to endorse a disci- plinary procedure that ignores such apprisal before the student’s suspension. Accord Zehner v. Cent. Berkshire Reg’l Sch. Dist. , 921 F. Supp. 850, 859 (D. Mass. 1995)("Plaintiffs have cited no law, and the Court has found none, which would indicate that notice to a student in such circumstances is inadequate unless it is provided to the stu- dent’s parents as well.")
B.
We next address appellants’ Fourth Amendment claim. Appellee school administrators concede that, for the purposes of the Fourth Amendment, M.D. was seized on the day following Thanksgiving. They contest whether the pupil was seized on the day preceding the holiday. We shall assume arguendo that M.D. was seized on this occasion as well.
In most instances, the Fourth Amendment forbids searches and sei-
zures of citizens absent a warrant supported by probable cause.
Katz
v. United States
,
The facts of
T.L.O.
involved only a search. But the policies under-
lying that decision easily support its extension to seizures of students
by school officials.
See Wallace v. Batavia Sch. Dist. 101
, 68 F.3d
1010, 1012 (7th Cir. 1995);
Hassan v. Lubbock Indep. Sch. Dist.
, 55
F.3d 1075, 1079 (5th Cir. 1995);
Edwards v. Rees
,
A search is justified at its inception when there are "reasonable
grounds for suspecting that the search will turn up evidence that the
student has violated or is violating either the law or the rules of the
school."
T.L.O.
, 469 U.S. at 341-42. Analogously, a school official
may detain a student if there is a reasonable basis for believing that
the pupil has violated the law or a school rule.
[2]
Both the Botetourt
[2]
Appellants repeatedly allege that the failure to contact Wofford ren-
dered M.D.’s detention unlawful. Their premise is that a pupil’s seizure
is only reasonable if her parent is contacted first. We are not persuaded
that
T.L.O.
supports this proposition. The Supreme Court never men-
tioned parental notice in its definitional discussion of reasonable
searches. Indeed, the whole tenor of the opinion would be upset if such
a requirement were engrafted.
See, e.g.
,
T.L.O.
,
The seizure must also have been "reasonably related in scope to the circumstances which justified [it] in the first place." T.L.O. , 469 U.S. at 341 (quoting Terry , 392 U.S. at 20). The disciplinary interest in addressing the potential violation of school rules and the need to ensure the physical safety of pupils and staff validated the seizure of M.D. on the day preceding Thanksgiving. Rosa had reason to believe that the student had brought a gun to school. The assistant principal held M.D. no longer than necessary to address this allegation and con- firm that she had no gun on her person or in her schoolroom desk. The student’s seizure on the day preceding Thanksgiving thus satis- fied the second part of the T.L.O. test. See Hassan , 55 F.3d at 1080 (unruly student who had disrupted school excursion properly detained until the excursion was completed).
On the day following the holiday, the school officials continued their investigation of the incident. The students who had accused M.D. the previous week reiterated their allegations. Josh Bane also claimed to have seen the appellant discard the gun in the environs of the campus. This information renewed the administrators’ concern that M.D. had violated the weapons ban and explained Rosa’s failure to discover a gun the week before. Disciplinary interests and the need to protect those at school from bodily harm again justified M.D.’s sei- zure following Bane’s revelation. M.D.’s detention on the day follow- ing Thanksgiving thus satisfied the first part of the T.L.O. test.
Law enforcement officers, not school administrators, have a partic- ular expertise in safely retrieving hidden weapons. It was eminently reasonable, therefore, for the school to contact the police department once it became plausible that a handgun had been secreted in the school’s environs. And since the safety of pupils and staff required the retrieval of any such weapon, it was also prudent for school administrators to hold M.D. until the police had completed their investigation. The school officials reasonably believed that she could identify the gun’s location. Permitting M.D. to follow her normal school-day routine would have posed the unacceptable risk of her retrieving the weapon or revealing its location to a peer. The school officials detained the pupil no longer than necessary to obviate this dire possibility. Holding the student until the police had determined that no weapon was present thus satisfied the second part of the T.L.O. test.
The district court devoted much attention to the constitutional
implications of the police involvement. Law enforcement officers
may depart from the procedural strictures of the Fourth Amendment
when they reasonably conclude "that criminal activity may be afoot."
Terry
,
One consequence of this confluence of Terry standards is that, when school officials constitutionally seize a student for suspected criminal activity and transmit the basis for their suspicion to the police, any continued detention of the pupil by the police is necessar- ily justified in its incipience. This very sequence of events occurred here. The police officers’ initial involvement in the incident, there- fore, satisfied constitutional requirements.
Additionally, when the justification for the original detention includes a concern that also warrants police involvement, no violation of the Fourth Amendment occurs if the police detain the pupil while they allay this concern. The officers detained M.D. only until they had satisfactorily determined that the school’s environs contained no handgun. They did not, therefore, violate her rights under the Fourth Amendment.
Finally, we find no constitutional violation in the decision of school administrators to detain M.D. for a brief period after the police had departed and school had been dismissed. This action was within the officials’ discretion and we are loath to second-guess their judg- ment as to whether discussions with students may prove more or less productive after the school day has ended.
IV.
We appreciate fully the difficult nature of these interactions for appellants and indeed for the entire community of teachers, students, and parents at Colonial Elementary School. We cannot find constitu- tional fault, however, with the efforts of school officials to protect the lives and safety of children entrusted to their care. Weapons are a matter with which schools can take no chances. The actions here reflected the need to avert the greater tragedy and respected the recon- ciliation of rights and interests set forth in federal law. The judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED .
