A.S. v. Lake Central School Corporation

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Indiana
DecidedMarch 18, 2024
Docket4:23-cv-00079
StatusUnknown

This text of A.S. v. Lake Central School Corporation (A.S. v. Lake Central School Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A.S. v. Lake Central School Corporation, (N.D. Ind. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA HAMMOND DIVISION at LAFAYETTE A.S. and S.S., Individually and as ) Parents and Next Friends of A.R.S., a ) Minor, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) NO. 4:23CV79-PPS ) LAKE CENTRAL SCHOOL ) CORPORATION, ST. JOHN, INDIANA, ) THE INDIANA DEPARTMENT OF ) EDUCATION, Division of Special ) Education, DR. KATIE JENNER, Indiana ) Secretary of Education, ) ) Defendants. ) OPINION AND ORDER This case involves a family with significant challenges, and the issue before me warrants a lengthy recap of the circumstances that brings the matter here. Plaintiffs A.S. and S.S. are the adoptive parents of A.R.S, who was 13 years old at the time of the complaint. A.R.S. suffers from a host of psychological conditions: Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, Disruptive Mood Dysregulation Disorder, Reactive Attachment Disorder, Depersonalization Derealization Disorder, Generalized Anxiety Disorder, and Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder. For several months until late October 2022, A.R.S. was an in-patient at a psychiatric facility. After her release, A.R.S. returned to the family home. She also returned to school in the Lake Central district in November 2022 but soon resumed a previous pattern of self-injury, harm to her family, and abuse of her siblings. A.S. and S.S. pursued several different strategies for responding to A.R.S. and her issues, and this case reflects their dissatisfaction with the unintended consequences. Under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act or “IDEA,” A.R.S. is

eligible for special education and related services from defendant Lake Central School Corporation. In October 2022, A.S. and S.S. filed a complaint with the Indiana Department of Education alleging that Lake Central had denied A.R.S. a free appropriate public education (frequently referred to as a “FAPE”) during the previous two-year period. An Independent Hearing Officer was appointed and a hearing was set

in December 2022 but later continued several times, finally to July 2023. l refer to these as the IDEA proceedings. While the parties awaited the administrative hearing, a separate track in A.R.S.’s care started to develop — this involving the Juvenile Division of the Lake County Superior Court. On November 23, 2022, the Indiana Department of Child Services filed a petition in that court seeking a finding that A.R.S. was a Child in Need of Services

(CHINS). This appears to have been a result of A.S. and S.S. seeking assistance from DCS in getting a “therapeutic placement” for A.R.S. [DE 1 at ¶27.] In response to DCS’s petition, A.R.S. was moved to a therapeutic foster placement on December 14, 2022. Then, on February 10, 2023, Magistrate Judge Robert G. Vann issued an order that adopted a “stipulation for CHINS Adjudication” and awarded to DCS “wardship of the

child, with responsibility for supervision, care and placement.” [DE 1-4 at 1-2.] The order further required DCS “to have court approval regarding physical custody, any 2 change in placement, visitation with parents, relatives, or other individuals, or medical care and treatment of the child.” [DE 1-4 at .] I’ll refer to these events as the DCS track. Lake Central Schools perceived a conflict between the proceedings concerning

A.R.S. on the two tracks. Lake Central attempted to intervene in the juvenile proceedings on the DCS track, but its motion was denied. On July 11 Judge Vann issued an order declaring A.R.S. to be a “ward of the state” and that “all custodial rights of the parents are temporarily transferred from the parents to DCS.” [DE1-7.]1 Lake Central responded by filing a motion to stay the IDEA proceedings in deference to the authority

of the Lake County Juvenile Court over matters involving A.R.S. [DE 1-5.] The following day, the IHO issued an order advising the parties that she intended to speak to Magistrate Judge Vann during a pre-hearing conference. [DE 1-6.] Thereafter, Lake Central moved to dismiss the case before the IHO without prejudice on the grounds that A.S. and S.S. lacked standing. The IHO agreed, issuing her order dismissing the case on August 28, 2023, finding that A.R.S. was a ward of the State and her parents no

longer had standing to proceed with their complaint on the IDEA track. [DE 1-7.] A.S. and S.S. allege in this case that the IHO’s conclusions merely parroted those expressed to her by Judge Vann. Before me, A.S. and S.S. have filed a complaint seeking review of the IHO’s decision and alleging a denial of due process under the IDEA. Now pending is their

1Judge Vann’s July 11, 2023 order does not appear to be in the record, but it was quoted by the IHO in her order dismissing the case.[DE 1-7 at 2.] 3 Motion for Injunctive Relief, by which A.S. and S.S. seek an order vacating the IHO’s dismissal, reinstating their IDEA proceeding, and requiring the replacement of the IHO whose ruling they disagree with. [DE 24.] Their motion does not appropriately explain

its procedural basis and makes no reference to Fed.R.Civ.P. 65, but it cites the familiar standards applicable to a request for a preliminary injunction and will be construed as one. The motion does not, however, appropriately seek a preliminary injunction. First, nothing in the language of the motion or of the proposed order suggests that the

relief sought is in fact preliminary. To the contrary, A.S. and S.S. seek an order that would award them all the relief sought in their complaint, and not subject to any further or final determination in the case. This is done without any reference to Rule 65(a)(2)’s provision for consolidating a preliminary injunction hearing with trial on the merits. Second, the proposed order does not “enjoin” in the usual sense. The principal aim of the motion is not imminently (but temporarily) to compel or restrain anyone

from acting in a particular way, but instead for A.S. and S.S. to prevail, using a procedurally extraordinary means, on their appeal of the dismissal of their IDEA proceedings before the Indiana Department of Education. In these critical respects, then, the Motion for Injunctive Relief appears to be an entirely impermissible use of Rule 65 that does not actually seek to enjoin anything in the customary manner of a

preliminary injunction.

4 Both Lake Central and the Department of Education have expressed the same criticism of A.S. and S.S.’s motion. “From the outset, the School notes that Plaintiffs have selected a highly unusual procedural mechanism to accomplish judicial review of

the administrative proceedings.” [DE 33 at 3.] The State defendants observe that plaintiffs seek a “preemptive decision on their claims” but “without presentation of the agency record for this Court to review.” [DE 32 at 1.] Judicial review of IDEA decisions is ordinarily obtained by a different procedural route. “Cross-motions for summary judgment are the standard method for presenting a case to a district court for decision

on the record compiled by the administrative tribunal that the court is reviewing.” Dale M. ex rel. Alice M. v. Bd. of Educ. of Bradley-Bourbonnais High Sch. Dist. No. 307, 237 F.3d 813, 816 (7th Cir. 2001). For all these reasons, the motion before me is a square peg attempting to fit into a round hole and thereby win final, rather than preliminary, relief for plaintiffs A.S. and S.S. On this basis alone, denial of the motion would be justified. But in addition, I have considered the standard requirements for a preliminary

injunction, and find that they are not met here.

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Bluebook (online)
A.S. v. Lake Central School Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/as-v-lake-central-school-corporation-innd-2024.