Audrey Baker v. Crossroads Academy-Central Street

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 17, 2022
DocketWD84941
StatusPublished

This text of Audrey Baker v. Crossroads Academy-Central Street (Audrey Baker v. Crossroads Academy-Central Street) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Audrey Baker v. Crossroads Academy-Central Street, (Mo. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Western District

) AUDREY BAKER, et al, ) ) WD84941 Appellants, ) ) OPINION FILED: v. ) ) May 17, 2022 CROSSROADS ACADEMY-CENTRAL ) STREET, et al, ) ) Respondents. )

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Missouri The Honorable Charles H. McKenzie, Judge

Before Division Two: Karen King Mitchell, P.J., Edward R. Ardini, Jr. and Thomas N. Chapman, JJ.

G.B., J.B., and W.B., and their parents, Zach and Audrey Baker, (collectively “the

Bakers”) appeal from the judgment of the Circuit Court of Jackson County dismissing with

prejudice their petition against a school and various school, city, county, and state officials

alleging that Missouri vaccination and exemption regulations for school children, and their

enforcement, violate constitutional provisions and federal and state laws. They raise six points

on appeal. The judgment is affirmed. Background1

Missouri law requires all students to be immunized and provide proof of such

immunizations. § 167.181.2.2 Exemptions based on religious beliefs are given if a parent or

guardian objects in writing to the school administrator. § 167.181.3.3 The Department of Health

& Senior Services (“DHSS”) promulgates rules and regulations governing the required

immunization program and supervises and secures its enforcement. § 167.181.1.4 To assert a

religious exemption from the school children vaccination requirement, a parent’s exemption

statement “must be provided on an original Department of Health and Senior Services’ form

Imm.P.11A” (“Form 11”). 19 C.S.R. § 20-28.010(1)(C)(2). A Form 11 “may be obtained by

contacting a medical provider, local public health agency, or the department’s Bureau of

Immunization Assessment and Assurance at PO Box 570, Jefferson City, MO 65102-0570, or by

calling 800-219-3224.” Id. The form contains the following language:

We strongly encourage you to immunize your child, but ultimately the decision is yours. Please discuss any concerns you have with a trusted healthcare provider or call the immunization coordinator at your local or state health department. Your

1 In reviewing a judgment dismissing a petition with prejudice, the appellate court assumes all facts alleged in the petition are true and liberally construes all reasonable inferences in favor of the plaintiff. G.B. v. Crossroads Acad.- Central St., 618 S.W.3d 581, 584 n.1 (Mo. App. W.D. 2020). 2 “It is unlawful for any student to attend school unless he has been immunized as required under the rules and regulations of the department of health and senior services, and can provide satisfactory evidence of such immunization[.]” § 167.181.2. All statutory references are to RSMo 2016 unless otherwise indicated. 3 “This section shall not apply to any child if one parent or guardian objects in writing to his school administrator against the immunization of the child, because of religious beliefs or medical contraindications. In cases where any such objection is for reasons of medical contraindications, a statement from a duly licensed medical physician must also be provided to the school administrator.” § 167.181.3. 4 “The department of health and senior services, after consultation with the department of elementary and secondary education, shall promulgate rules and regulations governing the immunization against poliomyelitis, rubella, rubeola, mumps, tetanus, pertussis, diphtheria, and hepatitis B, to be required of children attending public, private, parochial or parish schools. Such rules and regulations may modify the immunizations that are required of children in this subsection. The immunizations required and the manner and frequency of their administration shall conform to recognized standards of medical practice. The department of health and senior services shall supervise and secure enforcement of the required immunization program.” § 167.181.1.

2 final decision affects not only the health of your child, but also the rest of your family, the health of your child’s friends and their families, classmates, neighbors, and community.

Unimmunized children have a greater risk of contracting and spreading vaccine- preventable diseases to babies who are too young to be fully immunized due to medical conditions and those who cannot be immunized due to medical conditions. In the event of an outbreak of a vaccine-preventable disease within a particular facility, children who are not fully immunized or do not have documented laboratory evidence of immunity shall not be allowed to attend school or day care until the local health authority declares the designated outbreak or health emergency has ended.

The form also contains a section for a parent’s election of religious exemption.

On December 29, 2019, the Bakers filed their underlying lawsuit against Crossroads

Academy-Central Street (“Crossroads”), Karis Parker, Crossroads’ principal, and Eva Copeland,

Crossroads’ school nurse (collectively “Crossroads Defendants”); Rex Archer, in his official

capacity as Director of the City of Kansas City, Missouri Health Department (“City Health”), and

Bridgette Casey, in her official capacity as Director of the Jackson County Health Department

(“County Health”) (collectively “Health Departments”); and Randall Williams, in his official

capacity as Director for the Missouri Department of Health & Senior Services (“DHSS”), and

Eric Schmitt, in his official capacity as Missouri Attorney General (“AG”) (collectively “State

Defendants”).5 In their petition, they alleged that, since as early as 2017, the three Baker

children have attended Crossroads Charter School unvaccinated based on their parents’ providing

to the school’s administrator a written objection to vaccinations on religious grounds, which the

school accepted. They further alleged that Crossroads later “changed policies and demanded that

the Bakers” again provide “their religious objections to vaccinations for each child,” but this

5 This is not the only lawsuit the Bakers have filed relating to the school children immunization requirement. The opinion in G.B. v. Crossroads Acad.-Central St., 618 S.W.3d 581, 587 (Mo. App. W.D. 2020), provides a synopsis of the lawsuits the Bakers have filed.

3 time on an original DHSS Form 11. The Bakers claimed that the Form 11 “was only obtainable

from a local health department who then requires a parent to make an appointment, then watch a

pro-vaccine video, or be questioned by a nurse as a condition to obtaining the form.” The Bakers

alleged that, at the beginning of the 2019 school year, Audrey Baker provided the school

administrator with a handwritten note stating, “PURSUANT TO MISSOURI STATUTE

167.181, I AM MAKING A RELIGIOUS OBJECTION TO VACCINATIONS ON BEHALF OF

MY CHILD AND AM GIVING IT TO THE SCHOOL ADMINISTRATOR. I AM WILLING

TO FILL OUT A FORM IF THE SCHOOL PROVIDES IT TO ME WHICH THEY WILL NOT

DO.” She provided another written objection on a printed Form 11 she found online, which was

watermarked “Sample”. The school rejected the two written objections, and informed her that an

original Form 11 must be completed otherwise the children would be not be allowed to attend.

The Bakers alleged that the children were expelled from the school and are being denied an

education.

The Bakers’ 20-count petition asserted a variety of state and federal statutory and

constitutional claims, based on alleged violations of the Bakers’ rights to (1) free exercise of

religion, (2) first amendment speech, (3) a child’s bodily integrity and autonomy, (4) the parental

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Bluebook (online)
Audrey Baker v. Crossroads Academy-Central Street, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/audrey-baker-v-crossroads-academy-central-street-moctapp-2022.