Bastrop Independent School District Board of Trustees v. Toungate

922 S.W.2d 650, 1996 WL 228779
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 19, 1996
Docket03-95-00200-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 922 S.W.2d 650 (Bastrop Independent School District Board of Trustees v. Toungate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bastrop Independent School District Board of Trustees v. Toungate, 922 S.W.2d 650, 1996 WL 228779 (Tex. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinions

KIDD, Justice.

Appellee September Toungate, on behalf of her minor son Zachariah, sought declaratory and injunctive relief in district court against appellant Board of Trustees for the Bastrop Independent School District (“the Board”) after the Board suspended Zachariah for the length of his hair. Toungate argued that the Board discriminated against Zachariah on the basis of his gender because the Board’s grooming policy permitted girls but not boys to wear long hair. The district court rendered judgment in favor of Toungate, granting declaratory relief, an injunction, and an award of attorneys’ fees. The Board now appeals the district court’s judgment. We will affirm.

THE CONTROVERSY

The relevant events in this appeal took place during the 1990-91 school year. At that time, Zachariah Toungate was an eight-year old, third-grade student at Mina Elementary in the Bastrop Independent School District. For that school year, the Board had adopted the following grooming rule:

Boys’ hair must meet the following guidelines: The rear length must be no longer than to the bottom of a regular shirt collar. On the sides, the ear lobe must be visible. In the front, the length cannot be longer than the top of the eyebrows.

The Board concedes that this rule did not apply to girls.

Zachariah’s hair style in the Fall of 1990 violated the Board’s grooming rule because it included a thin pony-tail that extended below his rear shirt collar. After Zachariah came home with a note from his school stating that he was not in compliance with the grooming code, Toungate scheduled a meeting with Rebecca Smith, Zachariah’s principal. When Smith informed Toungate that Zaehariah’s hair violated the grooming code, Toungate said she would not force Zachariah to cut his hair. Toungate offered to pin Zachariah’s pony-tail above his collar or have him tuck it inside his shirt. Smith refused to deviate from the dress code and told Toungate that Zachariah could not return to school until he cut his hair.

After Zachariah had been suspended for approximately three days, Smith informed Toungate that Zachariah should return to school to begin his in-school suspension (“ISS”). While in ISS, Zachariah was isolated from other students. He received his lessons from a substitute teacher in a twelve-by-fifteen foot room in which the only windows were blocked by heavy paper. Zachariah had to eat lunch alone, take recess alone, and was not allowed to participate in physical education, music classes, or any other extracurricular activities, including the school’s winter holiday program in December 1990. After the school kept Zachariah in ISS for approximately four months, Toungate began home-schooling her son on the advice of a psychologist.

Toungate sued the Board in district court, seeking injunctive and declaratory relief against continued enforcement of the Board’s hair-length rule, as well as compensatory and punitive damages for mental anguish. Toun-gate argued that the Board’s rule discriminated against Zachariah on the basis of his gender in violation of the Texas Equal Rights Amendment (“ERA”) and a Texas anti-discrimination statute. See Tex. Const, art. I, § 3a; Tex.Civ.Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 106.001(a) (West 1986). In October 1991, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of the Board on all claims. On appeal, this Court affirmed the portion of the judgment denying the damage claims on the basis of governmental immunity, but reversed and remanded the constitutional and statutory discrimination claims for factual development at trial. Toungate v. Bastrop Indep. Sch. Dist., 842 S.W.2d 823, 828-29 (Tex.App.—Austin 1992, no writ). Following a jury trial in 1994, the district court rendered judgment in favor of Toungate, enjoined enforcement of the hair-length rule, and declared that the rule violated both the anti-[652]*652discrimination statute and the Texas ERA. The court also awarded attorneys’ fees to Toungate under the authority of the Texas Declaratory Judgment Act. See Tex.Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 37.009 (West 1986). The Board now appeals.

DISCUSSION

The last twenty-five years have witnessed an explosion of cases in which public school students have challenged hair-length and grooming regulations. Approximately 120 such cases were reported by federal courts alone between 1968 and 1988. See Laurence H. Tribe, American Constitutional Law § 15-15, at 1385 n. 14 (2d ed. 1988). As Justice Douglas noted twenty-three years ago: “Nothing is more indicative of the importance currently being attached to hair growth than the barrage of eases reaching the courts evidencing the attempt by one segment of society to control the plumage of another.” Ham v. South Carolina, 409 U.S. 524, 529-30, 93 S.Ct. 848, 851-52, 35 L.Ed.2d 46 (1973) (Douglas, J., dissenting). School children have increasingly looked to hair length or style as an important aspect of personal identity, and school boards throughout the country have shown an intense interest in keeping male hair styles within narrow boundaries. Tribe, supra, § 15-15, at 1386-87.

The adoption of the Texas ERA in 1972 added an important new dimension to the public school hair-length controversy in this State: gender discrimination. The Texas ERA has no analogue in the federal constitution. Whereas the federal cases have addressed the issue under the rubric of the student’s right to personal liberty,1 the Texas jurisprudence has focused on the question of gender discrimination against male students. See Mercer v. Board of Trustees, 538 S.W.2d 201, 203 (Tex.App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1976, writ refd n.r.e.). This appeal is one such gender discrimination case. Toungate asks us to hold that the Board’s hair-length rule discriminated against Zachariah, on the basis of his gender, in violation of the Texas Constitution and a Texas civil rights statute. We will consider each of Toungate’s arguments in turn.

A Constitutional Claim

Toungate argues that the Board’s rule violates the Texas ERA, which provides: “Equality under the law shall not be denied or abridged because of sex, race, color, creed, or national origin.” Tex. Const, art. I, § 3a. The Board responds that Toungate’s ERA claim is foreclosed by the Texas Supreme Court’s recent decision in Barber v. Colorado Independent School District, 901 S.W.2d 447 (Tex.1995).

In Barber, the supreme court considered a high school student’s challenge to a similar hair-length rule. The plaintiff, Austin Barber, was an adult student who brought a class action to challenge the rule under the ERA Id. at 447. In rejecting Barber’s claim, the supreme court declined to perform a constitutional analysis and refused to determine whether the rule violated Barber’s rights under the ERA Instead, relying on long-standing Fifth Circuit precedent,2 the court enunciated a bright-line rule of abstention: no Texas court may act on an ERA challenge to a hair-length rule promulgated by a public primary or secondary school. Id. at 450.

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Related

BD. OF TRUSTEES OF BASTROP INDEPENDENT SCH. DIST. v. Toungate
958 S.W.2d 365 (Texas Supreme Court, 1998)
Bastrop Independent School District Board of Trustees v. Toungate
922 S.W.2d 650 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1996)

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