Board of Managers of Glen Mills Schools v. West Chester Areas School District

838 F. Supp. 1035, 1993 WL 512072
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 6, 1993
DocketCiv. A. 92-3407
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 838 F. Supp. 1035 (Board of Managers of Glen Mills Schools v. West Chester Areas School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Managers of Glen Mills Schools v. West Chester Areas School District, 838 F. Supp. 1035, 1993 WL 512072 (E.D. Pa. 1993).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

ANITA B. BRODY, District Judge.

I am called upon to decide: 1) whether the plaintiff, a private school for boys adjudicated delinquent by the courts, has offered sufficient evidence of racial animus to- survive summary judgment on its claims under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, 42 U.S.C. § 1981, and 42 U.S.C. § 1985(3) where plaintiff has offered sufficient evidence of unequal treatment but has offered no evidence of racial motivation apart from the fact that the majority of the plaintiffs students are' black or latino, and 2) whether the plaintiff has offered sufficient evidence of arbitrary and capricious government action to survive summary judgment on its substantive due process claim. I find that the plaintiff has failed to offer sufficient evidence of racial animus to survive summary judgment on its claims under the Fourteenth Amendment, 42 U.S.C. § 1981 and 42 U.S.C. § 1985(3), but that it has offered sufficient evidence of arbitrary and capricious government action to survive summary judgment on its substantive due process claim.

On June 11, 1992, plaintiff, the Board of Managers of the Glen Mills School (“Glen Mills”), a private school for boys who have committed delinquent acts, filed a six count complaint against the West Chester Area School District, individual school board members, 1 Thornbüry Township, and several past and present Township supervisors. 2 After a partial settlement, the remaining counts allege denial of equal protection, violation of substantive due process rights, violation of contract rights protected by 42 U.S.C. *1038 § 1981, and a conspiracy to deprive plaintiffs of their constitutional rights in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1985(3). 3

The School District and Township defendants each moved for summary judgment on all outstanding counts of the complaint. Those motions are now before me.

FACTS

Plaintiff is the Board of Managers or governing body of the Glen Mills Schools (“Glen Mills”), a school for boys who have committed delinquent acts. Dep. of Mitzi Hepps at 11. Glen Mills is located in Thornbury Township, Delaware County, Pennsylvania, within the West Chester Area School District.

This lawsuit involves a building and tract of land (“the Thornbury School”) adjacent to the Glen Mills School and currently owned by the West Chester Area School District. Glen Mills originally sold the land to the School District in 1904, but retained a reversionary interest should the School District cease to use it as a school. Plaintiffs Ex. C (Deed dated June 24, 1904). In 1962 Glen Mills gave up that reversionary interest in connection with a subsequent sale of land. Plaintiffs .Ex. D (1962 Deed). The School District subsequently granted Glen Mills a right of first refusal should the School District ever decide to sell the property. Plaintiffs Ex. E (letter dated April 17, 1963 from the School District to Glen Mills, confirming the right of first refusal).

The School District constructed a building on the property and used it as a public elementary school until the late nineteen seventies. Dep. of Donald Howland at 12-13. During that time, the school also served as a community center for the citizens of Thorn-bury Township. Dep. of George Morley at 12-14. Each of the Township supervisors who participated in the acts which are the subject of this lawsuit had children who had attended the Thornbury School and had fond memories of the school, and some had expressed an interest in bringing the school “back into the Township”. Morley Dep. at 21; Dep. of Theodore Russell at 41.

In early 1988 there was an incident which shocked the residents of Thornbury Township and hurt Glen Mills’ relationship with the surrounding community. A Glen Mills student left the school without permission and was discovered undressing in a young girl’s bedroom nearby. Russell Dep. at 59. A number of residents approached the Township supervisors “in an uproar” and demanded that they do something to insure the residents’ safety. Russell Dep. at 59-60. This led to meetings between the supervisors and Glen Mills and the establishment of a liaison between the Township and the school. 4 Russell Dep. at 59.

Beginning in 1981, the School District leased the Thornbury School building to Glen Mills for additional classroom space for the sum of $1.00 per year. Plaintiffs Ex. I (Lease). The original lease, which was for a term of five years, was renewed for another five-year term, but the School District retained the right to terminate the lease, with six months notice to Glen Mills, at the end of any year. Plaintiffs Ex. K (Addendum to Lease). Glen Mills continued to occupy the school until July, 1991. Dep. of Cosimo Ferrianola at 145. Glen Mills made several offers to purchase the building during this time, but the School District showed no interest. Plaintiffs Ex. Q (December 1987 offer to purchase the property for $750,000 payable over 10 years); Plaintiff’s Ex. W (April 1988 offer to purchase the property for $750,-000, or $1 million over the next five years or to make an exchange for a 16 acre piece of property owned by Glen Mills).

In October 1987, the Township wrote to the School District, expressing an interest in purchasing the property and requesting a meeting to discuss that possibility. Howland Dep. Ex. 10. The Township sent another *1039 letter in March 1988, confirming its interest in the property. Plaintiffs Ex. S. The exact course of the negotiations between the School District and the Township is. unknown; Township officials characterize their interest in the building as short-lived, and state that the Township never formally decided to purchase the budding. Dep. of Mary Beth Graap at 6; Russell Dep. at 74. Defendant Howland, the Director of Business Affairs for the School District, has testified that he has no recollection of the Township expressing any interest in purchasing the building until after the deal with Glen Mills fell through in 1991. Howland Dep. at 101-03. Nonetheless, in the spring of 1989 the lawyers for the parties exchanged a “final” agreement which involved the exchange of the Glen Mills School for a piece of property owned by the Township. Plaintiffs Ex. U (Letter dated May 25, 1989 from lawyer for Township to lawyer for School District, describing attached agreement as “final” and communicating Township’s intention to sign the agreement by June 5, 1989). Glen Mills was not offered a right of first refusal, nor told of the negotiations. Hepps Dep. at-22-23.

The School District and the Township apparently anticipated an effort by Glen Mills to assert a right of first refusal.

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Bluebook (online)
838 F. Supp. 1035, 1993 WL 512072, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-managers-of-glen-mills-schools-v-west-chester-areas-school-paed-1993.