Bruce Lavine v. Blaine School District

257 F.3d 981
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJuly 20, 2001
Docket00-35303
StatusPublished

This text of 257 F.3d 981 (Bruce Lavine v. Blaine School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bruce Lavine v. Blaine School District, 257 F.3d 981 (9th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

257 F.3d 981 (9th Cir. 2001)

BRUCE LAVINE, AS NEXT FRIEND OF JAMES LAVINE; JAMES LAVINE, PLAINTIFFS-APPELLEES,
v.
BLAINE SCHOOL DISTRICT, A MUNICIPAL CORPORATION; TIM HANEY; OPINION DAN NEWELL; KAREN MULHOLLAND, DEFENDANTS-APPELLANTS.

No. 00-35303

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

Argued and Submitted December 4, 2000
July 20, 2001

Tyna Ek, Merrick, Hofstedt & Lindsey, Seattle, Washington, for the defendants-appellants.

Philip J. Buri, Breean L. Beggs, Brett & Daugert, Bellingham, Washington, for the plaintiffs-appellees.

Appeal from the United States District Court Western District of Washington Barbara J. Rothstein, Chief Judge, Presiding D.C. No. CV-99-01074-BJR

Before: Betty B. Fletcher and Raymond C. Fisher, Circuit Judges, and William W Schwarzer,* District Judge.

Fisher, Circuit Judge.

This case has its genesis in a high school student's poem, which led to his temporary, emergency expulsion from school. It arises against a backdrop of tragic school shootings, occurring both before and after the events at issue here, and requires us to evaluate through a constitutional prism the actions school officials took to address what they perceived was the student's implied threat of violent harm to himself and others. Given the knowledge the shootings at Columbine, Thurston and Santee high schools, among others, have imparted about the potential for school violence (as rare as these incidents may be when taken in context), we must take care when evaluating a student's First Amendment right of free expression against school officials' need to provide a safe school environment not to overreact in favor of either. Schools must be safe, but they are educational institutions after all, and speech -including creative writing and poetry -is an essential part of the educational fabric. Although this is a close case in retrospect, we conclude that when the school officials expelled James LaVine they acted with sufficient justification and within constitutional limits, not to punish James for the content of his poem, but to avert perceived potential harm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND1

In the fall of 1998, James LaVine was in eleventh grade and a student in Vivian Bleecker's sixth period English class at Blaine High School. One evening in June or July 1998, James wrote the first draft of a poem he entitled"Last Words." The final version reads:

As each day passed, I watched, love sprout, from the most, unlikely places, wich reminds, me that, beauty is in the eye's, of the beholder.

As I remember, I start to cry, for I, had leared, this to late, and now, I must spend, each day, alone, alone for supper, alone at night, alone at death.

Death I feel, crawlling down, my neck at, every turn, and so, now I know, what I must do.

I pulled my gun, from its case, and began to load it.

I remember, thinking at least I won't, go alone, as I, jumpped in, the car, all I could think about, was I would not, go alone.

As I walked, through the, now empty halls, I could feel, my hart pounding.

As I approched, the classroom door, I drew my gun and, threw open the door, Bang, Bang, Bang-Bang.

When it all was over, 28 were, dead, and all I remember, was not felling, any remorce, for I felt, I was, clensing my soul,

I quickly, turned and ran, as the bell rang, all I could here, were screams, screams of friends, screams of co workers, and just plain, screams of shear horor, as the students, found their, slayen classmates,2 years have passed, and now I lay, 29 roses, down upon, these stairs, as now, I feel, I may, strike again.

No tears, shall be shead, in sarrow, for I am, alone, and now, I hope, I can feel, remorce, for what I did, without a shed, of tears, for no tear, shall fall, from your face, but from mine, as I try, to rest in peace, Bang!

Around that time, several school shootings had occurred --including the tragedy at Thurston High School in nearby Springfield, Oregon -and were frequent topics in the news.2 The morning after James wrote the poem, he showed it to his mother. She warned James not to turn the poem in to his teachers at school, because "with everything that was on the news . . . whoever read it might overreact."

James forgot about the poem until he rediscovered it in his living room on September 30, 1998. He made some editorial changes and brought it to school on Friday, October 2. He showed the poem to several of his friends, some of whom liked it and some of whom did not. At that point, he decided to ask his English teacher, Ms. Bleecker, her opinion of "Last Words."

James had not been in school for the three days prior to October 2. At the end of his sixth period English class, he turned in several assignments and the poem. James asked Bleecker if she would read the poem and tell him what she thought. Bleecker thanked James for the poem and said she looked forward to reading it. The poem was not an assignment or an "extra credit" project, but James had turned in other poems to his previous English teachers at Blaine High School and appreciated their feedback.

That evening, Bleecker read "Last Words" and became concerned. Her impression of James up to that time was that he was a very quiet student. She thought the poem might be "James' way of letting somebody know that . . . maybe something's hurting him, maybe he's upset about something, maybe he's afraid." The next morning (Saturday), Bleecker contacted Karen Mulholland, James' school counselor, to discuss the contents of the poem. Mulholland was similarly concerned and set up a meeting that evening with Bleecker and Tim Haney, the school's vice principal.

During his time at Blaine High School, James had frequently confided in Mulholland, who is also a school psychologist. In 1996, James told her that he thought about suicide. Mulholland made James promise her that he would talk to her before he tried to kill himself. Thereafter, Mulholland kept an eye out for James and tried to make time to help him when he needed it. In fall 1998, James told her about several incidents that had occurred in his home. In particular, on September 12, James and his father had had an argument about James' car. James' father, Bruce, had thrown a rock in the direction of James and his car. James called the police, who filed charges against Bruce. As a result of the charges, a court issued a no-contact order that led to James moving out of his home temporarily to live with his sister. James had also missed school on September 17, 1998 to participate in the resulting legal proceedings. In addition, in the preceding weeks, James had broken up with his girlfriend. The school authorities had become aware of this because the ex-girlfriend's mother had called the school to report that James was stalking her daughter.

Mulholland disclosed these events to Haney and Bleecker.

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LaVine ex rel. LaVine v. Blaine School District
257 F.3d 981 (Ninth Circuit, 2001)

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257 F.3d 981, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bruce-lavine-v-blaine-school-district-ca9-2001.