Christy v. McCalla

53 So. 3d 689, 2010 WL 5099650
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 20, 2011
Docket45754-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 53 So. 3d 689 (Christy v. McCalla) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Christy v. McCalla, 53 So. 3d 689, 2010 WL 5099650 (La. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinions

WILLIAMS, J.

11 Plaintiff, Melanie Christy, sued the Caddo Parish School Board (“CPSB”) and Dr. Sandra MeCalla, the principal of Captain Shreve High School, for personal injuries arising out of an incident involving plaintiffs son, Justin Christy. Following a bench trial, the trial court found the CPSB hable and awarded $50,000 in damages. For the following reasons, we affirm.

FACTS

On October 6, 2003, Justin Christy (“Justin”) was a 17-year-old senior at Captain Shreve High School (“Captain Shreve”). During his first-period class, Justin opened his backpack and a bottle of “Kentucky Deluxe” whiskey rolled onto the floor and broke. Justin was sent to the office, where he was questioned by Marvin Hite, the assistant principal of administration and discipline. Justin informed Hite that he did not know that the alcohol was in his backpack and did not know how it had gotten there. Hite’s attempts to contact Justin’s parents were unsuccessful. Hite summoned Corporal Gregory Jackson, an officer with the Shreveport Police Department, who was assigned to the school as a resource officer. After questioning Justin, Cpl. Jackson placed him under arrest and transported him to the police station.1 Cpl. Jackson charged Justin with a violation of a city ordinance by being a “minor in possession of alcohol.” He gave Justin a summons to appear in city court, transported him back to the school and instructed him to go home and “get in touch with [his] parents.”

| ^Approximately one hour after Justin was sent to the office, Andrew Heacock, the president of the student council at Captain Shreve, learned about the incident. Heacock voluntarily approached Hite and admitted that he had placed the bottle of whiskey in Justin’s backpack. Heacock also stated that Justin was unaware that the bottle was in his backpack. Hite instituted disciplinary action against Justin. No disciplinary action was instituted against Heacock.

Justin was initially suspended from school for three days. Thereafter, Dr. MeCalla recommended that Justin be expelled from Captain Shreve. At some time during the investigation, Hite notified Dr. MeCalla that Heacock had informed him that he (Heacock) had placed the bottle of whiskey on the seat of Justin’s truck, rather than inside the backpack. However, Heacock emphatically testified that he never told Hite that he had placed the bottle on the seat of the truck. Heacock also testified that Dr. MeCalla called him into her office prior to the expulsion hearing and questioned him. He stated that he reiterated to Dr. MeCalla that he had placed the bottle of whiskey inside Justin’s backpack.

[692]*692An expulsion hearing was scheduled. Prior to the hearing, Heacock approached Hite and informed him that he wanted to testify at the hearing on Justin’s behalf. Hite told Heacock that his testimony would not be needed. Therefore, at Justin’s request, Heacock prepared a written statement, which reads as follows:

To whom it may concern:

On the morning of Sunday, October 5, I discovered a bottle of whiskey i[n] the back of my car. Not knowing [ 3whose it was or how it had gotten there, I took it out of my car and put it in Justin Christy’s backpack, which was on the front seat of his truck. I believed that he would throw it away in the dumpster by his house. Justin spent the night with me the night of Saturday, October 4 and was still at my house asleep when I put the alcohol in his backpack. I had intended to tell him that the whiskey was in his bag before he left my house, but I went back to sleep and he left without waking me up. I didn’t call Justin and tell him that I had put the whiskey in his bag that day because I believed that he would have discovered it by then. I never told Justin that I had put the alcohol in his backpack until noon on Monday, October 6 after he had been suspended.

The statement was signed by Heacock and his father.

The expulsion hearing was held on October 10, 2003 in Hite’s office at Captain Shreve. Larry Anderson, the supervisor of child welfare and attendance for the CPSB, was in charge of the hearing. Plaintiffs requested that Heacock be allowed to testify, but the school officials denied the request, stating that they “already had a statement” from Heacock. Justin testified that after Hite presented the school’s version of the incident, he was allowed to give his “side of the story.” Justin further stated, “There was no really [sic] discussion. [Anderson] just decided-it was already decided before I came in there.”2 At the conclusion of the hearing, Anderson upheld Dr. McCalla’s recommendation that Justin be expelled from Captain Shreve. Anderson determined that Justin would be placed at Hamilton Terrace Learning Center, an alternative school, for a period of five months, from October 13, 2003 through March 12, 2004. Following the hearing, Justin was instructed to clear his belongings from his locker and was escorted out 14of the school.

Justin and his parents appealed Anderson’s decision to the preliminary appeals committee of the CPSB. Like Anderson, the committee allowed Hite to present the school’s version of the facts, then allowed Justin to present his version. The committee upheld the expulsion, but modified the term of the expulsion from five months to two months.3 On November 12, 2003, Ollie Tyler, the CPSB’s superintendent, issued a memorandum ratifying the committee’s recommendation [693]*693that Justin’s expulsion to the alternative school be modified from March 12, 2004, to December 19, 2003. Tyler also recommended that Justin be “permitted to enroll at Southwood High School on January 6, 2004 to complete the two Carnegie units needed for graduation.”

Justin’s mother, the initial plaintiff herein, appealed the committee’s decision to the CPSB, which upheld the recommendation of the superintendent. Plaintiff did not appeal the CPSB’s decision to the district court.4

IfiOn February 10, 2004, Justin’s mother, Melanie Christy, filed a lawsuit, individually and on behalf of Justin, alleging that the CPSB violated Justin’s right to due process and imposed an “excessive and irrational punishment.” Plaintiff also alleged that the actions of the CPSB and its employees “were unreasonable, illogical, unjustifiable in light of the evidence, arbitrary, capricious, without just or lawful cause, and malicious.” Plaintiff further alleged that the CPSB’s actions caused “extreme mental anguish and distress, grief, humiliation and inconvenience!.]”5

On March 15, 2004, defendants filed a peremptory exception of no cause of action. Defendants unsuccessfully argued that plaintiffs claims were unsupportable because Dr. McCalla and the CPSB acted “in accordance with statutory law,” which allows the expulsion of a student who possesses alcohol on school grounds.

Following a bench trial, the trial court ruled in favor of plaintiff and awarded damages in the amount of $50,000. Specifically, the court found that Hite failed to provide the hearing officer and the preliminary appeals committee with the full truth and that his actions were “intentional.” The court also found that Anderson’s actions were “grossly negligent.” The CPSB appeals.

IfiDISCUSSION

The CPSB contends the trial court erred in finding it liable to plaintiff. The CPSB argues that the actions of its employees were appropriate and permissible under LSA-R.S. 17:416(A) and (B).

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Related

Christy v. McCalla
79 So. 3d 293 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 2011)

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Bluebook (online)
53 So. 3d 689, 2010 WL 5099650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/christy-v-mccalla-lactapp-2011.