Cody Hudson, an Infant Who Sues by and Through His Grandmother and Next Friend, Nancy Tyree v. Bayse Wilson, Superintendent of Roanoke County Schools Eddie Kolb, Director, Special Education Paul Orcutt, Roanoke County School Psychologist, and S. John Davis, Dr., Superintendent of Public Instruction, State Department of Education, Cody Hudson, an Infant Who Sues by and Through His Grandmother and Next Friend, Nancy Tyree v. Bayse Wilson, Superintendent of Roanoke County Schools Eddie Kolb, Director, Special Education Paul Orcutt, Roanoke County School Psychologist, and S. John Davis, Dr., Superintendent of Public Instruction, State Department of Education

828 F.2d 1059
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 16, 1987
Docket87-1019
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 828 F.2d 1059 (Cody Hudson, an Infant Who Sues by and Through His Grandmother and Next Friend, Nancy Tyree v. Bayse Wilson, Superintendent of Roanoke County Schools Eddie Kolb, Director, Special Education Paul Orcutt, Roanoke County School Psychologist, and S. John Davis, Dr., Superintendent of Public Instruction, State Department of Education, Cody Hudson, an Infant Who Sues by and Through His Grandmother and Next Friend, Nancy Tyree v. Bayse Wilson, Superintendent of Roanoke County Schools Eddie Kolb, Director, Special Education Paul Orcutt, Roanoke County School Psychologist, and S. John Davis, Dr., Superintendent of Public Instruction, State Department of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cody Hudson, an Infant Who Sues by and Through His Grandmother and Next Friend, Nancy Tyree v. Bayse Wilson, Superintendent of Roanoke County Schools Eddie Kolb, Director, Special Education Paul Orcutt, Roanoke County School Psychologist, and S. John Davis, Dr., Superintendent of Public Instruction, State Department of Education, Cody Hudson, an Infant Who Sues by and Through His Grandmother and Next Friend, Nancy Tyree v. Bayse Wilson, Superintendent of Roanoke County Schools Eddie Kolb, Director, Special Education Paul Orcutt, Roanoke County School Psychologist, and S. John Davis, Dr., Superintendent of Public Instruction, State Department of Education, 828 F.2d 1059 (4th Cir. 1987).

Opinion

828 F.2d 1059

41 Ed. Law Rep. 830

Cody HUDSON, an infant who sues By and Through his
grandmother and next friend, Nancy TYREE,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Bayse WILSON, Superintendent of Roanoke County Schools;
Eddie Kolb, Director, Special Education; Paul
Orcutt, Roanoke County School
Psychologist, Defendants-Appellees,
and
S. John Davis, Dr., Superintendent of Public Instruction,
State Department of Education, Defendant.
Cody HUDSON, an infant who sues By and Through his
grandmother and next friend, Nancy TYREE, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Bayse WILSON, Superintendent of Roanoke County Schools;
Eddie Kolb, Director, Special Education; Paul
Orcutt, Roanoke County School
Psychologist, Defendants-Appellants,
and
S. John Davis, Dr., Superintendent of Public Instruction,
State Department of Education, Defendant.

Nos. 87-1019, 87-1020.

United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.

Argued June 3, 1987.
Decided Sept. 16, 1987.

Tonita Minge Foster, Roanoke, Va., for appellant.

William Fain Rutherford, Jr. (John L. Walker, Jr.; Theodore R. Kingsley; Woods, Rogers & Hazelgrove; Roanoke, Va., Jean B. Arnold, Blacksburg, Va., on brief), for appellees.

Before WIDENER, PHILLIPS, and CHAPMAN, Circuit Judges.

JAMES DICKSON PHILLIPS, Circuit Judge:

This appeal and cross-appeal challenge a federal district court's application of the Education of the Handicapped Act (EHA), 20 U.S.C. Secs. 1400 et seq. Cody Hudson, a handicapped infant who initiated this suit by and through his grandmother and next friend in United States District Court for the Western District of Virginia, appeals the district court's denial of his claim for tuition reimbursement for private school instruction during his second-grade year. Cody's claim was premised on the alleged failure of the Roanoke County [Virginia] Schools (RCS) to provide him with the appropriate special education services required under the EHA. RCS and three RCS employees in turn cross appeal the district court's tuition reimbursement award to Cody for the final months of his first-grade year. Both Cody and RCS further challenge the district court's decision to reimburse Cody for one, but only one, private educational evaluation which he used to challenge RCS's placement decisions. We conclude that the district court's explication of the controlling legal standards under the EHA was correct, and that the district court's findings of fact, upon which its partial relief to Cody was premised, are not clearly erroneous. We accordingly affirm the district court's decision in its entirety.

* The history of this litigation and the precedent actions by RCS, Cody's mother and grandmother, and state administrative review officials, is fairly complicated. Cody entered RCS as a kindergartener in the 1982-83 school year. Preliminary routine screening by RCS revealed that Cody suffered from speech and language problems. Appellee Paul Orcutt, a psychologist for RCS, tested Cody, and discovered that he had a high IQ but a vocabulary six months behind the average five-year old, and that he could learn visually but could not express himself. Before the school decided on a special placement for Cody, however, and before it developed any individualized program for him, Cody was taken out of public kindergarten and enrolled in a private day school.

During the 1983-84 school year Cody returned to RCS, and Cody's regular first-grade teacher referred him for testing to determine if he needed special education. This teacher reported that Cody fantasized, used nonsense language, and performed at the bottom of his class. She also reported that he cried, was easily frustrated, had trouble controlling his temper, formed few relationships with his classmates, and often did not perform his work.

Orcutt tested Cody for the second time on January 24, 1984. On the basis of the five tests he performed at that time, Orcutt concluded that Cody's difficulties were related to his emotional development. Orcutt then recommended an independent psychiatric evaluation and RCS retained Dr. William Gray. Following a brief examination, Dr. Gray concluded that Cody suffered from a "thought disorder" but was not psychotic. Significantly, neither Orcutt nor Gray tested Cody appropriately to determine if any or all of his problems stemmed from a learning disability rather than an emotional disturbance. Orcutt in fact informed Cody's mother and grandmother that, in his opinion, Cody did not require testing for a learning disability.

On March 1, 1984, RCS held an eligibility meeting to determine if Cody was a handicapped child and to discuss an appropriate educational placement. Before this meeting, Cody's mother and grandmother arranged private testing for Cody, at their own expense, by a private school psychologist. This psychologist, Dr. Gene Watson, conducted nine tests to determine if Cody was learning disabled and concluded that he was: specifically, he diagnosed an "attentional deficit disorder" (a language processing disorder) and developmental dyslexia. Dr. Watson appeared at the eligibility meeting, presented his findings to the committee, and recommended that Cody be placed in a learning disability classroom. The committee, however, decided that Cody should be placed in a "Behavioral Adjustment" (B.A) classroom for severely emotionally disturbed children, relying on the evaluations by Orcutt and Gray and the anecdotal observations of Cody's first-grade teacher.

The status of this RCS placement decision is open to some factual dispute. RCS claims that it never ruled out another ultimate placement but only insisted that it first conduct its own corroborative testing for learning disabilities, though this insistence does not explain its decision to place Cody in a possibly inappropriate B.A. classroom pending such testing. What is clear is that the March meeting ended in a heated discussion between Dr. Watson and the RCS committee and that Cody's mother and grandmother removed Cody from RCS and placed him in a special private school for learning disabled children. At RCS's request, and after Cody had already been withdrawn from RCS, Dr. Watson retested Cody; the tests confirmed his earlier results. After this additional testing at RCS's request, and without any modification by RCS of its placement decision, Cody's mother and grandmother withdrew their consent for additional testing by RCS. They did, however, obtain further corroborative tests by two other doctors at their own expense; both doctors recommended a learning disabilities placement for Cody.

For the 1984-85 school year (Cody's second-grade year), RCS held a second eligibility meeting. The committee met on August 30, 1984, studied the testing conducted by Dr. Watson and the other private psychologists who examined Cody, and concluded that Cody did indeed require learning disabilities instruction. Significantly, RCS reached this conclusion without conducting any corroborative testing by its own personnel despite its earlier insistence that such RCS corroboration was essential. The placement recommended by RCS, however, still did not provide what Dr. Watson recommended and what Cody's mother and grandmother sought, namely full-time instruction for Cody in a self-contained learning disabilities classroom.

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