Coleman v. Utah State Charter School Board

673 F. App'x 822
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedDecember 16, 2016
Docket15-4141
StatusUnpublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 673 F. App'x 822 (Coleman v. Utah State Charter School Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coleman v. Utah State Charter School Board, 673 F. App'x 822 (10th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

ORDER AND JUDGMENT *

Gregory A. Phillips, Circuit Judge

Kim Fitzpatrick Coleman alleges that members of the Utah State Charter School Board (“the State Charter Board”) and its staff director violated her due-process rights preceding her nonrenewal as the director of the Monticello Academy charter school. The district court granted summary judgment against her public-employment claims and denied her motion to amend her complaint to add a new claim that the government had interfered with her private employment as an on-leave board member of the school. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

In 2006, Coleman co-founded the Monticello Academy, a charter school in West Valley City, Utah run by the private nonprofit Monticello Academy, Inc. Initially, she served on the Monticello Academy’s board of directors, but in 2008 she took a leave of absence from the board to become the paid director of the school. 1 Her initial term of employment was' for fifteen *825 months. After that, the Monticello Academy board had two one-year renewal options. Monticello Academy’s charter states that all employees serve at will, and Coleman’s contract was explicit that she “is an at-will employee” and that “this Agreement will control and supersede such other material.” 2 Appellant’s App. at 1251. Among other job duties, Monticello Academy board members told Coleman that the board expected her to work on getting a high school built for the charter school.

When parents complained to it about Coleman’s not providing required special-education services at Monticello Academy, the State Charter Board stepped in and investigated. It found the parental complaints warranted. The State Charter Board drafted findings, including that Coleman had created a school environment in which special-education services were withheld from students legally entitled to them. 3 Based on the State Charter Board’s findings, it directed that the Monticello Academy board remove Coleman from all school operations and bar her from campus in any potentially-disruptive capacity. But the Monticello Academy board did its own investigation, placing Coleman on paid administrative leave until June 30, 2009, when her employment contract expired. Coleman contests the State Charter Board’s findings about her stewardship of the school.

During Monticello Academy’s investigation, the Salt Lake Tribune newspaper published a 270-word article saying that “state education officials” had ordered that Coleman “be placed on paid administrative leave pending an investigation into allegations of financial mismanagement” at Monticello Academy. Appellant’s App. at 2110, The article said this action arose from parental complaints “about low teacher morale and efforts to block parental involvement in the school’s management,” Id. The sole quote from a named source was from Brian Allen, the State Charter Board’s chairman, who offered praise, saying that “[w]e have a very capable principal and assistant principal running the school,” and advising that “[t]he board has it well under control. I think they're trying to do the right thing.” Id. In February 2009, the Monticello Academy board appealed the State Charter Board’s initial findings to state education officials. Even before it began its self-investigation of Coleman, the Monticello Academy board advised the State Charter Board that it would appeal unless the initial findings were withdrawn. In April 2009, Coleman sued the State Charter Board in state court for violating the Utah Open and Public Meetings Act, codified in Utah Code. Ann. §§ 52-4-101 to -305. After concluding its investigation, the Monticello Academy board found no wrongdoing by Coleman. Coleman demanded that the State Charter Board provide her with the bases for its *826 decision, but she says that the State Charter Board did not do so.

Eight months after it issued them, the State Charter Board voided its preliminary findings about Coleman’s deficiencies running the school as its director; 4 but after meeting again, it issued new findings reaffirming that Coleman had denied required special-education services to Monticello Academy students, and directing that she be removed as the school’s director. The State Charter Board made those findings public according to its usual practice. 5 The Utah Board of Education and the Utah State Office of Education ratified the second version of the findings. When Coleman’s term of employment expired, the Monticello Academy board did not renew her contract.

In response to the later findings, Coleman filed a second state-court suit against the State Charter Board, its members, and its staff director, pleading thirteen claims for relief. The defendants removed the case to federal court, where the district court dismissed all but one of Coleman’s claims. Later, the district court granted summary judgment on the sole remaining claim, one asserting a violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983 based on an alleged procedural-due-process violation. 6 The district court also denied Coleman’s motion to amend her complaint to add a claim for governmental interference with private employment—which she identified as her position on Monticello Academy’s board of directors and potential future jobs, not her public position as director of Monticello Academy. Coleman appealed.

DISCUSSION

On appeal, Coleman argues that the district court misapplied the summary-judgment standard in disposing of her procedural-due-process claims premised on asserted property rights and liberty interests. We conclude that the district court properly applied the summary-judgment standard in rejecting her property-interest claim based on continued employment and her liberty-interest claim based on defamation. Coleman also argues that the district court wrongly denied her motion to amend her complaint to claim- governmental interference with her private employment, that being her unpaid position on the Monticello Academy board and her future employment in the education field. We conclude that the district court correctly determined that our circuit has not yet recognized a claim for governmental interference with private employment with charter schools, meaning that Coleman could not show that the defendants had violated a clearly established constitutional right.

I. Standard of Review

We review de novo a district court’s grant of summary judgment and, in doing so, use the same standard that applies in *827 the district court. Cillo v. City of Greenwood Vill., 739 F.3d 451, 461 (10th Cir. 2013). Under this standard, we view facts most favorably to the nonmoving parties, and we resolve all factual disputes and reasonable inferences in their favor. Id.

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Bluebook (online)
673 F. App'x 822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coleman-v-utah-state-charter-school-board-ca10-2016.