Colombo v. Sewanhaka Central High School District No. 2

87 Misc. 2d 48, 383 N.Y.S.2d 518, 1976 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2152
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 11, 1976
StatusPublished

This text of 87 Misc. 2d 48 (Colombo v. Sewanhaka Central High School District No. 2) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colombo v. Sewanhaka Central High School District No. 2, 87 Misc. 2d 48, 383 N.Y.S.2d 518, 1976 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2152 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1976).

Opinion

Alexander Berman, J.

This is a CPLR article 78 proceeding in which petitioners seek to overturn a directive of respondent which prohibits John Colombo, Jr., one of the petitioners, from "participating in contact sports on behalf of H. Frank Carey School,” on the ground that respondent’s refusal is "arbitrary, capricious and contrary to law.” The petitioners are John Colombo, Jr., 15 years of age, a student at H. Frank Carey School under the jurisdiction of Sewanhaka Central High School, and his parents, John Colombo, Sr., and Dolores Colombo.

On December 11, 1975, Dr. Nathan Samuels, the duly designated medical officer for the school district, conducted a physical examination of the petitioner, John, Jr., to determine whether he should be permitted to participate in contact sports in the high school. This examination was conducted pursuant to regulations of the Commissioner of Education of the State of New York (8 NYCRR 135.4 [c] [7] [i] [h]), the text of which follows: "It should be the duty of trustees and boards of education * * * (h) to provide adequate health examinations before participation in strenuous activity and periodically throughout the season as necessary, and to permit no pupil to participate in such activity without the approval of the school medical officer”. (Emphasis supplied.)

The physical examination disclosed no abnormality other than a marked hearing deficiency, which petitioners concede, to wit: that John is totally deaf in his right ear and that he has a 50% loss of hearing in his left ear. This hearing problem has existed from birth. He wears a hearing aid in his left ear.

Dr. Samuels, in his written report of said examination, as well as in his testimony given at the trial, stated that with his hearing aid, John could hear normal conversational tones when looking at him, but not when facing away, and that "there is a marked impairment of hearing when he clicked his fingers on the right or left side of John’s head,” and that even with loud finger clicking, there was "impairment in determining the directional source of the sound.” By reason of this hearing deficit, Dr. Samuels determined that John should not be permitted to play football, lacrosse or soccer. He rational[50]*50ized that John’s hearing deficit leaves him with a permanent "auditory blind” right side and a diminished sound perception on his left side, even with the use of the hearing aid, and that "this inability to directionalize the source of sound leaves him at increased risk of bodily harm as compared with students with a full sensory perception.”

In reaching the conclusion that John should not be permitted to play such contact sports, Dr. Samuels, among other things, took into consideration guidelines published by the American Medical Association (Rev ed, 1972), entitled, A Guide for Medical Evaluation of Candidates for School Sports (AMA Guide), which has been approved by the State Education Department. This guide lists, among others, as disqualifying conditions for participation in contact sports "significant impairment” of ears.

Petitioners contend, however, that Dr. Samuels had not taken into consideration other relevant factors which should have been weighed in his evaluation, such as: that both parents had given their unqualified consent to John’s participation in these sports; that John is an all-around athlete of unusual and extraordinary talent; that John has demonstrated his ability to participate extensively in contact sports with his peers who had no hearing disability and that he had never sustained any injury during such competition; that he has actually played football with nonschool organizations under the strict supervision of organized athletic groups; and furthermore, that the prohibition against participation in these high school sports has had a damaging psychological effect upon this boy in that he has now lost interest in attending school and has been made to feel inferior to and different from the other children in school.

Both parents, it is true, not only joined in this petition, but testified that they were willing to assume the risk of additional injury to their son, even if same resulted in his becoming totally deaf. John’s mother testified that another of her children, a daughter, is, in fact, totally deaf and although she would hope that John would not sustain such complete impairment of hearing, she believed that he could "live with it,” and that he would, nevertheless, be able to function well "with such a handicap.” John’s father reiterated these feelings and added that he hoped John would be able to eventually obtain a college football scholarship as this would be of vital importance because of their limited financial resources.

[51]*51Petitioners presented as a witness, one Gerald M. Jordan, the Assistant Director of Admissions of Gallaudet College of Washington, D. C. This is a liberal arts college for deaf students, with a student body of approximately 1,200 from the United States and foreign countries. Mr. Jordan is also President of the International Committee of Silent Sports which he referred to as the "Deaf Olympics.” This committee was founded in 1924 to provide sports for deaf people. He testified that between 1,200 and 1,800 deaf athletes participated in the Deaf Olympics, of which about 700 participated in contact sports and that he had never heard of any participant sustaining any injury brought about by reason of his affliction. He also stated that there were 59 residential primary and secondary schools for the deaf in this Country and that they all participated in contact sports. At Gallaudet, he stated, its football team competed with those of other colleges and that, as far as he knew, no injury came about by reason of any hearing impairment.

Another witness for petitioners was Sister Loyola Marie of St. Joseph’s Convent in Brentwood. She works for Catholic Charities and the Caritas Center for the Deaf. She is also formerly superintendent of two State schools for the deaf. She holds a masters degree in deaf education. She testified that the children at these institutions engage in contact sports and that these children experienced no problems or injuries during such activities, by reason of their deafness.

Bernard J. Sellick, father of two boys who had an 80% hearing loss, testified in behalf of petitioners that his two sons played contact sports, including football, and neither one of them suffered any injury attributable to his loss of hearing.

Dr. Donald T. Kasprzak, a physician who is medical officer for an up-State school district, and also Chairman of the Committee on the Medical Aspects of Sports of the Medical Society of New York, testified for the petitioners that in his opinion John should be permitted to engage in contact sports and he envisioned no danger to John or to any other students by reason of John’s affliction. He expressed the opinion that prohibiting John from engaging in contact sports was emotionally harmful to him and that there was no valid reason to anticipate aggravation of his hearing impairment by participation in contact sports. He also testified that he believed that the AMA guidelines were archaic and should be revised to [52]*52eliminate or substantially change the disqualifying factors listed in this guide.

Attached to the petition in this proceeding is the text of a letter to Dr. Samuels from Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
87 Misc. 2d 48, 383 N.Y.S.2d 518, 1976 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colombo-v-sewanhaka-central-high-school-district-no-2-nysupct-1976.