D.A. v. Houston Independent School District

716 F. Supp. 2d 603, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 126722
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedAugust 14, 2009
Docket5:08-mj-02438
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 716 F. Supp. 2d 603 (D.A. v. Houston Independent School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D.A. v. Houston Independent School District, 716 F. Supp. 2d 603, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 126722 (S.D. Tex. 2009).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

KEITH P. ELLISON, District Judge.

Before the Court is Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment. (Doc. No. 16.) After considering the parties’ filings, all responses and replies thereto, and the applicable law, the Court finds that Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment should be granted.

I. BACKGROUND

A. D.A.’s Educational Background

This case arises out of Defendants’ alleged failure to test Plaintiff D.A. for special education services. 1 D.A. first entered Houston Independent School District (“HISD”) as a pre-kindergarten student in 2005. (Adm. Hr’g Tr. 26:11-17, April 7, 2008.) He attended Sanchez Elementary School. (Id. at 26:21-23.) Not long after D.A. began pre-kindergarten, his teacher, Renisha Freeman, noticed that he was having trouble completing his work and following instructions. (Id. at 27:19-24.) Freeman told Plaintiff L.A., D.A.’s mother, that HISD would probably not test D.A. for special education while he was in prekindergarten, but that he should be tested in kindergarten or first grade. (Id. at 28:9-14.) L.A. tried to help D.A. by completing assignments with him at home that he could not finish in class, like coloring and learning the alphabet. (Id. at 29:20-25.)

When he advanced to kindergarten, D.A. was zoned to Crespo Elementary School (“Crespo”). His teacher was Melissa Espinoza. (Id. at 35:18-22.) Once in kindergarten, D.A. was still unable to complete his work. Espinoza felt that he did not perform at the level of the other students in the class. (Id. at 80:18-21.) L.A. would come to the school and sit with D.A. while he was in class to help him complete assignments. (Id. at 36:14-17.) On September 4, 2006, L.A. wrote to Espinoza and requested that D.A. be evaluated for testing, stating that Celestina Martinez, the Crespo principal, had informed L.A. that Espinoza had to consent to D.A. being tested. (Adm. R. at 000152.) On October 4, 2006, L.A. signed a “Consent for Full and Individual Evaluation.” (Adm. R. at 000153.)

L.A. attended a meeting with Mr. Butts, a kindergarten teacher who was covering Espinoza’s class, Ms. Halpern, the counsel- or and referral chairperson, and Martinez. Both L.A. and Mr. Butts wanted D.A. to have the full battery of special education testing, but Halpern informed L.A. that D.A. could be tested only for speech therapy. (Id. at 44:6-11.) L.A. signed the nec *607 essary papers. Shortly thereafter, Espinoza resumed teaching the class. She told Halpern that she did not have any trouble understanding D.A.’s speech. HISD did not inform L.A. that it had decided not to go through with the testing. (Id. at 171:12-22.)

On February 9, 2007, Espinoza sent L.A. a “Notice of Progress” for D.A., in which Espinoza stated that, if D.A. did not experience major improvement, she would recommend that he repeat kindergarten. (R. at 000154.) Espinoza ultimately decided to promote D.A. to first grade, however, because she felt there would be more testing and special education opportunities there. (Id. at 92:23-24.) Espinoza believes that there is a district policy preventing a kindergarten teacher from initiating a special education referral. (Id. at 102:18-22.) She believes the only type of referral that can be made is for speech therapy. (Id. at 108:9-11.) Martinez similarly confirmed that Crespo has a practice of waiting until the first grade to test for special education, to give children a chance to develop. (Id. at 166:13-14.)

On the last day of school, D.A. came home with a certifícate saying that he had passed kindergarten and would continue to the first grade. (Id. at 48:12-14.) L.A. was angry because Espinoza had told her that she would not send D.A. to the first grade, and L.A. felt that advancing to the next grade would only hurt D.A. because he was not even on a kindergarten level. He could not, at that point, identify his numbers or letters. (Id. at 48:16-25.)

Before D.A. started first grade, L.A. made efforts over the summer to have him transferred to another school because Crespo had failed to test him for special education during kindergarten. (Id. at 49:21-25.) She attempted to transfer him to several different schools, but they were all overcrowded. L.A. then enrolled D.A. in Crespo again, where he began first grade in Doris Fields’ classroom. (Id. at 53:17-20.) Fields has 23 years of teaching experience and has taught grades one through eight for HISD. (Id. at 278:9-18.) When D.A. entered first grade, L.A. first spoke with Sharon Colvin, a counselor, about having him tested for special education. Colvin gave L.A. some forms to complete, and L.A. filled them out and returned them to the school. (Id. at 150:16-17.) On September 10, 2007, L.A. wrote a letter to Martinez requesting, again, that D.A. be evaluated. (R. at 000155.) In the letter, L.A. informed Martinez that D.A.’s doctor believed D.A. had a learning disability and needed to be evaluated by the school.

From the beginning of first grade, Fields had trouble with D.A. After a few weeks of having D.A. in her class, Fields recommended to L.A. that she have D.A. tested for special education. (Id. at 279:15-20.) Fields observed that D.A. performed below grade level and that he exhibited “extreme behavior,” such as fighting, in her class. (Id. at 279:5-11.) D.A. would throw crayons, crawl out of his seat on the floor, and refuse to pay attention in class. At Martinez’s suggestion, Field had D.A. sit at a separate desk apart from the other children. D.A. would have outbursts, sing during lessons, and continuously talk. (Id. at 281-282.) Fields generally had below average children in her classroom, and D.A. was the lowest performing child in the class. (Id. at 283:22-284:4.) D.A. was failing academically, and Fields believed that the first grade was too much for him. (Id. at 284-285.)

The dean of instruction at Crespo, Lisa Gonzalez, began to pull D.A. out of class to help him do his work. (Id. at 55:6-9.) L.A. describes D.A.’s academic progress at this time as “horrible.” He was assigned two digit math problems; however, he was *608 unable to count or identify his numbers past ten. (Id. at 55:21-56:17.) D.A.’s report card dated October 19, 2007 indicated that he was failing all of his academic courses. (Adm. R. at 000156.) The school called L.A. three or four times per week about D.A.’s behavior. Finally, Martinez told her not to bring her son back to school unless she came to sit with him. (Id. at 59:10-11.) As a result, L.A. would sit with D.A. during the mornings before his class left for lunch. (Id. at 60:11-13.) Sometimes she stayed for the entire day. (Id. at 61:16-17.) On approximately three occasions, the school dropped D.A. off at home, with L.A.’s elderly mother, without contacting L.A. (Id. at 63:6-25.)

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Bluebook (online)
716 F. Supp. 2d 603, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 126722, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/da-v-houston-independent-school-district-txsd-2009.