DOE v. CENTRAL BUCKS SCHOOL DISTRICT

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 29, 2024
Docket2:23-cv-03287
StatusUnknown

This text of DOE v. CENTRAL BUCKS SCHOOL DISTRICT (DOE v. CENTRAL BUCKS SCHOOL DISTRICT) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DOE v. CENTRAL BUCKS SCHOOL DISTRICT, (E.D. Pa. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

HEATHER DOE : CIVIL ACTION : v. : NO. 23-3287 : DOROTHY E. AUSTIN :

MEMORANDUM KEARNEY, J. February 29, 2024 We expect responsible adults hired as a school aide for a kindergartener challenged with autism on a public-school bus would protect the child especially on his third day of school. We instead today review the potential liability for the school district employer and bus aide after the aide admitted hitting and bruising the kindergartener as discipline for repeatedly reciting lines from Toy Story on his third day on the bus in September. The child pleads a substantive due process civil rights claim against the aide. We need discovery to understand the extent of the child’s physical injuries. But the child and his mother do not plead facts allowing us to find the school district or its transportation entity (presumably with some role in managing the busing) knew of the risk of this potential conduct or otherwise may incur some form of municipal liability. And the child must exhaust administrative remedies before seeking some form of relief under federal statutes possibly applying to the child on a public-school bus. We dismiss the claims against the school district and its transportation entity without prejudice. The child and his mother (subject to our later standing analysis) may proceed against the aide on a civil rights substantive due process claim, assault and battery, and the emotional distress claims. I. Alleged facts Five-year old R.S.’s family chose to live in Central Bucks School District when he began kindergarten at the District’s Buckingham Elementary School in Fall 2021.1 The District provides R.S. bus transportation to and from school.2 The United States provides funding to the District and its allegedly separate Transportation entity.3

R.S. is challenged by autism.4 Children suffering from autism respond differently to discipline than those not suffering from autism.5 Children suffering from autism may engage in aggressive, socially unacceptable, or rude behavior when subject to discipline.6 R.S. received his autism diagnosis before his third day of kindergarten, September 1, 2021.7 The District or its Transportation entity placed kindergartener R.S. on a bus designated to transport children with special needs like autism to and from Buckingham Elementary School.8 The School District and its Transportation entity assigned white-haired Dorothy Austin to serve as the bus’s aide.9 The School District and its Transportation entity did not subject Ms. Austin to personality, psychological, or other tests to ensure Ms. Austin had the personality and patience to work with children suffering from autism or other emotional disorders.10 The School District and

its Transportation entity did not instruct or train Ms. Austin to supervise children suffering from autism or other emotional conditions.11 The School District and its Transportation entity did not disclose R.S.’s autism diagnosis to Ms. Austin before R.S. began kindergarten at Buckingham Elementary School.12 Ms. Austin hits R.S. because he recited from “Toy Story” on his third day on the bus. R.S. recited and repeated dialogue between characters in the movie Toy Story while on the bus on September 1, 2021.13 Repetition is a byproduct of R.S.’s autism diagnosis.14 R.S. did not repeat the Toy Story dialogue in a threatening or aggressive tone.15 Ms. Austin perceived R.S.’s recitation of the Toy Story dialogue as disrespectful to her and struck R.S. in his head, face, chin, and neck area.16 Ms. Austin bruised R.S. but he did not suffer long-term physical injuries.17 R.S. cried hysterically after Ms. Austin struck him and R.S. refused to leave the bus at his stop.18 R.S.’s Mother, Heather Doe, carried R.S. off the bus as he cried and refused the leave the

bus.19 Ms. Doe asked the driver and Ms. Austin if anything happened during the bus ride to cause R.S. to cry.20 Both the driver and Ms. Austin denied anything happening to cause R.S. to cry.21 R.S. explained to Ms. Doe the “white hair lady” hit him during the bus ride home.22 Ms. Doe filed criminal charges against Ms. Austin.23 The Commonwealth charged Ms. Austin with aggravated assault against a victim less than six years old, simple assault, and harassment by subjecting another to physical contact.24 Ms. Austin pleaded guilty to one count of criminal harassment.25 The effects of Ms. Austin striking R.S. R.S. now suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder, an exacerbation of his anxiety

disorder, emotional and psychological damage, bruising, enhancement of autism and the autism- related symptoms from which R.S. suffers, and regression of pre-assault autism progress.26 R.S. is afraid of adults, especially those with white hair.27 R.S. suffers from nightmares.28 R.S. is afraid to go to school.29 Ms. Doe suffers from severe emotional injury from witnessing R.S. process being struck by Ms. Austin.30 Ms. Doe has and will continue to spend money for R.S.’s medical care to treat R.S.’s psychological injuries stemming from Ms. Austin’s attack.31 II. Analysis Ms. Doe and R.S. now sue Central Bucks School District, Central Bucks School District Transportation, and Ms. Austin.32 They seek civil rights recovery alleging procedural and substantive due process claims against the School District and its Transportation entity arguing the entities failed to properly train Ms. Austin to supervise students suffering emotional disorders

like R.S.33 Ms. Doe and R.S. allege the School District and its Transportation entity violated the Individuals with Disabilities Act because they denied R.S. an appropriate education.34 Ms. Doe and R.S. allege Rehabilitation Act and Americans with Disabilities Act discrimination claims against the District and its Transportation entity arguing the entities denied R.S. the benefit of the entities’ educational program of safe school bus transportation because of his autism.35 R.S. alleges a section 1983 substantive due process claim against Ms. Austin arguing she engaged in conscious-shocking behavior by striking a young child suffering from autism.36 Ms. Doe and R.S. allege assault and battery, negligent infliction of emotional distress, and intentional infliction of emotional distress against Ms. Austin based on her striking R.S.37

The District and its Transportation entity move to dismiss Ms. Doe and R.S.’s section 1983 claim arguing Ms. Doe and R.S. do not to identify the School District and Transportation arm had a custom, policy, or practice of failing to train its bus aides because Ms. Doe and R.S. do not plead a pattern of abuse by bus aides against bus riders.38 The School District and its Transportation entity move to dismiss Ms. Doe and R.S.’s Individuals with Disabilities Education Act claim arguing Ms. Doe and R.S. cannot allege an Individuals with Disabilities Education Act claim because the Act does not create a private right of action for damages.39 The School District and its Transportation entity move to dismiss Ms. Doe and R.S.’s Rehabilitation Act and Americans with Disabilities Act discrimination claims arguing Ms. Doe and R.S. do not allege the School District and its Transportation entity intentionally discriminated against R.S.40 Ms. Austin separately moves to dismiss Ms. Doe and R.S.’s civil rights claim arguing Ms. Doe does not allege harm stemming from a conscious-shocking act, the physical harm R.S. suffered from Ms. Austin’s strikes is not sufficiently severe to plead a substantive due process

claim, R.S. cannot bring a substantive due process claim alleging psychological harm, and qualified immunity protects Ms. Austin because Ms. Doe and R.S. do not plead a constitutional harm.41 Ms. Austin moves to dismiss Ms. Doe and R.S.’s state law tort claims if we dismiss Ms. Doe and R.S.’s constitutional claims against Ms.

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DOE v. CENTRAL BUCKS SCHOOL DISTRICT, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doe-v-central-bucks-school-district-paed-2024.