Harpswell Coastal Academy v. M.S.A.D. 75

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 19, 2016
DocketCUMap-15-44
StatusUnpublished

This text of Harpswell Coastal Academy v. M.S.A.D. 75 (Harpswell Coastal Academy v. M.S.A.D. 75) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harpswell Coastal Academy v. M.S.A.D. 75, (Me. Super. Ct. 2016).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT CUMBERLAND, ss CIVIL ACTION DOCKET NO. AP-15-44

HARPSWELL COASTAL ACADEMY, et al.,

Plaintiffs v. ORDER STAtE.Of MA\\~,.. M.S.A.D. 75, o~ Cumoorl;mcl IS. CIP.rk', DEC 19 2016 Defendant ~ECEIVED Before the court is a motion for summary judgment by defendant M.S.A.D. 75.

In this action plaintiffs Harpswell Coastal Academy, Wesley Withers, Carrie Withers,

and John Doe seek to establish that students at charter schools have a statutory and constitutional

right to try out for athletic teams and other extracurricular activities at their local public schools

even when the local school superintendent has determined that students at the local public

schools should have first priority.

The specific dispute that gave nse to this action was a decision by MSAD 75

Superintendent Bradley Smith that the son of -plaintiffs Wesley and Carrie Withers, a student

attending Harpswell Coastal Academy who is designated as "John Doe" in this action, would not

be allowed to try out for the 8th grade basketball team at Mt. Ararat Middle School.

In an order dated January 16, 2016 the court denied a motion by plaintiffs for a stay of

administrative action and a preliminary injunction. Subsequently, in an order dated June 16, 2016

the court 1:1led against plaintiffs' Rule 808 appeal from the Superintendent Smith's decision.

The remaining issues in this case are plaintiffs' claim in Count II of the complaint for a

declaratory judgment that respondent MSAD 75's policy violates 20-A M.R.S. § 2415 and plaintiffs' section 1983 claim in Count III that John Doe has been deprived of equal protection

under the U.S. Constitution.

Summary Judgment

Summary judgment should be granted if there is no genuine dispute as to any material

fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. In considering a motion for

summary judgment, the court is required to consider only the portions of the record referred to

and the material facts set forth in the parties' Rule 56(h) statements. E.g., Johnson v. McNeil,

2002 ME 99 1 8, 800 A.2d 702. The facts must be considered in the light most favorable to the

non-moving party. Id. Thus, for purposes of summary judgment, any factual disputes must be

resolved against the movant. Nevertheless, when the facts offered by a party in opposition to

summary judgment would not, if offered at trial, be sufficient to withstand a motion for judgment

as a matter of law, summary judgment should be granted. Rodrigue v. Rodrigue, 1997 ME 99 1

8, 694 A.2d 924.

In this case plaintiffs have admitted virtually all of the statements in MSAD 75's

Statement of Material Facts (SMF), and the court concludes that all material facts are undisputed.

Although plaintiffs have raised certain objections to the evidentiary support offered for two of

the assertions in MSAD 75's SMF, in the court's view those objections are either not well-

founded or verge on the hypertechnical. 1 In any event, the court would reach the same result

even if it disregarded those assertions in their entirety.

1 Plaintiffs argue that defendants cannot rely on an April 22, 2015 letter from MSAD 7 5 Superintendent Smith because it was not stipulated to by the parties or authenticated by any affidavit. See Plaintiffs' Response to Defendant's SMF ~ 23. However, plaintiffs do not dispute the statement by MSAD 75 that the parties had agreed that their previously filed Joint Stipulation of Facts - which includes Smith's April ·22, 2015 letter (Stipulation , 21) - would be binding on the parties and would be part of the summary judgment record. See the introduction to MSAD 75's Statement of Material Facts and MSAD 75's

2 The essential facts are that one or more students at Harpswell Coastal Academy, a charter

school that enrolls students in grades 6-11, have sought to try out for the Mt. Ararat athletic

teams but were denied the opportunity to try out by Bradley Smith, Superintendent of MSAD 75.

The students who have sought to try out for Mt. Ararat athletic teams reside within MSAD 75.

Harpswell Coastal Academy does currently not offer extracurricular athletic activities or field

athletic teams.

The decision by Superintendent Smith not to let the Harpswell Coastal Academy students

try out was based on a July 2015 policy adopted by MSAD 75 which states that an MSAD 75

school

does not have capacity to provide a charter school student the opportunity to participate in extracurricular activity when all available slots and positions for the activity are taken by regularly enrolled students. A student enrolled in MSAD 75 schools will not be denied the opportunity to participate in favor of a student enrolled in a charter school.

In cases where not enough regular Mt. Ararat students have sought to try out for a team to fill all

the existing slots, Superintendent Smith has allowed Harpswell Coastal Academy students to

participate. Defendant's SMF 128 (admitted).

Plaintiffs are not seeking relief that would require MSAD 75 to expand the rosters of

existing teams to accommodate Harpswell Coastal Academy students. See Petitioners' Rule 808

brief at 8 n.3 ("Plaintiffs do not challenge MSAD 75's right to determine the size of its

extracurricular teams"). They are instead seeking to require MSAD 75 to allow charter school

Amended Motion for Summary Judgment at 2 n.1. Plaintiffs also argue that the legislative file appended to the Carey Affidavit has not been properly authenticated. While they may or may not be correct that legislative files do not constitute factual evidence for purposes of summary judgment, courts routinely take judicial notice of those files as part of a st.a tute's legislative history. E.g., Blanchard v. MDOT, 2002 ME 96, ~~ 24-25, 798 A.2d 1119; In re Opinion ofJustices, 281 A.2d 321, 324 (Me. 1971). The court does agree with plaintiffs that MSAD 75's responses in its Reply SMF that it is "unable to admit or deny" factual assertions in plaintiffs' Statement of Additional Material Facts should be deemed to be admissions. None of those admissions would affect the court's decision.

3 students to try out for the existing slots on the team in competition with public school students

enrolled in MSAD 75.

Alleged Violation of 20-A M.R.S. § 2415 (Complaint Count II)

On this issue the court has twice considered the issue of whether MSAD' s policy violates

20-A M.R.A. § 2415 and has nothing to add to its prior rulings. See order dated January 16, 2016

at 3-5; order dated June 16, 2016 at 3-7. Based on the discussion in those rulings, the court

concludes that MSAD 75 is entitled to summary judgment on Count II of plaintiffs' complaint.

Alleged Violation of Equal Protection (Complaint Count III)

Count III of plaintiffs' complaint is a section 1983 claim that MSAD's policy violates

equal protection. Faced with a claim that a governmental policy subjects similarly situated

individuals to differential treatment, the court must first determine whether the policy involves

either a fundamental right or a suspect class that has been found to trigger strict scrutiny. 2 If no

fundamental rights or suspect classes are involved, the remaining question is whether the

governmental policy at issue is rationally related to a legitimate governmental interest. E.g.,

Town of Frye Island v.

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Harpswell Coastal Academy v. M.S.A.D. 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harpswell-coastal-academy-v-msad-75-mesuperct-2016.