Isaac D. Minton, Administrator of Estate of Minor, Connie Minton v. St. Bernard Parish School Board

803 F.2d 129, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 32556, 35 Educ. L. Rep. 634
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 22, 1986
Docket85-3688
StatusPublished
Cited by109 cases

This text of 803 F.2d 129 (Isaac D. Minton, Administrator of Estate of Minor, Connie Minton v. St. Bernard Parish School Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Isaac D. Minton, Administrator of Estate of Minor, Connie Minton v. St. Bernard Parish School Board, 803 F.2d 129, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 32556, 35 Educ. L. Rep. 634 (5th Cir. 1986).

Opinion

ALVIN B. RUBIN, Circuit Judge:

A Mississippi resident in whose favor a final tort judgment has been rendered by a Louisiana court against a Louisiana parish school district has been unable to collect her damages because the parish school board refuses to appropriate the funds necessary to satisfy her claim. Alleging that the School Board and its individual members are depriving her of equal protection of the law because they pay all judgments in favor of residents of the Parish and — as she elaborates upon her charges in her brief — in favor of Louisiana residents but do not pay her because she is a nonresident of either the Parish or the State, she and the administrator of her estate filed suit in federal court seeking declaratory and monetary relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana dismissed appellants’ action for failure to state a claim for which relief can be granted. Assessing her charge of discrimination on its face, as we must, we find that it is sufficient to state a claim for denial of that equality with residents that state agencies must accord nonresidents. Even discretion may not be exercised on a discriminatory basis.

I.

In 1974, Connie Minton, a resident of Mississippi and a minor, was struck and injured by a school bus operated under the supervision of the St. Bernard Parish School Board. Shortly thereafter, she and the administrator of her estate, Isaac D. Minton, brought an action to recover for her injuries in a Louisiana state court, and obtained judgment in her favor. On appeal, the judgment was affirmed although *131 the amount of damages was reduced. 1 That judgment is now final.

Since then Minton and her administrator have tried unsuccessfully to obtain from the Saint Bernard Parish School Board an appropriation of funds to satisfy the judgment. The Board has articulated no reasons for its refusal other than its assertion that the judgment is unjust and that .it is immune from suits requiring it to make such appropriations. State law forbids payment of a judgment against a state agency or political subdivision of the state without such an appropriation. 2

The plaintiffs allege in this § 1983 action that the School Board and its individual members are depriving Connie Minton of her property without due process of the law and, by refusing to pay judgments in favor of nonresidents of St. Bernard Parish while satisfying claims raised by residents of the parish, are denying her equal protection of the law as guaranteed by the fourteenth amendment. In their prayer for relief, the Mintons asked the district court for damages, including the unpaid portion of the judgment plus interest, attorney’s fees, punitive damages, and any equitable relief the court deems appropriate.

II.

The Saint Bernard Parish School Board relies first on the defense that the Mintons’ suit constitutes a suit against the state that is prohibited by the eleventh amendment to the United States Constitution. We must therefore determine whether the Saint Bernard Parish School Board is an arm of the state enjoying eleventh amendment immunity or whether it possesses an identity sufficiently distinct from that of the State of Louisiana to place it beyond that shield.

As Judge Garwood has recently stated in Clark v. Tarrant County, Texas, 3 to draw that distinction “we ‘must examine the particular entity in question and its powers and characteristics as created by state law____’” 4 The relevant factors include: (1) whether state statutes and case law characterize the agency as an arm of the state; (2) the source of funds for the entity; (3) the degree of local autonomy the entity enjoys; (4) whether the entity is concerned primarily with local, as opposed to statewide, problems; (5) whether the entity has authority to sue and be sued in its own name; and (6) whether the entity has the right to hold and use property. 5

These tests identify parish school boards as local independent agents not shielded by the state’s eleventh amendment immunity. Although Louisiana courts have referred to school boards as “agencies” of the state, 6 this characterization does not amount to an assertion that the boards are arms of the state within the meaning of the eleventh amendment. School boards generate funds for the operation of parish school districts through local ad valorem taxation, 7 exercise a great deal of discretion in performing their functions and addressing their innately local *132 concerns, 8 have authority to sue or be sued in their own name, 9 and can hold, use, or sell property as each local board determines necessary to fulfill its obligation to the public. 10 In view of the inherently local nature of the interests of Louisiana school boards, the wide degree of local autonomy they are granted under state law, and the predominately local source of their funding, it cannot be said either that these entities are mere arms of the state or that monetary judgments against them would represent indirect impositions on the state treasury interfering with the state’s fiscal autonomy. 11 Louisiana school boards, therefore, are not entitled to eleventh amendment immunity to Section 1983 claims.

In a separate brief the state argues that this court should abstain even if we have jurisdiction because the issue is a matter of serious state concern with “potentially far-reaching impact on the public fisc and on state regulation of public property.” The argument has no foundation in Louisiana law. For the reasons we have given, a suit against a parish school board is not a suit against the state and poses no immediate threat to the state fisc or state regulation of public property. What relief, if any, the Mintons may obtain from the School Board and what relief is barred by the eleventh amendment are separate questions that do not require abstention.

III.

The Board’s failure to pay the Min-tons’ judgment is not a denial of due process. The Supreme Court determined long ago in Louisiana ex rel. Folsom v. Mayor of New Orleans 12 that the property right created by a judgment against a government entity is not a right to payment at a particular time but merely the recognition of a continuing debt of that government entity. 13

In an effort to avoid the impact of Folsom, the Mintons refer to Evans v. City of Chicago, 14

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
803 F.2d 129, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 32556, 35 Educ. L. Rep. 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/isaac-d-minton-administrator-of-estate-of-minor-connie-minton-v-st-ca5-1986.