Jane Doe v. Jackson Local Sch. Dist.

954 F.3d 925
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 1, 2020
Docket19-3019
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 954 F.3d 925 (Jane Doe v. Jackson Local Sch. Dist.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jane Doe v. Jackson Local Sch. Dist., 954 F.3d 925 (6th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b) File Name: 20a0105p.06

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

JANE DOE and JOHN DOE, Individually and as the ┐ natural parents and next of kin of Minor Doe, │ Plaintiffs-Appellants, │ │ > No. 19-3019 v. │ │ │ JACKSON LOCAL SCHOOL DISTRICT BOARD OF │ EDUCATION, TAMARA NEFF, MICHELLE KRIEG, JIMMIE │ SINGLETON, SUSANNE WALTMAN, and HARLEY │ NEFTZER, │ Defendants-Appellees. │ ┘

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio at Akron. No. 5:17-cv-01931—Sara E. Lioi, District Judge.

Argued: October 23, 2019

Decided and Filed: April 1, 2020

Before: GUY, BUSH, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges. _________________

COUNSEL

ARGUED: Laura L. Mills, MILLS, MILLS, FIELY & LUCAS, LLC, Canton, Ohio, for Appellants. Sherrie C. Massey, PETERS KALAIL & MARKAKIS CO., LPA, Cleveland, Ohio, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Laura L. Mills, MILLS, MILLS, FIELY & LUCAS, LLC, Canton, Ohio, for Appellants. Sherrie C. Massey, David S. Hirt, PETERS KALAIL & MARKAKIS CO., LPA, Cleveland, Ohio, for Appellees. No. 19-3019 Doe, et al. v. Jackson Local Sch. Dist., et al. Page 2

_________________

OPINION _________________

MURPHY, Circuit Judge. Like other cases involving the “state-created-danger” theory of substantive due process, this case comes to us with tragic facts: a fifth grader sexually assaulted a kindergartener. Cf. McQueen v. Beecher Cmty. Schs., 433 F.3d 460, 462 (6th Cir. 2006); Schroder v. City of Fort Thomas, 412 F.3d 724, 725 (6th Cir. 2005). The fifth-grade student, C.T., lit a match during the bus ride home from an Ohio elementary school. In response, school administrators moved him to the front of the bus. While seated in the front, he sexually assaulted the kindergarten student, Minor Doe, as they rode home from school over several weeks. C.T. was expelled and is not a defendant. Instead, Minor Doe’s parents brought a state- created-danger claim against the Jackson Local School District Board of Education and five school employees. The district court granted summary judgment to these defendants, holding that no reasonable jury could find that they knowingly exposed Minor Doe to the risk of sexual assault. We must agree, and respectfully reaffirm that the Constitution does not empower federal judges to remedy every situation we find “heart-wrenching.” Schroder, 412 F.3d at 731.

I

In the fall of 2015, Jimmie Singleton began driving the bus that C.T. and Minor Doe rode to and from their elementary school. The bus driver that Singleton replaced had handled this route for years, but retired at the end of the prior school year. Soon after this transition, school administrators fielded some parent complaints about Singleton’s ability to prevent student misconduct compared to the previous bus driver. Harley Neftzer, the school’s director of transportation, spoke with Singleton about the complaints and did not hear further concerns from parents for the rest of the school year.

At the start of the 2016–2017 school year, Singleton created a seating chart for the students on his bus. The school district encouraged drivers to assign younger students to the front of the bus and older students to the back. Minor Doe was entering kindergarten and C.T. was entering the fifth grade. So Singleton assigned C.T. to a seat in the back with the older No. 19-3019 Doe, et al. v. Jackson Local Sch. Dist., et al. Page 3

children, while Minor Doe sat in the front row directly behind the driver’s seat. Another kindergartener sat next to Minor Doe in the mornings on the way to school. But Minor Doe sat alone in the afternoons because her seatmate did not ride the bus home.

On September 15, 2016, a student told his teacher that C.T. had lit a match on the bus the day before. The teacher relayed this concern to the dean of students, Michelle Krieg. Krieg and a guidance counselor, Tamara Neff, investigated the allegation. Students told them that C.T. had lit matches during the afternoon bus ride and had lit matches and burned cardboard while waiting at the bus stop the prior morning. A camera on the bus recorded C.T. lighting a match and throwing it out the window over another student’s head. A search of the school grounds turned up matches in a bathroom trashcan. Making matters worse, C.T. had tried to prevent fellow students from telling school administrators about his conduct. One student had immediately attempted to report C.T. to Singleton, but C.T. had blocked her path to the bus driver. And C.T. had promised not to bother another student for the rest of the year if the student did not tell anyone about the matches.

Krieg and Neff summarized the findings of their investigation for the school’s principal, Susanne Waltman. Waltman interviewed C.T. He was initially dishonest about what he had done. When Waltman confronted him with the bus video, C.T. confessed.

Waltman disciplined C.T. She found that he had violated several codes of conduct. His violations included: “failing to tell the truth”; engaging in “[b]ehavior which causes or reasonably could cause physical harm to students or adults”; and “[p]ossession of or igniting of” a device “which produces an explosion, smoke, fire, gas, or odor.” She placed C.T. in “alternative day assignment” for a day and a half. She suspended him from riding the bus for a week or so. And she required him to sit in the front row of the bus across from the driver for the rest of the school year. Waltman wanted C.T. in that seat because it would be “easier [for the bus driver] to see” him, and “if he lit a match, the driver could smell it.”

Waltman also crafted a “Safety Plan” for C.T. For the indefinite future, a school employee would meet C.T. at the bus each morning and escort him to the school office, where school officials would check his backpack. Someone would then escort C.T. to class. C.T. could No. 19-3019 Doe, et al. v. Jackson Local Sch. Dist., et al. Page 4

not go into the hallway or restrooms unless escorted by an adult. He could only play on the playground blacktop near the adult monitors. And he would have assigned seats in gym class, in music class, in the library, and in the cafeteria. Waltman explained that she wanted C.T. “to be close to an adult at all times” because C.T. had been “dishonest” when asked about the matches.

Before this incident, school administrators had been involved with C.T. one prior time. Teachers had developed a “Success Plan” for C.T. soon after he enrolled in the middle of his third-grade year. According to Neff, the guidance counselor, C.T. had struggled with “being truthful, being respectful of other people’s property, and following directions the first time they were given.” He, for example, “would take someone’s glue sticks” and deny doing so. As part of the plan Neff checked in with C.T. about ten times in all. By the end of C.T.’s third-grade year, she recalled that the Success Plan “kind of dwindled off.” By C.T.’s fifth-grade year, his teacher described him as “a little bit chatty, talkative, but really kind of typical of a fifth grade boy.”

Singleton, the bus driver, learned that C.T.’s new seat assignment would be in the bus’s front-right seat. Waltman claims that she explained to Singleton that C.T. “had lit matches on the bus and he was coming to the front because he was not truthful.” Singleton, however, recalls hearing about the matches and seat restriction from Neftzer, the director of transportation. No one told Singleton about C.T.’s building restrictions.

C.T. shared his new front-row seat with a kindergarten boy.

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954 F.3d 925, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jane-doe-v-jackson-local-sch-dist-ca6-2020.