Kouider v. Parma City School District

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedAugust 19, 2020
Docket1:19-cv-02294
StatusUnknown

This text of Kouider v. Parma City School District (Kouider v. Parma City School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kouider v. Parma City School District, (N.D. Ohio 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO ------------------------------------------------------------------ : SOURYANA KOUIDER, : CASE NO. 1:19-cv-02294 on behalf of her minor child, Y.C. : : Plaintiff, : : v. : OPINION & ORDER : [Resolving Docs. 36, 45] PARMA CITY SCHOOL DISTRICT : BOARD OF EDUCATION, , : : Defendants. : : ------------------------------------------------------------------

JAMES S. GWIN, UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE:

Plaintiff Souryana Kouider sues Parma School District Board of Education and a school-resource officer, Antonio Baez, on behalf of her minor child, Y.C. Plaintiff brings federal constitutional and state-law claims arising out of an incident in which Y.C. had an emotional outburst during recess. During the outburst, Plaintiff alleges that Defendant Baez physically restrained Y.C. and then escorted Y.C. to the principal’s office. In the principal’s office, Plaintiff alleges that Defendant Baez intentionally sprayed Y.C. in the face with a juice box. Defendants Baez and the School District separately move for summary judgment on all claims.1 Plaintiff opposes,2 and Defendants reply.3 For the following reasons, the Court GRANTS IN PART and DENIES IN PART Defendants’ motions for summary judgment.

1 Doc. 36 (Parma); Doc. 45 (Baez). 2 Doc. 48; Doc. 49. Background At the relevant time, Plaintiff Y.C. was an 8-year-old, third-grade student at John Muir Elementary School in the Parma City School District (“School District”).4 Y.C. has anxiety and Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, and he has had behavioral problems at school since the first grade.5 Y.C. is Arab-American.6 I. Playground Incident On September 18, 2019, during recess, Y.C. played atop the school’s jungle gym and refused to let girl students use the jungle-gym slides.7 Y.C. called other students names

and ultimately “got[] a little bit physical and started to push and kind of kick people.”8 Meanwhile, the School District’s lead school-resource officer, Defendant Antonio Baez, was at John Muir to train a new school-resource officer, Nonparty Nick Santora.9 Officers Baez and Santora were leaving the school when they heard a child screaming at the jungle gym.10 They turned back to assist.11 Defendant Baez climbed the jungle gym and confronted Y.C.12 Baez convinced Y.C. to sit down, and Baez and Y.C. went down the

slide together.13

4 Doc. 38 at 8, 34; Doc. 43 at 8. 5 Doc. 38 at 16-23, 27, 33; Doc. 39 at 16; Doc. 40 at 11-12. 6 Doc. 39 at 11. 7 Doc. 41 at 40. 8 Doc. 42 at 15. 9 Doc. 41 at 31-32; Doc. 44 at 13. 10 Doc. 41 at 39. 11 12 Doc. 41 at 41; Doc. 42 at 16. 13 Doc. 41 at 41-42; Doc. 42 at 16. Y.C. ran off to a parking lot area.14 Santora apprehended Y.C., and then Santora and Defendant Baez escorted Y.C. to a bench.15 The officers restrained Y.C. on the bench while Y.C. was “screaming, yelling, spitting, [and] doing all sorts of things.”16 At one point, Baez held Y.C.’s shirt over Y.C.’s face.17 Baez later said that this was to prevent Y.C.’s spitting.18 The school’s “behavior analyst,” Hollee Anderson, later opined that Baez’s shirt-over-the-face technique was inappropriate and filed an abuse report against Baez.19

II. Principal’s Office Juice-Squirting Santora and Defendant Baez escorted Y.C. to Principal Karl Schneider’s office.20 Once in the principal’s office, Officers Baez and Santora sat Y.C. in a chair between them.21 Y.C. continued his temper tantrum—flailing at the officers, screaming that he wanted his “red Doritos,” and trying to escape the office.22 At one point, Y.C. dove under a table and unplugged cords from the wall.23 According to Y.C., the officers pulled Y.C. out from under the table by his feet and ankles.24 Principal Schneider left the office to look

for the red Doritos.25 He returned with Y.C.’s lunch bag, but the red Doritos were not in it, so Schneider left again to continue the search.26

14 Doc. 42 at 16; Doc. 44 at 43. 15 Doc. 42 at 17; Doc. 44 at 43. 16 Doc. 42 at 17. 17 18 Doc. 41 at 44. 19 Doc. 42 at 5-7, 17-18; Doc. 43 at 22-23, 48-49. 20 Doc. 41 at 44. 21 at 50. 22 Doc. 40 at 16-19; Doc. 41 at 50; Doc. 44 at 44. 23 Doc. 40 at 18; Doc. 41 at 48. 24 Doc. 40 at 18. 25 Doc. 41 at 50; Doc. 44 at 44. 26 Doc. 41 at 51-52. While Principal Schneider looked for the Doritos, Defendant Baez offered Y.C. the contents of his lunch bag, including a Capri Sun juice pouch (“juice box”).27 The Parties dispute what happened next. In Y.C.’s version, Officer Baez inserted the straw into the juice box and took a sip.28 Baez handed the juice box to Y.C. but Y.C. did not want it, so Y.C. put the juice box down on the floor.29 According to Y.C., Defendant Baez then picked up the juice box and sprayed it on Y.C.30 In Defendant Baez’s version, Baez offered Y.C. the juice box, but Y.C. did not want

it, so Baez placed the juice box on a nearby table.31 When Baez looked away, Y.C. grabbed the juice box and intentionally sprayed Baez and Santora.32 Baez then grabbed the juice box, and, when Y.C. tried to hang on, Y.C. “sprayed himself . . . underneath his chin.”33 Nonparty Santora originally corroborated Baez’s version in incident reports.34 However, Santora later recanted. In his deposition, Santora testified that, in creating the

incident reports, Baez had pressured Santora to present the facts in a light favorable to Baez.35 But Santora testified that the juice-squirting incident actually transpired as follows: From what I saw, Tony [Baez] put the straw in. It looked like he may have taken a sip, I’m not sure. He gave the juice box to the kid. The kid grabbed it with two hands, started spraying it all over Tony, the desk, slightly me.

27 Doc. 41 at 52, 57-58. 28 Doc. 40 at 20. 29 at 23-24. 30 at 20. 31 Doc. 41 at 58. 32 33 Doc. 41 at 62. 34 Doc. 44 at 42, 80, 82. 35 at 46-47. Tony grabbed it, ripped it out of the kid’s hands, and sprayed it up and down on the kid’s face.36

The Parties also dispute whether Defendant Baez called Y.C. a “DACA” in the principal’s office. DACA is an acronym for Deferred Action for Child Arrivals—a federal immigration policy. In depositions, Y.C.’s sister testified that Baez pejoratively called Y.C. a DACA during the incident.37 However, Y.C. himself testified that he was not called a DACA,38 and both Baez and Santora deny calling Y.C. a DACA.39 After the juice-squirting incident, Principal Schneider returned and gave Y.C. his Doritos and some cold water.40 A school official contacted Y.C.’s father, who took Y.C. home.41 The school suspended Y.C. for 10 days.42 III. Lawsuit Against the School District and Officer Baez On October 1, 2019, Plaintiff Souryana Kouider sued on Y.C.’s behalf against Defendants Baez and the School District for the September 18, 2019 incidents.43 Plaintiff sues Baez in his official and individual capacities, claiming that Baez violated Y.C.’s Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights (Counts I – II). Plaintiff sues the School Board for inadequately training Defendant Baez and Officer Santora (Count III). Finally, Plaintiff brings supplemental state-law claims against both Defendants for intentional infliction of emotional distress, assault, and battery (Counts IV – V).

36 at 17. 37 Doc. 38 at 54. 38 Doc. 40 at 28. 39 Doc. 41 at 15; Doc. 44 at 11. 40 Doc. 41 at 49; Doc. 43 at 44. 41 Doc. 43 at 44. 42 43 Doc. 1. Plaintiff later amended her complaint. Doc. 25.

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Kouider v. Parma City School District, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kouider-v-parma-city-school-district-ohnd-2020.