Maday v. Township High School District 211

2018 IL App (1st) 180294, 127 N.E.3d 795, 431 Ill. Dec. 262
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 30, 2018
Docket1-18-0294
StatusUnpublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2018 IL App (1st) 180294 (Maday v. Township High School District 211) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maday v. Township High School District 211, 2018 IL App (1st) 180294, 127 N.E.3d 795, 431 Ill. Dec. 262 (Ill. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

JUSTICE HALL delivered the judgment of the court.

*265 *798 ¶ 1 In this interlocutory appeal, plaintiff Nova Maday appeals from a January 25, 2018, order of the circuit court of Cook County, which denied her motion for a preliminary injunction. The initial question we must address in this appeal is whether plaintiff's interlocutory appeal from the denial of her preliminary injunction motion, seeking her unrestricted use of the girls' locker room for her last semester of high school, is moot as plaintiff graduated from high school on May 20, 2018. We find that it is and dismiss the appeal. At the outset, we find it necessary to note that the parties ignored the scope of an interlocutory appeal from the denial of a preliminary injunction motion with their pleadings before this court and attempted instead to have this court render a decision on the merits.

¶ 2 I. BACKGROUND

¶ 3 A. Federal Litigation

¶ 4 Since 2013, Township High School District 211 (the district) has been involved in federal litigation relating to transgender student locker room use. Initially, the Office of Civil Rights for the U.S. Department of Education (Office of Civil Rights) alleged that the district discriminated against a transgender high school student by denying her access to the girls' locker room. 1 In December 2015, the Office of Civil Rights and the district entered into a Resolution Agreement whereby the transgender student was given locker room access based on her representation that she would change her clothes in private changing stations.

¶ 5 On May 4, 2016, a group called Students and Parents for Privacy (SPP), who represented 50 of the district's families, filed a complaint in federal court, arguing that the Resolution Agreement (and corresponding restroom and locker room access) violated female students' right to privacy and created a hostile environment. Students & Parents for Privacy v. United States Department of Education , No. 16-cv-4945, 2016 WL 6134121 (N.D. Ill. Oct. 18, 2016). They sought a preliminary injunction to deny access to transgender students, which the district court denied in December 2017, relying in part on the privacy protections in place for students in the locker rooms. The case remains pending in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois.

¶ 6 B. Plaintiff's Human Rights Charge

¶ 7 On September 8, 2016, while plaintiff was still a minor, her mother filed a charge on her behalf against the district with the Illinois Department of Human Rights (IDHR), alleging unlawful discrimination in violation of the Act by denying her use of the girls' locker room because she is transgender. On or about September 6, 2017, IDHR mailed its notice of dismissal for lack of substantial evidence to counsel for the parties.

¶ 8 C. Plaintiff's Senior Year

¶ 9 On July 24, 2017, just prior to plaintiff's senior year of high school at Palatine High School, she indicated to her school support team 2 (the team) that she planned to enroll in Adventure Education as her *266 *799 physical education (P.E.) course for her senior year. Adventure Education's curriculum included a swimming component, and students were required to change into swimsuits. The district offered plaintiff use of the girls' locker room if she agreed to change her clothes in a changing stall within the locker room. The changing stalls were located within the girls' locker room near the student lockers and "open" changing areas. Other students regularly used the changing stalls to change clothes. The girls' locker room also had a curtained shower area that provided privacy for showering. According to the district, plaintiff would have had full access to the locker room with her peers, an assigned locker, and full use of the other amenities such as sinks, mirrors, hair dryers, and electrical outlets. She would not have been individually monitored and could have used the locker rooms "openly," as several other transgender students did within the district. However, plaintiff's mother declined to agree that plaintiff would change clothes within a stall and asked that plaintiff be excused from P.E. as she was the previous year. The team agreed to grant plaintiff a P.E. waiver for her senior year.

¶ 10 D. The Current Litigation

¶ 11 Plaintiff, after reaching 18 years of age, filed a complaint in the circuit court of Cook County, seeking injunctive and other relief against the district. Plaintiff alleged that the district violated the Illinois Human Rights Act (Act) ( 775 ILCS 5/5-102 (West 2016) ) pertaining to places of public accommodation by treating her differently from other high school girls solely because she was transgender. Specifically, plaintiff alleged that the district denied her unrestricted use of the girls' locker room to change into required clothing for P.E. class while permitting all non-transgender girls to use the locker room to change without restrictions. In the complaint, plaintiff alleged that the district told her that she could use the girls' locker room but only if she agreed to dress in an "unspecified private changing area" within the locker room, even though the district did not require other girls to do so. Plaintiff further alleged that the district's discriminatory treatment of her constituted illegal discrimination on the basis of gender identity in a place of public accommodation under the Act. See 775 ILCS 5/1-102(A), 1-103(O-1) (West 2016). As part of her prayer for relief in her complaint, plaintiff sought a cease and desist order that would allow her and other transgender girls to use the girls' locker room to change for P.E. on the same terms as other high school girls and to take P.E. during her last semester of high school, which would begin on January 9, 2018. Plaintiff also sought unspecified actual damages, interest, and attorney fees and costs. Plaintiff filed both her complaint and a motion to proceed under her preferred name on November 30, 2017, 3 and the motion was granted by the circuit court on December 8, 2017.

¶ 12 E. Plaintiff's Preliminary Injunction Motion

¶ 13 On December 13, 2017, plaintiff filed a motion for preliminary injunction, seeking to enjoin the district from denying her unrestricted use of the girls' locker room to change for P.E. class during her last semester of high school solely on the basis of her transgender identity, in violation of section 5-102 of the Act. 775 ILCS 5/5-102 (West 2016). Plaintiff sought "full and equal access" to the girls' locker room as required under the Act. 4 Unlike the *267

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Maday v. Township High School District 211
2018 IL App (1st) 180294 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2019)

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Bluebook (online)
2018 IL App (1st) 180294, 127 N.E.3d 795, 431 Ill. Dec. 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maday-v-township-high-school-district-211-illappct-2018.