Mangan v. Hanover Area School District

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 16, 2025
Docket3:22-cv-01578
StatusUnknown

This text of Mangan v. Hanover Area School District (Mangan v. Hanover Area School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mangan v. Hanover Area School District, (M.D. Pa. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA JOSEPH MANGAN, as parent and | natural Guardian of A.M, a minor, CIVIL ACTION NO. 3:22-CV-01578 Plaintiffs, (aPorito, J.) V. HANOVER TOWNSHIP SCHOOL DISTRICT, et. al., Defendant. MEMORANDUM On October 7, 2022, the plaintiff Joseph Mangan (“Mangan”) and his daughter (‘A.M.”) commenced this action against the Hanover Township School District (the “School District”) and individual defendants Katherine Healey (“Healey”) and Russell Davis (“Davis”) seeking compensation for injuries stemming from A.M. being hit by a softball during a softball practice on April 28, 2021. (Doc. 1). The plaintiffs have alleged claims under Monel] liability and state-created danger liability against the defendants for their role leading up to, and on, April 28, 2021. The School District and defendants Davis and Healey have moved for summary judgment. (Doc. 55); (Doc. 57). The matter has been fully briefed by the parties (Docs. 55-64) and it is now ripe for

review. I. Undisputed Statement of Material Facts! This action revolves primarily around defendant Katherine Healey. Defendant Healey was hired by the School District as a secondary health and physical education teacher on August 17, 2005, and her professional tenure was officially approved by the School District on September 12, 2008. Defendant Healey was later appointed as the head softball coach for the School District on February 16, 2016. However, throughout her tenure as a teacher and athletic coach, the complaint alleges that defendant Healey faced multiple allegations of misconduct. e Between the years of 2012 and 2014, defendant Healey was

' The plaintiffs have filed their own “Statement of Undisputed Material Facts” in support of their opposition briefs. (Doc. 59; Doc. 60). This statement of facts by the plaintiffs, however, does not respond to the numbered paragraphs set forth in the statement filed by the defendants. Under Local Rule 56.1, a party opposing summary Judgment must file “a separate, short and concise statement of the material facts, responding to the numbered paragraphs” in the movant’s statement of material facts. M.D. Pa. L.R. 56.1. The local rule does not permit a non-moving party to file an additional statement of material facts that does not respond to the movant’s statement. However, Rule 56(c)(3) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure allows us to consider the plaintiffs’ “Statement of Undisputed Material Facts” for purposes of the current motion before the court. See Fed. R. Civ. Pro. 56(c)(3) (“The court need consider only the cited materials, but it may consider other materials in the record.”). We will do so here.

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alleged to have bullied a student with ADHD and Aspergers Syndrome for his failure to comply with defendant Healey’s locker room rules for swimming class. (Doc. 60, 4 17, 20). The student’s family opted to pursue legal action against the School District for defendant Healey’s actions, ultimately resulting in a settlement agreement between the School District and the family. /d., § 26). e During the years 2014 through 2018, defendant Healey allegedly subjected a student to repeated harassment and bullying measures by purposely targeting the student’s anxiety. Ud., 29, 30). The student’s family exchanged multiple emails and sent numerous letters to school officials and board members about defendant Healey’s allegedly abusive behavior. Cd., TF 32, 33). ¢ Between the years 2016 through 2018, a varsity basketball member coached by defendant Healey alleged that she was subjected to repeated mental, emotional, and verbal abuse at the hands of defendant Healey. (/d., §§ 34, 35). The basketball member stated that players were publicly singled out for losses and driven to tears. Ud. §§ 36, 38). The student’s mother

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attended a School Board meeting to express concerns about defendant Healey, and shortly thereafter, the student decided to transfer to a different school “for the sole purpose of getting away from Defendant Healey.” (/d., {4 40, 41). e During the 2020-2021 school year, a student in defendant Healey’s virtual physical education class accused defendant Healey of repeatedly making sarcastic comments about her fluctuating weight, which was caused from the student’s type 1 diabetes and thyroid disease. (/d., 46, 48). These allegations of conduct also include the varsity girls’ softball team specifically at the School District. On May 3, 2019, one of the softball assistant coaches requested a meeting with the defendant Davis and the principal at Hanover Area High School to discuss various complaints from coaches and players regarding the alleged abusive treatment they have been subjected to by defendant Healey. (/d., § 50). Moreover, on June 4, 2019, the parents of several softball players appeared at a Hanover Area School Board meeting to express concerns about defendant Healey’s behavior toward their children. (/d., §] 52). On April 28, 2021, defendant Healey, along with assistant coach

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Gary Williams, was coaching the School District’s varsity girls’ softball team during a routine practice. (Doc. 55-3, § 62); (Doc. 57-5, § 15). A.M. was a member of the softball team at that time. (Doc. 57-5, § 13). Defendant Davis, the athletic director of the School District from 2004 to June 2020, was not present at the practice as he had left his employment from that position at the time of the practice. (Doc. 55-3, 7 54, 83); (Doc. 57-5, J 17). At some point during the softball practice, defendant Healey asked A.M. to participate in a drill called “soft toss.” (Doc. 55-3. {| 86). The drill involves a pitcher lobbing a ball to a batter while standing behind a pitching screen placed between the pitcher’s mound and home plate, and it is commonly used at different levels of softball. (Doc. 55-3, § 86). The main purpose of soft toss is to improve hitting skills by allowing batters to take as many swings as possible to develop their hitting skills. (Doc. 55-3, § 91). Specifically, as the defendants note, soft toss helps players focus on their swing mechanics, hand-to-eye coordination, and timing by mimicking the conditions of the game. (Doc. 55-3, § 92). Defendant Healey had used the drill with prior softball teams for years, including A.M.’s softball team, without any prior incidents. (Doc. 55-3, 88, 89);

iB.

(Doc. 57-5, § 111). Throughout that time, no one had ever expressed any views that soft toss was so dangerous that it should not be used. (Doc. □□□ 5, 94). During the practice on April 28, 2021, A.M. was pitching behind a pitching screen approximately fifteen to twenty feet away from home plate. (Doc. 55-3, § 102). The pitching screen had no openings or holes. (Doe. 55-3, § 100); (Doc. 57-5, § 40). However, due to the windy conditions on the day of the practice, tarps were placed on the feet of the screen to prevent it from blowing with the wind. (Doce. 55-3, 9 109, 110); (Doc. 57- 5, { 22). The tarps had never been used at any softball practice prior to April 28, 2021, as they had been delivered earlier that day. (Doc. 55-3, § 112). At some point during the soft toss drill, A.M. was hit in the back of the neck/head with a batted ball. (Doc. 55-3, § 126). She was not behind the pitching screen when she was hit in the back of the neck even though she was instructed to stay behind the pitching screen when pitching soft toss. (Doc. 55-3, 4 107, 122). After tossing the pitch that led to her injury, A.M. had decided to turn around and pick up a ball from the ground instead of ducking behind the pitching screen as instructed by the coaches. (Doc. 55-3, { 125). There is no evidence that anyone told A.M. to

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turn around after tossing pitches to the batters. (Doc. 55-3, § 180).

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Mangan v. Hanover Area School District, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mangan-v-hanover-area-school-district-pamd-2025.