Montgomery v. Independent School District No. 709

109 F. Supp. 2d 1081, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12800, 2000 WL 1233063
CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedAugust 23, 2000
Docket99-393 JRT/RLE
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 109 F. Supp. 2d 1081 (Montgomery v. Independent School District No. 709) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montgomery v. Independent School District No. 709, 109 F. Supp. 2d 1081, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12800, 2000 WL 1233063 (mnd 2000).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

TUNHEIM, District Judge.

Plaintiff Jesse Montgomery brings this action against Independent School District Number 709 (the “School District”) based on its failure to prevent harassment by other students that he experienced during approximately eleven years of education in defendant’s schools. Plaintiff asserts that the other students harassed him both because of his gender and his perceived sexual orientation. He brings claims under the Minnesota Human Rights Act (“MHRA”), Minn.Stat. §§ 363.01-363.20, the Equal Protection and Due Process Clauses of the United States and Minnesota Constitutions, and Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, 20 U.S.C. § 1681 (“Title IX”). 1 This matter is before the Court on defendant’s motion for judgment on the pleadings against plaintiffs claims under the United States Constitution and Title IX, and a portion of his claim under the MHRA. This matter is also before the Court on defendant’s motion for summary judgment against all claims and on plaintiffs motion for summary judgment in his favor on the issue of liability in connection with his MHRA, Title IX, due process and equal protection claims. 2

*1084 BACKGROUND

Plaintiff attended three of defendant’s schools from kindergarten through the tenth grade, including Lakewood Elementary School, Ordean Middle School, and East High School. Plaintiff alleges, and defendant does not dispute, that while he was a student in defendant’s schools he experienced frequent and continual teasing by other students beginning in kindergarten and recurring on an almost daily basis until the end of the tenth grade, when he transferred to another school district. While some of these taunts were more general in nature, many of them appear to have been directed at plaintiff because of his perceived sexual orientation, including, “faggott,” “fag,” “gay,” “Jessica,” “girl,” “princess,” “fairy,” “homo,” “freak,” “lesbian,” “femme boy,” “gay boy,” “bitch,” “queer,” “pansy,” and “queen.” A review of plaintiffs allegations, assuming them to be true for purposes of these motions, reveals that the verbal abuse to which his peers subjected him was severe and unrelenting throughout his entire tenure in defendant’s school system.

According to plaintiff, the students’ misconduct escalated to the point of physical violence beginning in the sixth grade, when several students punched him, kicked him, and knocked him down on the playground. 3 Another student later super-glued him to his seat. Plaintiff claims that as he entered middle school and progressed on to high school, the harassment became noticeably worse. While the verbal taunts continued unabated, the physical threats and assaults intensified. Students threatened to beat him up on several occasions. A group of students pushed him down in the hallway in front of his family when they were at the school to attend a choir concert. Another student unzipped his backpack, threw his books to the floor and smashed his calculator. Plaintiff also states that during a gym exercise one of the students charged him and sent him flying several feet through the air, and that during hockey drills the offending students deliberately tripped him or knocked him down on several occasions, causing bruises. Plaintiff further alleges that students frequently kicked or tripped him on the school bus, and that while he was riding the bus or in art class students would throw objects at him such as crayons, paper, popcorn, water, chunks of clay, paint brushes, pencils, pen caps, trash, and other small things.

In addition to these incidents, plaintiff claims that on some occasions the physical threats and assaults he experienced were of a more sexual nature. 4 He specifically contends that a student in his middle school choir class grabbed his legs, inner thighs, chest and crotch. He states that the same student grabbed his buttocks on at least five or six occasions. Later another student approached him and asked to see him naked after gym class. Plaintiff states that he experienced similar incidents when he was in high school. According to plaintiff, students in his ninth and tenth grade choir classes sometimes put their arms around him or grabbed his inner thighs and buttocks while calling him names targeted at his perceived sexual orientation. Plaintiff states that one of the students grabbed his own genitals while squeezing plaintiffs buttocks, and on other occasions would stand behind plaintiff and grind his penis into plaintiffs backside. The same student once threw him to the ground and pretended to rape him anally, and on another occasion sat on plaintiffs *1085 lap and bounced while pretending to have intercourse with him. Other students watched and laughed during these incidents.

Plaintiff alleges that the harassment he experienced deprived him of the ability to access significant portions of the educational environment. During his tenure in defendant’s schools, plaintiff generally achieved average to above average grades. Nonetheless, plaintiff states that he stayed home from school on approximately five or six occasions while he was in middle school in order to avoid the harassment. He further states that he did not participate or try to participate in intramural sports because his harassers were participants, that he avoided going to the school cafeteria unless absolutely necessary, and that he avoided using the school bathroom except in emergency situations. When plaintiff was in high school he stopped using the school bus in order to circumvent the continuous harassment he experienced there, requiring his parents and- other family members to drive him to school. 5

Plaintiff states that he reported the students’ misconduct to a variety of School District officials, including teachers, bus drivers, principals, assistant principals, playground and cafeteria monitors, locker room attendants, and school counselors. Plaintiff further states that on several occasions when he was in middle school, he and his parents reported the incidents of misconduct to the office of the School District’s superintendent.

The officials to whom plaintiff reported the misconduct responded with a variety of measures. Defendant gave plaintiff access to school counselors, and he made appointments with them on a regular basis. Moreover, when plaintiff was in middle school defendant required him to attend a number of group sessions with other boys to discuss strategies for responding to harassment. According to plaintiff, defendant removed him from some of his favorite classes and required him to attend these sessions involuntarily.

Defendant also implemented several disciplinary measures against the offending students, although it appears that School District officials applied such discipline inconsistently. Plaintiffs teachers responded to many of his complaints by verbally reprimanding students or sending them to the principal’s office. When students harassed plaintiff on the school bus, the driver sometimes stopped the bus and reprimanded the students.

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Bluebook (online)
109 F. Supp. 2d 1081, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12800, 2000 WL 1233063, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-v-independent-school-district-no-709-mnd-2000.