Ray Gant, Jr., a Minor, by His Father and Next Friend, Ray Gant, Sr. v. Wallingford Board of Education Barbara Beecher, Richard Centner, Phyllis Dechello, Mark Moynihan, Thomas Murphy, Valerie Nolan, Steve Pickering, John Wooding, Suzanne Wright, George Bozzi, Jr., Donna Lange, and Vincent Testa, in Their Official Capacities and Dr. Joseph Cirasuolo, Patricia Cronin, and Grace Candido, in Their Individual and Official Capacities

195 F.3d 134, 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 29611
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedNovember 9, 1999
Docket1998
StatusPublished

This text of 195 F.3d 134 (Ray Gant, Jr., a Minor, by His Father and Next Friend, Ray Gant, Sr. v. Wallingford Board of Education Barbara Beecher, Richard Centner, Phyllis Dechello, Mark Moynihan, Thomas Murphy, Valerie Nolan, Steve Pickering, John Wooding, Suzanne Wright, George Bozzi, Jr., Donna Lange, and Vincent Testa, in Their Official Capacities and Dr. Joseph Cirasuolo, Patricia Cronin, and Grace Candido, in Their Individual and Official Capacities) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ray Gant, Jr., a Minor, by His Father and Next Friend, Ray Gant, Sr. v. Wallingford Board of Education Barbara Beecher, Richard Centner, Phyllis Dechello, Mark Moynihan, Thomas Murphy, Valerie Nolan, Steve Pickering, John Wooding, Suzanne Wright, George Bozzi, Jr., Donna Lange, and Vincent Testa, in Their Official Capacities and Dr. Joseph Cirasuolo, Patricia Cronin, and Grace Candido, in Their Individual and Official Capacities, 195 F.3d 134, 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 29611 (2d Cir. 1999).

Opinion

195 F.3d 134 (2nd Cir. 1999)

Ray Gant, Jr., a minor, by his father and next friend, Ray Gant, Sr., Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Wallingford Board of Education; Barbara Beecher, Richard Centner, Phyllis Dechello, Mark Moynihan, Thomas Murphy, Valerie Nolan, Steve Pickering, John Wooding, Suzanne Wright, George Bozzi, Jr., Donna Lange, and Vincent Testa, in their official capacities; and Dr. Joseph Cirasuolo, Patricia Cronin, and Grace Candido, in their individual and official capacities, Defendants-Appellees.

Docket No. 98-9467
August Term, 1998

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT

Argued: August 12, 1999
Decided: November 09, 1999

Appeal from a final judgment of the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut (Janet Bond Arterton, Judge), to the extent that it grants defendants' motion for summary judgment on plaintiff's race discrimination claims under 42 U.S.C. 1981 and 1983. The District Court, adopting the recommended ruling of Magistrate Judge William I. Garfinkel, determined that there was no genuine issue as to the material factual question of whether defendants intentionally discriminated against plaintiff on the basis of race through (1) deliberate indifference to racial hostility in his kindergarten and first-grade classes; or (2) a decision to transfer him, mid-year, from the first grade to kindergarten. The District Court concluded that, in the absence of a showing by plaintiff of a genuine issue as to intentional discrimination, defendants were entitled to judgment as a matter of law.

Affirmed.[Copyrighted Material Omitted][Copyrighted Material Omitted]

Laura Lee A. Dorflinger, Law Office of W. Martyn Philpot, Jr., L.L.C., New Haven, CT, for Plaintiff-Appellant.

Peter A. Janus, Siegel, O'Connor, Schiff & Zangari, P.C., Hartford, CT, for Defendants-Appellees.

Before: Calabresi, Cabranes, and Sotomayor, Circuit Judges.

Judge Calabresi concurs in the judgment and in the majority opinion, and files a separate concurring opinion.

Judge Sotomayor concurs in Parts I-III of the majority opinion, and files a separate opinion dissenting in part from Parts IV and V of the majority opinion.

Jose A. Cabranes, Circuit Judge:

This appeal presents questions concerning the nature and extent of circumstantial evidence needed to permit a reasonable inference of intentional race discrimination by school officials against a six-year-old child. Plaintiff appeals from a final judgment of the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut (Janet Bond Arterton, Judge), to the extent that it grants defendants' motion for summary judgment on claims, brought under 42 U.S.C. 1981 and 1983, that they intentionally discriminated against plaintiff on the basis of race through (1) deliberate indifference to racial hostility in his kindergarten and first-grade classes; and (2) a decision to transfer him, mid-year, from the first grade to kindergarten. We affirm.

* Although we discuss the pertinent evidence in greater detail below, we begin with some brief background facts that are not in dispute.

This case involves the enrollment of Ray Gant, Jr. ("Ray Jr.") at Cook Hill Elementary School, a public school in Wallingford, Connecticut, during the four-month period from February 23 to June 23, 1993. Ray Jr. entered Cook Hill after his family moved to Wallingford from the neighboring town of Meriden, where he had been in the first grade. Cook Hill was the third of four different schools, in three different towns, that Ray Jr. attended during the 16-month period from June 1992 to September 1993. At Cook Hill, Ray Jr. was initially placed in a first-grade class; after approximately two weeks, however, he was transferred to a kindergarten class, which he attended from March 10, 1993 until the end of the school year.

At Cook Hill, Ray Jr. was the only African-American student in his first-grade class, and the student body of the entire school was roughly one-percent to two-percent African-American. During his four months at the school, Ray Jr. was subjected to racial name-calling by other children, and once, when Ray Jr. was riding the school bus, he was referred to as a "nigger" by a parent speaking to her son at a bus stop.

The school superintendent, after receiving complaints from the Gants in June 1993, investigated the kindergarten transfer and the racial insults. In a September 1993 memorandum to the Wallingford Board of Education, he concluded that (1) "[t]here is no persuasive evidence that supports the allegation that Ray was subjected to constant abuse of a racial nature at Cook Hill"; (2) "[a]ll available evidence indicates that Ray's transfer to a kindergarten class was appropriate"; and (3) "[t]here is no persuasive evidence to support any criticism of how any staff member at Cook Hill addressed this situation."

Ray Jr. and his parents commenced this lawsuit, in August 1994, in the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut. The complaint named as defendants the Wallingford Board of Education, 12 board members in their official capacities, and three other persons the first-grade teacher (Grace Candido), the school principal (Patricia Cronin), and the school superintendent (Dr. Joseph Cirasuolo) in their individual and official capacities. The complaint asserted various federal claims, under 42 U.S.C. 1981, 1983, 1985, and 1986, for race discrimination, denial of equal protection of the laws, and denial of due process of law. The complaint also asserted various state law claims for infliction of emotional distress and for violation of Conn. Gen. Stat. 10-15c, which prohibits discrimination in public schools.

Judge Alfred V. Covello, to whom the case originally was assigned, granted defendants' motion to dismiss pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6). The District Court concluded that the complaint set forth only "naked assertions" of race discrimination and that plaintiffs, by attaching the above-referenced superintendent's memorandum to the complaint, accepted its conclusion of no wrongdoing by school officials. On appeal, we vacated the dismissal. See Gant v. Wallingford Bd. of Educ., 69 F.3d 669 (2d Cir. 1995). We held that the complaint's specific allegations--that Ray Jr. had skill levels similar to other students in the first-grade class, that the transfer was motivated by a desire to allay known racial tension in the first-grade class, and that the transfer violated a school policy requiring parental consent amounted to more than "naked allegations." See id. at 673. We also determined that the attachment of the memorandum was meant only to demonstrate the superintendent's alleged ratification of actions by other defendants. See id. at 674-75.

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