Roohbakhsh v. Board of Trustees of the Nebraska State Colleges.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Nebraska
DecidedAugust 22, 2019
Docket8:17-cv-00031
StatusUnknown

This text of Roohbakhsh v. Board of Trustees of the Nebraska State Colleges. (Roohbakhsh v. Board of Trustees of the Nebraska State Colleges.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nebraska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roohbakhsh v. Board of Trustees of the Nebraska State Colleges., (D. Neb. 2019).

Opinion

FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEBRASKA

LISSETTE LARIOS ROOHBAKHSH, as personal representative of the Estate of Fatima Lissette Larios and on behalf of 8:17CV31 next of kin; and NELSON LARIOS, as next of kin; MEMORANDUM AND ORDER Plaintiffs,

vs.

BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE NEBRASKA STATE COLLEGES, and CHADRON STATE COLLEGE,

Defendants.

This matter is before the Court on a motion for summary judgment filed by defendants Board of Trustees of the Nebraska State Colleges and Chadron State College (collectively, “Chadron State” or “the College”), Filing No. 100.1 This is an action under Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, 20 U.S.C. § 1681(a) et seq. ("Title IX"). Title IX is a federal statute banning discrimination on the basis of sex in federally funded educational programs. Id. The plaintiffs are the parents of Fatima Larios, who had been a student and athlete at Chadron State College from

1 Also pending is defendant’s motion for relief under FRCP 56(e) AND NECivR 56(b)(1), Filing No. 148. Chadron State contends the plaintiffs’ submissions in opposition to its motion for summary judgment do not comply with the Court’s local Rules. It requests that the Court deem all the facts in its statement of undisputed material facts admitted, strike the plaintiffs' statement of facts, and grant defendant’s motion for summary judgment. Alternatively, the defendant asks the court to order the plaintiffs to refile their statement of additional facts to be consistent with FCRP 56(e) and NECivR 56.1(b)(1) and to grant the defendant additional time to file a reply brief. The Court has reviewed the parties’ submissions and declines to exalt form over substance. The Court reviews the facts underlying the parties’ purportedly undisputed statements of fact. The Court finds that the defendant’s request should be denied. The facts are sufficiently developed to enable the Court to rule without further briefing. The requested relief is unnecessary. August 2014 until her suicide on January 31, 2015. Plaintiff Lissette Larios Roohbakhsh is also the personal representative of decedent Fatima Larios’s estate. In their complaint, the plaintiffs allege that Chadron State was deliberately indifferent to reports of dating violence against Fatima by one of its students. They allege that if Chadron State had complied with its own policies and Title IX by properly responding to third-party reports of the abuse and took appropriate steps to protect Fatima's safety, Fatima's death could have been prevented.

Chadron State asserts it is entitled to a summary judgment of dismissal. It contends that undisputed evidence shows that the plaintiffs cannot prove the elements of a Title IX claim. First, it argues that Chadron State did not have actual notice that Fatima Larios experienced discrimination while a student at Chadron State, contending that the College’s level of actual knowledge must amount to reliable reports of specific behavior so severe as to deprive the victim of access to educational opportunities. Next, it argues that even if the plaintiffs could meet the actual notice requirement, Title IX is inapplicable because the plaintiffs cannot show that the alleged dating violence was based on sex rather than interpersonal conflict. Chadron State disputes that Fatima Larios was the

victim of dating violence, arguing that Fatima Larios was the physical aggressor. Further, it argues the plaintiffs’ claims fail as a matter of law because the College was not deliberately indifferent in its response to the rumors relayed to it regarding Larios. Chadron State also argues that the plaintiffs cannot show that the college’s deliberate indifference caused the student to undergo harassment, physical assaults, or deprivation of educational opportunities. Last, it argues that the College cannot be held responsible under Title IX for Larios’s suicide because the decision to inflict self-harm is an efficient intervening cause under Nebraska state law. In response, the plaintiffs argue that there are genuine issues of material fact on all these issues. I. FACTS The facts are gleaned from the parties’ respective statements of undisputed facts in their briefs and from the court’s review of the evidence. See Filing No. 102, Defendants’

Brief at 2-31; Filing No. 113, Plaintiffs’ Brief at 3-100; Filing Nos. 103 & 104, Indices of Evid.; Filing Nos. 113 & 114, Indices of Evid. Fatima Larios (“Larios”) and Brandon Finona-Gardner (“Gardner”) first met in their hometown of Monterey, California. Filing No. 104-1, Ex. 5, Deposition of Brandon Finona- Gardner (“Gardner Dep.”) at 12-13. Gardner was a junior at a public high school at the time, and Larios was a senior at a nearby private, all-girls high school. Id. They dated from August 2012 to the date of Larios’s death on January 31, 2015. Larios first attended college in Clarksville, Tennessee, on an athletic scholarship. She played softball on an NCAA Division I team. Larios and Gardner continued to date

in a long-distance relationship. In August 2014, Gardner began college at Chadron State on a football athletic Scholarship. Larios then transferred to Chadron State and began playing softball for Chadron State, an NCAA Division II school. Larios moved into the College’s Andrews Hall and Gardner moved into the College's High Rise resident hall in August 2014. Tayler Saunders was a Residence Hall Advisor (“RA”) at Gardner’s dormitory. During Gardner’s move into the dormitory, his mother told RA Saunders that "it was common for Brandon and his girlfriend Fatima to argue frequently and rather loudly." Filing No. 104-30, Incident Report/Memo of conversation at 1. Saunders stated that she believed "Brandon’s mother had informed her" of Gardner and Larios's arguments as if to issue "a warning so that [the College's] staff wouldn't be surprised by the consistency of the arguments that would likely ensue." Id. In late September 2014, Fatima Larios moved from her dormitory to Gardner's dormitory. Filing No. 103-3, Ex. 3, Deposition of Lissette Roohbakhsh (“Roohbakhsh Dep.”) at 48; Filing No. 103-18, Ex. 46, Residence Hall Contract. Larios’s mother was not

aware of the change. Filing No. 103-3, Roohbakhsh Dep. at 50. Chadron State hosted an on-campus Halloween dance for students on October 31, 2014. There were reports of an altercation between Fatima Larios and another student at the dance. There is evidence in the record that RA Saunders would occasionally consume alcohol in the dorms with students she oversaw on the third floor, which was contrary to Chadron State’s code of conduct. It is undisputed that Fatima Larios began consuming increasingly more alcohol while at Chadron State. During the relevant time period, Robert Stack was the College's Head Softball Coach and Aryn Grywusiewicz was Assistant Softball Coach. Sometime in late October

2014, Coach Grywusiewicz noticed fingerprint bruises on Larios’s upper arm and a huge bruise on Fatima's inner leg from groin to mid-thigh that she believed to be unrelated to softball. Filing No. 104-5, Ex. 9, Deposition of Aryn Grywusiewicz (“Grywusiewicz Dep.) at 34-39. Several players later told Coach Grywusiewicz that Larios had told them Brandon was hitting her. Id. at 39-40. Larios’s teammates, Brooke Wakefield and Rebeka Prokaski, also noticed bruises on Larios’s upper arms. Filing No. 104-15, Ex. 24, Deposition of Brooke Wakefield (“Wakefield Dep.”) at 12-14, 18. They questioned Larios about the bruises, and Larios initially claimed they were softball-related. Filing No. 104- 16, Ex. 25, Deposition of Rebeka Prokaski (“Prokaski Dep.”) at 25.

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Roohbakhsh v. Board of Trustees of the Nebraska State Colleges., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roohbakhsh-v-board-of-trustees-of-the-nebraska-state-colleges-ned-2019.