Saylor v. Board of Education

118 F.3d 507
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 22, 1997
DocketNo. 95-5319
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 118 F.3d 507 (Saylor v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Saylor v. Board of Education, 118 F.3d 507 (6th Cir. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID A. NELSON, Circuit Judge.

A fourteen-year-old schoolboy, Randy Saylor, Jr., got into a wild fight with a classmate in a public school in Harlan County, Kentucky. Their teacher, Sam Saylor, punished each of them by administering five licks with a paddle. The paddling left the boys with bruised buttocks.

Young Saylor and his parents brought a federal civil rights action alleging, among other things, a violation of substantive due process rights guaranteed by the United States Constitution. The defendants (who include the teacher and the school’s principal and assistant principal) ultimately asserted qualified immunity and other defenses in a motion for summary judgment. The district court denied the request for qualified immunity, and this interlocutory appeal followed.

Upon de novo review of the record, and treating all genuine issues of fact as having been resolved in favor of the plaintiffs, we conclude that judgment ought to have been entered in favor of the individual defendants on the basis of qualified immunity. The denial of such immunity will be reversed.

I

Randy Saylor, Jr., was born at Harlan Appalachian Hospital on September 11, 1976. He attended Wallins Elementary School, in Harlan County, from kindergarten through the eighth grade. A younger sister followed him in school.

Resort to corporal punishment was not unknown at Wallins, and a number of the teachers kept paddles in their rooms. Prior to the incident out of which this lawsuit arose, according to the boy’s deposition testimony, Randy had been spanked by five different teachers (but never by defendant Saylor) beginning as early as the fourth grade.

When Randy was in the seventh grade, a teacher named Henry Howard paddled him on the back of the legs hard enough to leave bruises. Upset at this, Randy’s parents told the principal, defendant William Lee, that henceforth they did not want the school to administer corporal punishment to either of their children. (A “Code of Conduct” for the Harlan County schools provided that parents who objected to corporal punishment could so notify the proper school official upon enrollment of the student.) Mr. Lee subsequently testified at his deposition that he told all the teachers they were not to spank Randy Saylor.

When Randy entered the eighth grade in the fall of 1990, his mother testified, defendant Jim Roark, the assistant principal, was told that the Saylors didn’t want their kids whipped in school. Randy’s father, similarly, testified that he told both Roark and Lee at the beginning of the school year that he did not want corporal punishment used on his kids at Wallins. Neither Mr. Saylor nor Mrs. Saylor had occasion to convey this message directly to defendant Sam Saylor,1 Randy’s eighth grade mathematics and history teacher. Sam Saylor had been told by Mr. Lee during the prior school year, however, that Randy’s parents did not want him spanked at school.

A few weeks after Randy started the eighth grade, as the testimony of several witnesses established, Sam Saylor telephoned one of Randy’s parents to report a problem with the boy’s classroom behavior. Randy and his father met with Sam Saylor at the school the following day. In the course [509]*509of the meeting, Sam Saylor testified, Randy’s father told the teacher, in haec verba, “that if he [young Randy] gives you any more problem ... I’m telling you to bust his ass.” The father added, Sam Saylor said, that “if that don’t do any good ... you call me and [looking at the boy] I’ll take you in front of that class and take my damned belt off and wear your ass out in front of that class.” This conversation was reported to Assistant Principal Roark the next day, according to Sam Saylor, and Principal Lee testified that Sam Saylor likewise told him in October that Randy’s father had given Sam permission to spank the boy.

Randy Saylor, Sr., testified that when his son misbehaved at home, he (the father) would whip him with a belt or a switch. In response to a general question by counsel for the defendants, however, Mr. Saylor denied ever having told Sam Saylor that it was all right for the latter to administer corporal punishment. The father subsequently volunteered that

“I have told them people, all of them, if you have any problems with my kids whatsoever in this school, you are to contact me or then* mother. If I’m not here that day, I’ll miss work the next day to be here. If they need whipped, I’ll whip them in front of you.”

Young Randy testified that he remembered his father telling Sam Saylor, “Well, if he gives you any more problems, call me and I’ll take care of him.” The boy was not directly asked if he remembered his father telling the teacher to “bust his ass” if young Randy gave the teacher any more problems—nor was this question posed by counsel for either side during the father’s deposition.

On December 12, 1990, as young Randy later told it, Randy was challenged to fight by a classmate, Brian Turner. Randy was big for his age2—much bigger than Brian— but this seems to have been no deterrent as far as Brian was concerned.

The trouble started in Mr. Howard’s science class, according to Randy’s testimony, when Randy felt something on his shoulder. He thought it was a paper wad thrown by Brian Turner, who was sitting a few seats behind him. Randy threw a paper wad at Brian, whereupon the latter, “cussing and carrying on,” said he wanted to fight. Randy asked him to name the time, and Brian proposed the next break. (As both boys presumably knew, the Code of Conduct expressly prohibited fighting on school property. In this connection the Code said that “any student who finds himselfiherself the victim of harassment should notify a teacher or principal.”)

When the bell rang at the end of the period, the boys went on to Mr. Saylor’s room for their mathematics class. The class was scheduled to begin at 12:45 p.m., but Mr. Saylor was late in getting back from a sixth grade class he had volunteered to teach several days a week during his lunch hour. The sixth grade class was on another floor of the building.3

When Randy arrived at Mr. Saylor’s room, according to Randy’s testimony, Brian proposed getting the fight over with then and there. Randy, unfortunately, agreed. Brian swung first, hitting Randy in the face with his fist hard enough to leave a bruise. The boys fought for a time standing up, and Randy then wrestled Brian to the floor. Suggesting that they needed to stop fighting before Mr. Saylor arrived, Randy let Brian up. The latter came at him again, however, so Randy hit him with a plastic garbage can, scattering garbage everywhere. Then Randy hit Brian in the face with a small plastic water bucket, after which Randy started throwing yardsticks. Brian still wanted to fight, so Randy—“getting mad,” in his words—picked up a folding metal chair with which he intended to hit the smaller boy. [510]*510Other students got the chair away, whereupon Randy picked up a second chair. He testified that he was going at Brian with the chair when the assistant principal, Mr. Roark, came to the door and screamed at the combatants to get to his office. Randy threw the chair down and left the classroom.

When the boys got to the office, Randy testified, Mr. Roark told them that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
118 F.3d 507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saylor-v-board-of-education-ca6-1997.