Sinajini v. Board of Education of the San Juan School District

47 F. Supp. 2d 1316, 1999 WL 305061
CourtDistrict Court, D. Utah
DecidedFebruary 5, 1999
DocketCivil No. 2:74-CV-346S
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 47 F. Supp. 2d 1316 (Sinajini v. Board of Education of the San Juan School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sinajini v. Board of Education of the San Juan School District, 47 F. Supp. 2d 1316, 1999 WL 305061 (D. Utah 1999).

Opinion

ORDER

SAM, Chief Judge.

This case came before the court on three related motions. The plaintiffs filed two motions for orders requiring the defendant Board of Education of the San Juan County School District (District) and amicus curias the Utah State Board of Education (State Board) to pay plaintiffs’ costs and attorney fees pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988(b). The State Board, together with the State Superintendent of Public Instruction, asked the court to consider separately issues of entitlement to fees and reasonableness of the amount requested. In a phone conference with the parties, the court granted the State Board’s motion. A hearing on the issue of entitlement was then held on December 15,1998.

I. Procedural background

In 1974 the plaintiffs, all Native Americans, filed this lawsuit against the District and its members, the State Board and its members, and the State Superintendent of Public Instruction. They alleged that the defendants violated the United States Constitution and various federal laws by (1) expending more funds for construction and operation of schools within the San Juan School District which served non-Native American students than for those which predominantly served Native American students, and (2) failing to provide a bicul-tural and bilingual education program to benefit non-English speaking Native American students. {See Memorandum Decision of May 25, 1995 “1995 Decision” at 2.) The case was certified as a class, with the plaintiffs representing all Native American students in the San Juan School District.

In 1975 the parties stipulated to an agreement which this court, Judge Aldon J. Anderson presiding, incorporated into a consent decree. {See file following doe. # 4 & Exhibit G to District’s memorandum in opposition.)

The final provision of the 1975 Agreement specified, “The parties shall pay their own costs and attorney’s fees.” Id., ¶ 53.

More than seventeen years later, the plaintiffs filed a Verified Motion in Supplemental Proceedings, and the Navajo Nation intervened as a plaintiff, alleging that the District had not complied with the 1975 Agreement and Consent Decree. Judge Anderson agreed to reopen the case and assert jurisdiction “for the purposes of enforcing this court’s Judgment and Decree adopting the terms of the [1975] Agreement.” (Memorandum Decision of May 27,1993.)

Soon thereafter, the plaintiffs filed a Second Verified Motion in Supplemental Proceedings which addressed particular educational needs of Native American teenagers at Navajo Mountain, Utah. Both motions raised claims and allegations which were not contained in the 1975 Agreement and Consent Decree. Because there had never been an adjudication or admission of any constitutional violation in this case, Judge Anderson determined that modification of the Agreement would not be allowed absent “a clear showing of extraordinary circumstances,” which the plaintiffs had not made. (Order Denying Plaintiffs’ Motion to Modify of November 30, 1993 at 7; quoting ¶ 47 of Agreement.) Accordingly, those paragraphs which raised claims and allegations beyond the scope of the Agreement and Consent Decree, were stricken from the plaintiffs’ motions.

[1319]*1319The plaintiffs filed a Third and Fourth Verified Motions in Supplemental Proceedings, and the United States filed a Com-plainb-in-Intervention. The case was reassigned to Judge David K. Winder.

Agreeing with Judge Anderson’s reasoning, Judge Winder refused to consider “any allegations which raise claims or request remedies not contained in either the Agreement or the court’s 1975 Decree.” 1995 Decision at 6. Accordingly, Judge Winder granted the District’s motions to strike various paragraphs in the plaintiffs’ Third and Fourth Verified Motions and in the United States’ Complaint-in-Intervention. Id. at 5-11.

The plaintiffs commenced two new cases against the District, both alleging discriminatory practices against Native American students. Meyers v. Board of Education of the San Juan School District, 905 F.Supp. 1544 (D.Utah 1995), and Chee v. Board of Education of the San Juan School District, No. 2:94-CV-0386. In Meyers, the plaintiffs reasserted the new claims they had tried to raise in their Second Verified Motion in Supplemental Proceedings in this case. See 1995 Decision at 3 n. 2. Judge Winder observed that the plaintiffs could also pursue allegations stricken from their Third Verified Motion by filing a new case or amending their complaint in Meyers or Chee. Id. at 8.1

Judge Winder distinguished this case from original civil rights actions. Id. at 10. He wrote:

[B]ecause this is an enforcement proceeding and not an original civil rights action, the better approach is to limit the United States to arguing about whether the District has or has not complied with its obligations under the “clear and specific” terms of the Agreement and the court’s 1975 Decree.
... [TJhis case is and always has been about whether the District is complying with the terms of the Agreement and the court’s 1975 Decree.

Id. at 10-11 (emphasis added).

The Fourth Verified Motion alleged for the first time that the State Board had also violated the Agreement and Consent Decree. Id. at 4 n. 4. The plaintiffs later filed a Fifth Verified Motion, also directed at the State Board. Judge Winder denied both the Fourth and Fifth Verified Motions on the merits. {See Minute Entry of October 31,1996.)

The Sinajini case then languished while the plaintiffs pursued their claims in Meyers. On November 22, 1996, the parties reached a settlement in Meyers. (See Exhibit G to plaintiffs’ reply memorandum in response to amicus curiae.) Later they stipulated to a significant award of costs and attorney fees for the plaintiffs’ work in that case. {See file doc. #321 in Meyers.) 2

Returning to Sinajini, the plaintiffs filed a Sixth Verified Motion for Supplemental Proceedings and' moved for partial summary judgment on their claims that the District had violated paragraphs 19, 31 & 46 of the 1975 Agreement. Their motion for partial summary judgment was denied. (Order of April 24, 1997.)

[1320]*1320In 1997 the parties reached a new agreement which was incorporated into a new consent decree.3 The 1997 Agreement explicitly “superseded, dissolved and replaced” the 1975 Agreement. (Paragraph 9.) Its stated purpose was:

to resolve the dispute concerning compliance with the 1975 Agreement and related issues, including paragraphs 11-16 of the United States’ Complainb-in-Intervention ..., the issues raised in the referral dated February 10, 1994 from the Office for Civil Rights ... to the United States Department of Justice concerning the District’s compliance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act .., and the issues raised in the October 31, 1996 letter from the United States Department of Justice to the District. (Paragraph 5, emphasis added).

The 1997 Agreement reiterated:

The pending Sinajini

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47 F. Supp. 2d 1316, 1999 WL 305061, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sinajini-v-board-of-education-of-the-san-juan-school-district-utd-1999.