Todd v. Carstarphen

236 F. Supp. 3d 1311, 2017 WL 655756, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22813
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedFebruary 17, 2017
Docket1:16-cv-3729-WSD
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 236 F. Supp. 3d 1311 (Todd v. Carstarphen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Todd v. Carstarphen, 236 F. Supp. 3d 1311, 2017 WL 655756, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22813 (N.D. Ga. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

WILLIAM S. DUFFEY, JR., UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE

This matter is before the Court on Plaintiffs Daffanie Todd (“Ms. Todd”), R.D., R.D. and D.T.’s (together, “Plaintiffs”) Motion for Preliminary Injunction [3] and request for permanent injunctive relief.

I. INTRODÚCTION

This is a case about how three children will get to and from their elementary school. The Court and the parties agree on the inestimable value of an education, including at the elementary school level. That goal has been impeded for these three children by their nonattendance in classes for weeks before this action was filed. At the Court’s urging, and with the [1316]*1316help of volunteers, the children have been transported to and from school while this matter is .litigated.1 That a court had to be the driving force behind these arrangements illustrates, the frustration of this case. Sometimes it -takes- time to understand the underlying issues in litigation. It took two evidentiary hearings, and multiple legal submissions, for the Court to discover what is really impeding the children’s access to their elementary school.

II. FINDINGS OF FACT

A. Introduction

The Court is required to make specific findings of fact in this action because Plaintiffs’ claims for injunctive relief were tried without a jury. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 52(a); United States v. Lopez, 466 Fed. Appx. 829, 831 (11th Cir. 2012).2 Having carefully “weighted] and appraise[d]’’ the evidence in the record, including the credibility of those who testified at the eviden-tiary hearings, the Court states its factual findings below. 9C Arthur R. Miller, Fed. Prac. & Proc. Civ. § 2576 (3d ed. Apr. 2016 Update) (“[T]he district court must weigh and appraise the evidence offered by both parties impartially.”).

B. The Parties

Defendant Atlanta Independent School System (“APS”) is a public school system in Atlanta* Georgia. APS has jurisdiction over approximately 50,000 students and 100 schools, including Continental Colony Elementary School (“Continental Colony”), where Plaintiffs R.D., R.D. and D.T. (the “Children” or “Plaintiff Children”) are enrolled. (Transcript of October 13, 2016 Hearing on Temporary Restraining Order (“2016 Tr.”) at 8-9, 50; Transcript of January 5, 2017 Hearing on Preliminary and Permanent Injunction [32] (“2017 Tr.”) at 133).3 Defendant Meria Joel *Carstarphen (“Superintendent Carstarphen”) is the Superintendent of APS. (2017 Tr. at 158).

Ms, Todd is thirty-seven (37) years old. (2016 Tr. at. 7). In 2002, she was diagnosed with retinal detachment. (2016 Tr. at 10). In 2007, she lost sight in her right eye. (2016 Tr. at 10-11). On June 3,. 2013, she lost sight in her left .eye, and now is blind. (2016 Tr. at 11; 2017 Tr. at 16). Ms. Todd is a single mother with full custody of her four youngest children: D.D., who is fourteen (14) years old, Plaintiff R.D., who is nine (9) years old, Plaintiff R.D., who is eight (8) years old, and Plaintiff D.T., who is five (5) years old. (2016 Tr. at 8). Roger Dennison (“Dennison”) is the father of D.D., R¿D. and R.D. (2017 Tr. at 36). Ms. Todd’s youngest child, D.T., has a different father. (2017 Tr. at 36). The Plaintiff Children are not disabled. (20Í7 Tr. at 56). Ms. Todd also has a daughter, aged twenty-one [1317]*1317(21), who lives in Atlanta and who. has three children of her own. (2017 Tr. at 37, 42). Ms. Todd has eight brothers and. sisters, with whom she is not on speaking terms, and a sixty-nine (69) year old aunt who visits her once a week. (2016 Tr. at 17; 2017. Tr. at 33-34).4 Both of Ms. Todd’s parents are deceased. (2017 Tr. at 33). Ms. Todd is the only adult who lives, in her home. (2016 Tr. at 17). .

Ms. Todd is unemployed and receives food stamps under the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, free housing and utilities under Section 8 of the Housing Act of 1937, and approximately $737 per month in Social Security disability benefits. (2016 Tr. at 10, 21-22). Her food stamps cover the cost of the groceries' that she buys. (2016 Tr. at 22). Although Ms. Todd obtained court orders requiring Den-nison and D.T.’s father to provide her with monthly child support payments of $384 and $116, respectively, she has not received payments from either individual. (2017 Tr. at 36-36). Ms. Todd claims she has sought, unsuccessfully, to enforce the court orders against the children’s, fathers. (2017 Tr. at 36-37).

Ms.. Todd states that, because of her blindness, she is “currently unable to walk [outside her home] without an accompanying individual holding her arm as a guide.” ([3.2] at 1; see 2017 Tr. at 24). She has not learned to walk with the assistance of a walking cane or a guide dog. (See 2016 Tr. at 20). Ms. Todd generally uses her children as guides when she Walks outside her home,5 or uses MARTA Mobility, a door-to-door transportation service.6 (2016 Tr. at 13, 15; 2017 Tr. at 24). She walks with D.D. and the 'Children to the grocery store at the top of her street. (2016 Tr. at 13). She allows D.D. and one of the Plaintiff Children to walk to the store together without adult supervision, (2017 Tr, at 38-40).7 The grocery store is about the same distance from her home as Continental Colony. She cooks for her children and walks independently in her home. (2017 Tr. at 23-24).

Ms. Todd has always distrusted strangers.. (See 2017 Tr. at 17 (“[W]hen I could .see, I didn’t trust strangers.”)). This distrust intensified after she lost her sight because she. “can’t see the wrong moves that [others] are making or their eyes.” (2017 Tr. at 17). She believes “[p]eople are not right,” “[t]he world is strangers,” and “[everywhere in the world is getting dangerous.” (2017 Tr. at 22, 30, 69, 75, 81). She has taught her children to “scream, holler, kick [and] bite” if “anybody touches [them].” (2017 Tr. at 72-73). Ms. Todd and her children do not leave their home for entertainment or social activities, including because she “cannot see if somebody is putting something in [her] Coca-Cola or [her] water.” (2016 Tr. at 14; 2017 Tr. at 40). She.generally does not allow her children outside of her range of hearing, including to play or interact with other children in their neighborhood. (2016 Tr. at [1318]*131816-17). She “ha[s] to hear [her children] in order for [her] to feel safety.” (2016 Tr. at 16). In her old neighborhood, she allowed other children to come to her home to play with her children, but she did not allow her children to go to others’ homes because she feared for the safety of her children and “didn’t want everybody to know [she] was blind, to be vulnerable ... to different crimes.” (2016 Tr. at 16-17).

C. APS Transportation Policy

APS provides transportation, to and from elementary schools, for students who live more than one mile away from school. (2017 Tr. at 124; [31.1] at 3; [6.1] ¶ 4).8 Students who live within one mile of their elementary school live in what is known as the “walk zone.” (2017 Tr. at 124; [31.1] at 3; [6.1] ¶ 4).

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Bluebook (online)
236 F. Supp. 3d 1311, 2017 WL 655756, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22813, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/todd-v-carstarphen-gand-2017.