White v. Park Forest-Chicago Heights School District 163

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedDecember 28, 2023
Docket1:23-cv-05006
StatusUnknown

This text of White v. Park Forest-Chicago Heights School District 163 (White v. Park Forest-Chicago Heights School District 163) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Park Forest-Chicago Heights School District 163, (N.D. Ill. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

DR. CALETHA WHITE, ) ) Plaintiff, ) Case No. 23-CV-5006 ) v. ) Judge Robert W. Gettleman ) PARK FOREST-CHICAGO HEIGHTS ) SCHOOL DIST. 163; MARGARET ) MCDANNEL, in her individual capacity, ) KIMBERLY ELMORE-PERKINS, in her ) individual capacity, CHRISTINA DUPEE, in ) her individual capacity, JACQUELINE JORDAN, ) in her individual capacity, DR. JOYCE CARMINE, ) in her individual capacity, ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION & ORDER Plaintiff Dr. Caletha White brings the instant complaint against defendants: Park Forest- Chicago Heights School District 163 (“the District”); Margaret McDannel (“McDannel”), in her individual capacity; Kimberly Elmore-Perkins (“Elmore-Perkins”), in her individual capacity; Christina Dupee (“Dupee”), in her individual capacity; Jacqueline Jordan (“Jordan”), in her individual capacity; and Dr. Joyce Carmine, in her individual capacity (“Carmine”) (collectively “defendants”). Count I alleges that defendants McDannel, Elmore-Perkins, Dupee, and Carmine tortiously interfered with plaintiff’s employment contract under Illinois law; Count II alleges that defendants violated plaintiff’s right to due process under the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. On October 23, 2023, defendants moved to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) and to strike plaintiff’s request for punitive damages (Doc. 9). For the reasons discussed below, the court grants defendants’ motion. BACKGROUND According to the facts alleged in plaintiff’s complaint, the District is an Illinois municipality, and may be sued through the Board of Education (“the Board”).1 The Board is responsible for administering six public schools in Park Forest and Chicago Heights, Illinois, and is the sole policymaking body for the District. The District employed plaintiff as superintendent

under three successive employment contracts beginning in 2018. Plaintiff alleges that the Board recently extended her contract in February 2023 after it “unanimously determined Plaintiff had achieved all its targeted goals.” The Board extended plaintiff’s contract until June 30, 2025. However, on May 31, 2023, the Board voted to place plaintiff on indefinite paid administrative leave pending possible reassignment. Also on May 31, 2023, the Board replaced plaintiff with defendant Carmine as interim superintendent. Conversely, plaintiff had replaced Carmine as superintendent when she began in 2018. Plaintiff alleges that at all relevant times, defendants McDannel, Elmore-Perkins, Jordan, and Dupee were members of the Board. McDannel and Elmore-Perkins were elected to the

Board in April 2023, when they replaced two members who had supported plaintiff’s contract extension. Currently, McDannel is the president of the Board. According to plaintiff, McDannel, Elmore-Perkins, and Dupree swore an oath under Illinois statutory law when they joined the Board that “they had no power except when they were voting at a duly noticed meeting of the Board.” Plaintiff alleges that McDannel, Elmore-Perkins, and Dupree were required to undergo training on the principles of good governance for school boards from the State of Illinois, and “[o]ne of the primary principles is that board members are not allowed to

1 The complaint states that the District may sue and be sued through the Board pursuant to Illinois School Code, 105 ILCS 5/10-2, but as defendants point out, the case caption lists the District, not the Board, as a defendant. In their motion, however, defendants treated the Board as if it were the properly named party. interfere in the day-to-day management of the schools in their districts.” While the Board supervised plaintiff and set District policy, plaintiff alleges that she, as superintendent, “had sole responsibility for administering the day-to-day operations of all aspects of the District’s schools.” However, plaintiff alleges that “Carmine contacted members of the Board in March 2023

to urge them to terminate Plaintiff’s contract and pay her to go away.” She alleges that “[o]n information and belief, Carmine hatched a plan with McDannel and Elmore-Perkins to oust Plaintiff from her position and replace her with Carmine after they were elected to the Board.” According to plaintiff, McDannel “set the plan in motion” on May 2, 2023, by “demanding a meeting with Plaintiff and her staff to review all documents relating to the District’s operations, contracts, staffing, and budget.” McDannel was allegedly not acting under Board authority, but rather “was told to do this by individual members without Board approval.” Consequently, “[r]ealizing that this action violated the Contract and Illinois law, Plaintiff felt compelled to notify the Board on May 8, 2023, that she intended to retire on June 30, 2024,

even though she did not wish to retire.” Plaintiff alleges that McDannel, Elmore-Perkins, and Dupee “communicated with Plaintiff’s employees” to “countermand her orders and interfere with Plaintiff’s ability to manage the District.” She also alleges that McDannel “demanded that she fire an employee because she was related to a former Board member,” and “[w]hen plaintiff resisted, McDannel went around Plaintiff directly to staff and had the employee terminated by the Board.” Moreover, plaintiff alleges that McDannel told to her to change the negotiating team that was working on the District’s collective bargaining agreement, and took control over the budget. Further, plaintiff alleges that McDannel “contacted staff directly and demanded personnel information and employment contracts for certain employees.” Plaintiff then alleges that she wrote a letter to McDannel, in McDannel’s capacity as Board president, and the Board’s vice president to request a meeting “to clarify her role as superintendent.” Instead of responding to the letter, McDannel allegedly used her control over the Board’s agenda “to make sure Plaintiff’s letter was ignored.” On May 31, 2023, McDannel allegedly called a special Board meeting to terminate

plaintiff, and before the meeting, told certain employees that plaintiff would be terminated and replaced by Carmine. On May 24, 2023, a former Board member allegedly hosted a live Facebook event that announced that plaintiff would be terminated, and similarly, “[l]eaks to the media” stated that plaintiff would be terminated. Plaintiff further alleges that Elmore-Perkins gave an interview before the meeting, in which she stated that plaintiff was being terminated for her “failure to monitor former Board member’s use of District credit cards,” although Elmore- Perkins allegedly stated in closed session that she “was removing Plaintiff because of the way she was treated when she was reassigned during her employment in the District.” As discussed above, plaintiff alleges that the Board voted to place plaintiff on paid leave, and the Board issued

a resolution stating that plaintiff had resigned as of June 2024. Plaintiff complains that she was not present at the special Board meeting, and she was “effectively terminated.” According to plaintiff, McDannel instructed staff not to notify plaintiff of the meeting, and “[t]he District’s attorney was also instructed to tell Plaintiff not to attend.” Following the meeting, plaintiff alleges that McDannel notified her that she was barred from school property, and ordered staff to retrieve her key card, phone, iPad, and hard drive. According to plaintiff, McDannel also directly announced to staff that plaintiff was removed.

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Bluebook (online)
White v. Park Forest-Chicago Heights School District 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-park-forest-chicago-heights-school-district-163-ilnd-2023.