Wisniewski v. Bd. of Ed. of Weedsport Central School Dist. ( 2007 )


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  • 06-3394-cv
    Wisniewski v. Bd. of E d. of W eedsport C entral School Dist.
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
    August Term 2006
    Heard: April 17, 2007                                               Decided: July 5, 2007)
    Docket No. 06-3394-cv
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    MARTIN WISNIEWSKI and ANNETTE WISNIEWSKI,
    on behalf of their son Aaron Wisniewski,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    BOARD OF EDUCATION OF THE WEEDSPORT CENTRAL
    SCHOOL DISTRICT and RICHARD MABBETT,
    Superintendent of Schools,
    Defendants-Appellees.
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    Before: NEWMAN, WALKER, and STRAUB, Circuit Judges.
    Appeal from the June 30, 2006, amended judgment of the United
    States District Court for the Northern District of New York (Norman A.
    Mordue, Chief Judge), granting summary judgment on federal law claims
    to school board and school superintendent sued for suspending student
    for displaying via Internet instant messaging an icon depicting the
    shooting of a named teacher, and declining to exercise supplemental
    jurisdiction over state law claims.
    Affirmed.
    Stephen Ciotoli, Fayetteville, N.Y. (Dennis
    G. O’Hara, O’Hara, O’Connell & Ciotoli,
    Fayetteville, N.Y., on the brief), for
    Plaintiffs-Appellants.
    Suzanne O. Galbato, Syracuse, N.Y.
    (Jonathan B. Fellows, Bond, Schoeneck &
    King, Syracuse, N.Y., on the brief), for
    Defendants-Appellees.
    JON O. NEWMAN, Circuit Judge.
    This appeal concerns a First Amendment challenge to an eighth-
    grade student’s suspension for sharing with friends via the Internet
    a small drawing crudely, but clearly, suggesting that a named teacher
    should be shot and killed.    Plaintiffs-Appellants Martin and Annette
    Wisniewski, the parents of Aaron Wisniewski, appeal from the June 30,
    2006, amended judgment of the District Court for the Northern District
    of New York (Norman A. Mordue, Chief Judge), dismissing their federal
    civil rights claims against the Defendants-Appellees Weedsport Central
    School District Board of Education and School Superintendent Richard
    Mabbett and declining to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over state
    law claims.    We conclude that the federal claims were properly
    dismissed because it was reasonably foreseeable that Wisniewski’s
    communication would cause a disruption within the school environment,
    and that it was appropriate not to exercise supplemental jurisdiction.
    We therefore affirm.
    Background
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    Facts      of   the    episode.     This   case    arose   out   of   an   Internet
    transmission by an eighth-grader at Weedsport Middle School, in the
    Weedsport Central School District in upstate New York. In April 2001,
    the pupil, Aaron Wisniewski (“Aaron”), was using AOL Instant Messaging
    (“IM”) software on his parents’ home computer.                       Instant messaging
    enables a person using a computer with Internet access to exchange
    messages   in    real      time   with   members   of    a   group    (usually   called
    “buddies” in IM lingo) who have the same IM software on their
    computers.      Instant messaging permits rapid exchanges of text between
    any two members of a “buddy list” who happen to be on-line at the same
    time.   Different IM programs use different notations for indicating
    which members of a user’s “buddy list” are on-line at any one time.
    Text sent to and from a “buddy” remains on the computer screen during
    the entire exchange of messages between any two users of the IM
    program.
    The AOL IM program, like many others, permits the sender of IM
    messages to display on the computer screen an icon, created by the
    sender, which serves as an identifier of the sender, in addition to
    the sender’s name.         The IM icon of the sender and that of the person
    replying remain on the screen during the exchange of text messages
    between the two “buddies,” and each can copy the icon of the other and
    transmit it to any other “buddy” during an IM exchange.
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    Aaron’s IM icon was a small drawing of a pistol firing a bullet
    at a person’s head, above which were dots representing splattered
    blood.1 Beneath the drawing appeared the words “Kill Mr. VanderMolen.”
    Philip VanderMolen was Aaron’s English teacher at the time.                   Aaron
    created the icon a couple of weeks after his class was instructed that
    threats would not be tolerated by the school, and would be treated as
    acts of violence.     Aaron sent IM messages, displaying the icon to some
    15 members of his IM “buddy list.”                   The icon was not sent to
    VanderMolen or any other school official.
    The icon was available for viewing by Aaron’s “buddies” for three
    weeks, at least some of whom were Aaron’s classmates at Weedsport
    Middle School.     During that period it came to the attention of another
    classmate, who informed VanderMolen of Aaron’s icon and later supplied
    him   with a copy of the icon.               VanderMolen, distressed by this
    information,     forwarded   it   to   the    high   school   and   middle   school
    principals, who brought the matter to the attention of the local
    police, the Superintendent Mabbett, and Aaron’s parents.              In response
    to questioning by the school principals, Aaron acknowledged that he
    had created and sent it and expressed regret.             He was then suspended
    1
    The Appellants, in something of an understatement, describe
    Aaron’s icon as “distasteful.” See Brief for Appellants at 3 n.1.
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    for five days, after which he was allowed back in school, pending a
    superintendent’s hearing.       VanderMolen asked and was allowed to stop
    teaching Aaron’s class.
    At the same time, a police investigator who interviewed Aaron
    concluded that the icon was meant as a joke, that Aaron fully
    understood the severity of what he had done, and that Aaron posed no
    real threat to VanderMolen or to any other school official.          A pending
    criminal case was then closed.              Aaron was also evaluated by a
    psychologist, who also found that Aaron had no violent intent, posed
    no actual threat, and made the icon as a joke.
    The superintendent’s hearing.           In May 2001 a superintendent’s
    hearing, regarding a proposed long-term suspension of Aaron, was held
    before a designated hearing officer, attorney Lynda M. VanCoske.
    Aaron   was   charged   under   New   York    Education   Law   §3214(3)   with
    endangering the health and welfare of other students and staff at the
    school.
    In her decision of June 2001, VanCoske found that the icon was
    threatening and should not have been understood as a joke.           Although
    the threatening act took place outside of school, she concluded that
    it was in violation of school rules and disrupted school operations by
    requiring special attention from school officials, replacement of the
    threatened teacher, and interviewing pupils during class time.             The
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    hearing officer acknowledged the opinions of the police investigator
    and the psychologist that Aaron did not intend to harm VanderMolen and
    that he did not pose any real threat, but stated that “intent [is]
    irrelevant.” Citing the evidentiary standard followed in New York
    suspension hearings, the decision concluded:
    Substantial and competent evidence exists that Aaron engaged
    in the act of sending a threatening message to his buddies,
    the subject of which was a teacher. He admitted it.
    Competent and substantial evidence exists that this message
    disrupted the educational environment. . . .
    As a result of the foregoing, I conclude that Aaron did
    commit the act of threatening a teacher, in violation of
    page 11 of the student handbook, creating an environment
    threatening the health, safety and welfare of others, and
    his actions created a disruption in the school environment.
    The hearing officer recommended suspension of Aaron for one semester.
    The recommendation was presented to the district’s Board of Education
    (“Board”),2    which    approved   the    one   semester    suspension   in   late
    September 2001.        Aaron was suspended for the first semester of the
    2001-2002 school year.       During the period of suspension the school
    district afforded Aaron alternative education.             He returned to school
    for the spring term.       At oral argument, we were advised that because
    2
    Although Superintendent Mabbett was authorized under the statute
    to decide Aaron’s discipline, the issue was brought before the Board
    due to his prior involvement in the case.
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    of school and community hostility, the family moved from Weedsport.
    The District Court litigation.          In November 2002 Aaron’s parents
    filed   on    his   behalf   the   current     suit   against    the   Board    and
    Superintendent Mabbett, seeking damages under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    .                 The
    complaint included five counts: the first count claimed that Aaron’s
    icon was not a “true threat,” but was protected speech under the First
    Amendment.     It therefore alleged that in suspending Aaron the Board
    acted in a retaliatory manner in violation of his First Amendment
    rights.      The second and third counts alleged that the Board and
    Mabbett, respectively, had failed to train school staff in threat
    assessment,    thereby   leading    to   the    violation   of    Aaron’s      First
    Amendment rights.     The fourth and fifth counts claimed the Board had
    violated New York State Education Law.
    In June 2006, Chief Judge Mordue granted the Defendants’ motion
    for summary judgment. The District Court first found that the hearing
    officer had made a factual determination, entitled to preclusive
    effect, that the icon was a threat and, as such, not protected by the
    First Amendment.     Alternatively, the Court made its own determination
    that the icon was reasonably to be understood as a “true threat”
    lacking First Amendment protection. The Court also found that, in any
    event, Mabbett would be entitled to qualified immunity.                     Having
    dismissed all three federal law claims, the District Court declined to
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    exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the remaining two state law
    claims, and dismissed them without prejudice.
    Discussion
    We see no need to resolve the dispute between the parties as to
    whether the Plaintiffs’ claim was barred by collateral estoppel
    arising from the determinations in the Superintendent’s hearing.
    Instead, we turn directly to the merits of the Plaintiffs’ claim that
    Aaron’s icon was protected speech under the First Amendment.
    In assessing that claim, we do not pause to resolve the parties’
    dispute as to whether transmission of the icon constituted a “true
    ‘threat’” within the meaning of the Supreme Court’s decision in Watts
    v. United States, 
    394 U.S. 705
    , 708 (1969).        Watts concerned a
    criminal prosecution for violating 
    18 U.S.C. § 871
    (a), which provides
    punishment for “knowingly and willfully . . . mak[ing] [a] threat
    against the President.”   The defendant had said at a public rally on
    the grounds of the Washington Monument, “If they ever make me carry a
    rifle the first man I want to get in my sights is L.B.J.” 
    Id. at 706
    .
    The Court noted that “a statute such as this one, which makes criminal
    a form of pure speech, must be interpreted with the commands of the
    First Amendment clearly in mind,” and added, “What is a threat must be
    distinguished from what is constitutionally protected speech.” 
    Id. at 707
     (emphasis added). Ruling that “the statute initially requires the
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    Government to prove a true ‘threat,’” the Court concluded, “We do not
    believe that the kind of political hyperbole indulged in by [the
    defendant] fits within that statutory term.” 
    Id. at 708
    .
    Although    some     courts   have   assessed   a   student’s   statements
    concerning the killing of a school official or a fellow student
    against the “true ’threat’” standard of Watts, see, e.g., Doe v.
    Pulaski County Special School District, 
    306 F.3d 616
    , 621-27, 627-32
    (8th Cir. 2002) (in banc); Lovell v. Poway Unified School District, 
    90 F.3d 367
    , 371-73 (9th Cir. 1996), we think that school officials have
    significantly broader authority to sanction student speech than the
    Watts standard allows. With respect to school officials’ authority to
    discipline a student’s expression reasonably understood as urging
    violent conduct, we think the appropriate First Amendment standard is
    the one set forth by the Supreme Court in Tinker v. Des Moines
    Independent Community School District, 
    393 U.S. 503
     (1969).
    Tinker, it will be recalled, concerned students (two at a high
    school   and   one   at   a   junior   high   school)    suspended   by   school
    authorities for coming to school wearing black armbands signifying
    their opposition to the Vietnam War. See 
    id. at 504
    .           Noting that the
    students’ conduct was “a silent, passive expression of opinion,” 
    id. at 508
    , the Court stated, “In order for the State in the person of
    school officials to justify prohibition of a particular expression of
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    opinion, it must be able to show that its action was caused by
    something   more    than   a   mere   desire   to   avoid     the   discomfort   and
    unpleasantness that always accompany an unpopular viewpoint.” 
    Id. at 509
    .    The Court used several formulations to describe student conduct
    that    would   merit   school    discipline:       conduct     that   (1)   “would
    substantially interfere with the work of the school,” 
    id.,
     or (2)
    cause   “material    and   substantial    interference      with    schoolwork   or
    discipline,” 
    id. at 511
    , or (3) “would materially and substantially
    disrupt the work and discipline of the school,” 
    id. at 513
    , or (4)
    “might reasonably have led school authorities to forecast substantial
    disruption of or material interference with school activities,” 
    id. at 514
    .    Seeing no evidence of any of such risks, the Court ruled that
    the students’ wearing of the armbands was speech protected against
    school discipline by the First Amendment. See 
    id. at 511-14
    .                 In its
    most recent consideration of a First Amendment challenge to school
    discipline in response to a student’s allegedly protected speech, the
    Supreme Court viewed the third formulation as Tinker’s holding:
    “Tinker held that student expression may not be suppressed unless
    school officials reasonably conclude that it will ‘materially and
    substantially disrupt the work and discipline of the school.’” Morse
    v. Frederick, No. 06-278, 
    2007 WL 1804317
    , at *7 (Sup. Ct. June 25,
    2007) (quoting Tinker, 
    393 U.S. at 513
    ).
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    Even if Aaron’s transmission of an icon depicting and calling for
    the killing of his teacher could be viewed as an expression of opinion
    within the meaning of Tinker, we conclude that it crosses the boundary
    of protected speech and constitutes student conduct that poses a
    reasonably foreseeable risk that the icon would come to the attention
    of school authorities and that it would “materially and substantially
    disrupt   the   work   and    discipline    of    the   school.”    
    Id.
        (internal
    quotation   marks   omitted).      For     such   conduct,      Tinker    affords   no
    protection against school discipline.             See LaVine v. Blaine School
    District, 
    257 F.3d 981
    , 989-92 (9th Cir. 2001) (upholding, under
    Tinker, suspension of high school student based in part on poem
    describing shooting of students); Boucher v. School Board, 
    134 F.3d 821
    ,   827-28   (7th   Cir.   1998)   (upholding,       under    Tinker,    one-year
    expulsion of high school student for writing article in underground
    newspaper outlining techniques for hacking into school computers);
    J.S., a Minor v. Bethlehem Area School District, 
    757 A.2d 412
    , 422
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2000) (upholding, under Tinker, permanent expulsion of
    student for placing on web-site picture of severed head of teacher and
    soliciting funds for her execution).
    The fact that Aaron’s creation and transmission of the IM icon
    occurred away from school property does not necessarily insulate him
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    from school discipline.3       We have recognized that off-campus conduct
    can create a foreseeable risk of substantial disruption within a
    school, see Thomas v. Board of Education, 
    607 F.2d 1043
    , 1052 n.17 (2d
    Cir. 1979) (“We can, of course, envision a case in which a group of
    students incites substantial disruption within the school from some
    remote locale.”), as have other courts, see Pulaski, 
    306 F.3d at
    625-
    27 (letter, written and kept at home, that threatened killing of
    fellow student); Sullivan v. Houston Independent School District, 
    475 F.2d 1071
    , 1075-77 (5th Cir. 1973) (underground newspaper distributed
    off-campus    but    near   school   grounds);   J.S.,   
    757 A.2d at 418-22
    (material created on home computer).
    In this case, the panel is divided as to whether it must be shown
    that it was reasonably foreseeable that Aaron’s IM icon would reach
    the school property or whether the undisputed fact that it did reach
    the school pretermits any inquiry as to this aspect of reasonable
    3
    Since the Supreme Court in Morse rejected the claim that the
    student’s location, standing across the street from the school at a
    school approved event with a banner visible to most students, was not
    “at school,” Morse, 
    2007 WL 1804317
    , at *5, it had no occasion to
    consider     the    circumstances    under    which   school   authorities   may
    discipline students for off-campus activities.
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    foreseeability. We are in agreement, however, that, on the undisputed
    facts, it was reasonably foreseeable that the IM icon would come to
    the attention of school authorities and the teacher whom the icon
    depicted being shot.4        The potentially threatening content of the icon
    4
    Judge Walker, who otherwise fully concurs in this opinion and in
    the judgment, would hold that a school may discipline a student for
    off-campus expression that is likely to cause a disruption on campus
    only if it was foreseeable to a reasonable adult, cognizant of the
    perspective of a student, that the expression might reach campus. Cf.
    Skoros v. City of New York, 
    437 F.3d 1
    , 23 (2d Cir. 2006) (discussing
    perspective of reasonable adult who assesses religious display aware
    that it will be seen primarily by children).                 He believes that to hold
    otherwise would run afoul of Thomas, 
    607 F.2d at 1045
     (holding that
    “the arm of [school] authority does not [generally] reach beyond the
    schoolhouse        gate”),   and    would   raise   substantial     First     Amendment
    concerns, as it might permit a school to punish a student for the
    content of speech the student could never have anticipated reaching
    the school, such as a draft letter concealed in his night-stand,
    stolen by another student, and delivered to school authorities,
    cf. Porter v. Ascension Parish School Board, 
    393 F.3d 608
    , 615 n.22
    (5th       Cir.   2004)   (“[T]he   fact    that    Adam’s    drawing   was   composed
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    and the extensive distribution of it, which encompassed 15 recipients,
    including some of Aaron’s classmates, during a three-week circulation
    period, made this risk at least foreseeable to a reasonable person, if
    not inevitable.         And there can be no doubt that the icon, once made
    known to the teacher and other school officials, would foreseeably
    create a risk of substantial disruption within the school environment.
    Whether these aspects of reasonable foreseeability are considered
    issues of law or issues of fact as to which, on this record, no
    reasonable jury could disagree, foreseeability of both communication
    to    school   authorities,     including     the   teacher,    and    the    risk    of
    substantial disruption is not only reasonable, but clear.                       These
    consequences permit school discipline, whether or not Aaron intended
    his    IM   icon   to    be   communicated    to    school   authorities      or,     if
    communicated, to cause a substantial disruption.                As in Morse, the
    student in the pending case was not disciplined for conduct that was
    merely “offensive,” Morse, 
    2007 WL 1804317
    , at *10, or merely in
    conflict with some view of the school’s “educational mission,” 
    id. at *18
     (Alito, J., with whom Kennedy, J., joins, concurring).
    off-campus     and   remained    off-campus    for    two    years    until   it     was
    unintentionally taken to school by his younger brother takes the
    present case outside the scope of [Tinker].”).
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    Although the Appellants contend that the First Amendment barred
    the imposition of any discipline, they make no distinct challenge to
    the extent of the discipline.             Thus, we need not determine whether
    such a challenge would have to be grounded on the First Amendment
    itself or the substantive component of the Due Process Clause of the
    Fourteenth Amendment.        Cf. Graham v. Connor, 
    490 U.S. 386
    , 395 (1989)
    (“Because the Fourth Amendment provides an explicit textual source of
    constitutional protection against this sort of physically intrusive
    governmental conduct, that Amendment, not the more generalized notion
    of ‘substantive due process,’ must be the guide for analyzing these
    claims.”).        And we are mindful that “[i]t is not the role of the
    federal courts to set aside decisions of school administrators which
    the court may view as lacking a basis in wisdom or compassion.” Wood
    v. Strickland, 
    420 U.S. 308
    , 326 (1975).              However, in the absence of
    a properly presented challenge, we do not decide whether the length of
    the   one    semester       suspension     exceeded    whatever   constitutional
    limitation might exist.        We rule only that the First Amendment claims
    against     the    School   Board   and    the   Superintendent   were   properly
    dismissed, and that the state law claims were properly left for
    whatever state court adjudication might be available.               We need not
    rule on the Superintendent’s defense of qualified immunity.
    Conclusion
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    The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
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