Estrada v. San Antonio Independent School District , 575 F. App'x 541 ( 2014 )


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  •      Case: 13-50609      Document: 00512708324         Page: 1    Date Filed: 07/23/2014
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    No. 13-50609                            FILED
    July 23, 2014
    Lyle W. Cayce
    CLAUDIA ESTRADA,                                                              Clerk
    As Next Friend of J.E.,
    Plaintiff – Appellant
    v.
    SAN ANTONIO INDEPENDENT
    SCHOOL DISTRICT
    Defendant – Appellee
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Texas
    USDC No. 5:13-CV-513
    Before DAVIS, ELROD, and COSTA, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:*
    A San Antonio Independent School District employee molested a special
    needs high school student, who brought Americans with Disabilities Act and
    Rehabilitation Act claims against the District. He asserted that the District
    failed to provide reasonable accommodations for his disability and grossly
    * Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not
    be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH
    CIR. R. 47.5.4.
    Case: 13-50609     Document: 00512708324     Page: 2   Date Filed: 07/23/2014
    No. 13-50609
    mismanaged his educational plan. The district court dismissed the claims on
    summary judgment, and this appeal followed.
    I.
    Pursuant to the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA),
    schools must design plans, called Individualized Educational Programs (IEPs),
    which give disabled students “meaningful educational benefit[s].” Klein v.
    Indep. Sch. Dist. Hovem, 
    690 F.3d 390
    , 396 (5th Cir. 2012), cert. denied, 133 S.
    Ct. 1600 (2013).     “IEPs are created and periodically reviewed following
    meetings at which parents, teachers, other school personnel, and educational
    experts all participate.” 
    Id. at 395
    (citing 20 U.S.C. § 1414(d)(1)(B)).
    J.E., who brings this case through his mother, Claudia Estrada, was a
    student at Brackenridge High. He graduated and now attends college. J.E.
    suffers from cerebral palsy, is confined to a wheelchair, and needs help with
    transfers to and from the bathroom.
    The District formulated an IEP for J.E. based on the recommendations
    of an Admission, Review, and Dismissal panel comprised of J.E., his mother,
    teachers, administrators, and special education staff. Over the course of J.E.’s
    pre-K–12 education, that panel met 28 times to formulate and reformulate his
    IEP. J.E. now identifies several flaws with the May 2008 IEP that he and his
    mother signed and agreed to, and which was in effect when the sexual assaults
    occurred. For instance, a box next to the line “Mobility Needs” was checked
    but no additional information was provided; a box for Adaptive Equipment was
    left blank; and the IEP’s Narrative Section says nothing about those and other
    missing or incomplete items. Furthermore, the IEP form contained a checked
    “NO” box next to the question whether J.E. “requires daily assistance with
    toileting,” despite the fact that J.E.’s physical therapist reported to school
    officials that he could not move from his wheelchair to the toilet alone.
    2
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    In early 2006, a number of years before the incidents that gave rise to
    this lawsuit, a Brackenridge employee sexually abused three disabled students
    in a school bathroom. After those incidents, Brackenridge enacted a new policy,
    announced orally but not put in writing: two employees were required to be in
    a restroom with a disabled child at all times. But one-person transfers still
    sometimes occurred when other student aides were unavailable. This was
    consistent with the District’s special education handbook, which demonstrates
    how a single staff member can safely transfer a student from a wheelchair to
    a toilet without extra assistance.
    Later in 2006, the District hired Bret Jernigan, first as a substitute
    teacher and eventually as one of several support personnel for disabled
    students. In the spring of 2008, Brackenridge’s principal assigned Jernigan to
    accompany J.E. and assist him during the school day with his mobility needs.
    Jernigan attended most of J.E.’s restroom visits with a coworker. Sometimes,
    however, no other adult was available to assist Jernigan, and he accompanied
    J.E. alone. Jernigan molested J.E. on three of those occasions. After the third
    incident, J.E. disclosed to his mother what had happened, and she told
    Brackenridge officials.          Upon learning of the events, the Brackenridge
    principal filled out a critical incident report and met with Jernigan.                   He
    confessed soon afterwards.
    J.E. brought suit in the Western District of Texas, alleging claims under
    Title IX, section 1983, the Rehabilitation Act, and the Americans with
    Disabilities Act (ADA). 1 The district court first granted summary judgment on
    the section 1983 claim, and later, in a separate opinion, granted summary
    judgment on the remaining claims. This appeal involves only the ADA and
    Rehabilitation Act claims.
    1   J.E. also brought claims against Jernigan that the parties later settled.
    3
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    II.
    The district court’s grant of summary judgment is reviewed de novo.
    “Summary judgment is appropriate when, viewing the evidence and all
    justifiable inferences in the light most favorable to the non-movant, there is no
    genuine issue of material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a
    matter of law.” D.A. ex rel. Latasha A. v. Houston Indep. Sch. Dist., 
    629 F.3d 450
    , 453 (5th Cir. 2010). We are “not limited to the district court’s conclusions
    but can affirm a district court’s judgment on any grounds supported by the
    summary judgment record.” Cabrol v. Town of Youngsville, 
    106 F.3d 101
    , 105
    (5th Cir. 1997).
    Americans with Disabilities Act Claim
    In support of the ADA claim, J.E. alleges that the District: (1) failed to
    have an accessible, safe bathroom for a wheelchair-bound student; (2) failed to
    provide him with two-person transfers; (3) did not have accessible doors across
    the campus that he could utilize; and (4) did not enact an evacuation plan for
    him in case of an emergency. These failures to accommodate, J.E. contends,
    constitute intentional discrimination that allows him to recover compensatory
    damages. See 
    D.A., 629 F.3d at 453
    –55 (requiring plaintiffs to show intentional
    discrimination to recover compensatory damages under the ADA).
    Undisputed evidence rejects the factual predicate for each of these
    claims. The bathroom that J.E. utilized had safety devices installed to assist
    handicapped students. Beyond that, several urinals in Brackenridge’s main
    building were handicapped accessible.           Two Brackenridge employees
    accompanied J.E. for the vast majority of his bathroom visits, and J.E. presents
    no authority suggesting that the District’s failure to provide two-person
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    transfers on every occasion supports a finding of intentional discrimination. 2
    As for campus-wide accommodations, Brackenridge employs three automatic
    door openers, and the District had emergency evacuation plans for “students
    in wheelchairs” and for J.E. specifically. Based on those accommodations, no
    reasonable juror could find that the District intentionally discriminated
    against J.E. in violation of the ADA. See 
    D.A., 629 F.3d at 453
    –55; see also,
    e.g., I.A. v. Seguin Indep. Sch. Dist., 
    881 F. Supp. 2d 770
    , 780 (W.D. Tex. 2012)
    (noting that attempts to accommodate, “even if imperfect, establish a lack of
    intentional discrimination”).
    Rehabilitation Act Claim
    J.E. asserted two distinct Rehabilitation Act claims in the district court.
    One was that the District created a hostile educational environment by failing
    to protect him from being sexually abused. At the outset of oral argument,
    however, counsel for J.E. conceded that this claim could not survive our recent
    decision in Estate of Lance v. Lewisville Independent School District, 
    743 F.3d 982
    (5th Cir. 2014). Thus, only the following Rehabilitation Act claim remains:
    that the District grossly mismanaged his IEP.
    Lance     thoroughly      set   forth       the   framework     for   evaluating   a
    Rehabilitation Act claim premised on a school district’s failure to provide a free
    appropriate public education.             To “establish a claim for disability
    discrimination, in the education context, something more than a mere failure
    to provide the ‘free appropriate education’ required by IDEA must be shown.”
    
    Lance, 743 F.3d at 995
    (quoting 
    D.A., 629 F.3d at 454
    (internal alterations
    omitted)).     That “something more” is evidence of bad faith or gross
    2 We do not decide whether a plaintiff could succeed on a claim for injunctive relief
    under the ADA based on similar bathroom practices.
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    mismanagement. See 
    D.A., 629 F.3d at 454
    (citing Monahan v. Nebraska, 
    687 F.2d 1164
    , 1171 (8th Cir. 1982)).
    J.E. has not met that threshold; indeed, he is unable to make the
    preliminary showing that the District failed to provide a free appropriate
    public education. 
    Lance, 743 F.3d at 992
    (“At a minimum, then, [a plaintiff is
    required] to allege a denial of a FAPE under IDEA to sustain a § 504 claim
    based on the denial of a § 504 FAPE because ‘§ 504 regulations distinctly state
    that adopting a valid IEP is sufficient but not necessary to satisfy the § 504
    FAPE requirements.’” (quoting Mark H. v. Lemahieu, 
    513 F.3d 992
    , 933 (9th
    Cir. 2008))). The District convened 28 separate panel meetings to formulate
    J.E.’s specific educational plan. Those efforts clearly had an impact as J.E.
    graduated high school and is now attending college. Thus, the flaws that J.E.
    identifies in his IEP—including missing or incomplete items on the IEP form,
    a failure to specifically denote that he needed two-person transfers, and
    generally, what he labels a deficient “check-the-box” approach—amount to, at
    worst, procedural defects. Such procedural defects “alone do not constitute a
    violation of the right to a [free appropriate public education] unless they result
    in the loss of an educational opportunity.” 
    Klein, 690 F.3d at 396
    . We rejected
    similar challenges to an IEP in Klein, holding that a student had received a
    free appropriate public education despite assertions that “IEPs were not
    sufficiently individualized, the collaborative process was thwarted, and [the
    district] afforded no ‘academic benefit’ tailored to his 
    disability.” 690 F.3d at 396
    –97. We noted the student’s strong academic performance and observed
    that the school district did far more “than robotic IDEA form-checking to assist
    his performance in school.” 
    Id. at 398.
    The same is true here.
    The sexual assault that gave rise to this case was horrible, and we agree
    with the trial court that the District should consider reexamining its policies
    in light of these multiple incidents of student sexual abuse. Under our case
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    law, however, there is insufficient evidence to establish that the District failed
    to provide J.E. educational opportunities or grossly mismanaged his IEP.
    Dismissal of the Rehabilitation Act claim was therefore warranted.
    III.   Conclusion
    The district court correctly granted summary judgment on J.E.’s
    Rehabilitation Act and ADA claims. The judgment below is AFFIRMED.
    7
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 13-50609

Citation Numbers: 575 F. App'x 541

Judges: Davis, Elrod, Costa

Filed Date: 7/23/2014

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/6/2024