Kimmel v. Texas A&M University ( 2003 )


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  •                                                      United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    F I L E D
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS         August 19, 2003
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT             Charles R. Fulbruge III
    Clerk
    _____________________
    No.: 02-41166
    _____________________
    HOWARD SCANLAN; DENISE SCANLAN; and LAUREN SCANLAN;
    Plaintiffs/Appellants;
    versus
    TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY; ET AL,
    Defendant;
    TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY;
    J. MALON SOUTHERLAND, in his individual capacity;
    RUSSELL THOMPSON, in his individual capacity,
    RAY BOWEN, in his individual capacity;
    WILLIAM L. KIBLER, in his individual capacity; and
    JOHN J. KOLDUS, III, in his individual capacity,
    Defendants/Appellees.
    _____________________
    No.: 02-41173
    _____________________
    SEAN BREEN, as Administrator of the Estate of Christopher Breen;
    CHRISTOPHER BREEN; JOHN E. BREEN; MARIAN K. BREEN;
    Plaintiffs/Appellants;
    versus
    TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY;
    J. MALON SOUTHERLAND, in his individual capacity;
    RUSSELL THOMPSON, in his individual capacity;
    RAY BOWEN, in his individual capacity;
    Defendants/Appellees.
    1
    _____________________
    No.: 02-41187
    _____________________
    JAMES KIMMEL, as Representative of the Estate of Lucas Kimmel;
    JAMES KIMMEL; WALIETA KIMMEL;
    Plaintiffs/Appellants;
    versus
    TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY; ET AL,
    Defendants;
    TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY;
    J. MALON SOUTHERLAND, in his individual capacity;
    RUSSELL J. THOMPSON, in his individual capacity;
    RAY BOWEN, in his individual capacity;
    WILLIAM L. KIBLER, in his individual capacity; and
    JOHN J. KOLDUS, in his individual capacity;
    Defendants/Appellees.
    ______________________
    No.: 02-41204
    _____________________
    JACQUELYNN KAY SELF, Individually and
    as Administratrix of the Estate of Jerry Don Self, Deceased;
    KATHY MCCLAIN ESCAMILLA, Individually and as Administratrix of
    the Estate of Bryan A. McClain, Deceased; PHIL R. MCCLAIN;
    ANDREA HEARD, Individually and as Administratrix of the Estate of
    Christopher Lee Heard, Deceased; LESLIE G. HEARD;
    ANTHONY POWELL, Individually and as Administrator of the Estate
    of Chad D. Powell, Deceased; BEVERLY JILL POWELL; MATTHEW ROBINS;
    DOMINIC BRAUS; and NANCY BRAUS;
    Plaintiffs/Appellants,
    versus
    TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY; ET AL,
    Defendants;
    TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY; RAY BOWEN; J. MALON SOUTHERLAND;
    WILLIAM L. KIBLER; RUSSELL W. THOMPSON; JOHN J. KOLDUS, III;
    2
    M.T. HOPGOOD, JR., Major General; DONALD J. JOHNSON;
    ZACK COAPLAND; KEVIN JACKSON; JAMES R. REYNOLDS;
    ROBERT HARRY STITELER, JR.; and MICHAEL DAVID KRENZ;
    Defendants/Appellees.
    3
    ____________________
    No.: 02-41222
    _____________________
    JOHN ANDREW COMSTOCK and DIXIE ANN ZINNEKER;
    Plaintiffs/Appellants;
    versus
    TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY; ET AL,
    Defendants,
    TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY;
    J. MALON SOUTHERLAND, in his individual capacity;
    RUSSELL THOMPSON, in his individual capacity;
    RAY BOWEN, in his individual capacity;
    Defendants/Appellees.
    _____________________
    No.: 02-41244
    _____________________
    BILL DAVIS,
    Plaintiff/Appellant;
    versus
    TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY; ET AL,
    Defendants,
    TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY;
    J. MALON SOUTHERLAND, in his individual capacity;
    RUSSELL THOMPSON, in his individual capacity;
    RAY BOWEN, in his individual capacity;
    WILLIAM L. KIBLER, in his individual capacity; and
    JOHN J. KOLDUS, III, in his individual capacity;
    Defendants/Appellees.
    ____________________________________________
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Texas
    ____________________________________________
    4
    Before WIENER, CLEMENT and PRADO, Circuit Judges.
    PRADO, Circuit Judge.
    The above numbered and styled appeals arise from six
    lawsuits filed in the Southern District of Texas by, and on
    behalf of, those injured and killed during the Texas A&M
    University bonfire disaster that occurred on November 18, 1999.
    The district court dismissed all of the plaintiffs’ claims and
    entered a final judgment in each lawsuit.    The plaintiffs
    appealed to challenge the dismissal orders.     After considering
    the parties’ arguments on appeal, this Court reverses the
    district court’s judgments.
    Background Facts
    On November 18, 1999, the Texas A&M University bonfire stack
    collapsed, killing 12 students and injuring another 27.    After
    the accident, the president of Texas A&M University (the
    University) convened a special commission to investigate the
    collapse.   The investigating commission documented its findings
    and conclusions in the Final Report of the Special Commission on
    the 1999 Texas A&M Bonfire (Final Report).    Subsequently, the
    appellants filed six lawsuits.   In the lawsuits, the plaintiffs
    alleged section 1983 claims under the state-created danger theory
    and various state law claims against the University and various
    University officials (the University Officials) whom the
    plaintiffs hold responsible for their injuries.
    5
    From the outset, the district court limited discovery to the
    issue of qualified immunity.   The district court allowed five
    weeks to conduct discovery on that issue and set the deadline for
    dispositive motions four weeks later.   Eight weeks after the
    deadline for dispositive motions, the district court issued the
    orders challenged in these appeals, dismissing all of the
    plaintiffs’ claims.   The court issued the same order in each
    case.
    The district court’s orders were quite clear.   The court
    first dismissed the plaintiffs’ claims against the University as
    a state entity on Eleventh Amendment immunity grounds.   No
    plaintiff appeals that action.
    Next, the district court adopted the Final Report and
    determined the actions of the University Officials did not, as a
    matter of law, rise to the level of deliberate indifference.
    Based on that determination, the district court dismissed the
    plaintiffs’ section 1983 claims against the University Officials
    for failure to state a claim under Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal
    Rules of Civil Procedure.   Each plaintiff challenges that action.
    The district court then declined to exercise supplemental
    jurisdiction over the plaintiffs’ state law claims and dismissed
    those claims without prejudice.   No plaintiff appeals that
    action.
    The Plaintiffs’ Issues on Appeal
    6
    The plaintiffs’ issues on appeal can be summarized as
    follows: (1) Whether the district court erred by relying on
    documents outside the complaints to determine the plaintiffs
    failed to state a claim, and (2) whether the district court erred
    by dismissing the plaintiffs’ claims against the University
    Officials for failure to state a claim.     This Court reviews the
    district court's dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6) de novo, taking
    the allegations of the complaint to be true.     See Vander Zee v.
    Reno, 
    73 F.3d 1365
    , 1368 (5th Cir. 1996); Eason v. Holt, 
    73 F.3d 600
    , 601 (5th Cir. 1996).
    Rule 12(b)(6)
    Rule 12(b)(6) authorizes dismissal of a complaint for
    “failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.”
    FED. R. CIV. P. 12(b)(6).   The district court can grant a motion
    to dismiss only if it appears beyond doubt that the plaintiff can
    prove no set of facts in support of his claim that would entitle
    him to relief.   See Leffall v. Dallas Indep. Sch. Dist., 
    28 F.3d 521
    , 524 (5th Cir. 1994).    Accordingly, this Court has
    consistently disfavored dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6).     See Hall
    v. Thomas,190 F.3d 693, 696 (5th Cir. 1999); Mahone v. Addicks
    Utility Dist. of Harris County, 
    836 F.2d 921
    , 926 (5th Cir.
    1988).   In determining whether to grant a motion to dismiss, the
    district court must not go outside the pleadings and must accept
    all well-pleaded facts as true, viewing those facts most
    7
    favorably to the plaintiff.    See Scheuer v. Rhodes, 
    416 U.S. 232
    ,
    236 (1974); Khurana v. Innovative Health Care Sys., Inc., 
    130 F.3d 143
    , 147 (5th Cir. 1997); Capital Parks, Inc. v.
    Southeastern Adver. & Sales Sys., Inc. 
    30 F.3d 627
    , 629 (5th Cir.
    1994).
    Although the district court may not go outside the
    complaint, this Court has recognized one limited exception.      In
    Collins v. Morgan Stanley Dean Witter, 
    224 F.3d 496
    , 498-99 (5th
    Cir. 2000), this Court approved the district court’s
    consideration of documents attached to a motion to dismiss.      In
    that case, the district court relied on an agreement and an
    assessment about a potential merger between two companies in
    determining the contract was not intended to benefit the
    plaintiffs/stock option holders.       See Collins v. Morgan Stanley
    Dean Witter, 
    60 F. Supp. 2d 614
    (S.D. Tex. 1999).      The fact that
    the plaintiffs did not object to, or appeal, the district court’s
    consideration of those documents was central to this Court’s
    approval of that practice.    See 
    Collins, 224 F.3d at 498-99
    (5th
    Cir. 2000).    In approving the district court’s consideration of
    the documents attached to the motion to dismiss, this Court
    restricted such consideration to documents that are referred to
    in the plaintiff’s complaint and are central to the plaintiff’s
    claim.   
    Id. Whether the
    District Court Erred By Relying on the Final Report
    8
    The district court relied on Collins as its authority to
    consider the Final Report in dismissing the plaintiffs’ claims.
    Like Collins, the plaintiffs in the instant case referred to the
    Final Report in their complaints.    But unlike Collins, the
    University Officials did not attach the Final Report to their
    motion to dismiss.   Instead, the University Officials quoted
    portions of the Final Report in their motions and provided an
    Internet cite.   As a result, the district court had to seek out
    the report in order to consider it in making the factual
    determinations that served as the basis of the court’s conclusion
    about deliberate indifference.
    The University Officials maintain on appeal that because
    they provided the Internet citation for the report, and because
    the report is appropriate for judicial notice under Rule 201 of
    the Federal Rules of Evidence, the plaintiffs had sufficient
    notice of the document so that it was not necessary for the
    University Officials to attach it to their motion to invoke the
    Collins exception.   The district court’s order, however, does not
    indicate the court took judicial notice of the report.   Even if
    the district court had taken judicial notice of the report, that
    action would have been improper because “[a] judicially noticed
    fact must be one not subject to reasonable dispute in that it is
    either (1) generally known within the territorial jurisdiction of
    the trial court or (2) capable of accurate and ready
    9
    determination by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot
    reasonably be questioned.”    FED. R. EVID. 201(b).   The Final
    Report cannot be characterized as generally known within the
    Southern District of Texas or capable of accurate and ready
    determination by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot
    reasonably be questioned.    Instead, the Final Report is
    essentially a defendant-created report that focuses on the causes
    of the bonfire collapse and thanks at least one of the University
    Officials for supporting the special commission’s efforts to
    investigate the disaster.
    In addition to the Final Report not being attached to the
    motion, the plaintiffs did not accept the Final Report as true in
    district court, and complain about the district court’s
    consideration of the Final Report on appeal.     Notably, the
    Scanlan plaintiffs, the Breen plaintiffs, the Kimmel plaintiffs
    and Plaintiff Bill Davis objected to the Court's reliance on
    Collins in their response to the defendants' motion for summary
    judgment.   These plaintiffs distinguished Collins from their case
    stating,
    Collins is unlike the present case in many respects:
    (1) the Commission Report was not attached to the
    Motion to Dismiss; (2) the Commission Report refers to
    , incorporates and includes numerous other documents
    that have not been presented to the Court or referenced
    by Plaintiffs; (3) the Commission Report, while
    insightful, is not central to the Plaintiffs' claims;
    and (4) the other documents contained on the website
    referenced in Defendants' Motion are not even
    mentioned by Plaintiffs in their complaint.
    10
    Although the plaintiffs rely on the Final Report in their
    complaints, certainly the report alone is not central to their
    claims.    Indeed, it is much more central to the University
    Officials’ defenses.    The plaintiffs rely on substantial, other
    evidence to support their claims.1    Consequently, the district
    court’s first error was going outside the plaintiffs’ complaints
    and considering the Final Report.     Even if the Final Report fell
    under the Collins exception, the district court failed to
    construe the plaintiffs’ factual allegations in the light most
    favorable to the plaintiffs.
    Construing the Allegations in the Plaintiffs’ Favor
    Although this Court has never explicitly adopted the state-
    created danger theory, the Court set out the elements of a state-
    created danger cause of action in Johnson v. Dallas Independent
    School District, 
    38 F.3d 198
    (5th Cir. 1994).     In Johnson, the
    Court explained that a plaintiff must show the defendants used
    their authority to create a dangerous environment for the
    plaintiff and that the defendants acted with deliberate
    indifference to the plight of the plaintiff.     See 
    Johnson, 38 F.3d at 201
    .    Later, the Court explained what is required to
    establish deliberate indifference.    In Piotrowski v. City of
    1
    Although the Self plaintiffs and Comstock plaintiffs did
    not specifically object to the Collins exception, those
    plaintiffs presented substantial summary judgment evidence that
    placed the district court on notice that they were relying on
    much more than the Final Report.
    11
    Houston, the Court explained that to establish deliberate
    indifference, the plaintiff must show the “environment created by
    the state actors must be dangerous; they must know it is
    dangerous; and . . . they must have used their authority to
    create an opportunity that would not otherwise have existed for
    the third party's crime to occur.”   Piotrowski v. City of
    Houston, 
    237 F.3d 567
    , 585 (5th Cir. 2001)(quoting Johnson v.
    Dallas Indep. Sch. Dist.).   Even a cursory review of the
    complaints shows the plaintiffs pleaded facts to establish
    deliberate indifference.
    The plaintiffs filed a very similar complaint in each of the
    underlying lawsuits.   In the complaints, the plaintiffs discussed
    how the bonfire grew over the years from a pile of burning trash
    to a structure weighing over 3 million pounds.   The plaintiffs
    asserted that the defendants were well aware of the dangers posed
    by the construction of the bonfire stack and that it had been
    characterized by one of the University Officials as the “most
    serious risk management activity at the University.”   The
    plaintiffs further asserted that:
    The Defendants however, did not use their control to
    see that the Bonfire stack was built in a safe manner.
    Instead, they allowed the Bonfire to grow into a
    massive, complex and dangerous structure. The
    Defendants, through their action and inaction, created
    a terrible peril that clearly could not, and should
    not, have been designated and built solely by students.
    The plaintiffs claimed that the University Officials “created
    12
    this dangerous condition.   They knew it was dangerous.     Despite
    that, they like ostriches, put their heads in the sand and
    pretended the peril did not exist.”
    The plaintiffs explained that the defendant had a vested
    interest in keeping their heads in the sand and not exercising
    supervision over the bonfire because they “used the Bonfire
    experience and tradition as a huge marketing tool to lure
    prospective students to A&M as well as to secure millions of
    dollars in donations from alumni.”    The plaintiffs went on to
    claim that the University Officials “actively encouraged and
    enticed students and alumni to work on the Bonfire stack while
    they turned a blind eye to the peril.”
    In stating their section 1983 claims, the plaintiffs
    included the language “deliberate indifference” to describe a
    particular University Official’s conduct.    Although the
    plaintiffs relied on the Final Report for their characterization
    of the danger posed by the bonfire, the introductory paragraph of
    five of the complaints makes it clear that the plaintiffs rely on
    more than the Final Report.   In that paragraph, the plaintiffs
    allege that “despite clear and overwhelming evidence of their
    culpability, including, but not limited to, the independent
    Bonfire Commission’s (“Commission”) Report, the Defendants have
    failed to take or accept any responsibility whatsoever.”(emphasis
    added).
    13
    If these allegations were construed in the light most
    favorable to the plaintiff, the district court should have
    determined the plaintiffs had pleaded sufficient factual
    allegations to show the bonfire construction environment was
    dangerous, the University Officials knew it was dangerous, and
    the University Officials used their authority to create an
    opportunity for the resulting harm to occur.   As a result, the
    district court should have concluded that the plaintiffs stated a
    section 1983 claim under the state-created danger theory.
    If the district court was going to consider the Final
    Report, the court should have converted the motion to dismiss to
    a motion for summary judgment, given the parties notice, and then
    considered all of the evidence presented.2   See FED. R. CIV. P.
    12(b)(6).   Had the district court done that, the court would have
    been faced with the questions of fact the evidence presents.
    Indeed, the introductory paragraphs of five complaints clearly
    2
    Apparently, most of the plaintiffs saw the hand-writing on
    the wall. In their responses to the defendants' motions to
    dismiss, the Scanlan plaintiffs, the Breen plaintiffs, the Kimmel
    plaintiffs, and Plaintiff Bill Davis objected to the defendants'
    reliance on the Final Report. In particular, these plaintiffs
    asserted that because the defendants were relying on facts and
    documents not contained within the pleadings, the Court must
    convert the motion to dismiss to a motion for summary judgment,
    and asserted that they were entitled to discover evidence central
    to their claims before the Court ruled on the motion to dismiss.
    Although the Self plaintiffs and the Comstock plaintiffs did not
    make this particular objection, they presented substantial
    summary judgment evidence that placed the district court on
    notice that plaintiffs were relying on much more than the Final
    Report.
    14
    indicate the plaintiffs are relying on more than the Final Report
    as evidence for their claims.
    By simply adopting the Final Report as the basis for
    determining the University Officials did not act with deliberate
    indifference, the district court deferred to a defendant-created
    commission rather than presenting the questions of material fact
    to a trier of fact.   Whether deliberately delegating the
    construction of the bonfire stack to students the University
    Officials allegedly knew were not qualified to handle such a
    dangerous project, and whether deliberately providing no
    supervision to students in building the bonfire even though they
    knew the students were not qualified to build the stack,
    constituted deliberate indifference presents fundamental
    questions of material fact.   Oddly, the district court
    acknowledged in a footnote that the existence of deliberate
    indifference is often a factual determination, but stated
    because the Final Report affirmatively discloses that
    the University Officials in this case lacked the
    requisite culpability with respect to the alleged
    violation of the Bonfire victims’ constitutional
    rights, it is not only appropriate, but mandatory in
    this instance to conclude that the University Officials
    failed to act with deliberate indifference, as a matter
    of law.
    Although the district court stated in its orders that “the
    Parties have accepted the Final Report,” most of the plaintiffs
    objected to the district court’s reliance on the Final Report in
    their responses to the defendants' motions for summary judgment.
    15
    In particular, the Scanlan plaintiffs, the Breen plaintiffs, the
    Kimmel plaintiffs, the Self plaintiffs, and Plaintiff Bill Davis
    complained:
    The Defendants assert that the Plaintiffs have accepted
    the Commission's final [sic] Report and findings.
    (State's Brief, p. 2.) That statement is untrue and
    the Defendants have cited no support for that position.
    The Plaintiffs, however, are entitled to rely on
    portions of the Report as admissions by the Defendants
    as it is essentially an A&M report and has been adopted
    by the Defendants.
    Certainly, reasonable minds could differ about the Final Report’s
    conclusions about the University Officials’ roles in the collapse
    of the bonfire stack.    If all of the summary judgment evidence
    presents genuine issues of material fact, those roles should be
    decided by a trier of fact, not the defendants themselves.
    Consequently, the district court erred because it went outside
    the complaints and did not construe the plaintiffs’ allegations
    in favor of the plaintiffs.
    Conclusion
    Because the district court erred in dismissing the
    plaintiffs’ claims against the University Officials, the Court
    REVERSES the district court’s judgments and REMANDS the cases to
    the district court for further proceedings consistent with this
    opinion.
    REVERSED and REMANDED.
    16
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