FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
FOREST GROVE SCHOOL DISTRICT, No. 10-35022
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v. D.C. No.
3:04-cv-00331-MO
T.A.,
OPINION
Defendant-Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the District of Oregon
Michael W. Mosman, District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted
October 5, 2010—San Francisco, California
Filed April 27, 2011
Before: Pamela Ann Rymer, Susan P. Graber, and
Carlos T. Bea, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge Bea;
Dissent by Judge Graber
5459
5462 FOREST GROVE SCHOOL DISTRICT v. T.A.
COUNSEL
Mary E. Broadhurst, Eugene, Oregon, Bryan Michael Killian,
Masai Dennis McDougall, David Bruce Salmons (argued),
Bingham McCutchen, Washington DC, for the defendant-
appellant.
Richard Gunther Cohn-Lee, Andrea L. Hungerford, Nancy L.
Hungerford (argued), The Hungerford Law Firm, Oregon
City, Oregon, for the plaintiff-appellee.
OPINION
BEA, Circuit Judge:
T.A., a former student in the Forest Grove School District
(“Forest Grove”), appeals the district court’s determination
that he is not entitled to an award of reimbursement for his
private school tuition under the Individuals with Disabilities
Education Act (“IDEA”), 20 U.S.C. § 1415(i)(2)(C). On
remand from the Supreme Court’s opinion and our opinion,
Forest Grove Sch. Dist. v. T.A., 523 F.3d 1078 (9th Cir.
2008), aff’d, 129 S. Ct. 2484 (2009), the district court held
that equitable considerations did not support any award of
private-school tuition at Mount Bachelor Academy as a result
of Forest Grove’s failure to provide T.A. with a Free Appro-
priate Public Education (“FAPE”) under the IDEA. Because
the district court did not abuse its discretion when it deter-
mined T.A.’s parents enrolled him at Mount Bachelor for
non-educational reasons, we affirm.
FOREST GROVE SCHOOL DISTRICT v. T.A. 5463
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The facts of this case were published in Forest Grove Sch.
Dist. v. T.A., 523 F.3d 1078, 1081-83 (9th Cir. 2008) (“Forest
Grove I”), and we repeat them here only to the extent neces-
sary to explain our decision today. T.A. was enrolled in the
Forest Grove School District from kindergarten until the
spring semester of his junior year in high school, when his
parents removed him from public school and enrolled him at
Mount Bachelor Academy—a private boarding school which
charged $5,200 a month for room and board.
At Forest Grove High School, T.A.’s scholastic perfor-
mance had been poor; he earned mostly C’s and D’s. When
T.A. was a freshman, his parents requested that he be evalu-
ated for a learning disability. If T.A. had a learning disability,
he might have been eligible for special education services
under the IDEA. See 20 U.S.C. § 1401(3)(A) (children with
specific learning disabilities are eligible for services under the
IDEA if “by reason thereof, [the child] needs special educa-
tion and related services”). Although Forest Grove evaluated
T.A. and concluded he did not have a specific learning dis-
ability, school staff noted in an internal memo that he might
have Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD).1
ADHD is a separate basis under which T.A. would have been
eligible for special education services. Id. T.A.’s parents were
informed in June 2001 he did not have a learning disability
and was therefore ineligible for special education services.
T.A. continued to earn mostly C’s and D’s throughout his
sophomore and junior years of high school. Forest Grove did
not undertake any additional action with respect to its internal
memorandum that T.A. might have ADHD.
1
As we explained in Forest Grove I, “ADHD is classified as a mental
disorder. A person with ADHD often has symptoms similar to those expe-
rienced by a person with a learning disability, but ADHD is a disorder dis-
tinct from learning disabilities. . . . The evaluation of T.A. for a learning
disability therefore did not encompass an evaluation for ADHD.” Forest
Grove I, 523 F.3d at 1081 n. 1.
5464 FOREST GROVE SCHOOL DISTRICT v. T.A.
In fall 2002—during T.A.’s junior year of high school—he
began to use marijuana at least three or four times a day.
Sometimes, T.A. was so highly dosed with marijuana he
could not speak or get out of bed. T.A.’s parents found drug
paraphernalia in his room. His parents also discovered he had
made $1200 worth of “1-900” pornographic phone calls, and
they removed the family computer from their home after they
discovered T.A. had visited Internet pornography sites. On
February 11, 2003, T.A. ran away from home, but was
returned to his parents by the police several days later. In
response to T.A.’s escalating behavioral problems, T.A.’s par-
ents took him to Dr. Michael Fulop, a psychiatrist, who con-
ducted several tests and evaluations of T.A. in late January
and February 2003. After T.A. ran away from home—but
without seeking intervention by, or services from, the school
district—T.A.’s parents removed T.A. from school and
enrolled him in a three-week program for troubled youth at
Freer Wilderness Therapy Expeditions in March 2003.2 At a
family therapy session held at Freer, T.A. informed his par-
ents he had used cocaine.
Dr. Fulop completed his report on T.A on March 15, 2003,
while T.A. was enrolled at Freer. Dr. Fulop diagnosed T.A.
with ADHD, as well as depression and marijuana addiction.
On March 23, 2003—upon T.A.’s return from Freer—his par-
ents immediately removed him from public school and
enrolled him at Mount Bachelor Academy. Subsequently, on
April 18, 2003, T.A.’s parents filed an IDEA complaint
against Forest Grove, which claimed Forest Grove had not
provided T.A. with a FAPE under the IDEA. As required by
the IDEA, T.A.’s parents requested an administrative due pro-
cess hearing. See 20 U.S.C. § 1415(f). The assigned hearing
officer continued the matter to allow Forest Grove to evaluate
T.A. for ADHD.
2
Freer Wilderness Therapy Expedition is not a school; instead, it is a
residential treatment program for troubled teens. Freer is licensed as a
Mental Health and Drug and Alcohol treatment program by the state of
Oregon.
FOREST GROVE SCHOOL DISTRICT v. T.A. 5465
On July 7, 2003, a team of Forest Grove’s medical and edu-
cational specialists confirmed Dr. Fulop’s diagnosis that T.A.
had ADHD. On August 26, 2003, a similar team determined
T.A. was not eligible for services or accommodations under
the IDEA, because his ADHD did not have a severe adverse
effect on his academic performance.
On January 26, 2004, the hearing officer assigned to T.A.’s
case held that T.A. was disabled, that the diagnosis had a
severe adverse effect on his academic performance, and that
Forest Grove had thus failed to provide T.A. with a FAPE.
Thus, the hearing officer held T.A.’s parents were entitled to
reimbursement for the full cost of T.A.’s Mount Bachelor
tuition.3 Forest Grove appealed the hearing officer’s decision
in federal district court. The district court reversed the hearing
officer’s grant of reimbursement to T.A.’s parents. The dis-
trict court held T.A. was statutorily ineligible for reimburse-
ment of private school expenses under 20 U.S.C.
§ 1412(a)(10)(C) because he had never previously received
special education. Forest Grove Sch. Dist. v. T.A., 640 F.
Supp.2d 1320, 1335 (D. Or. 2005). Section 1412(a)(10)(C)
provides for private school reimbursement only for children
with disabilities who are denied a FAPE in public school and
“who previously received special education and related ser-
vices.” Further, the district court held that “[e]ven assuming
that tuition reimbursement may be ordered in an extreme case
for a student not receiving special education services,” T.A.’s
case was not sufficiently “extreme” to require such reimburse-
ment. Id. at 1334 (emphasis added).
3
T.A.’s parents also contended they were entitled to reimbursement for
the cost of Dr. Fulop’s evaluation, and for the cost of the Freer expedition.
The hearing officer denied reimbursement for Freer because it was not an
appropriate placement for a child with a disability. The hearing officer fur-
ther denied reimbursement for Dr. Fulop’s evaluation because T.A. first
presented that claim to the hearing officer in his opening brief. Neither of
these claims are the subject of this appeal.
5466 FOREST GROVE SCHOOL DISTRICT v. T.A.
We reversed. We held that under “general principles of
equity,” students who had not previously been diagnosed with
disabilities—and thus, did not previously receive special edu-
cation services—are nevertheless entitled to private school
reimbursement under 20 U.S.C. § 1415(i)(2)(C), which pro-
vides that the court “shall grant such relief as the court deter-
mines is appropriate” in actions brought under the IDEA.
Forest Grove I, 523 F.3d at 1088. Moreover, we found “noth-
ing in § 1415(i)(2)(C), Supreme Court precedent, or our own
precedent [to suggest] that tuition reimbursement is available
only in extreme cases for parents who place their child in pri-
vate school before receiving special education and related ser-
vices in public school.” Id. (emphasis in the original). We
thus remanded this case to the district court to consider “all
relevant factors in determining whether to grant reimburse-
ment and the amount of the reimbursement.” Id. at 1088-89.
In part, we held:
We are mindful that the Hearing Officer found that
T.A.’s parents sent him to Mount Bachelor Academy
not only because of his disabilities, but also for rea-
sons unrelated to his disabilities (i.e., substance
abuse and behavioral problems), and the district
court would be acting within its discretion to con-
sider that factor as well.
Id. at 1089. The Supreme Court affirmed. Forest Grove Sch.
Dist. v. T.A., 129 S. Ct. 2484 (2009).
On remand, the district court reconsidered the case in light
of the factors under the “general principles of equity” we set
out in Forest Grove I, 523 F.3d at 1088, and denied T.A. and
his parents tuition reimbursement. The district court held that
the “decisive factor in this case is that T.A.’s parents appear
to have enrolled T.A. in [Mount Bachelor] not because of any
disability recognized by the IDEA but because of his drug
abuse and behavioral problems.” The district court held the
“timing of the change in schools is instructive,” noting that
FOREST GROVE SCHOOL DISTRICT v. T.A. 5467
T.A.’s enrollment at Mount Bachelor followed his descent
into increasingly severe drug addiction, his decision to run
away from home, his calls to 1-900 sex lines, and his use of
Internet pornography sites, none of which events were attrib-
utable to any IDEA-defined disabilities. Moreover, the district
court noted that T.A.’s father said nothing on the Mount
Bachelor application about T.A.’s ADHD or schoolwork in
response to a question which asked “what specific events pre-
cipitated enrollment in the program?” Instead, T.A.’s father
listed “inappropriate behavior, depression, opposition, drug
use, runaway.”
On appeal, T.A. contends the district court abused its dis-
cretion when it held T.A. and his parents were not entitled to
reimbursement.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review for abuse of discretion a district court’s equita-
ble determination to grant or deny reimbursement for private
school tuition under the IDEA. Forest Grove Sch. Dist. v.
T.A., 523 F.3d 1078, 1084 (9th Cir. 2008). We reverse a dis-
trict court’s decision under the abuse of discretion standard
only if the district court’s decision was “[1] illogical, [2]
implausible, or [3] without support in inferences that may be
drawn from the facts in the record.” United States v. Hinkson,
585 F.3d 1247, 1263 (9th Cir. 2009) (en banc).
III. DISCUSSION
[1] We first reject T.A.’s contention that, as a matter of
law, his parents’ subjective reasons for private school enroll-
ment cannot be a valid equitable consideration. In Forest
Grove I, we specifically held:
We are mindful that the Hearing Officer found that
T.A.’s parents sent him to Mount Bachelor Academy
not only because of his disabilities, but also for rea-
5468 FOREST GROVE SCHOOL DISTRICT v. T.A.
sons unrelated to his disabilities (i.e., substance
abuse and behavioral problems), and the district
court would be acting within its discretion to con-
sider that factor as well.
523 F.3d at 1089. That holding is the law of the case, and no
exception to the doctrine applies here.
[2] We disagree with the dissent that this sentence is a
“finding of fact” which required the district court to hold that
T.A.’s enrollment was precipitated in part by his disabilities.
Contrary to the dissent’s assertions, see Dissent at 5475 n. 1,
the hearing officer never made an explicit finding of fact as
to the reasons T.A.’s parents enrolled him at Mount Bachelor.4
And as an appellate court, we are not in the business of mak-
ing findings of fact. The passage cited above simply stated
that the district court had discretion to consider the reasons for
T.A.’s enrollment at Mount Bachelor as an equitable factor on
remand. The section in which this sentence was included
instructed the district court, under general principals of equity,
to consider “all relevant factors in determining whether to
grant the reimbursement and the amount of the reimburse-
ment.”5 Forest Grove I, 523 F.3d at 1088-89.
4
On the contrary: although the hearing officer generally discussed both
T.A.’s behavioral and academic difficulties and the dual services Mount
Bachelor provided, it held “it was T.A.’s escalating drug abuse, depression
and out of control behavior that caused his parents to remove him . . . from
[Forest Grove High School.]” (emphasis added). As the hearing officer
made no explicit factual finding as to the reasons for enrollment at Mount
Bachelor—and the closest it came to doing so suggested enrollment was
precipitated exclusively by drug abuse, depression, and behavioral
problems—Forest Grove should not be penalized for its failure to appeal
this nonexistent factual finding.
5
We also find unpersuasive the dissent’s contention that the district
court was required explicitly to state that it was rejecting the Hearing Offi-
cer’s factual findings. See Dissent at 5474. Nothing in Ojai Unified Sch.
Dist. v. Jackson, 4 F.3d 1467, 1474 (9th Cir. 1993) requires a district court
to recite some liturgical phrases effectively to reject the Hearing Officer’s
factual finding, and here (as discussed infra), the district court’s analysis
was sufficient to support its factual findings.
FOREST GROVE SCHOOL DISTRICT v. T.A. 5469
Moreover, even were we to read this passage as “fact-
finding” on appellate review—fact-finding which required the
district court to accept that T.A. was sent to Mount Bachelor
for both reasons related and unrelated to his disability—the
district court was not required to award reimbursement to
T.A. simply because T.A.’s enrollment in private school was
motivated in part by his disabilities. Section 1415(i)(2)(C)(ii)
—the statute under which we instructed the district court to
consider possible reimbursement under “general principles of
equity,” Forest Grove I, 523 F.3d at 1088—provides that “the
court . . . basing its decision on the preponderance of the evi-
dence, shall grant such relief as the court determines is appro-
priate.” 20 U.S.C. § 1415(i)(2)(C)(iii). The “preponderance of
the evidence” standard necessarily requires the district court
to weigh the equitable factors. Even if the district court were
bound by a factual determination that T.A.’s enrollment was
motivated by reasons both related and unrelated to his disabil-
ities, the court could have held the non-disability reasons so
outweighed the disability reasons as to make reimbursement
inequitable, and hence inappropriate under § 1415(i)(2)
(C)(iii).
Indeed, our remand order instructed the district court to
“consider all relevant factors in determining whether to grant
reimbursement.” Forest Grove I, 523 F.3d at 1088 (emphasis
added). Affirming our decision, the Supreme Court similarly
instructed the district court to consider all equitable factors
“in determining whether reimbursement for some or all of the
cost of the child’s private education is warranted.” Forest
Grove, 129 S.Ct. at 2496 (emphasis added). If indeed the
“factual” finding that T.A. enrolled at Mount Bachelor for
reasons related to his disability was the law of the case—and
if any disability-related motivation for enrollment at Mount
Bachelor requires at least some reimbursement—these
remand orders would not have instructed the district court to
determine whether reimbursement was required. Instead, the
remand orders would simply have instructed the district court
to determine the amount of reimbursement to which T.A. was
5470 FOREST GROVE SCHOOL DISTRICT v. T.A.
entitled. We, and later the Court, remanded for determination
of liability for reimbursement, not solely for damages.
[3] In any event, we hold that there was sufficient evidence
in the record to support the district court’s factual determina-
tion that T.A.’s parents enrolled him at Mount Bachelor solely
because of his drug abuse and behavioral problems. Our stan-
dard of review bears reiteration: to find the district court made
a “clearly erroneous finding of fact,” this court must find that
the district court’s determination was “[1] illogical, [2]
implausible, or [3] without support in inferences that may be
drawn from the facts in the record.” Hinkson, 585 F.3d 1263.
Here, there were ample facts in the record to support the dis-
trict court’s conclusion that T.A. enrolled at Mount Bachelor
solely for non-academic purposes. As the district court noted,
T.A.’s parents decided to enroll him at Mount Bachelor
directly after T.A.’s behavioral and drug problems escalated.
Indeed, although T.A.’s parents had sought IDEA academic
services through Forest Grove in 2001, they did not seek a re-
evaluation of T.A. in 2003 until nearly a month after they had
already enrolled him at Mount Bachelor.6 Moreover, T.A.’s
father’s answer to the one question on the Mount Bachelor
application which asked which “specific events precipitated”
enrollment mentioned only T.A.’s behavioral and drug prob-
lems, not his academic difficulties. Thus, the district court’s
determination that T.A.’s parents enrolled him at Mount
Bachelor because of his drug abuse and behavioral problems
was not illogical, implausible, or without support in infer-
ences that may be drawn from the facts in the record. Id.
[4] The dissent would reverse the district court because
“the only support for the district court’s conclusion concern-
ing the parents’ reasons is one response to one question . . .
out of an 18-page application.” Dissent at 5477. But as an ini-
6
Such an evaluation, of course, was required if the parents were to be
reimbursed the Mount Bachelor tuition as a result of the school district’s
failure to provide a FAPE. See generally 20 U.S.C. § 1415.
FOREST GROVE SCHOOL DISTRICT v. T.A. 5471
tial matter, the district court did not “view” the response in
isolation. On the contrary, the district court explicitly held
that it considered T.A.’s Mount Bachelor application in con-
junction with the timing of T.A.’s enrollment at Mount Bach-
elor, related to the events which showed his escalating drug
and behavioral problems in the months leading up to his
enrollment. Moreover, the district court’s focus on the “spe-
cific events” question was not “illogical, implausible, or with-
out support in inferences that may be drawn from the facts in
the record.” Hinkson, 585 F.3d at 1263. The “specific events”
question was the sole question on the Mount Bachelor appli-
cation which asked what precipitated T.A.’s enrollment at
Mount Bachelor. Therefore, the district court quite reasonably
concluded that the “specific events” question was particularly
useful in determining T.A.’s parents’ motivation in enrolling
him at Mount Bachelor.
[5] We also find no clear factual error in the district court’s
determination that “T.A.’s father said nothing on the [Mount
Bachelor Academy] application about . . . T.A.’s trouble with
his school work.” The district court’s determination that
T.A.’s father did not mention his school work on the Mount
Bachelor application came in the context of the district court’s
discussion of the application question: “What specific events
precipitated enrollment to this program?” Moreover, the topic
sentence of the paragraph in which the district court’s factual
determination is included rejects T.A.’s counsel’s assertion at
oral argument that “inappropriate and oppositional behavior
and drug use could be symptoms of T.A.’s ADHD and that by
listing them on his application, T.A.’s father was enrolling
T.A. in MBA as a result of his ADHD.” “Inappropriate
behavior,” “opposition,” and “drug use” were three of the
“specific events” listed by T.A.’s father in response to the
question about what “precipitated” T.A.’s enrollment at
Mount Bachelor. Thus, read in context, the district court’s
determination that T.A.’s father said nothing about T.A.’s
trouble with school work was in reference to his father’s
answer to the “specific events” question. We thus cannot con-
5472 FOREST GROVE SCHOOL DISTRICT v. T.A.
clude that the district court’s factual determination was illogi-
cal, implausible, or without support in inferences that may be
drawn from the facts in the record. Id.
It is true that T.A.’s father referenced T.A.’s academic dif-
ficulties and ADHD in response to two questions on the
lengthy Mount Bachelor application: 1) “List any academic or
learning differences . . . include . . . ADD, ADHD, etc . . .”;
and 2) “If at any time the student had been diagnosed as hav-
ing attentional or emotional problems: What was the diagno-
sis?” It is also true that T.A.’s father mentioned several
academic objectives he hoped T.A. would achieve at Mount
Bachelor. But the fact that T.A.’s father listed “ADHD” in
response to questions which specifically asked him to list that
condition does not compel the conclusion that T.A. was
enrolled at Mount Bachelor because of his ADHD. Nor does
the fact that T.A.’s father hoped T.A. would achieve some
academic gains at Mount Bachelor Academy—which is, after
all, a school—compel the conclusion that T.A. was enrolled
for academic reasons. This is particularly true in light of the
fact that T.A. was enrolled at Mount Bachelor after several
months of escalating drug abuse and behavioral problems—
and directly after he attempted to run away from home—and
not during the two-year period when ADHD and poor scho-
lastic performance alone, and not drugs and pornography,
were the problem.
[6] The dissent contends our decision today “punishes”
parents who seek to address “all of their child’s needs.” Dis-
sent at 5479. Hardly. Our decision today merely affirms the
district court’s fact-specific weighing of the equities in this
case under our deferential abuse of discretion standard. Thus,
contrary to what the dissent contends, our decision does not
establish a rule of law which requires parents who “seek to
address all of their child’s needs” to “answer each and every
question with the response: ‘Disability.’ ” Id. Instead—in
light of the timing of T.A.’s enrollment at Mount Bachelor,
and a review of his Mount Bachelor application—we con-
FOREST GROVE SCHOOL DISTRICT v. T.A. 5473
clude that in this case the district court’s determination that
T.A. enrolled at Mount Bachelor due to his behavior and drug
problems was not illogical, implausible, or without support in
inferences which may be drawn from facts in the record.7
Hinkson, 585 F.3d at 1262. The dissent apparently reads the
record in this case differently than did the district court. Our
role, however, is solely to determine whether the district court
abused its discretion, not to evaluate the record de novo.8
AFFIRMED.
GRABER, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
I respectfully dissent.
Until the most recent iteration of this case, it has been com-
pletely undisputed that T.A.’s parents sent him to Mount
Bachelor Academy for two kinds of reasons: reasons related
7
Moreover, contrary to the dissent’s contention, the district court did not
deny reimbursement “only because of its view that the parents’ reason for
enrollment was the ‘decisive factor.’ ” Dissent at 5479. The district court
also held:
T.A.’s parents do not appear to have expended significant effort
to secure T.A.’s place at [Mount Bachelor]. In fact, T.A. was
enrolled at [Mount Bachelor] ten days after Dr. Fulop recom-
mended the school. T.A.’s parents do not appear to have done
significant research into schools dealing with children with
ADHD and depression to determine the best placement for T.A
. . . . This factor weighs against requiring the District to reim-
burse T.A. for the cost of [Mount Bachelor], particularly in light
of the evidence that T.A.’s parents enrolled him at [Mount Bach-
elor] for reasons other than his ADHD and depression.
Emphasis added.
8
To paraphrase Judge Farris’s comment in Li v. Ahscroft, 378 F.3d 959,
964 n. 1 (9th Cir. 2004): Our dissenting colleague differs from us on what
is the appropriate appellate function. She would retry. We are content to
review.
5474 FOREST GROVE SCHOOL DISTRICT v. T.A.
to his disability and reasons unrelated to his disability. We
need look no further than our original opinion. “[T]he Hearing
Officer found that T.A.’s parents sent him to Mount Bachelor
Academy not only because of his disabilities, but also for rea-
sons unrelated to his disabilities . . . .” Forest Grove Sch. Dist.
v. T.A., 523 F.3d 1078, 1089 (9th Cir. 2008) (emphasis
added), aff’d, 129 S. Ct. 2484 (2009). “The district court
adopted all of the Hearing Officer’s factual findings, and the
[Forest Grove] School District has not appealed any of those
findings.” Id. at 1087 n.10; see also 129 S. Ct. at 2489 (“The
District Court accepted the hearing officer’s findings of fact
. . . .”).
On remand, the district court found otherwise. The district
court found that T.A.’s parents enrolled him at “MBA [Mount
Bachelor Academy] not because of any disability recognized
by the IDEA [Individuals with Disabilities in Education Act]
but because of his drug abuse and behavioral problems.”
(Emphasis added.) Under any standard of review, I am at a
loss as to why the district court did not clearly err. If it is
established that both X and Y caused an event, then a finding
that only X, but not Y, caused the event is clearly erroneous.
In so ruling, the district court erred in four ways.
First, its decision contravenes the doctrine of the law of the
case. Because the School District did not appeal the two-
reasons factual finding in the original appeal, the district court
lacked authority to reconsider that finding. See United States
v. Phillips, 367 F.3d 846, 856 (9th Cir. 2004) (“The law of the
case doctrine precludes a court from reconsidering an issue
that it has already resolved.”).
Second, the district court’s decision contravenes our case
law establishing that the court must provide a sufficient expla-
nation when it rejects an agency’s factual finding. See Ojai
Unified Sch. Dist. v. Jackson, 4 F.3d 1467, 1474 (9th Cir.
1993) (“The court, in recognition of the expertise of the
administrative agency, must consider the findings carefully
FOREST GROVE SCHOOL DISTRICT v. T.A. 5475
and endeavor to respond to the hearing officer’s resolution of
each material issue. After such consideration, the court is free
to accept or reject the findings in part or in whole. . . . [But]
courts are not permitted simply to ignore the administrative
findings.” (citations and internal quotation marks omitted)).
Here, the district court never stated that it was rejecting the
Hearing Officer’s factual finding—although it was—and,
therefore, never undertook an appropriate analysis. Instead,
the court simply ignored the administrative finding, which it
may not do. Id.
In addition to those independent and sufficient reasons to
reverse, the district court’s decision lacks support in the
record, its third reversible error. Overwhelming evidence,
including testimony, doctor’s records, and other documents,
demonstrate that T.A.’s parents enrolled T.A. at Mount Bach-
elor Academy both for reasons unrelated to his disabilities
and for reasons related to his disabilities. It came as no sur-
prise that the Hearing Officer found that both reasons moti-
vated T.A.’s parents. Indeed, the School District did not
dispute that factual finding before the Hearing Officer, before
the district court, before this court, or before the Supreme
Court. Even after we reiterated in our opinion the Hearing
Officer’s factual finding,1 the School District did not dispute
that finding in its petition for rehearing or in its petition for
certiorari.
One of the many documents supporting the Hearing Offi-
cer’s factual finding was the Mount Bachelor Academy appli-
cation. When T.A.’s parents enrolled him at Mount Bachelor
Academy, his father completed an 18-page application regard-
1
I am puzzled by the majority’s assertion that I claim that we, the appel-
late court, made a finding of fact in our original opinion. Op. at 5468. We
did not. But we did state the undisputed fact that “the Hearing Officer
found” that the parents’ reasons were dual: related to T.A.’s disability and
unrelated to T.A.’s disability. Forest Grove, 523 F.3d at 1089 (emphasis
added).
5476 FOREST GROVE SCHOOL DISTRICT v. T.A.
ing T.A. and his needs. The father’s responses make it crystal
clear that T.A.’s parents enrolled T.A. both for reasons unre-
lated to his disabilities and for reasons related to his disabili-
ties. Concerning T.A.’s disabilities, his father stated on the
application that his son’s “learning difficulties” included “ver-
bal processing [and] ADHD”; he stated that T.A. had been
diagnosed with “ADHD” and “verbal processing difficulty”;
and he stated that his “specific objectives” for T.A. included
“improved verbal processing skills” and “study habits.”2
In reaching its conclusion that T.A.’s disabilities played no
role in the parents’ decision, the district court impermissibly
relied on only one answer, taken out of context. In response
to the one question that queried which “specific events precip-
itated enrollment to this program,” T.A.’s father listed only
reasons unrelated to T.A.’s disabilities; he did not state
“ADHD” or “school difficulties.” But viewing that response
in isolation makes no sense. As noted above, T.A.’s father
repeatedly expressed his desire, on the very same application
form, that the private school address T.A.’s ADHD and
school difficulties, including in his responses to the surround-
ing questions. And, also as noted above, numerous documents
and other evidence supported the Hearing Officer’s factual
finding.
Were the district court’s myopic focus on one response out
of dozens not already apparent from its factual finding con-
cerning the parents’ reasons for enrollment, the court’s next
factual finding would remove all doubt. The district court
found that “T.A.’s father said nothing on the MBA applica-
tion about the one ADHD symptom for which the School Dis-
2
Those responses are not surprising. Months before enrollment at Mount
Bachelor Academy, T.A.’s parents had hired a doctor to evaluate T.A.’s
needs. As the Hearing Officer found, that doctor recommended that T.A.’s
parents send T.A. to Mount Bachelor Academy so that “he could work on
drug issues and school related issues and address both his ADHD and his
depression.” Hearing Officer’s Decision at 23 (emphases added). No one
has ever challenged that factual determination.
FOREST GROVE SCHOOL DISTRICT v. T.A. 5477
trict could be liable, T.A.’s trouble with his school work.”
Again, the record belies that finding. For example, T.A.’s
father stated on the application that T.A.’s “learning difficul-
ties” included “has a hard time with math,” “tests poorly due
to speed,” “low working memory,” and “math disability”; and
his “specific objectives” for T.A. included “improved verbal
processing skills” and “study habits.” The district court
clearly erred.
The majority does not defend the district court’s finding on
its own terms. See op. at 5471-72. Rather, the majority
explains that the district court did not actually mean what it
plainly said—that “T.A.’s father said nothing on the MBA
application about the one ADHD symptom for which the Dis-
trict could be liable, T.A.’s trouble with his school work.”
(Emphasis added.) According to the majority, the district
court really meant that, “in response to one question on the
MBA application, T.A.’s father said nothing about the one
ADHD symptom for which the District could be liable, T.A.’s
trouble with his school work.” I cannot accept the majority’s
blatant revision of the district court’s opinion or its refusal to
address what the court in fact wrote.
In the final analysis, the only support for the district court’s
conclusion concerning the parents’ reasons is one response to
one question regarding the specific events that precipitated
enrollment, out of an 18-page application. The district court’s
reliance on the triggering event alone is a fourth reversible
error, this time another error of law.
A child may have a range of special needs stemming from
several sources, which might include lack of adequate parent-
ing; inability to speak English; bullying class-mates; drug
abuse; anger; laziness; and physical disabilities. The events
that finally trigger a decision to send one’s child to private
school may or may not relate to the child’s disabilities. But
the fact that a particular event precipitates enrollment does not
negate the fact that the parents’ decision also is meant to
5478 FOREST GROVE SCHOOL DISTRICT v. T.A.
address the child’s disability-related needs. This is particu-
larly true when all of the evidence confirms that, although the
triggering events may not have related to disability, the par-
ents undeniably chose a placement in order to meet the child’s
disability-related special needs.
This case presents an excellent example. For years, T.A.’s
parents sought special services under the IDEA for T.A. and,
for years, the School District refused to provide the required
services. T.A.’s disabilities and special needs went unmet, and
he performed poorly at school. Like many teenagers, while in
high school, T.A. began using marijuana, started getting into
trouble, and became defiant toward his parents. At wit’s end,
T.A.’s parents hired a doctor to evaluate all of T.A.’s needs.
T.A. then ran away from home for a few days. After that epi-
sode, the doctor concluded his evaluation and recommended
that T.A.’s parents send T.A. to Mount Bachelor Academy so
that “he could work on drug issues and school related issues
and address both his ADHD and his depression.” Hearing
Officer’s Decision at 23 (emphases added). One cannot fault
the parents for following their doctor’s considered recommen-
dation.
It comes as no surprise, then, that T.A.’s father peppered
the Mount Bachelor Academy application with his desire to
treat T.A.’s disability and disability-related needs. It also
comes as no surprise that T.A.’s father listed as the triggering
events the facts that T.A. had run away from home and
abused drugs. It was those non-disability-related events that
ultimately triggered the decision to seek private placement,
but the parents expressly sought to meet their son’s disability-
related special needs as well—special needs that the School
District repeatedly had refused to provide. It is clear that
T.A.’s parents’ intentions were to meet all of T.A.’s needs:
not just his disability-related needs, but also not just his non-
disability-related needs.
When the parents of a child face a recalcitrant school dis-
trict that refuses even to acknowledge that it must provide ser-
FOREST GROVE SCHOOL DISTRICT v. T.A. 5479
vices under the IDEA, and the child also has non-disability-
related special needs, what should the parents do? One lesson
to be learned from today’s majority decision is that it is much
safer if the parents seek treatment only for the child’s
disability-related needs. That conclusion runs entirely con-
trary to the spirit of the IDEA and to common sense. See C.B.
v. Garden Grove Unified Sch. Dist., No. 09-56588, 2011 WL
1108254 (9th Cir. Mar. 28, 2011). Alternatively, if the parents
prudently seek to address all of their child’s needs, they
would be wise to answer each and every question with the
response: “Disability.” Nothing in law or equity requires such
a formalistic approach. T.A.’s parents are to be commended,
not punished, for seeking to treat all of T.A.’s special needs.
They also should be commended, not punished, for respond-
ing honestly and accurately to the questions on the application
form, rather than concerning themselves with what might look
best to a reviewing court in later years.
Everyone agrees that the School District denied T.A. a free
appropriate public education; everyone agrees that T.A.’s
placement at Mount Bachelor Academy was proper; and
everyone agrees, as the district court found, that many equita-
ble factors support reimbursement. Indeed, the district court
denied complete reimbursement only because of its view that
the parents’ reasons for enrollment was the “decisive factor.”
Because the district court’s analysis of that factor is clearly
incorrect, no equitable factors support the complete denial of
reimbursement. T.A.’s parents are entitled to reimbursement.3
The majority’s sanctioning of the contrary result under the
guise of deferential review is deeply disappointing.
3
To be clear, the fact that the parents chose Mount Bachelor Academy
in part for reasons unrelated to T.A.’s disability, combined with the
school’s high cost, could support a reduction in reimbursement. But no
factor supports the complete denial of reimbursement altogether.