NOT PRECEDENTIAL
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
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No. 10-4184
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LECHELLE BROWN;
BEATRICE TERRY, as guardian ad litem of LECHELLE BROWN
and as administratrix of the ESTATE OF ROCHELLE TERRY,
Appellants
v.
SCHOOL DISTRICT OF PHILADELPHIA;
DR. PAUL G. VALLAS; DR. RICHARD MANTELL;
AKEEM WATSON; ANGELA PRESSLY;
TODD WADDY, JR.; TODD WADDY, SR.;
KYSHAN TUNSTALL; NICOLE WALKER;
AZEEZAH CHARLES, in her own capacity and parent/guardian of
QUINZELL POWELL, a minor;
LISA FLETCHER in her own capacity and parent/guardian of
JEFFREY CHASE, a minor
______________
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA
(D.C. Civil No. 08-cv-02787)
District Judge: Honorable Norma L. Shapiro
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Submitted Under Third Circuit LAR 34.1(a)
September 16, 2011
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Before: RENDELL, JORDAN and BARRY, Circuit Judges
(Opinion Filed: September 20, 2011)
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OPINION
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BARRY, Circuit Judge
On June 15, 2006, when Lechelle Brown (“Brown”) was a sophomore in high
school, she was sexually assaulted by five fellow students during the lunch hour at her
school in Philadelphia. At issue on appeal are her claims under the Fourteenth
Amendment and 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the School District of Philadelphia and Dr.
Richard Mantell, the high school principal at the time of the assault (collectively “School
District”).1 She argues that the School District is liable for violations of her right to bodily
integrity under the state-created danger doctrine. The District Court granted summary
judgment in favor of the School District on this claim, finding that it took no affirmative
action to place Brown in danger or make her more vulnerable to the assault than she
otherwise would have been. We will affirm.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Brown has mild mental retardation, as well as a disorder that inhibits her ability to
speak or comprehend the written or spoken word. The combination of these disabilities
makes it difficult, among other things, for her to ask for help or advocate for herself. She
1
Brown made other claims, but all of them except the § 1983 claim against the
School District have been settled or dismissed, and they thus are not before us. The
plaintiffs are Lechelle Brown and her grandmother, Beatrice Terry, as guardian ad litem
of Brown and as the administratrix of the estate of Rochelle Terry, Brown‟s mother. As to
2
received special education services at school through an Individualized Education
Program. Those who know Brown well say that outside her family, she rarely speaks
more than a few words at a time and that she responds primarily to yes-or-no questions.
She was close to her mother, who died during this litigation and who was her devoted
advocate.
On the day of the assault, Brown was eating lunch by herself in the school
cafeteria. One of the assailants asked her to come with him, and she followed him to an
auditorium on the second floor of the school. The auditorium should have been locked,
but, as school administrators knew, it was relatively easy for students to force the door
open, and students were regularly found there, against school rules. Brown complied with
the five assailants‟ demands for oral sex, and some of them groped her. All five of them
pled guilty to sex offense charges in juvenile court, and that court determined that due to
her disabilities, Brown was not legally capable of consenting to sex.
There is some evidence in the record – much, if not all, of which the District Court
ruled was inadmissible – that two weeks before the assault, another student, who was not
one of the five assailants on June 15, 2006, told Brown to meet him in the library for oral
sex. When she did not do so, he hit her on the head or messed up her hair. One of
Brown‟s teachers knew that the student had at least messed up her hair, and though the
teacher had heard that the interaction had something to do with sex, she did not know the
the issues that are before us, Terry does not have any claims that are separate from
Brown‟s, and we will therefore refer to the plaintiffs as “Brown.”
3
details.
Under the most generous reading of all of the evidence Brown submitted,2 she and
her mother met with that teacher and an assistant principal after this incident, and one or
both of them promised that the school would provide Brown with one-on-one adult
supervision. Brown contends that if the School District had done what it allegedly
promised to do, the assault in the auditorium would not have happened.3 She also claims
that the School District is liable because it failed to fix the lock on the door to the
auditorium and because it generally refused to expel or appropriately discipline violent
students, including some of her assailants. Some officials, including a committee of the
Pennsylvania House of Representatives, have concluded that the School District
systematically has underreported violence in its schools.
II. ANALYSIS
At issue before us are Brown‟s claims pursuant to § 1983 for violations of her right
to bodily integrity under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. For
liability to attach to Mantell, he “„must have [had] personal involvement in the alleged
wrongdoing; liability cannot be predicated solely on the operation of respondeat superior.
2
Because we would affirm considering all of the evidence Brown submitted,
including the evidence the District Court ruled was inadmissible, we will not address the
question of whether the Court abused its discretion in its evidentiary rulings nor will we
consider the legal conclusions and speculative opinions of plaintiffs‟ school safety expert.
3
Brown claims that the School District “deliberately misrepresented that Lechelle
would be protected” (Appellants‟ Br. at 62), but there is no evidence in the record that
any promise of protection, assuming that admissible evidence would show such a
4
Personal involvement can be shown through allegations of personal direction or of actual
knowledge and acquiescence.‟” Evancho v. Fisher, 423 F.3d 347, 353 (3d Cir. 2005)
(quoting Rode v. Dellarciprete, 845 F.2d 1195, 1207 (3d Cir. 1988)). For the School
District itself to be liable, “any injury must be inflicted by execution of [its] policy or
custom.” Santiago v. Warminster Twp., 629 F.3d 121, 135 (3d Cir. 2010) (internal
quotation marks omitted).4
“[T]he Due Process Clause does not impose an affirmative duty upon the state to
protect citizens from the acts of private individuals,” but the state-created danger doctrine
provides an exception to this general rule.5 Sanford v. Stiles, 456 F.3d 298, 303-04 (3d
Cir. 2006) (citing DeShaney v. Winnebago County Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 489 U.S. 189,
198-200 (1989)). We have held that a plaintiff asserting a claim under the state-created
danger doctrine must prove four elements:
(1) the harm ultimately caused was foreseeable and fairly direct;
promise, was a deliberate misrepresentation. There is also no evidence that Mantell knew
about this alleged promise.
4
The District Court had jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1331, and we have
jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We exercise plenary review over the District
Court‟s grant of summary judgment.
5
There is also an exception for a person with whom the state has a custodial
relationship, but a student in school does not have that relationship with the state. D.R. v.
Middle Bucks Area Vocational Tech. Sch., 972 F.2d 1364, 1371 (3d Cir. 1992) (“[I]t is
the parents who decide whether [mandated] education will take place in the home, [or] in
public or private schools . . . . For some, the options may be limited for financial reasons.
However, even when enrolled in public school parents retain the discretion to remove the
child from classes as they see fit, subject only to truancy penalties for continued periods
of unexcused absence. In the case of special education students, the parents have even
greater involvement since they must approve the precise educational program developed
for their child.” (citations omitted)).
5
(2) a state actor acted with a degree of culpability that shocks the
conscience;
(3) a relationship between the state and the plaintiff existed such that the
plaintiff was a foreseeable victim of the defendant‟s acts, or a member of a
discrete class of persons subjected to the potential harm brought about by
the state‟s actions, as opposed to a member of the public in general; and
(4) a state actor affirmatively used his or her authority in a way that created
a danger to the citizen or that rendered the citizen more vulnerable to
danger than had the state not acted at all.
Id. at 304-05.
The District Court held that Brown could not establish the fourth element because
there was no state actor who affirmatively acted to create the danger which led to her
assault, or to make her more vulnerable to it.6 Brown contends that school officials
affirmatively promised to provide her with one-on-one adult supervision and that she and
her family relied on that promise in continuing to send her to school, but the crux of that
argument is that the school promised and then failed to provide her with the supervision.
We agree with the District Court that this is not an affirmative act. The same is true
regarding the School District‟s failure to expel or appropriately punish violent students.
We addressed an analogous fact pattern in another tragic case. In Bright v.
Westmoreland County, we held that the plaintiff could not assert a § 1983 claim under the
state-created danger doctrine. 443 F.3d 276, 283-84 (3d Cir. 2006). In that case, a man
6
The Court concluded that Mantell was entitled to qualified immunity because
Brown could not show that he violated her constitutional rights, given the lack of any
affirmative action. See Pearson v. Callahan, 555 U.S. 223, 232 (2009).
6
who had pled guilty to corrupting the morals of a twelve-year-old girl was on probation.
In violation of his conditions of probation, he continued to have contact with the girl, and
a probation officer saw him with her, unsupervised, at a store. The father of the victim,
who was the plaintiff in the case, called the police to ask them to arrest the man, and a
police officer “assured [the father] that immediate action would be taken,” but he was not
arrested. Id. at 279. He then killed the victim‟s eight-year-old sister “to retaliate against
the family for its efforts to prevent him from seeing the 12-year-old victim.” Id.
We held in Bright that the state actors had taken no affirmative action, and we
affirmed the dismissal of the § 1983 claim. With respect to the police officer‟s promise to
arrest the perpetrator, Bright could not “claim that the state in any way restricted his
freedom to act on his family‟s own behalf.” Id. at 284. In Brown‟s case, even though she
was required to attend school, her family could have fulfilled that requirement in a
different setting. See D.R., 972 F.2d at 1371. In DeShaney, moreover, the Supreme Court
held that even where the state has made “expressions of intent to help,” it has no
“affirmative duty to protect.” 489 U.S. at 200, quoted in Bright, 443 F.3d at 280-81, 284.
In this case, even if Brown could prove with admissible evidence that a school official
promised to provide her with one-on-one supervision, the failure to follow through on
that promise did not create an affirmative duty to protect her from the student assailants.
Brown primarily relies on two cases to support her arguments. In one, Kneipp v.
Tedder, we held that the plaintiffs had stated a claim under the Fourteenth Amendment
7
and § 1983 against the City of Philadelphia and its police officers. 95 F.3d 1199, 1201 (3d
Cir. 1996). On a cold night, the police officers came upon plaintiff Samantha Kneipp
(“Kneipp”), who was severely intoxicated and walking home with her husband. The
police stopped the couple for causing a disturbance on the highway, allowed the husband
to go home to relieve a babysitter, and then later sent Kneipp home alone. She was found
unconscious in the bottom of an embankment and suffered hypothermia and severe brain
damage. Id. at 1201-03. In that case, the plaintiffs argued that the officers “voluntarily
assume[ed] responsibility for her protection when they told [the husband] he could leave.”
Id. at 1203.
With respect to the fourth prong of the state-created danger doctrine, we held in
Kneipp that there was sufficient evidence that the officers “used their authority as police
officers to create a dangerous situation or to make Samantha more vulnerable to danger
had they not intervened” by sending the husband home and “in detaining Samantha, and
then sending her home unescorted in a seriously intoxicated state in cold weather.” Id. at
1209. We characterized the officers‟ actions as “affirmative acts” and an “intervention,”
id. It is not, or course, always easy to distinguish between an affirmative act and a failure
to act. As the Seventh Circuit wrote,
If the state puts a man in a position of danger from private persons and then
fails to protect him, it will not be heard to say that its role was merely
passive; it is as much an active tortfeasor as if it had thrown him into a
snake pit.
Bowers v. DeVito, 686 F.2d 616, 618 (7th Cir. 1982), quoted in D.R., 972 F.2d at 1374.
8
The police officers in Kneipp intervened in the couple‟s walk home and detained Kneipp
before releasing her into the night. Those actions – intervening, detaining, and then
releasing – were akin to throwing her into a “snake pit.” The police officers did not put
her in danger of harm from another person but rather from her own inebriation, combined
with the dangerous weather that night.
The School District‟s treatment of Brown is distinguishable from the conduct in
Kneipp. The School District did not, for example, keep anyone else from helping Brown,
as the police officers did by detaining Kneipp and sending her husband home, and it did
not send her straight to the clutches of her assailants, as the officers did when they sent
Kneipp into the cold night air. The School District did not “act” at all. This lack of action
perhaps contributed in some way to tragic consequences for Brown and her family, but
the School District‟s lack of affirmative action is, nonetheless, fatal to Brown‟s § 1983
claim.
Brown relies on another case that involved sexual abuse in school, Stoneking v.
Bradford Area School District, 882 F.2d 720 (3d Cir. 1989). In Stoneking, a former high
school student sued her school district and its officials under § 1983 and the Fourteenth
Amendment for failing to protect her from a teacher who school officials knew had
sexually harassed and assaulted other students. School officials in that case kept a secret
file of the teacher‟s actions, did not discipline the teacher, and intimidated previous
victims from telling their stories. We held that the § 1983 claim could survive summary
9
judgment against some of the defendants, over their assertions of qualified immunity,
because “state officials may [not] escape liability arising from their policies maintained in
deliberate indifference to actions taken by their subordinates,” id. at 725, and “public
officials in administrative positions with notice of assaultive behavior by their
subordinates must not take actions which communicate that they encourage or even
condone such behavior,” id. at 729. Critical to our decision in Stoneking, the plaintiff‟s
assailant was a state actor and a subordinate of the defendants. See id. at 725; see also
D.R., 972 F.2d at 1376 (“[A] violation by state actors” was the “linchpin” of the claims in
Stoneking). The School District here did not have the same relationship with Brown‟s
assailants as the defendants had with the teacher in Stoneking. Stoneking, therefore, has
little to teach us regarding the claims at issue here.
Brown‟s assault on June 15, 2006 was a tragedy, and its consequences have been
serious and devastating for her and her family. We nonetheless agree with the District
Court that the School District is not liable under § 1983 and the Fourteenth Amendment
for the harm she has suffered.
III. CONCLUSION
We will affirm the judgment of the District Court.
10