PUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
J. P., a minor, by and through his
parents and next friends, Karl
Peterson and Linda Peterson; KARL
PETERSON; LINDA PETERSON,
Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD OF HANOVER
COUNTY, VIRGINIA,
Defendant-Appellant.
No. 06-2068
VIRGINIA SCHOOL BOARDS
ASSOCIATION,
Amicus Supporting Appellant,
CHILDREN’S LAW CENTER, of the
University of Richmond School of
Law; VIRGINIA OFFICE FOR
PROTECTION AND ADVOCACY,
Amici Supporting Appellees.
J. P., a minor, by and through his
parents and next friends, Karl
Peterson and Linda Peterson; KARL
PETERSON; LINDA PETERSON,
Plaintiffs-Appellees,
No. 07-1320
v.
COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD OF HANOVER
COUNTY, VIRGINIA,
Defendant-Appellant.
2 J. P. v. COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD
Appeals from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of Virginia, at Richmond.
Robert E. Payne, District Judge.
(3:06-cv-00028-REP)
Argued: December 6, 2007
Decided: February 14, 2008
Before NIEMEYER and TRAXLER, Circuit Judges, and
HAMILTON, Senior Circuit Judge.
Vacated and remanded by published opinion. Judge Traxler wrote the
opinion, in which Judge Niemeyer and Senior Judge Hamilton joined.
COUNSEL
ARGUED: (No. 06-2068) John Francis Cafferky, BLANKINGSHIP
& KEITH, P.C., Fairfax, Virginia, for Appellant. Philip Carter Stro-
ther, Richmond, Virginia, for Appellees. (No. 07-1320) Bradford
Allen King, HARRELL & CHAMBLISS, Richmond, Virginia, for
Appellant. Robert Jackson Allen, STROTHER LAW OFFICES,
P.L.C., Richmond, Virginia, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: (No. 06-
2068) Yvonne S. Wellford, OFFICE OF THE COUNTY ATTOR-
NEY, Hanover, Virginia; Bradford A. King, HARRELL & CHAM-
BLISS, Richmond, Virginia, for Appellant. Robert Jackson Allen,
STROTHER LAW OFFICES, P.L.C., Richmond, Virginia, for
Appellees. Kathleen S. Mehfoud, REED SMITH, L.L.P., Richmond,
Virginia, for Amicus Supporting Appellant. Adrienne E. Volenik,
Director, Jovonni Armstead, Kathleen Murphy, Rebecca Rockwood,
Andrea Tompkins, Jerrell Williams, Third Year Law Students, Dis-
ability Law Clinic, Children’s Law Center, RICHMOND SCHOOL
OF LAW, University of Richmond, Virginia; Jonathan Martinis, VIR-
GINIA OFFICE FOR PROTECTION AND ADVOCACY, Rich-
mond, Virginia, for Amici Supporting Appellees. (No. 07-1320)
Yvonne S. Wellford, OFFICE OF THE COUNTY ATTORNEY,
J. P. v. COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD 3
Hanover, Virginia, for Appellant. Philip Carter Strother, Richmond,
Virginia, for Appellees.
OPINION
TRAXLER, Circuit Judge:
In this case arising under the Individuals with Disabilities Educa-
tion Act ("IDEA"), the parents of J.P., a young boy with autism, chal-
lenged the sufficiency of an individualized education program ("IEP")
developed for J.P by the County School Board of Hanover County,
Virginia. After the state hearing officer concluded that the IEP was
adequate, the parents sought to overturn that decision in federal dis-
trict court. Examining the case de novo, the district court determined
that the hearing officer’s factual findings were not regularly made and
were entitled to no deference. The district court concluded that the
IEP for J.P. was not adequate, that the private school where the par-
ents had enrolled J.P. was an appropriate placement, and that the
School Board was therefore obligated to pay the costs of the private
school. In a subsequent order, the district court awarded the parents,
as prevailing parties, attorneys fees and costs of more than $180,000.
The School Board appeals the district court’s decision on the merits
of the parents’ IDEA claims (appeal no. 06-2068) and separately
appeals the attorney’s fee order (appeal no. 07-1320).
We conclude that the district court failed to give the required defer-
ence to the state hearing officer’s decision, and we therefore vacate
the district court’s order (no. 06-2068) and remand with instructions
that the district court reconsider the question of the appropriateness
of the IEP proposed for J.P. We likewise vacate the district court’s
order awarding attorney’s fees and costs (no. 07-1320), and we
remand for reconsideration of the parents’ entitlement, should they
remain prevailing parties, to an award of attorney’s fees.
I. Appeal No. 06-2068
Under the IDEA, all states receiving federal funds for education
must provide disabled schoolchildren with a "free appropriate public
4 J. P. v. COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD
education" ("FAPE"). 20 U.S.C.A. § 1412(a)(1)(A) (West Supp.
2007). A FAPE "consists of educational instruction specially designed
to meet the unique needs of the handicapped child, . . . supported by
such services as are necessary to permit the child to benefit from the
instruction." Board of Educ. v. Rowley, 458 U.S. 176, 188-89 (1982)
(internal quotation marks omitted).1
A school provides a FAPE by developing an IEP for each disabled
child. Appropriate IEPs "must contain statements concerning a dis-
abled child’s level of functioning, set forth measurable annual
achievement goals, describe the services to be provided, and establish
objective criteria for evaluating the child’s progress." MM v. School
Dist., 303 F.3d 523, 527 (4th Cir. 2002); see 20 U.S.C.A.
§ 1414(d)(1)(A). An IEP is sufficient if it is "reasonably calculated to
enable the child to receive educational benefits." Rowley, 458 U.S. at
207.
A.
J.P. was born on January 4, 1994, and was diagnosed as autistic at
eighteen months. In 2001, J.P. began school as a first grader in a spe-
cial education program at Battlefield Park Elementary School in Han-
over County. The parents were not satisfied with the progress J.P. was
making at Battle Creek, and in May 2003, the parents enrolled him
in the Spiritos School, a private school specializing in the education
of autistic children.
Spiritos uses the "applied behavioral analysis" ("ABA") approach
to teaching autistic children. The ABA approach is a form of the
Lovaas methodology, which "relies heavily on extremely structured
teaching and comprehensive data collection and analysis." Deal v.
Hamilton County Bd. of Educ., 392 F.3d 840, 845-46 (6th Cir. 2004);
see G v. Fort Bragg Dependent Sch., 343 F.3d 295, 300 n.6 (4th Cir.
2003). The central component of the Lovaas-ABA methodology is
1
The Rowley Court was considering the requirements of the "Educa-
tion of the Handicapped Act." See Board of Educ. v. Rowley, 458 U.S.
176, 179 (1982). That act was amended in 1990 and retitled as the IDEA.
See Gadsby ex rel. Gadsby v. Grasmick, 109 F.3d 940, 942 n.1 (4th Cir.
1997).
J. P. v. COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD 5
"discrete trial" training or therapy, which "involves breaking down
activities into discrete tasks and rewarding a child’s accomplish-
ments." MM, 303 F.3d at 528 n.8. Research has indicated that early
intervention with ABA methods can be very successful. See Deal, 392
F.3d at 845 n.2.
J.P. made significant gains at Spiritos during the following year.
The parents, however, returned him to the public school system for
the 2004-05 school year, because they wanted him to succeed in the
public school setting.
The IEP developed by the School Board for the 2004-05 school
year (the "2004 IEP") placed J.P. in a self-contained special education
class at Rural Point Elementary School. An addendum to the 2004
IEP provided for an instructional aide to be assigned to J.P. exclu-
sively, thus giving J.P. one-on-one instruction. The IEP stated that the
aide would "receive[ ] training in methods that are proven to work"
with autistic children, and that the Board would "arrange for the aide
to receive training from a Certified Behavior Analyst from a program
such as the Faison School."2 J.A. 192. The addendum also stated that
J.P.’s academic setting "will include opportunities for [J.P.] to receive
discrete trials when and where the instructional personnel deem
appropriate." J.A. 192.
Although the parents agreed to the 2004 IEP, they quickly became
concerned about J.P.’s progress at Rural Point. By June 2005, the par-
ents had concluded that J.P. was regressing rather than progressing
under the 2004 IEP. The School Board, however, believed that J.P.
was making sufficient progress under the IEP, and the board proposed
for the 2005-06 school year an IEP (the "2005 IEP") that was essen-
tially the same as the 2004 IEP. Because the parents believed that J.P.
had made no progress under the 2004 IEP, they also believed that he
would not make progress under the largely identical 2005 IEP. The
parents requested that J.P. be placed (at public expense) in a private
specialty school like Spiritos. When the county denied that request,
the parents enrolled J.P. in the Dominion School, a private school for
2
The Faison School is a private school that uses ABA methodology to
teach autistic children. See County Sch. Bd. v. Z.P., 399 F.3d 298, 301
(4th Cir. 2005).
6 J. P. v. COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD
autistic children. In accordance with their rights under the IDEA, see
20 U.S.C.A. § 1415(f)(1), the parents sought a due process hearing to
determine whether the proposed 2005 IEP was adequate to provide
J.P. with a FAPE.
After considering the evidence presented during the due process
hearing, the state hearing officer rejected the parents’ request that the
School Board reimburse them for the cost of J.P.’s tuition at Domin-
ion, concluding that J.P. had made more than minimal progress during
the 2004-2005 school year and that both the 2004 IEP and the pro-
posed 2005 IEP were appropriate under the IDEA and governing law.
The parents then commenced this action in federal district court seek-
ing review of the hearing officer’s ruling.
The district court determined that the hearing officer’s factual find-
ings were not regularly made and were therefore entitled to no defer-
ence. Resolving the underlying factual questions de novo, the district
court concluded that J.P. had made no progress at Rural Point under
the 2004 IEP. And because the 2005 IEP was, in essence, a continua-
tion of the 2004 IEP, the district court concluded that the 2005 IEP
was not reasonably calculated to enable J.P. to receive educational
benefits. The district court concluded that Dominion was an appropri-
ate placement for J.P. and that the School Board must therefore reim-
burse the parents for the costs of educating J.P. at Dominion. This
appeal followed.
B.
The appropriateness of an IEP is the central issue in most IDEA
cases. Whether an IEP is appropriate is a factual question, see DiBuo
v. Board of Educ., 309 F.3d 184, 188 n.8 (4th Cir. 2002), one that the
IDEA charges the district court with answering based on the prepon-
derance of the evidence, see 20 U.S.C.A. § 1415(i)(2)(C)(iii); Kirk-
patrick v. Lenoir County Bd. of Educ., 216 F.3d 380, 384 (4th Cir.
2000). The IDEA, however, also requires the district court to "receive
the records of the administrative proceedings," 20 U.S.C.A.
§ 1415(i)(2)(C)(i), an obligation that "carries with it the implied
requirement that due weight shall be given to these proceedings."
Rowley, 458 U.S. at 206.
J. P. v. COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD 7
In this circuit, we interpret Rowley’s "due weight" requirement to
mean that the findings of fact made in the state administrative pro-
ceedings must "be considered prima facie correct, akin to the tradi-
tional sense of permitting a result to be based on such fact-finding,
but not requiring it." Doyle v. Arlington County Sch. Bd., 953 F.2d
100, 105 (4th Cir. 1991). If the findings are not "regularly made,"
however, they are not entitled to deference. Id.; see also County Sch.
Bd. v. Z.P., 399 F.3d 298, 305 (4th Cir. 2005) ("[F]actual findings
made during the state administrative proceeding are entitled to a pre-
sumption of correctness, so long as the findings were ‘regularly
made.’").
The district court in this case believed that the hearing officer’s
decision did not sufficiently explain how the hearing officer assessed
the credibility of the witnesses and did not provide a sufficiently
detailed analysis of the hearing officer’s resolution of the legal and
factual issues in the case. The district court concluded that these defi-
ciencies in the hearing officer’s opinion prevented the court from
determining that the factual findings were regularly made, and the
district court therefore gave no weight to the hearing officer’s find-
ings.
On appeal, the School Board contends that the district court erred
by giving the hearing officer’s opinion no weight. The School Board
argues that the deficiencies identified by the district court do not sup-
port the conclusion that the hearing officer’s findings were not regu-
larly made. "Whether a district court has accorded the proper due
weight to the administrative proceedings is a question of law—or at
least a mixed question of law and fact—to be reviewed de novo by
an appellate court." MM, 303 F.3d at 531 (internal quotation marks
omitted).
(1)
When determining whether a hearing officer’s findings were regu-
larly made, our cases have typically focused on the process through
which the findings were made: "Factual findings are not regularly
made if they are reached through a process that is far from the
accepted norm of a fact-finding process." Z.P., 399 F.3d at 305 (inter-
nal quotation marks omitted); see also Doyle, 953 F.2d at 105 ("[I]n
8 J. P. v. COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD
deciding what is the due weight to be given an administrative decision
under Rowley, we think a reviewing court should examine the way in
which the state administrative authorities have arrived at their admin-
istrative decision and the methods employed."). In this case, there is
nothing in the record suggesting that the hearing officer’s process in
resolving the case was anything other than ordinary. That is, the hear-
ing officer conducted a proper hearing, allowing the parents and the
School Board to present evidence and make arguments, and the hear-
ing officer by all indications resolved the factual questions in the nor-
mal way, without flipping a coin, throwing a dart, or otherwise
abdicating his responsibility to decide the case. Indeed, none of the
deficiencies in the hearing officer’s opinion identified by the district
court have anything to do with the process through which the hearing
officer made the required factual findings; as we will explain, the dis-
trict court’s criticisms instead focus on the manner in which the hear-
ing officer expressed his view of the case.
Although our IDEA cases have generally focused on the process of
fact-finding when determining whether a hearing officer’s factual
findings were regularly made and thus entitled to deference, we
assume that, in a proper case, the manner in which a hearing officer’s
factual findings are presented could be so deficient as to deprive the
opinion of the deference to which it would otherwise be entitled under
Rowley and Doyle. Cf. Springer v. Fairfax County Sch. Bd., 134 F.3d
659, 663 n.* (4th Cir. 1998) (concluding that Doyle did not require
that deference be given to the opinion of the first-level state hearing
officer over that of the state officer reviewing that opinion in part
because the decision of the first-level state hearing officer was "both
cursory and conclusory" and thus was properly rejected by the
reviewing officer). The question, then, is whether the hearing officer’s
opinion in this case was so deficient as to warrant the district court’s
rejection of the hearing officer’s factual findings.
(2)
In his written opinion, the hearing officer stated that he "found all
the witnesses credible, and all the experts qualified to testify within
their fields." J.A. 141. The hearing officer also specifically found
J.P.’s mother to be a very knowledgeable and credible witness, but the
J. P. v. COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD 9
opinion otherwise contains no specifics about the hearing officer’s
view of the credibility of the witnesses.
The district court found the hearing officer’s opinion to be "virtu-
ally useless in assessing the credibility of the witnesses." J.A. 1828.
The district court explained that
Under Doyle, a hearing officer’s credibility determinations
are to be given due weight where they are normally made.
However, because the State Hearing Officer here made no
credibility determinations except with respect to [the
mother], obviously no weight can be given to the State
Hearing Officer’s absent credibility determination. . . .
Where, as here, the testimony of the witnesses, factual
and expert, are at odds over important points, often signifi-
cantly so, a finding that all witnesses are credible means that
disparate, sometimes dramatically opposed, recitations of
fact are accepted as true. That is neither possible nor helpful,
and it certainly makes it impossible to give any weight to
the State Hearing Officer’s factual findings.
J.A. 1829. On appeal, the School Board contends that the hearing
officer’s explanation of his credibility assessments was sufficient and
that the district court therefore erred by using the hearing officer’s
approach to the credibility issue as a basis for rejecting the hearing
officer’s findings. We agree.
Preliminarily, we confess some puzzlement over the district court’s
view of the credibility question. We find nothing improper or unusual
in the hearing officer’s statement that he found all witnesses credible.
As we understand it, the statement simply means that the hearing offi-
cer determined that all of the witnesses believed what they told the
hearing officer. That is, the statement reflects the hearing officer’s
view that, for example, the School Board’s witnesses believed J.P.
made progress under the 2004 IEP and thus were not lying when they
testified to that effect, and the parents’ witnesses similarly believed
J.P regressed under the 2004 IEP and thus were not lying when they
testified to that effect. The hearing officer’s belief that all of the wit-
nesses were testifying about the facts as the witnesses perceived them
10 J. P. v. COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD
to be does not mean, as the district court concluded, that the hearing
officer must have accepted as true "disparate, sometimes dramatically
opposed, recitations of fact." J.A. 1829. It means only that the hearing
officer could not dispose of the case by branding the witnesses of one
side or the other as dissemblers unworthy of belief, and that the hear-
ing officer was therefore required to decide whether he found the
School Board’s evidence or the parents’ evidence to be more persua-
sive.
While the hearing officer did not explicitly state that he found the
School Board’s witnesses more persuasive, our case law does not
require an IDEA hearing officer to offer a detailed explanation of his
credibility assessments. See Z.P., 399 F.3d at 306 ("Doyle . . . requires
the district court to explain its reasons for rejecting the findings of the
hearing officer; it does not require the hearing officer to explain in
detail its reasons for accepting the testimony of one witness over that
of another."). Moreover, because the hearing officer ultimately deter-
mined that J.P. made more than minimal progress under the 2004 IEP
and that the 2005 IEP was adequate (views that were advocated by
the School Board’s witnesses and disagreed with by the parents’ wit-
nesses), it is apparent that the hearing officer in fact found the School
Board’s evidence more persuasive. Such implicit credibility assess-
ments "are as entitled to deference under Doyle as explicit findings."
Id. at 307. Accordingly, the district court erred by relying on the
absence of explicit credibility findings to conclude that the hearing
officer’s findings were not regularly made and thus were not entitled
to deference under Doyle.
(3)
The district court also concluded that deference to the hearing offi-
cer’s findings was not required because the hearing officer’s opinion
was insufficiently detailed. For example, the district court criticized
the hearing officer’s "terse, conclusory" summaries of testimony, J.A.
1828, and the court stated that the hearing officer’s "failure to recite,
much less differentiate and evaluate, the opinions of experts makes it
impossible to identify the hearing officer’s views on the expert evi-
dence." J.A. 1829. According to the district court, "the complete lack
of written analysis in the State Hearing Officer’s opinion" prevented
J. P. v. COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD 11
the court from determining whether the hearing officer’s findings of
fact were regularly made. J.A. 1831.
The School Board argues on appeal that the hearing officer’s opin-
ion was sufficiently detailed to permit the district court to understand
the basis for the hearing officer’s resolution of the parents’ claims.
The School Board contends that the level of detail and explanation
demanded by the district court far exceeds that required by the IDEA
and this court’s case law and is unreasonable given the role of a state
hearing officer and the nature of IDEA administrative proceedings.
We agree.
As the School Board observes, the hearing officer’s opinion com-
plied with all statutory requirements. The opinion clearly satisfied the
federal requirement that the administrative fact-finding and decision
be in writing unless the parents request the decision in electronic
form. See 20 U.S.C.A. § 1415(h)(4); 34 C.F.R. § 300.512(a)(5)
(2007). The hearing officer’s opinion likewise satisfied Virginia’s
requirement that the opinion include written determinations of
whether the parents received proper notice, whether the child has a
disability, whether the child needs special education and related ser-
vices, and whether the school is providing a free and appropriate edu-
cation. See 8 Va. Admin. Code § 20-80-76(J)(17). And while we have
on occasion remanded IDEA cases to the hearing officer when the
opinion failed to address a critical issue, see, e.g., JH v. Henrico
County Sch. Bd., 326 F.3d 560, 568-69 (4th Cir. 2003), our case law
has never suggested that any particular level of detail is required in
the hearing officer’s decision. If anything, our case law suggests that
the level of detail required of a hearing officer is relatively low. Cf.
Z.P., 399 F.3d at 306 (explaining that Doyle "does not require the
hearing officer to explain in detail its reasons for accepting the testi-
mony of one witness over that of another").
In this case, we simply cannot conclude that the hearing officer’s
opinion was insufficiently detailed. The 25-page opinion included
summaries of the witnesses’ testimony, an outline of the relevant
legal standards, and the hearing officer’s findings of fact and legal
conclusions. Although the district court stated that the hearing officer
failed to even recite the opinions of the expert witnesses, the opinion
in fact summarized the expert testimony, just as it did the lay testi-
12 J. P. v. COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD
mony. While the summaries were relatively short (typically a page or
two), the summaries by and large captured the essence of the wit-
nesses’ testimony on the central issues of the case. Under these cir-
cumstances, the district court’s description of the opinion as
completely lacking in written analysis is difficult to understand.
We recognize, however, that the hearing officer’s opinion could
have been more thorough. As the district court noted, only two of the
factual findings made by the hearing officer addressed issues about
which the parties disagreed, and those findings are about as bare-
boned as they could be. See J.A. 147 ("During the 2004-2005 school
year, [J.P] made progress in speech and language, behavior, and aca-
demics. . . . This progress was not minimal or trivial."). And while
it is apparent that the hearing officer was persuaded by the School
Board’s evidence and its assertion that J.P. was making progress
under the 2004 IEP, the opinion offers no explanation of which evi-
dence the hearing officer found to be most important or why the hear-
ing officer was persuaded by the School Board’s evidence. As we
noted above, however, neither the governing statutes, regulations, or
case law requires the hearing officer to provide the detailed analysis
demanded by the district court. While it would of course be preferable
for hearing officers to explain their analysis in as much detail as pos-
sible, a hearing officer’s failure to meet this aspirational standard does
not provide a basis for concluding that the factual findings contained
in a statutorily compliant written opinion were not regularly made and
therefore not entitled to deference.3
3
Assuming that a hearing officer’s opinion could be so short on details
that it could not be effectively reviewed by the district court, the district
court would not be entitled to simply reject the hearing officer’s findings
out-of-hand. Given the statutory requirement that the district court "re-
ceive the records of the administrative proceedings," 20 U.S.C.A.
§ 1415(i)(2)(C)(i), and the Rowley Court’s requirement that the district
court give due weight to the findings made by the hearing officer, we
believe the proper course of action would be for the district court to
remand the matter to give the hearing officer an opportunity to flesh out
his opinion. See, e.g., JH v. Henrico County Sch. Bd., 326 F.3d 560, 568-
69 (4th Cir. 2003) (remanding to hearing officer because hearing officer
did not make findings on critical issue).
J. P. v. COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD 13
It must be remembered that in Virginia, the IDEA hearing officers
are lawyers appointed through the Supreme Court of Virginia to serve
as judges in IDEA due process hearings. See generally Hearing Offi-
cer Sys. Rules of Administration, http://www.courts.state.va.us/
publications/hearing_officer.html (last visited Jan. 17, 2008); see also
8 Va. Admin. Code § 20-80-76(D). The hearing officers operate
under tight time constraints—in non-expedited cases, a written opin-
ion must be issued within 45 days after a request for a due process
hearing is received. See 8 Va. Admin. Code § 20-80-76(L)(1). As
pointed out by an amicus in this case, this short time-frame means
that the written opinions may be issued before a transcript has been
prepared. Under these circumstances, hearing officers (who have no
state-provided law clerks or clerical support) cannot be expected to
craft opinions with the level of detail and analysis we expect from a
district judge. By rejecting the hearing officer’s opinion in this case
for lack of detail, the district court improperly held the hearing officer
to a standard not dictated by statute or case law and one which
ignored the constraints under which an IDEA hearing officer operates.
C.
For the reasons discussed above, we conclude that none of the defi-
ciencies in the hearing officer’s opinion identified by the district court
are sufficient to support the district court’s determination that the
hearing officer’s factual findings were entitled to no deference
because they were not regularly made. Accordingly, we hereby vacate
the district court’s judgment and remand for reconsideration of the
question of the adequacy of the 2005 IEP. See Z.P., 399 F.3d at 310-
11 (remanding for reconsideration by district court under the proper
legal standard because the district court improperly rejected findings
of hearing officer as "not regularly made" and thus gave them no
weight). On remand, the district court shall reconsider whether the
2005 IEP was adequate to fulfill the School Board’s obligation to pro-
vide J.P. with a free appropriate public education, giving deference to
the hearing officer’s decision. If after according deference to the hear-
ing officer’s decision the district court again concludes that the 2005
IEP was inappropriate and did not provide J.P. with a free appropriate
public education, the district court must explain its decision. See
Doyle, 953 F.2d at 105 ("[W]hen fact-findings are regularly made and
14 J. P. v. COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD
entitled to prima facie correctness, the district court, if it is not going
to follow them, is required to explain why it does not.").4
II. Appeal No. 07-1320
The IDEA authorizes a district court to award attorney’s fees to
parents who prevail on their IDEA claims. See 20 U.S.C.A.
§ 1415(i)(3)(B)(i)(I). Because we have vacated the district court’s
order (appeal no. 06-2068) granting relief to the parents on their
IDEA claims, the parents cannot at this juncture be considered the
prevailing parties. Accordingly, we hereby vacate and remand the dis-
trict court’s order (appeal no. 07-1320) awarding attorney’s fees to
the parents. If the parents prevail on the merits of their IDEA claims
after remand, the court may again consider the parents’ entitlement to
an award of attorney’s fees. We express no opinion on the merits of
the School Board’s current challenges to the fee award, and we like-
wise express no opinion as to whether or in what amount fees should
be awarded to the parents if they prevail after remand.
VACATED AND REMANDED
4
Given our conclusion that a remand is required, we need not consider
the School Board’s other challenges to the district court’s decision.