FILED
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
March 25, 2008
PUBLISH Elisabeth A. Shumaker
Clerk of Court
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
TENTH CIRCUIT
MYISHA GARCIA,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
No. 07-2041
BOARD OF EDUCATION OF
ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC
SCHOOLS,
Defendant-Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the District of New Mexico
(D.C. No. CIV-05-0062-WPJ/WPL)
Gail Stewart of Steven Granberg, P.A., Albuquerque, New Mexico, for Plaintiff-
Appellant.
Samantha M. Adams (Michael L. Carrico with her on the brief) of Modrall
Sperling Roehl Harris & Sisk, P.A., Albuquerque, New Mexico, for Defendant-
Appellee.
Before BRISCOE, GORSUCH, and HOLMES, Circuit Judges.
GORSUCH, Circuit Judge.
Jessica Garcia, on behalf of her daughter Myisha, alleges that the
Albuquerque Public School District failed to formulate an individualized
education program for Myisha in the Fall semester of 2003, in violation of the
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act. By way of remedy, the Garcias seek
certain compensatory educational services. The district court, though
acknowledging the school district’s procedural deficiency, held that no such
services should be awarded as a matter of equity because, among other things,
Myisha has dropped out of school, demonstrated an unwillingness to return to
school, and could essentially receive the very services she seeks simply by re-
enrolling in school. On appeal, we do not excuse the school district for
neglecting its statutory duties to Myisha, but neither can we say that the district
court abused its discretion in exercising its traditional equitable powers.
I
A
Although this appeal concerns only the school district’s conduct in Fall
2003, the parties’ initial administrative dispute extended to Myisha’s education in
prior school years as well. Because the district court’s remedial decision relied
on the full record developed by the parties, an appreciation of that record is
essential to our own analysis.
The genesis of this case takes us back to 1999, when, while in fifth grade,
Myisha was diagnosed with a specific learning disability affecting her reading
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abilities. This diagnosis qualified Myisha to begin receiving special education
services under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (“IDEA” or “the
Act”), see 20 U.S.C. § 1401(3)(A), (30), a federal statute aimed at helping states
provide disabled children with a free and appropriate public education (“FAPE”),
see id. § 1400 et seq. In order to provide Myisha with a FAPE, the school district
was obligated to develop and implement an individualized education program
(“IEP”) calculated to meet Myisha’s specific educational needs, id. § 1414(d), and
then to review and revise the IEP annually, id. § 1414(d)(4). The school district
was also required to involve Myisha’s mother in this process. See generally id.
§ 1414.
After her 1999 diagnosis, Myisha’s school district did exactly as it should,
providing her with IDEA-mandated services and benefits through the creation and
annual renewal of IEPs. Despite these efforts, however, Myisha’s academic
performance began to decline by the time she entered middle school, when she
also began to display significant disciplinary problems – tendencies that only
escalated as she entered high school in the Fall of 2002.
For the 2002-2003 school year, Myisha enrolled in ninth grade at West
Mesa High School, and the school district formulated and approved (in May
2002) an IEP for her freshman year. The IEP acknowledged Myisha’s prior
behavioral and academic struggles and set out various initiatives to help Myisha
overcome them. During the Fall semester, however, Myisha frequently skipped
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class, recording 136 unexcused class absences in that semester alone, and did not
do well when she did attend class. Myisha also began to engage in significant
drug and alcohol use. Making matters worse, on December 10, 2002, Myisha was
arrested, apparently for attacking her mother and brother. As a result of the
arrest, Myisha spent the Spring semester of 2003 at the Bernalillo County
Juvenile Detention Center (“JDC”) and the Mesilla Valley Residential Treatment
Center.
While Myisha was still at the JDC in August 2003, that institution
completed a short, one-page form intended to serve as an interim IEP.
Substantively, the interim IEP went no further than evaluating Myisha’s abilities
as “Reading is good – Needs help in Math,” and recommending “Place[ment] in
Req-Ed with Support.” This interim IEP did not meet the full requirements for
annual IEPs under IDEA, as set out in 20 U.S.C. § 1414(d), but it appears the
JDC and the school district intended only that the IEP be employed on a short-
term basis during Myisha’s temporary assignment to the JDC.
After her release from the JDC, Myisha again enrolled in ninth grade at
West Mesa High School for the 2003-2004 school year. The school district,
however, did not review and revise her IEP prior to the start of school. Indeed,
for most of the Fall semester, the staff at West Mesa did not even notice that
Myisha lacked an updated IEP. The school district explains this oversight as a
result of data entry issues with Myisha’s file in the school district’s computer
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system. Specifically, because the August 2003 interim IEP from the JDC was
logged into Myisha’s electronic file, the computer system showed that Myisha
had a new IEP as of August 2003, apparently leading West Mesa to believe
incorrectly, until at least November, that it did not need to revise her IEP for the
2003-2004 school year. Yet, despite apparently lacking guidance from any IEP,
the school did enroll Myisha in a curriculum consisting almost entirely of special
education courses for the Fall term.
Myisha continued to exhibit serious disciplinary problems, and she
recorded 65 days of unexcused absences during the Fall semester. That semester
effectively ended for Myisha on December 9, 2003, when she was suspended for
the remainder of the term for fighting at school. Though her suspension did not
prevent her from doing so, Myisha did not attend any of her final examinations,
and, as a result, she failed all of her Fall 2003 classes.
Having finally realized that no IEP existed for the 2003-2004 school year,
the school district convened an IEP meeting on December 12, 2003 to create one
for the second half of the year. The school district made many attempts to secure
Ms. Garcia’s attendance at the meeting, but ultimately decided to hold the
meeting in her absence after Ms. Garcia failed to return phone calls and letters
and in light of her history of missing IEP and other school meetings.
The gathering did produce a new IEP, but Myisha did not attend school at
all during the remainder of that school year. In early January 2004, the Garcias
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apparently moved to another area within the school district, necessitating that Ms.
Garcia obtain for Myisha a transfer to Del Norte High School. Unfortunately, by
the time Ms. Garcia requested the transfer, it was too late in the semester for
Myisha to earn any credits towards graduation. As a result, it appears that
Myisha did not attend any school during Spring semester 2004.
B
In April 2004, Ms. Garcia filed a request for an IDEA due process hearing
with the New Mexico Public Education Department, claiming, in essence, that the
school district had failed to provide Myisha with the FAPE promised her by IDEA
during the 2002-2003 and 2003-2004 school years because the May 2002 IEP
(effective for 2002-2003) was inadequate and because there was no IEP in place
for 2003-2004 until December 2003.
After taking evidence from the parties, the hearing officer determined that
there were at least three irregularities in the school district’s actions: (1) the
school district failed to implement some of the reading instruction components of
the May 2002 IEP; (2) the school district failed to have a new IEP in place for the
Fall 2003 semester; and, relatedly, (3) the school district failed to ensure that
teachers implemented an IEP during Fall 2003. Despite these irregularities, the
hearing officer ruled that the school district’s actions did not result in a denial of
access to a FAPE because the record failed to show that the irregularities would
have made any difference to, or imposed any harm on, Myisha. In the hearing
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officer’s words, “[a] school cannot provide FAPE to a student who is not there,
either physically or by virtue of her attitude.” See Hearing Officer’s Final
Decision at 39.
Ms. Garcia appealed to an administrative appeal officer (“AAO”) within the
New Mexico Public Education Department. The AAO agreed with the hearing
officer that the school district’s procedural missteps did not constitute a violation
of IDEA per se, and that Myisha had to “show educational harm or loss of
educational opportunity to have been denied FAPE as a result of alleged
procedural violations.” Admin. Appeal Decision at 28. But the AAO disagreed
with the hearing officer that the absence of a current IEP in Fall 2003 did not
result in harm or that the lack of an IEP was excusable due to Myisha’s poor
behavior. The AAO stated in relevant part that the “District’s failure to have a
current IEP in place in the Fall semester of 2003 . . . cannot be blamed on
Student’s behavior or truancy. . . . Whether having an IEP in place would have
altered the semester experience for Student is pure conjecture as to what might
have been.” Id. at 29. As such, the AAO determined that the school district
effectively denied Myisha access to a FAPE in the Fall of 2003. By way of an
equitable compensatory award, the AAO ordered the school district to conduct a
new and independent evaluation of Myisha’s needs and to develop a reading
program for her based upon the evaluation’s findings.
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While the administrative appeal was pending, Myisha enrolled again in the
ninth grade – this time at Del Norte High School – for the 2004-2005 school year.
Before the school year began, the school district conducted a comprehensive
evaluation of Myisha and developed a revised IEP. During this third attempt at
ninth grade, Myisha displayed a remarkable change of attitude and performance;
Myisha consistently attended school, did well in every class, and achieved a 4.0
grade point average for the year.
The school district also developed and implemented a revised IEP for the
2005-2006 school year, Myisha’s sophomore year. Unfortunately, however,
Myisha seemed to return to her prior habits, frequently skipping class and using
drugs and alcohol. Three days before the end of the Fall 2005 semester, Myisha’s
mother kicked her out of the family’s home. Since that incident, Myisha has not
regularly attended school for any material period of time, although, with the aid
of her attorney, she was at least formally re-enrolled at another high school
(Highland) for the 2006-2007 school year. See Dist. Ct. Op. at 25 n.6.
C
Following the AAO’s decision, Ms. Garcia brought suit in federal court,
claiming that the AAO should have found further violations of IDEA and that the
compensatory education awarded by the AAO was insufficient. The school
district, meanwhile, sought reversal of the AAO’s order.
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The district court ruled in favor of the school district on all scores. On the
merits of whether the school district effectively denied Myisha a FAPE, the
district court, much like the original hearing officer, reasoned that it was
Myisha’s own behavior, rather than the school district’s procedural deficiencies,
that caused any loss of educational opportunity in Fall 2003, and that the school
district therefore had no liability under IDEA. Dist. Ct. Op. at 21-24.
Alternatively, the district court held that, even had the school district’s procedural
failures harmed Myisha and the school district was liable for that harm, no award
of compensatory educational services was warranted as a matter of equity in light
of the fact that Myisha had demonstrated a pattern of failing to use the
educational opportunities provided to her by the school district despite the
district’s “exceptional” efforts to re-engage her in school. Id. at 24-26.
According to the district court, “[t]here is no basis for granting what is essentially
equitable relief to someone who neither deserves it nor wants it.” Id. at 25.
In reaching its result, the district court also stressed that the compensatory
educational services the Garcias sought through court award would effectively be
available to her if and when she should simply decide to return to school. Id. at
25-26. For example, the Garcias asked the court to order an “educational
reevaluation [of Myisha] . . . and [] educational planning” with an independent
expert. See Appellant’s App. at 348. Yet, IDEA already provides for objective
educational evaluations and for educational planning based on those evaluations.
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20 U.S.C. § 1414(a)-(d). Similarly, the other remedial measure sought by the
Garcias – that the state pay for Myisha’s placement outside of the traditional
public high school setting if such a placement is necessary to enable her to
progress towards graduation – is also already guaranteed to public education
students by IDEA. See id. § 1412(a)(10)(B).
On appeal, the Garcias challenge the district court’s disposition only with
respect to whether the school district failed to provide Myisha with a FAPE in
Fall 2003 and whether equitable compensatory relief is warranted for that failure.
For its part, the school district defends the correctness of the district court’s
reasoning, and it also raises the question of mootness, arguing that there is no
active controversy that need be resolved because Myisha has shown a lack of
desire to return to school or take advantage of any compensatory education
services that might be awarded as a result of this litigation.
II
We must address the question of mootness first “because the existence of a
live case or controversy is a constitutional prerequisite to federal court
jurisdiction.” McClendon v. City of Albuquerque, 100 F.3d 863, 867 (10th Cir.
1996). To satisfy the case or controversy requirement of Article III, and thus to
justify a federal court’s jurisdiction, the parties’ dispute must not only be live at
the time the suit is filed, but the parties “must continue to have a personal stake in
the outcome of the lawsuit” throughout the various stages of litigation. Lewis v.
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Continental Bank Corp., 494 U.S. 472, 478 (1990) (internal quotation and citation
omitted). In essence, “[t]his means that, throughout the litigation, the plaintiff
must have suffered, or be threatened with, an actual injury traceable to the
defendant and likely to be redressed by a favorable judicial decision.” Spencer v.
Kemna, 523 U.S. 1, 7 (1998) (internal quotation and citation omitted).
The school district contends that this appeal is moot because Myisha is now
nineteen years old, is no longer compelled under state law to attend high school, 1
and has expressed little or no desire to return to school or to continue her
education. In other words, because little evidence exists indicating that Myisha
intends to take advantage of any benefits she might be awarded from this suit, the
school district believes there is no active case or controversy to be resolved.
We cannot agree. If the Garcias’ allegations are true, then Myisha suffered
an actual injury (deprivation of a FAPE), at least for the Fall 2003 semester. And
this is a kind of injury that Congress has authorized the federal courts to remedy,
stating that a district court shall “grant such relief as the court determines is
appropriate.” 20 U.S.C. § 1415(i)(2)(C)(iii). Indeed, pursuant to the statutory
grant of remedial discretion, courts have commonly awarded exactly the kinds of
compensatory educational services that the Garcias seek in this suit. See
generally Allan G. Osborne, Jr., Remedies for a School District’s Failure to
1
New Mexico mandates school attendance until a student reaches the age
eighteen or graduates. See N.M. Stat. § 22-12-2.
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Provide Services Under IDEA, 112 Ed. Law Rep. 1, 9-11 (1996); see also G ex
rel. RG v. Fort Bragg Dependent Schs., 343 F.3d 295, 309 (4th Cir. 2003)
(collecting cases approving compensatory education awards).
It seems to us that the school district rests less on an assertion that we are
powerless to issue a compensatory remedy in this case and more on a prediction
that Myisha is unlikely to take full advantage of any such award. But while the
school district’s predictive assertions about what Myisha may or may not do in
the event she prevails in this litigation may be relevant in assessing whether
equitable relief is warranted – a very different question we take up later – they are
beside the point for purposes of assessing mootness. For this case to be
considered live, it is enough that the Garcias have alleged an actual injury
traceable to the school district for which we can issue a remedy. After all, when
a plaintiff brings suit for damages, the fact that he or she is not likely to make
“good use” of any ultimate compensatory award hardly means we are without
jurisdiction to entertain the claim.
Informative by way of contrast is a pair of our prior cases, T.S. v. Indep.
Sch. Dist. No. 54, 265 F.3d 1090 (10th Cir. 2001), and Moseley v. Bd. of Educ. of
Albuquerque Public Schs., 483 F.3d 689 (10th Cir. 2007). In those matters we
emphasized two factors that, together, suggested mootness in the IDEA context:
(1) the claimant has graduated from high school and thus has become ineligible to
receive continuing benefits under IDEA; and (2) the claimant seeks prospective
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relief. See T.S., 265 F.3d at 1092; Moseley, 483 F.3d at 692-94. When both
factors are present, any court decision on the merits in those cases would, we
held, “have no effect on the present or future actions of either party” because the
only relief sought is relief that the student can no longer – and in most instances,
need no longer – receive. Moseley, 483 F.3d at 693; see also Honig v. Doe, 484
U.S. 305, 318 (1988).
In Myisha’s case, however, not only is she statutorily eligible to receive
IDEA benefits (being nineteen years old and not graduated), but she seeks
compensatory rather than prospective relief, complaining not about the
entitlement to future benefits but instead seeking a remedy for past wrongs. In
both T.S. and Moseley, we implied that such a claim would likely not be moot. 2
And for good reason: after all, if a student has not graduated and is still eligible
to receive IDEA benefits in the future, seeking future-oriented relief is hardly a
moot point. Likewise, even if a student is ineligible going forward under IDEA,
seeking backward-looking relief to make up for past deprivations also seems
2
T.S., 265 F.3d at 1092 (“This rule applies, of course, only where a
student does not contest his graduation, and where he is seeking only prospective
– rather than compensatory – relief.”); Moseley, 483 F.3d at 694 (dismissing the
claim as moot only because claimant “failed to request either reimbursement or
compensatory education services in his complaint”).
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entirely appropriate. 3 Far from indicating that such a case is moot, then, our
precedent tends to confirm that this controversy is very much live.
III
A
Turning to the district court’s disposition of Myisha’s claim on the merits,
we begin by reiterating what is not before us. Although the Garcias initially
claimed deprivations of a FAPE in both the 2002-2003 and 2003-2004 school
years, on appeal they limit their challenge to the Fall 2003 semester.
On the question of liability for that term, the Garcias contend that the
school district violated IDEA by failing to formulate and implement an IEP, and
that this failure resulted in an effective denial of a FAPE to Myisha. The school
district responds by arguing that the tardiness in formulating an IEP for Fall 2003
was merely a procedural irregularity that did not cause any substantive harm or
comprise an effective denial of a FAPE. In pressing its position, the school
district emphasizes that it provided Myisha with special education services even
in the absence of an updated IEP and that Myisha’s behavioral problems
3
For example, the Supreme Court has acknowledged that a claim seeking
reimbursement for past education expenses is not moot even if the student has
graduated from high school. See Schaffer ex rel. Schaffer v. Weast, 546 U.S. 49,
55 (2005). Several of our sister circuits have applied the same logic to claims
seeking compensatory education services. See Barnett v. Memphis City Schs., 113
F. App’x 124, 127 (6th Cir. 2004) (collecting cases).
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prevented her from receiving any benefit from an updated IEP even had there
been one.
We approach this dispute mindful, as always, of our standard of review.
By statute, Congress has set out rather unique rules governing the review of
liability in IDEA claims. Unlike the deferential review typically afforded to
administrative adjudication of statutory claims, Congress requires district courts
to apply a modified de novo standard when reviewing agency disposition in the
IDEA context. See 20 U.S.C. § 1415(i)(2)(C); Murray v. Montrose County Sch.
Dist., 51 F.3d 921, 927 (10th Cir. 1995). Specifically, the district court must (1)
receive the record of the administrative proceedings, (2) hear additional evidence
at the request of a party, and (3) base its decision on the preponderance of
evidence. 20 U.S.C. § 1415(i)(2)(C). At the same time, though the statute
specifies that review is de novo, the Supreme Court has interpreted the
requirement that the district court receive the administrative record to mean that
“due weight” must be given to the administrative proceedings, Bd. of Educ. v.
Rowley, 458 U.S. 176, 206 (1982), the fact findings of which are “considered
prima facie correct,” L.B. ex rel. K.B. v. Nebo Sch. Dist., 379 F.3d 966, 974 (10th
Cir. 2004). On appeal of the district court’s judgment on the record, we are
bound to apply these very same principles of review. Nebo Sch. Dist., 379 F.3d at
974.
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Bearing this standard of review in mind, we turn to the two-step inquiry set
out by the Supreme Court as our test for assessing liability: (1) Has the school
district complied with the procedures set forth in IDEA? (2) Are the special
education services provided to the student reasonably calculated to enable the
child to receive educational benefits – or in other words, has the school district
fulfilled its obligation to provide the student with a FAPE? Rowley, 458 U.S. at
206-07.
While “a failure to meet [either] one of these considerations may result in
court ordered relief,” Erickson v. Albuquerque Pub. Schs., 199 F.3d 1116, 1120
n.4 (10th Cir. 1999), the type of relief sought will often determine which of the
two considerations is dispositive in a particular case. For example, where a
school district has allegedly failed to comply with a procedural requirement of
IDEA and the plaintiff seeks only an order mandating prospective compliance,
then question (1) (whether the school district complied with IDEA’s procedural
requirements) may be the crucial inquiry, while question (2) (whether the school
district provided a FAPE) may often be irrelevant because the claim seeks only to
vindicate the student’s procedural, rather than substantive, rights under IDEA.
But where, as here, only compensatory relief is sought, the pivotal question is (2),
because an award of compensatory education vindicates the student’s substantive
right to receive a FAPE and compensates for a past deprivation of educational
opportunity rather than a deprivation of purely procedural rights. See Urban v.
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Jefferson County Sch. Dist. R-1, 89 F.3d 720, 726-27 (10th Cir. 1996); cf.
Erickson, 199 F.3d at 1122-23 (“[C]ompensatory education is not an appropriate
remedy for a procedural violation of the IDEA.”). Of course, where a procedural
violation is alleged to have caused the substantive deprivation of a FAPE (the
case here), question (1) still bears obvious significance.
In this appeal, the school district does not dispute that it failed to comply
with IDEA’s procedural requirements in Fall 2003. For that reason, and because
the award of compensatory education that the Garcias seek depends primarily on
question (2) of our Rowley analysis, we proceed directly to consider that question
– namely, whether such a failure resulted in an effective denial of FAPE for
Myisha. Or, more precisely, whether the procedural defect of not having a
current IEP in place in Fall 2003 amounted to a substantive failure to “provid[e]
personalized instruction with sufficient support services to permit the child to
benefit educationally from [the school].” Rowley, 458 U.S. at 203.
B
Both the hearing officer and the district court held that, in light of Myisha’s
truancy and behavioral problems, as well as the school district’s provision of
remedial classes to Myisha, the school district’s failure to conduct an IEP for the
Fall 2003 semester was immaterial. Meanwhile, the AAO believed that no such
conclusion could be certain because, had the school district developed a new IEP
at the start of the term, it might have helped Myisha improve her behavior and
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achieve the sort of success she found in 2004-2005. As the disunity of these
opinions indicate, the answer to the liability question in this case is not altogether
free from doubt.
Adding to this doubt is the fact that the Garcias challenge the district
court’s decision on two grounds that do not appear to have been squarely
addressed previously in this circuit or others.
First, the Garcias argue that the lack of an IEP during most of the Fall 2003
term constitutes a per se denial of FAPE. This argument seems, at first blush, to
run headlong into our precedent holding that procedural failures under IDEA
amount to substantive failures only where the procedural inadequacy results in an
effective denial of a FAPE. 4 But the Garcias pose a slightly different and subtler
question that we have never fully confronted. They assert that, because the IEP is
the central vehicle that Congress created to deliver FAPE to disabled children and
the focal point of court review under Rowley, the total lack of an IEP for a school
term, as opposed to merely a defective IEP, is more than a technical deficiency;
rather, its entire absence forecloses any possibility that the school district
adequately provided a FAPE and also prevents effective court review of a school
district’s compliance with IDEA.
4
See T.S., 265 F.3d at 1095 (“Procedural defects alone do not constitute a
violation of the right to a FAPE unless they result in the loss of educational
opportunity.”); Urban, 89 F.3d at 726 (“Technical deviations . . . do not render an
IEP entirely invalid; to hold otherwise would ‘exalt form over substance.’”)
(internal citation omitted).
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In aid of this argument, the Garcias cite to two cases in which the absence
of an IEP was found to be a substantive denial of a FAPE. See Knable v. Bexley
City Sch. Dist., 238 F.3d 755, 766 (6th Cir. 2001); Dep’t of Educ. v. Cari Rae S.,
158 F. Supp. 2d 1190, 1196-97 (D. Haw. 2001). But these cases dealt with yet
another, slightly different factual scenario where no IEP was ever developed or
implemented for the plaintiff-student. Here, of course, the school district violated
IDEA not by failing ever to prepare an IEP for Myisha, but by failing to update
her IEP in the annual, timely fashion the statute requires. Also, apparently unlike
the cases cited by the Garcias, the school district in this case provided Myisha
with a full curriculum of special education classes even in the Fall 2003 semester
so that it remains unclear from our record whether any additional or different
services would have been provided had Myisha’s IEP been revised before that
term began.
Second, the Garcias argue that Myisha’s behavior cannot be used to defeat
the school district’s liability under IDEA. And this, too, presents us with a thorny
and uncertain path. On the one hand, we acknowledge potential pitfalls in
deeming harmless procedural violations of IDEA for students who fail to exhibit
enthusiasm for school. After all, a student’s lack of enthusiasm, at least in some
cases, may be related to his or her disability. Such students are perhaps most in
need of vigilant attention from their schools, and there is at least the possibility
that, had the school district reassessed Myisha’s needs and implemented a new
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IEP at the start of the Fall 2003 semester, the school might have been successful
in helping Myisha to overcome her behavioral tendencies and to increase her
commitment to school – a possibility not entirely out of the question on this
record in light of the potential Myisha demonstrated in 2004-2005, the very next
school year.
On the other hand, liability under IDEA is determined not by imagining the
possibilities of what might have been, but rather by determining whether the
preponderance of the evidence indicates that the school district’s procedural
failures resulted in a denial of educational benefit to the student. As the district
court points out, such an inquiry implicitly seems to require determining whether
the school district’s actions caused the student to suffer an educational loss. And
on the facts of this case, there is strong evidence indicating that, regardless of
what actions the school district did or did not take in Fall 2003, Myisha’s poor
attitude and bad habits would have prevented her from receiving any educational
benefit. See, e.g., Hearing Officer’s Decision at 39 (summarizing Myisha’s
patterns of behavior that contributed to her poor attendance and performance).
Having acknowledged that the Garcias’ appeal on liability poses novel
questions of law, we ultimately think the wisest course is to decline to answer
them definitively in this case. We do so because there appears to us a narrower
ground for decision, one based on the district court’s alternative remedial holding,
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and one more clearly dictated by our precedent. Accordingly, we leave for
another day the questions of liability posed here.
IV
Instead, assuming (though without deciding) the school district’s liability,
we turn to the question of remedy. In addition to basing its denial of relief on its
holding that the school district’s procedural deficiencies did not harm Myisha and
thus give rise to liability, the district court also, and alternatively, denied relief in
light of various equitable considerations it identified. Because the district court’s
remedial decision is entitled to abuse of discretion review, and because the
district court’s discretion extends to denying relief for the reasons the court stated
in its disposition of Myisha’s claim, we are compelled to affirm its judgment.
A
The school district asserts, and the Garcias do not deny, that, while our
standard of review in assessing liability is rather searching, our review of the
district court’s remedial decision is limited to assessing only whether it amounts
to an abuse of discretion. And, indeed, the plain language of IDEA accords
district courts broad discretion in determining relief for successful IDEA claims,
stating that a district court “shall grant such relief as the court determines is
appropriate.” 20 U.S.C. § 1415(i)(2)(C)(iii). The Supreme Court, when
examining this statutory text, has echoed the point, declaring that “[t]he ordinary
meaning of these words confers broad discretion on the court,” Sch. Comm. of
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Burlington v. Dep’t of Educ. of Mass., 471 U.S. 359, 369 (1985), and explaining
that the words of the statute “mean[] that equitable considerations are relevant in
fashioning relief,” id. at 374; see also Florence County Sch. Dist. Four v. Carter,
510 U.S. 7, 16 (1993) (recognizing that IDEA authorizes courts to “fashion[]
discretionary equitable relief”).
Where Congress affords equitable discretion to the district court, we
traditionally limit ourselves to reviewing only for “abuse” of that discretion.
“When Congress leaves to the federal courts the formulation of remedial details,
it can hardly expect them to break with historic principles of equity in the
enforcement of federally-created equitable rights.” Holmberg v. Armbrecht, 327
U.S. 392, 395 (1946). This is not to say that Congress cannot alter the federal
courts’ traditional equity practice by specifying a standard of review other than
abuse of discretion if it so chooses; of course it may. But no such congressional
intention is manifest in the text of IDEA, and the parties suggest none. See
Weinberger v. Romero-Barcelo, 456 U.S. 305, 313 (1982) (“Congress may
intervene and guide or control the exercise of the courts’ [equity] discretion, but
we do not lightly assume that Congress has intended to depart from established
principles.”). 5
5
Unsurprisingly, our application of abuse of discretion review to remedial
determinations under IDEA accords, as best we can tell, with the holdings of
every federal circuit court to have articulated a standard of review in this context.
See Mr. I. ex rel. L.I. v. Maine Sch. Admin. Dist. No. 55, 480 F.3d 1, 25-26 (1st
(continued...)
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Identifying abuse of discretion as the proper standard of review, however,
gets us only halfway across the river. We must still ask: What does it mean for a
district court to abuse its discretion in the context of considering and fashioning
remedies under IDEA?
We can begin to identify the contours of this discretion by considering what
a district court may properly do in exercising its discretion. First, and obviously
based on the statutory text, a district court may grant equitable relief to remedy a
demonstrated violation of IDEA. But, perhaps less obviously, a district may also
choose to withhold relief despite a demonstrated (or, in this case, assumed)
statutory violation if it has a valid basis in equity for doing so. As the Supreme
Court has made clear time and again, “[a] grant of jurisdiction to issue [equitable
relief] hardly suggests an absolute duty to do so under any and all circumstances.”
Hecht Co. v. Bowles, 321 U.S. 321, 329 (1944); see also United States v. Oakland
Cannabis Buyers’ Co-op., 532 U.S. 483, 496-97 (2001); Weinberger, 456 U.S. at
312-14; Tenn. Valley Auth. v. Hill, 437 U.S. 153, 193-94 (1978). Absent an
“unequivocal” statement by Congress to the contrary, courts retain their
traditional equitable discretion, including the authority to simply withhold relief,
5
(...continued)
Cir. 2007); Lester H. ex rel. Octavia P. v. Gilhool, 916 F.2d 865, 873 (3d Cir.
1990); Bd. of Educ. of Fayette County v. L.M., 478 F.3d 307, 316 (6th Cir. 2007);
Hale ex rel. Hale v. Poplar Bluffs R-I Sch. Dist., 280 F.3d 831, 834 (8th Cir.
2002); Park ex rel. Park v. Anaheim Union High Sch. Dist., 464 F.3d 1025, 1034
(9th Cir. 2006); Reid ex rel. Reid v. District of Columbia, 401 F.3d 516, 522, 527
(D.C. Cir. 2005).
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when a statutory authorization to grant relief invokes the courts’ equity
jurisdiction. Hecht, 321 U.S. at 329. Given that IDEA contains no such
unequivocal statement altering the courts’ equity jurisdiction, a district court’s
discretion encompasses the ability to deny relief based on equitable
considerations.
We can further illuminate the scope of the district court’s remedial
discretion under IDEA by considering what a district court must do. The Supreme
Court has explained that a court’s remedial determination (including a
determination to deny relief) under IDEA must be “‘appropriate’ in light of the
purpose[s] of the Act.” Burlington, 471 U.S. at 369. So we necessarily seek to
determine whether the district court’s equitable decision not to grant relief was
“appropriate” in light of IDEA’s purposes.
The “principal[]” purpose of IDEA, as outlined by the statute and as
confirmed by the Court in Burlington, is to provide all disabled children with “a
free appropriate public education that emphasizes special education and related
services designed to meet their unique needs.” 20 U.S.C. § 1400(d)(1)(A);
Burlington, 471 U.S. at 369. In addition, IDEA specifies three other purposes: to
assist states in implementing a “system of early intervention services for infants
and toddlers with disabilities;” “to ensure that educators and parents have the
necessary tools to improve educational results for children with disabilities;” and
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“to assess, and ensure the effectiveness of, efforts to educate children with
disabilities.” Id. § 1400(d)(2)-(4).
While a court’s remedial determination must be appropriate in light of these
four purposes, the Supreme Court has not given any guidance as to how a court
should rank and weigh what could, in many instances, amount to competing and
incommensurate goals or ends. For the task of our appellate review, however, we
need only evaluate whether the district court’s remedial decision is within the
range of reasonable choices in seeking to achieve whichever of IDEA’s purposes
are implicated in a given case. Fortunately in this instance, only two of IDEA’s
expressed purposes – the first and last – appear to be at issue in the district
court’s decision to deny relief to Myisha. 6 We therefore proceed to determine
whether that decision was appropriate in light of those purposes.
Turning first to IDEA’s primary purpose of providing a FAPE to all
disabled children, the district court emphasized that denying compensatory relief
in this instance in no way hinders Myisha’s access to a FAPE. And ample
evidence supports the district court’s conclusion. Myisha is, after all, already
guaranteed the provision of a FAPE at any time she chooses to return to school,
so long as she remains eligible to receive benefits under IDEA (that is, until she
6
We reach this conclusion because Myisha is not an infant or toddler and
because her suit does not appear to raise any questions about the educational tools
that are broadly available to educators and parents (as opposed to the specific
services that have or have not been available to Myisha).
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reaches 21). 7 Relatedly, it remains unclear from the record how that provision of
a FAPE would differ in any substantive (rather than formal) way from the
compensatory relief Myisha seeks in this case. See supra Part I.C. Neither does
denying Myisha relief endanger the provision of a FAPE to other disabled
children. The district court’s decision does nothing to indicate that IDEA
procedural failures will be tolerated or left unremedied except in limited
circumstances involving students who have demonstrated a clear commitment to
avoid school and disregard the educational opportunities available to them.
The district court’s denial of relief also relied on IDEA’s purpose of
ensuring the effectiveness of efforts to educate children with disabilities. After
all, the limited resources devoted to providing education benefits for disabled
children are not effectively allocated where schools expend resources on students
who not only fail to use the educational opportunities provided them but also
affirmatively avoid attending school altogether. Along these lines, the district
court emphasized that, regardless of the school district’s compliance or non-
compliance with IDEA’s procedural safeguards, “Myisha has had no interest (with
the exception of the 2004-05 school year) in obtaining an education, and . . .
continues to have no interest.” Dist. Ct. Op. at 25. As such, awarding
7
Were there any concerns that the school district would not provide her a
FAPE upon her return, prospective (rather than compensatory) relief to ensure the
provision of a FAPE would certainly be appropriate. But the Garcias have not
raised any such concerns or sought such relief.
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compensatory relief “just in case Myisha changes her mind about getting an
education at some point in the next few years is unnecessary and wasteful.” Id.;
see also Metro Motors v. Nissan Motor Corp., 339 F.3d 746, 753 (8th Cir. 2003)
(Hansen, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) (noting the general maxim
that “equity will not help those who do not help themselves”).
Ample evidence also supports the district court’s conclusion on this score.
Despite the school’s open doors, Myisha has not regularly attended school since
the Fall 2005 semester. She and her mother have affirmatively avoided the school
district’s attempts to cooperate in formulating new IEPs aimed at assisting Myisha
in further progressing in her high school education. See, e.g., Hearing Officer
Decision at ¶¶ 15, 27, 62, 64, 65, 116, 117. Additionally, Myisha’s significant
record of disciplinary problems and truancy, while not justifying the school
district’s non-compliance with IDEA in Fall 2003, does tend to confirm the
district court’s skepticism of whether Myisha will in fact choose to benefit from
the compensatory services that she might receive from the court. Myisha’s superb
performance during the 2004-2005 school year also demonstrates that she may
well be able to make impressive academic strides simply by re-enrolling in high
school, attending regularly, and avoiding the behavioral problems of her past,
aided by the special education services that would be available to her should she
re-enroll. Finally, as the hearing officer concluded, putting aside the lapse in
updating Myisha’s IEP in Fall 2003, the school district has for the most part made
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diligent and extensive efforts to provide Myisha with whatever special services
that could help her in progressing towards graduation, see Hearing Officer’s
Decision at 27, while Myisha has, aside from the 2004-2005 school year, largely
rejected those services.
Because the result of and reasons supporting the district court’s decision
accord with the relevant purposes of IDEA and are supported by the undisputed
facts in the record, we cannot say that the court abused its discretion. Of course,
this is not to say that, were we making a decision in the first instance, we would
necessarily choose the same path the district court took here; neither do we
necessarily believe that the district court’s path was the only one available to
effect the statutory purposes of IDEA. Rather, we simply hold that the district
court’s decision fell well within the broad parameters of the discretion Congress
chose to invest in it.
Now, one might observe that many of the reasons justifying the district
court’s denial of equitable relief echo the reasons the school district believes this
case is moot – namely, Myisha’s current refusal to attend school and the
demonstrated likelihood that she will not take full advantage of any award the
court might have granted. And surely they do. But while these reasons do not
indicate that this court is powerless to award relief to Myisha, and thus do not
suggest this case is moot, they do tend to confirm that the district court operated
within the bounds of the discretion afforded to it in concluding that it should not
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provide relief to Myisha. So, somewhat analogously, while the fact that a
plaintiff’s conduct prior to bringing suit may suggest some degree of comparative
or contributory fault does not strip the court of subject matter jurisdiction, it can
bear relevance when it comes to assessing whether and what relief may be
appropriate.
* * *
We recognize that Myisha Garcia’s troubles have hardly been entirely of
her own making. There is also no doubt that, at least in the Fall of 2003, the
school district neglected its statutory responsibilities towards Myisha. Our
decision today should, therefore, not be taken as excusing the school district’s
actions, or as condemning Myisha for being a poor student. Rather, our
affirmance of the district court’s disposition is simply a product of the discretion
that Congress reposed in that court. We cannot say that the court traversed the
bounds of that discretion in determining that the relief Myisha seeks is neither
necessary nor merited in light of Myisha’s educational history and the educational
services already available to her should she choose to return to school.
Affirmed.
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