the limits of your “duty”

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JIM WALSH The Limits of Your “Duty”

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The Limits of Your “Duty”. Jim Walsh. Moral Duty v. Legal Duty. What follows is a depressing story and a poor reflection on public education. The fact that the court ruled in favor of the school district and its employees will likely surprise many educators. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Limits of Your “Duty”

JIM WALSH

The Limits of Your “Duty”

Page 2: The Limits of Your “Duty”

Moral Duty v. Legal Duty What follows is a depressing story and a

poor reflection on public education. The fact that the court ruled in favor of

the school district and its employees will likely surprise many educators.

The case is an excellent example of the distinction between MORAL and LEGAL duties.

Page 3: The Limits of Your “Duty”

What Happened Jane Doe was a 9-year old in Covington

County Schools. We don’t know anything else about her.

Six times in the 2007-08 school year, Jane was released during the school day to Tommy Keyes.

Mr. Keyes was not listed on the “Permission to Check Out” form.

Page 4: The Limits of Your “Duty”

And Then? On each of these six occasions, Mr.

Keyes sexually assaulted Jane, and then returned her to the school.

Jane sued the district, the superintendent, the board, the board president, Mr. Keyes and unnamed others.

Page 5: The Limits of Your “Duty”

Up the Judicial Ladder Federal district court dismissed the

school and all of the individual school defendants from the case. No liability under federal law.

A panel of the 5th Circuit reversed that decision.

The case was then accepted for en banc review by the entire 5th Circuit—18 judges.

Page 6: The Limits of Your “Duty”

The Decision By 16-2 vote, the Court agreed with the

district court—dismissing the case against the district and its employees and board members.

Court ruled there was no liability for this under federal law.

How can this be????

Page 7: The Limits of Your “Duty”

Let’s Go Back In 1989, the Supreme Court held that a

county could not be held liable, under the U.S. Constitution, for the failure to protect a child from abuse inflicted by his father.

The Court held that the child’s constitutional rights were not violated. This is because his injuries were inflicted by a private party—not the government.

Page 8: The Limits of Your “Duty”

DeShaney v. Winnebago County

That was the DeShaney case. It created the general rule that the constitution does not create a DUTY for the government to protect us from harm, even violence, inflicted by private parties.

If there is no DUTY there is no RIGHT. I do not have a constitutional right to be protected from harm.

There was one exception.

Page 9: The Limits of Your “Duty”

Special Relationship DeShaney held that the government

DOES have a constitutional duty to protect a person from harm when the government creates a “special relationship” with an individual.

This happens when the government takes custody of the person, through incarceration or involuntary commitment.

Page 10: The Limits of Your “Duty”

Special Relationship and Public Schools

Since the DeShaney case (1989) there have been numerous cases in which plaintiffs have tried to extend the “special relationship” theory to the public school.

This is based on compulsory attendance laws and the fact that parents are not present at the school. Age and disability are often factored in as well.

Page 11: The Limits of Your “Duty”

How Is That Theory Working? Courts have overwhelmingly rejected

the notion that compulsory attendance laws, even when applied to very young or significantly disabled students, create a “special relationship.”

This includes Circuit Court decisions in the 1st, 3rd, 4th, 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th and 11th Circuits.

Page 12: The Limits of Your “Duty”

What About Fifth Circuit? This case is the third time that the en

banc 5th Circuit has rejected the “special relationship” theory in the public school setting.

“We now hold that the student did not have a DeShaney special relationship with her school, and her school therefore had no constitutional duty to protect her from harm inflicted by a private actor.”

Page 13: The Limits of Your “Duty”

State Created Danger Theory Jane Doe also alleged that the school

should be liable under the “state-created danger” theory of liability.

Some Circuits have approved this theory, but the 5th has not, and refused to do so here.

Page 14: The Limits of Your “Duty”

How to Think About This….

The court is charged with defining the scope of your LEGAL duties—not your moral or professional duties.

This case only alleged a violation of the U.S. Constitution—so that is all that the court could look at.

Fundamental principle: the Constitution restricts governmental action—not private actors.

Page 15: The Limits of Your “Duty”

Liability in This Case If the facts in the case as alleged are

true, then Mr. Keyes is liable for civil and criminal violations.

Mississippi state law could create liability for the school or the individuals in the school. The court made note of this: see next slide….

Page 16: The Limits of Your “Duty”

Quote from the Court

“In affirming the dismissal of the Does’ complaint, we do not suggest that schools have no obligation to insure that their students remain safe from acts of private violence. State law provides the appropriate legal framework to address Jane’s injury.”

Page 17: The Limits of Your “Duty”

Harrumph! This issue “has been before this en

banc court three times and three times we have said the same thing.”

“There is no room—not an inch—for confusion.”

“No further panel of this court should require us to iterate these clear statements of the law a fourth time.”

Page 18: The Limits of Your “Duty”

The Case Doe v. Covington County School

District, ___ F.3d ___ (5th Cir. en banc, 2012).

Decided March 23, 2012.

Page 19: The Limits of Your “Duty”

Contact

Jim WalshWalsh, Anderson, Gallegos, Green and

Treviño, P.C.P.O. Box 2156Austin, Texas 78768Phone: (512) 454-6864Fax: (512) 467-9318Email: [email protected] Web: www.WalshAnderson.comTwitter: http://twitter.com/JWalshtxlawdawg

Page 20: The Limits of Your “Duty”

The information in this handout was created by Walsh, Anderson, Gallegos, Green and Treviño, P.C. It is intended to be used for general information only and is not to be considered specific legal advice. If specific legal advice is sought, consult an attorney.