Can schools and teachers be held responsible if a bullied student commits suicide?
The Kentucky Supreme Court
took up the question on Wednesday after the family of 13-year-old
Stephen Patton sued teachers and school administrators. Defense
attorneys disputed whether Stephen was even bullied and said they hadn't
seen any other lawsuits where a family was able to hold school
officials negligent.
Stephen Patton
Stephen, a 6-foot-3, 196-pound boy, towered over classmates, but his
imposing presence didn't protect the shy kid with a stutter from bullies
— and ultimately his suicide, his lawyer told the justices. The
eighth-grader at Allen Central Middle School in Floyd County shot
himself to death in November 2007 after he was constantly bullied in the
school's halls and cafeteria, said his family's attorney, Vanessa
Cantley.
"The teachers knew about it and they did nothing. They violated clear directives from school procedure," Cantley said.
Attorneys for seven school officials named in the suit countered that
Stephen never complained to anyone. Stephen didn't leave a note, and
they said his suicide was a mystery.
"There is absolutely no proof ... to demonstrate that he committed
suicide because of anything that had to do with the school or the school
district," said attorney Jonathan Shaw.
Neal Smith, an attorney for four teachers, said Stephen had suffered
from migraines since age 5 and told another student he would rather die
than have another severe headache.
Cantley said children are unlikely to admit being bullied out of embarrassment and fear of retaliation.
The lawsuit was dismissed by a Floyd County judge, a ruling upheld by
the Kentucky Court of Appeals. The Patton family is asking the Supreme
Court to send the case back to Floyd County for trial.
Cantley said a jury should decide if the alleged bullying was a "substantial factor" behind the suicide.
The justices grilled attorneys from both sides.
"Bullying is a matter of judgment with the teacher, is it not?" Justice Bill Cunningham asked.
Cantley said the district's anti-bullying policy specifically delves into what constitutes bullying and what teachers should do.
Smith said it's difficult for teachers to determine the difference between bullying and horseplay.
"If every incident of horseplay must be considered bullying, then the
teachers won't be teaching," he said. "They'll be filling out bullying
forms all day, every day."
Justice Lisabeth Hughes Abramson noted "there's probably no more difficult time than middle school."
"I doubt anybody went through middle school without either observing or participating in or being bullied," she said.
The attempt to pin negligence on school officials for a bullied
student's suicide could have broader ramifications, Abramson said. The
family of a domestic violence victim who commits suicide, for example,
could try to hold the perpetrator responsible for the death, Abramson
said.
"It seems to me that suicide is one of those complex, human events that has so many factors," Abramson said.
Cantley said Stephen was mocked for his stutter, and had his lunch box
seized by bullies who took whatever they wanted and threw the rest on
the floor.
"He never fought back," she said. "He was a gentle giant."
The Patton family is seeking unspecified monetary damages in the suit.
The family wants to use that money to set up a memorial foundation in
Stephen's name to provide anti-bullying education and training, she
said.
By all accounts, most of Stephen Patton's classmates liked the cheerful eighth-grader.
But
a few of them at Allen Central Middle School in Eastern, Ky.,
repeatedly abused, taunted and bullied the 13-year-old gentle giant, who
stood 6 foot 3, weighed 196 pounds and had a stutter, his family said
they discovered.
On Nov. 27, 2007, Stephen placed a gun to his head and took his own life.
Now
on Wednesday, eight years later, the Kentucky Supreme Court here will
hear arguments on whether schools can be held liable for failing to stem
bullying that causes a student's suicide.
Stephen's mother,
Sheila Patton, sued on his behalf, saying that four teachers, two school
superintendents and Principal Davida Bickford knew he had been bullied
daily but did nothing to stop it.
"Stephen would not want another
student to go through what he suffered," Patton said, explaining why she
brought the lawsuit.
"We cannot let our son die in vain."
The
defendants in the school of more than 300 students in Eastern Kentucky
about 125 miles from the state capital say Stephen's death was heart
wrenching but deny they knew about the hazing. Even if they had, they
say it would have been impossible for them to foresee that Stephen would
kill himself when his death took his own mother and friends by
surprise.
The teachers and administrators have prevailed in two
lower courts, but the Supreme Court will decide whether to reinstate the
lawsuit in a case that could have major consequences, given the
prevalence of bullying and how often young people consider suicide.
About
16% of students in grades 9 to 12 say they thought about taking their
own lives in the prior 12 months, according to the federal Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention while other studies have found that
victims of bullying at school are two to nine times more likely to
consider suicide than nonvictims.
Executive Director Wayne Young
of the Kentucky Association of School Administrators, which represents
3,000 educators, said it would be frighteningly unfair to hold them
accountable for something so unpredictable.
"How in the world will
we be able to talk young people into becoming teachers or principals if
they are held responsible for a student's suicide?" he asked.
Brad
Hughes, spokesman for the Kentucky School Boards Association, said
schools try to prevent bullying because it makes it harder for students
to learn, but he said it would be unfair to hold them accountable for
something they didn't know about or that happens away from school.
Stephen killed himself at home, in his own bedroom.
Patton's
suit is thought to be the first of its kind in Kentucky, but across the
USA a flood of grieving parents have filed a flood of similar
complaints. In the past year alone, suits have been filed in Chicago;
East St. Louis, Ill.; Las Vegas; and Snohomish, Wash., according to
press accounts.
But while such litigation continues unabated,
teachers and school districts have won most of the cases, said Perry
Zirkel, a professor of law and education at Lehigh University in
Bethlehem, Pa. He puts the odds of parents winning at 1 in 10.
Parents
who lose a child to suicide are empathetic plaintiffs but he sees
competing interests, including the burdens to teachers and taxpayers who
ultimately pay the tab.
Although every state except Montana has
laws against bullying, Kentucky has not spelled out legal remedies for
bullying in its statute, according to StopBullying.gov.
And courts have been reluctant to hold teachers or schools liable for a
suicide — what is seen as an unpredictable tragedy — absent proof that
school employees had direct knowledge a student was suicidal and did
nothing, or as one scholar put it, took a "cruel stance toward the
plight of a severely bullied student."
Patton and her lawyer, Vanessa Cantley, say that is what happened to Stephen.
In
her brief to the Supreme Court, Cantley cites an affidavit from former
student Phyllis Smith, who said she watched in the hall as students made
fun of Stephen's stutter in front of teachers, who did nothing.
Another
student, Zack Shepherd, told how students bullied Stephen at lunch,
taking items out of his lunch box and scattering the rest. On two
occasions, Zack, Stephen and a third boy reported Stephen's bullying to
Bickford, the principal, but Zack said she "blew us off," according to
the brief.
Teachers
allowed other students to be bullied with no consequences for the
bullies. Students put gum and barbecue sauce in Phyllis' hair. While
teacher Patricia Handshoe, one of the defendants, picked it out,
Handshoe did nothing to punish the girls who put it there, according to
the brief.
The school's hallway cameras might have documented
incidents of bullying, but Bickford testified that the secretaries in
charge of monitoring the cameras were never trained in how to recognize
it, Cantley said.
If
the case goes to trial, students will testify that Stephen made
statements regarding his impending suicide that a reasonable juror could
attribute to bullying, according to the court brief.
But lawyers for the teachers and administrators say they saw no signs Stephen was suicidal.
They
contend he suffered from a variety of other maladies, including
migraine headaches since age 6, that could have prompted him to end his
life.
In fact, he once said to another student that he would
rather die than have another migraine, the teachers' lawyers, Neal Smith
and Todd Kennedy, say in their brief.
They note that the only
teacher who even suspected Stephen might have been bullied one day asked
him about it and he assured the teacher that he and the other students
were "having fun."
Bickford testified in a deposition that she never saw Stephen being bullied and nobody ever told her that he was.
The
defendants also note that Jon Akers, director of the Kentucky Center
for School Safety, testified the school had an effective anti-bullying
policy in place and followed it.
That program included educating
teachers and students about bullying and offering a "bullying box" that
allowed students to make anonymous reports.
Judge
John David Caudill of Floyd County Circuit Court threw out Patton's
suit, in part because he found the defendants enjoyed what is known as
qualified immunity. The courts generally don't allow defendants to be
held liable for a person's suicide because it is an intervening act that
they couldn't reasonably be expected to foresee.
Exceptions
include a jailer knowing that an inmate is suicidal and not taking
reasonable steps to prevent him from killing himself. However, Caudill
said, "The record is clear that Stephen was not known to be suicidal."
The
Kentucky Court of Appeals held that the defendants were not immune from
a suit but found they couldn't be liable for a suicide, especially one
that didn't occur at school.
Cantley
concedes that not every case in which a student is bullied and
ultimately commits suicide should result in a viable lawsuit. But she
asks the Supreme Court to find that suicide is not a total bar against
recovery of damages.
In e-mail she said if the court sends that
case back for a jury trial and the estate prevails, his parents will use
any proceeds to start a foundation in Stephen's memory to finance
anti-bullying education and training.
"Every day, teachers and
school administrators throughout this state teach students that if rules
are broken, consequences follow," Cantley said. Here "rules were
broken. Stephen Patton died. But there have been no consequences for
those who broke the rules."
First case in the country
The first suit in which a school district was found liable for a student's suicide also involved a 13-year-old.
After
Shawn Wyke tried to hang himself in October 1989 in a restroom of his
junior high school in Polk County, Fla., the dean of students called him
into his office, read Scripture to him and took no further action. He
didn't tell Shawn's parents or inform other school officials.
Shawn
tried to kill himself again on school grounds later the same day then
hanged himself in his back yard a couple of days later.
A court
found the school district could be found liable for failing to notify
Shawn's parents, saying "a prudent person would not have needed a
crystal ball to see that Shawn needed help and that if he didn't get it
soon, he might attempt suicide again." The court also said "the risk of a
child's death substantially outweighs the burden of making a phone
call."
A jury returned a $500,000 verdict although the school district was found responsible for only a third of it.
2 comments:
Anonymous
said...
I remember confronting stu Silberman about bullying. My specific concern was that gay and lesbian students were being bullied. This was after the death of a trans gendered student at Dunbar. Mr. Silberman on two occasions said the time was not right to add inclusive language to protect GLBT students. When he spoke at temple adath Israel he said FCPS did not have the financial resources to hire someone to train the staff on GLBT issues.
I hope our new superintendent will do something to stop the bullying of our students.
This is sad but I don't see how the lawyers are going to connect any causation dots here. No formal reports of bullying, bully denied by the child when asked, mostly hearsay comments/observations, heck can't even demonstrate that bullying contributed to suicide. As illogical as it sounds, one could argue that due to inadequate amount horseplay.bullying or whatever one seeks to potray the interaction that the poor kid took his life. Just a sad story but parents shouldn't be using the school as some sort of punching bag to take out their grief.
2 comments:
I remember confronting stu Silberman about bullying. My specific concern was that gay and lesbian students were being bullied. This was after the death of a trans gendered student at Dunbar. Mr. Silberman on two occasions said the time was not right to add inclusive language to protect GLBT students. When he spoke at temple adath Israel he said FCPS did not have the financial resources to hire someone to train the staff on GLBT issues.
I hope our new superintendent will do something to stop the bullying of our students.
After all, it's about Kids.
This is sad but I don't see how the lawyers are going to connect any causation dots here. No formal reports of bullying, bully denied by the child when asked, mostly hearsay comments/observations, heck can't even demonstrate that bullying contributed to suicide. As illogical as it sounds, one could argue that due to inadequate amount horseplay.bullying or whatever one seeks to potray the interaction that the poor kid took his life. Just a sad story but parents shouldn't be using the school as some sort of punching bag to take out their grief.
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