MICHAEL M. BAYLSON, District Judge.
Plaintiffs are suing over a teacher's alleged persistent bullying of Aidan S., a minor student with special needs. That bullying allegedly culminated in, but did not conclude with, a violent attack against him. Plaintiffs also allege that other school officials and employees handled the aftermath of the attack inappropriately. The Amended Complaint names the teacher, the school, and the school district as defendants.
Before the Court now is the defendant teacher's partial motion to dismiss. The motion asks the Court to dismiss several of the Amended Complaint's counts and narrow others. For the reasons given below, the Court will GRANT the partial motion in its entirety.
Aidan S. is an elementary-school student at Sabold Elementary School in Springfield School District. Am. Compl. ¶¶ 1, 3, 32. In early 2017, he was in the third grade.
Plaintiffs' First Amended Complaint alleges in relevant part that Aidan's art teacher, Argie Fafalios, engaged in a pattern of "bullying and targeting" Aidan.
Plaintiffs filed suit against Fafalios, the school district, and the school on January 17, 2019. ECF 1. Plaintiffs filed an amended complaint on September 4, 2019. ECF 18. Fafalios moved to dismiss or narrow some of their claims on September 24, 2019. ECF 19. Plaintiffs responded on October 28, 2019. ECF 21. Fafalios did not reply. As yet, the remaining Defendants have not answered or moved for dismissal.
The causes of action directed against Fafalios in the Amended Complaint are as follows:
Fafalios's objections to certain of these claims, and one claim not explicitly laid out as a count in the complaint, are discussed in more detail below.
In considering a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6), the Court "accept[s] all factual allegations as true [and] construe[s] the complaint in the light most favorable to the plaintiff."
Although a court must accept as true all of the factual allegations contained in a complaint, that requirement does not apply to legal conclusions; therefore, pleadings must include factual allegations to support the legal claims asserted.
The complaint makes two glancing references to Fafalios's abuse of Aidan being sexual in nature. In Paragraph 12, the Plaintiffs state that they "seek redress pursuant to Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972." In Paragraph 83, in the Damages section, the Plaintiffs refer twice to Fafalios's conduct as "sexual harassment."
Fafalios briefly requests that the Court dismiss any claims of sexual harassment because sexual harassment is not pleaded as a separate count and there are no facts to support any such claims.
The Amended Complaint is simply inadequate. A complaint must give defendants "fair notice of what the . . . claim is and the grounds upon which it rests,"
The facts of the Amended Complaint do not describe the alleged abuse and bullying as sexual. First, Plaintiffs never refer to the "bullying" or "targeting" or "harassment" or "humiliat[ion]" Fafalios allegedly directed at Plaintiff as sexual in any narrative portion of the complaint. Second, no part of the Amended Complaint purporting to describe Fafalios's intent describes sexual intent. Instead, several of Plaintiffs' statements about intent reject the possibility of sexual intent. In one paragraph, they specifically allege that some of Fafalios's alleged bullying was undertaken "for no reason other than to single him out and humiliate and make his education tortuous." Am. Compl. ¶ 52. Perverse sexual gratification would constitute a "reason other than to single him out and humiliate and make his education tortuous." Elsewhere, they claim that Fafalios attacked Aidan "for no apparent reason."
Moreover, the structure of the complaint does not suggest the Plaintiffs have included a Title IX claim. It contains nine distinct counts, each of which is explained at some length. None rests on Title IX.
The Amended Complaint does not contain a valid Title IX claim. However, it appears that Plaintiffs may be able to state a valid Title IX claim in an amended complaint. The Court will therefore GRANT Fafalios's motion to dismiss insofar as it addresses purported Title IX claims, without prejudice and with leave to amend.
Fafalios argues that the Fourth Amendment portion of this claim should be dismissed because the Fourth Amendment does not apply to uses of excessive force by school officials that do not effect a detention. Fafalios MtD Br. at 3-5. Instead, she argues, the Fourteenth Amendment and its "shocks the conscience" standard govern.
The Court agrees with both parties. The Fourteenth Amendment, rather than the Fourth, governs cases involving momentary uses of force by school officials that do not effect a detention.
The Court will therefore GRANT Fafalios's motion to dismiss Count I, to the extent that it rests on the Fourth Amendment, with prejudice.
Fafalios argues that Count III is barred by Pennsylvania's Political Subdivision Tort Claims Act. Fafalios MtD Br. at 5-6. Plaintiffs respond that they "withdraw the Count for Negligent Infliction of Emotional Distress from the First Amended Complaint." Pls. MtD Opp. at 24.
As this portion of Fafalios's motion is uncontested, the Court will GRANT Fafalios's motion to dismiss Count III, with prejudice.
Fafalios argues that the "punitive damages" count in Plaintiffs' complaint should be dismissed because "punitive damages" is not an independent cause of action. Fafalios MtD Br. at 7. Importantly, Fafalios does not contest Plaintiffs' potential entitlement to punitive damages should they succeed in their claims—only the inclusion of punitive damages as a separate count in the Amended Complaint.
Although the Court is not aware of controlling Third Circuit law on this issue, it arrived at the same conclusion that Fafalios presses in
The Court will therefore GRANT Fafalios's motion to dismiss Count IV, with prejudice.
As this portion of Fafalios's motion is uncontested, the Court will GRANT Fafalios's motion to dismiss Count VI as to her, with prejudice.
Count VII of the Amended Complaint is vague. Plaintiffs state that "Defendants, through the above-referenced conduct, violated Minor Plaintiff's civil and constitutional rights under the fourth and 14th Amendments of the Constitution of the United States, including his right to security of person, due process and equal protection." Am. Compl. ¶ 142. However, Plaintiffs do not explain which facts underlie which rights violations.
Fafalios has leveled various arguments against Count VII. Fafalios MtD Br. at 8-10. The Court has reviewed Fafalios's arguments and Plaintiffs' responses. Having done so, the Court concludes that many of the disputes stem from Count VII's conclusory nature. Therefore "[d]efendant cannot be expected to respond to Plaintiff[s'] claims because it is unclear what claims are being asserted and what facts relate to each claim.'"
Especially here, where there are multiple Defendants, multiple allegedly tortious acts, and multiple Constitutional provisions being invoked, "a revised amended complaint that sufficiently complies with Rule 10(b) will ultimately clarify the record, streamline discovery, reduce the litigation costs for the parties, and preserve the Court's resources."
Fafalios argues that this count should be dismissed as to her because Plaintiff does not plead that she is a supervisor. Fafalios MtD Opp. at 11. Plaintiff's response appears to be the following. Fafalios's status as a mandated reporter for school official misconduct towards children gave her something equivalent to "supervisory" status with regards to other officials, Pls. MtD Opp. at 31-32, and other school officials mishandled Fafalios's misconduct towards Aidan, exacerbating the ultimate harm Aidan suffered.
Plaintiffs rely on Title 24, Section 2070.9a(a)(3)(i) of the Pennsylvania Statutes to demonstrate that Fafalios had a mandatory duty to report other school officials' misconduct. That provision poses two problems for Plaintiffs. First, it only imposes reporting duties on "[t]he chief school administrator or his designee." 24 Pa. Cons. Stat. § 2070.9a(a). Fafalios is not a chief school administrator, and there is no indication in the Amended Complaint or the briefing that Fafalios is a chief school administrator's designee. Second, that provision requires the reporting of "[i]nformation which constitutes reasonable cause to suspect that an educator has caused physical injury to a child or student as a result of negligence or malice." 24 Pa. Cons. Stat. § 2070.9a(a). Plaintiffs do not, however suggest that the other school officials "caused physical injury" to Aidan. The provision governing ordinary teachers appears to be Section 2070.9a(d), which requires teachers to report "any action, inaction or conduct which constitutes sexual abuse or exploitation or sexual misconduct." 24 Pa. Const. Stat. § 2070.9a(d). Again, Plaintiffs do not suggest that the other school officials committed sexual abuse, exploitation, or misconduct.
The Court will dismiss Count VIII, as to Fafalios, with prejudice. Dismissal with prejudice is proper when a "curative amendment would be . . . futile . . . ."
The Court will therefore GRANT Fafalios's motion to dismiss Count VIII as to her, with prejudice.
For the reasons set forth above, Fafalios's Motion to Dismiss is GRANTED as follows:
Further, Count VII is dismissed in its entirety, without prejudice and with leave to amend.
An appropriate Order follows.