Rodney Baker v. Bentonville School District, No. 22-2669 (8th Cir. 2023)
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Plaintiffs individually and as next friends of their minor daughter, I.B., appealed the district court’s dismissal of disability discrimination and civil rights deprivation claims, and denial of their motion to reconsider dismissing with prejudice a state law negligence claim against the Bentonville, Arkansas School District (“the District”).
The Eighth Circuit affirmed. The court explained that Arkansas law provides a direct cause of action against the liability insurer of a school district that is “not subject to suit for tort.” Plaintiffs’ Complaint named “John Doe” as an additional defendant, alleged on information and belief that the District maintained liability insurance, identified the insurer as John Doe, and stated that “the joinder of [John Doe] will be made upon verification of its identity.” Eleven months later, the district court ordered Plaintiffs to show good cause for an extension of the deadline to add parties, if they opposed dismissal of the John Doe defendant without prejudice. When Plaintiffs did not respond, the district court dismissed John Doe without prejudice, leaving the District, with its statutory immunity, the only negligence defendant. Plaintiffs were not deprived of a remedy for the alleged negligence of District employees and agents.
Court Description: [Loken, Author, with Shepherd and Kelly, Circuit Judges] Civil case - Civil rights. On this record, no reasonable fact-finder could conclude that the school district failed to implement safety accommodations for plaintiffs' minor child; the school district took prompt action to address plaintiffs' safety concerns and no Section 504 violation was established; the district court did not err in dismissing plaintiffs' claims under the Arkansas Civil Rights Act because there was no evidence that would allow a reasonable juror to determine the child did not receive an adequate or equal education; the district court did not err in retaining supplemental jurisdiction over plaintiffs' state law claims and declining to rule on their request for a declaratory judgment declaring the Arkansas tort immunity statute unconstitutional as the Supreme Court of Arkansas has repeatedly rejected such challenges; nor did the court err in dismissing plaintiffs' negligence claims as the school district had a clear immunity defense to the claim.
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