GRIZZELL V. SAN ELIJO ELEMENTARY SCHOOL, No. 21-55956 (9th Cir. 2024)
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La Dell Grizzell, acting on behalf of her minor children, sued San Elijo Elementary School and the San Marcos Unified School District, alleging that the school violated her children's federal and state civil rights. The complaint included claims of racial discrimination and other civil rights violations, such as racial epithets, physical assaults, and discriminatory disciplinary measures. Grizzell sought to proceed without legal representation.
The United States District Court for the Southern District of California dismissed the case without prejudice, citing the "counsel mandate," which precludes nonlawyer parents from representing their children pro se. The court emphasized that regardless of the merits of the case, Grizzell could not represent her children without an attorney. The district court instructed that the minor plaintiffs could only proceed through a licensed attorney.
The United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit reviewed the case and affirmed the district court's dismissal. The Ninth Circuit held that it was bound by its precedent in Johns v. County of San Diego, which prohibits nonattorney parents from representing their children in court. Despite Grizzell's arguments that this rule impedes access to justice for children from low-income families, the panel concluded that it could not deviate from established precedent. The court acknowledged the serious implications of the counsel mandate but affirmed the dismissal without prejudice, indicating that only en banc review could potentially alter the rule.
Court Description: Counsel Mandate. The panel affirmed the district court’s dismissal without prejudice of La Dell Grizzell’s pro se claims, brought on behalf of her minor children against the San Elijo Elementary School and the San Marcos Unified School District, alleging that the school violated the federal and state civil rights of her children.
The district court dismissed the action without prejudice because of this Circuit’s long-established rule, dubbed the “counsel mandate,” that precludes Grizzell, as a nonlawyer, from representing her children pro se in pursuing their claims The panel held that notwithstanding concerns raised by Grizzell that the unyielding application of the counsel mandate raised grave implications for children’s access to justice, it was bound, as a three-judge panel, by Johns v. County of San Diego, 114 F.3d 874 (9th Cir. 1997), which holds that a parent may not proceed pro se on her children’s behalf.
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