B.H., et al. v. Johnston County Board of Education
Filing
104
ORDER - The court DENIES the Board's request to strike; CONCLUDES that the issue of the lawfulness of the SRO level of review is not before the court; DENIES WITHOUT PREJUDICE the pending amended motions (D.E. 95, 97) pending submission of secon d amended motions for judgment, proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law, and new briefs fully addressing plaintiffs' claims as required herein; DIRECTS the parties to participate in a teleconference on 2 April 2015 at 2:30 p.m.; and DIRECTS the parties to file a memorandum on convening a mediation and/or court-hosted settlement conference. Signed by Magistrate Judge James E. Gates on 03/19/2015. (Baker, C.)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF NORTH CAROLINA
WESTERN DIVISION
5:12-CV-405-FL
B.H., by his parents T.H. and J.H.,
T.H., and J.H.,
Plaintiffs,
v.
JOHNSTON COUNTY BOARD OF
EDUCATION,
Defendant.
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
ORDER
In this action, plaintiffs B.H., a minor, through his parents T.H. and J.H., and T.H. and
J.H., individually (collectively “plaintiffs”), assert that defendant Johnston County Board of
Education (“the Board”) failed to provide B.H. with a free and appropriate education (“FAPE”)
pursuant to the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, 20 U.S.C. § 1400, et seq. (“IDEA”). 1
The case is before the court on the parties’ respective amended 2 cross-motions for judgment as a
matter of law on the administrative record. (D.E. 95, 97). Specifically, plaintiffs seek review of
unfavorable decisions rendered on their IDEA claims by both an administrative law judge
(“ALJ”) in the North Carolina Office of Administrative Hearings (“OAH”) and a State Review
Officer (“SRO”) (collectively the “hearing officers”). (See D.E. 65 at 541-609 (ALJ decision);
1
In 2004, the Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act (“IDEIA”) was enacted to reauthorize the
IDEA, see Pub. L. No. 108-446, 118 Stat. 2647 (2004) (effective 1 July 2005). However, the short title of the
IDEIA expressly provides that the law may be cited as the “Individuals with Disabilities Education Act.” 20 U.S.C.
§ 1400(a). For consistency, the court will continue herein to cite to the law as the IDEA.
2
In the course of reviewing the parties’ original cross-motions, the court discovered that the Board had not filed an
answer to plaintiffs’ amended complaint and, accordingly, directed it do so. (See 10 June 2014 Order (D.E. 86)).
Because the Board’s answer to the amended complaint raised new issues, the parties were granted leave to file the
now pending amended cross-motions. (See 11 July 2014 Order (D.E. 92)).
D.E. 66 at 114-51 (SRO decision)). 3 The amended motions have been briefed 4 and were referred
to the undersigned Magistrate Judge for a memorandum and recommendation pursuant to 28
U.S.C. § 636(b)(1)(B). (See 1st Public D.E. dated 3 Sept. 2014). In addition to the merits of
plaintiffs’ claims, this case presents two preliminary matters relating to the scope of this
proceeding—a request by the Board to strike portions of plaintiffs’ amended complaint and a
possible challenge by plaintiffs to the lawfulness of the SRO level of review. For the reasons set
forth below, the court will deny the request to strike; hold that the issue of the lawfulness of the
SRO level of review has not been brought before the court; and deny the pending amended
motions without prejudice as moot pending submission of second amended motions for
judgment, proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law, and new briefs fully addressing
plaintiffs’ claims.
BACKGROUND
In their amended complaint (D.E. 11), plaintiffs assert three claims relating to their
contention that the Board denied B.H. a FAPE:
(1)
the Board failed to implement material elements of B.H.’s individualized
educational programs (“IEP’s”) throughout the 2010-11 school year (Am.
Compl. ¶¶ 115-17), including those related to educational placement (id. ¶
115(a)-(d)), the provision of various supplementary aids and services (id. ¶
116(a)-(c)), and the provision of a certified teacher to deliver classroom
instruction (id. ¶ 117);
3
The administrative record for the proceedings below, which is voluminous, was electronically filed on 15 July
2013 at D.E. 32 to D.E. 66. Docket Entries 32 to 55 contain the 24 volumes of transcripts of the hearing before the
ALJ. Docket Entries 56 to 60 contain plaintiffs’ exhibits admitted at the hearing and D.E. 61 to D.E. 64 contain the
Board’s admitted exhibits. Docket Entry 65 contains non-evidentiary materials from the proceedings in the OAH,
and D.E. 66 contains the record of the proceedings before the SRO. While initial attempts to electronically file a
portion of the administrative record appear at D.E. 26 to D.E. 31, the parties requested (D.E. 67) that the court
disregard these duplicative entries. While plaintiffs attached one exhibit (D.E. 11-1) to the amended complaint, they
did not request that the exhibit be received as additional evidence in this case, and the time within which to do so has
expired. (See Jt. Rule 26(f) Rep. (D.E. 15) ¶ 3(d); 9 Nov. 2012 Order (D.E. 16) 2 (adopting parties’ proposed case
schedule)). Accordingly, this exhibit will not be considered by the court in addressing the motions before it.
4
The parties each filed memoranda (D.E. 96, 98) in support of their respective amended motions as well as
responses (D.E. 101, 102) to the opposing amended motions. In addition, plaintiffs filed a reply (D.E. 103) to the
Board’s response.
2
(2)
the Board failed to educate B.H. in the least restrictive environment
(“LRE”) throughout the 2010-11 school year (id. ¶¶ 118-21); and
(3)
the Board’s superintendent violated the procedural requirements of the
IDEA when he unilaterally directed B.H.’s IEP team to change his
placement to homebound services on 29 March 2011 (id. ¶¶ 122-24). 5
Plaintiffs seek “all appropriate relief available” under the IDEA (id. ¶ 147(e)), including
specifically: compensatory education for a period of three years in an amount and frequency
sufficient to remedy the regression or other harm to B.H. as a result of the educational time lost
during the 2010-11 school year due to the failure of the Board to implement his IEP’s and
provide a FAPE (id. ¶¶ 127, 147(c)); a prospective injunction requiring the Board to fund a
private educational program for B.H. (id. ¶ 128); reimbursement for the costs of B.H.’s private
educational program and services from 29 March 2011 until such time as the Board offers
plaintiffs an IEP to which B.H.’s parents agree (id. ¶¶ 137-38, 147(b)(i)-(iv)); an order directing
that B.H.’s current private educational program remain as his placement (i.e., his “stay put” 6
placement) pursuant to 20 U.S.C. § 1415(j) until modified by court order or by agreement of the
parties (id. ¶¶ 139-40, 147(b)(v)); attorneys’ fees and costs (id. ¶¶ 141-46, 147(d)); and a
declaratory judgment stating that the Board failed to provide a FAPE for the 2010-11 school
year, the current homebound IEP fails to provide a FAPE in the LRE, and plaintiffs’ private
educational program is and continues to be appropriate (id. ¶ 147(a)).
5
As this listing indicates, the court is not including in plaintiffs’ claims for purposes of this Order plaintiffs’
associated demands for relief. Litigation of the issues relating to the relief plaintiffs seek would be premature until
their claims for liability are resolved. If plaintiffs do prevail on any of their claims for liability, the court can at that
time require submissions by the parties addressing the issues relating to relief.
6
The “stay put” provision of the IDEA provides that “during the pendency of any proceedings conducted pursuant
to [the IDEA,]” the child “shall remain” in his or her “then-current education placement.” 20 U.S.C. § 1415(j).
3
DISCUSSION
I.
The Board’s Request to Strike Portions of Plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint
In its answer to the amended complaint, the Board objects that certain allegations should
be stricken pursuant to Rule 12(f) “because they are beyond the scope of the official
administrative record on appeal.” (See, e.g., Ans. to Am. Compl. ¶ 11). The Board references
these objections in a footnote in its supporting memorandum and “requests that [the allegations]
be stricken from the record.” (Bd.’s Mem. 3 n.2). The Board nowhere provides a listing of the
allegations in question or any argument in support of its request to strike them.
The Board’s casual request falls far short of meeting the requirements for motions in this
court. See Local Civ. Rule 7.1, E.D.N.C. Indeed, the court does not deem the request a motion
at all, effective to bring the matter before the court for resolution. To the extent that the request
is deemed a motion, it is DENIED for defective form and lack of support.
II.
Lawfulness of the SRO Level of Review
In their amended motion, plaintiffs assert that they are entitled to a declaratory judgment
that North Carolina’s two-tiered system of review is not authorized by the IDEA. Specifically,
they assert that:
the [SRO]’s decision . . . was unauthorized under 20 U.S.C. § 1415(g), and is
therefore entitled to no weight in these proceedings, because an administrative
appeal is only available under IDEA where a local educational agency [“LEA”]
conducts the due process hearing and there is no genuine dispute that the due
process hearing in this case was not conducted by a[n] [LEA].
(Pls.’ Mot. ¶ 8). In other words, plaintiffs contend that the IDEA does not permit an appeal to
the SRO (i.e., the state educational agency, or “SEA”) since the due process hearing was
conducted not by the Board (i.e., the LEA), but rather by the OAH.
4
While plaintiffs raised this issue before both the ALJ and the SRO, unsuccessfully, 7 they
did not include this claim in the amended complaint in the instant action. Accordingly, the court
CONCLUDES that this issue is not before it. 8
III.
Need for Proposed Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law and Concomitant
Briefing by the Parties
“Actions authorized under [the IDEA] are procedurally unique in that they are
independent civil actions in which the district court considers the record of the state
administrative hearing, as well as any new evidence offered by a party, and makes findings based
on the preponderance of the evidence.” County Sch. Bd. of Henrico v. Z.P., 399 F.3d 298, 304
(4th Cir. 2005) (citing 20 U.S.C. § 1415(i)(2)(B)). Thus, for example, it is “entirely appropriate
and consistent with the district court’s obligation to make its own independent determination” for
the court to accept the administrative findings of fact but conclude “that the evidence considered
as a whole point[s] to a different legal conclusion than that reached by the [hearing officer].”
Sumter Cnty. Sch. Dist. 17 v. Heffernan ex rel. TH, 642 F.3d 478, 485 (4th Cir. 2011). A court is
required to give “due weight” to findings of fact made by the state hearing officers, meaning that
they are to be considered prima facie correct if “regularly made” within accepted fact-finding
norms. M.M. ex rel. D.M. & E.M. v. Sch. Dist. of Greenville Cnty., 303 F.3d 523, 530-31 (4th
Cir. 2002) (holding that in determining whether factual findings were “regularly made” a
reviewing court “should examine the way in which the state administrative authorities have
arrived at their administrative decisions and the methods employed”); see also Sch. Bd. of the
City of Norfolk v. Brown, 769 F. Supp. 2d 928, 939 (E.D. Va. 2010) (“[T]he Fourth Circuit has
7
(See ALJ Dec. at 604 ¶ 79; SRO Dec. at 145-46 ¶¶ 52-56).
8
Even had plaintiffs properly asserted this claim in this court, it would fail. The Fourth Circuit recently held that
North Carolina’s two-tiered system is permitted by the IDEA. E.L. ex rel. Lorsson v. Chapel Hill-Carrboro Bd. of
Educ., 773 F.3d 509, 510 (4th Cir. 2014).
5
recognized that ‘the manner in which a hearing officer’s factual findings are presented could be
so deficient as to deprive the opinion of the deference to which it would otherwise be entitled.’”
(quoting J.P. ex rel. Peterson v. Cnty. Sch. Bd. of Hanover Cnty., Va., 516 F.3d 254, 260 (4th
Cir. 2008))).
As applied in this case, this standard requires the court to determine the merits of each of
plaintiffs’ claims in the amended complaint based on the evidence in the administrative record,
giving due deference to the “regularly made” factual findings by the hearing officers. The court
finds that the present state of the record precludes the court from conducting the requisite review
in an efficient and timely manner.
The principal deficiency is the failure of the hearing officers to focus adequately on
plaintiffs’ claims and the issues they present. Contrary to the Board’s contention, plaintiffs’
claims in this court are, as far as the court can discern, the same claims plaintiffs asserted before
the ALJ and SRO, with the sole exception of the challenge to the lawfulness of the SRO level of
review, discussed above.
Rather than focusing on plaintiffs’ claims, the hearing officer decisions focus on the
Board’s contentions, whether or not they are responsive to plaintiffs’ claims. Indeed, the ALJ’s
decision, which was adopted in a summarized form by the SRO, 9 is virtually a wholesale,
verbatim recitation of the Board’s proposed final decision. A line-by-line comparison of the two
9
Specifically, the SRO explained:
The [SRO] finds that the ALJ’s Facts are regularly made and incorporates many of them in this
Decision. As many of the ALJ’s facts were simply recitations of testimony, the [SRO] has
consolidated them into a much shorter set of facts. This makes the reading of the decision much
easier and understandable. Also, the ALJ included numerous facts from testimony that were
unnecessary because of the stipulations. These were omitted. Several facts omitted by the ALJ,
but supported by the record, have been added. Although there are minor differences, the overall
impression one gets when reading all the ALJ’s Facts and the [SRO’s] Facts is basically the same.
(SRO Dec. at 117-18).
6
documents reveals that the ALJ adopted, with no substantive modifications whatsoever, all 480
findings of fact and 79 conclusions of law proposed by the Board. The only addition by the ALJ
was a single factual finding that “[t]he parties received notice of hearing by certified mail more
than 15 days prior to the hearing and each stipulated on the record that notice was proper.” (ALJ
Dec. at 544, Findings of Fact ¶ 1).
As a result of the hearing officers’ lack of focus on plaintiffs’ claims, they failed to make
findings of fact, as well as corresponding conclusions of law, on numerous issues raised by
plaintiffs’ claims. Perhaps the most glaring example is their failure to address in any way
plaintiffs’ second claim—that the Board failed to educate B.H. in the LRE throughout the 201011 school year. This claim, issues relating to it, and other issues as to which the hearing officers
failed to make findings of fact, as well as conclusions of law, are included in the list of issues set
out below that the court is directing the parties to address in further submissions required by this
Order. Certain other issues are included in this list in response to additional errors by the hearing
officers, among them the failure to apply the correct legal standard.
The failure of the hearing officers to make findings of fact on all of plaintiffs’ claims and
the underlying issues puts this court in the position of having to make extensive original findings
of fact on an administrative record—which includes almost 7,000 pages of evidence—it had no
role in creating. Moreover, the court would have to do so without the benefit of any proposed
findings by the parties properly focused on plaintiffs’ claims. The parties’ briefs do not fill this
void. In its briefing, the Board focuses not on plaintiffs’ claims, but defense of the SRO’s
decision, which, as noted, simply recites wholesale the Board’s contentions. While plaintiffs’
briefing does focus on their claims, they lacked findings of fact in the hearing officer decisions
7
needed to adequately support and develop their arguments and did not propose to the court
findings of their own.
The court has determined that the most efficient means of filling the gaps in factual
findings and corresponding conclusions of law addressing plaintiffs’ claims and the underlying
issues is to require the parties to submit proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law
properly based on plaintiffs’ claims and the underlying issues, and concomitant new briefing.
Because the requirement for these new submissions would effectively moot the parties’ pending
motions for judgment, they should be denied as such and the parties required to submit new
motions. The parties are certainly in a better position than the court to undertake development of
new findings of fact since they have extensive, firsthand familiarity with the evidence of record,
having themselves developed the administrative record.
In certain circumstances, of course, remand by the court to an administrative hearing
officer has been found to be appropriate for development of further factual findings. See, e.g.,
Z.P., 399 F.3d at 310; G ex rel. RG v. Fort Bragg Dependent Sch., 343 F.3d 295, 307-08 (4th
Cir. 2003) (remanding for further proceedings to resolve the parents’ claim that the school
district would be unable to implement the IEP as written because neither the appeal board nor the
district court addressed the issue under the proper legal standard); JH ex rel. JD v. Henrico Cnty.
Sch. Bd., 326 F.3d 560, 568-69 (4th Cir. 2003) (remanding to the district court with instruction to
remand to hearing officer for reconsideration of a claim where the record did not contain
findings by the hearing officer necessary to consideration of the claim under the proper legal
standard). At this point, though, the court is not convinced that remand is appropriate because of
the potential to remedy the fact-finding deficiencies at this level and the extended delay a remand
8
would entail. Moreover, as discussed below, the present posture of this case appears to present
the opportunity for its settlement in this court.
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED as follows:
1. The amended motions (D.E. 95, 97) for judgment as a matter of law by plaintiffs
(referred to collectively herein below as a party) and the Board are DENIED without prejudice as
moot.
2. No later than 9 April 2015, the parties shall each file a second amended motion for
judgment as a matter of law on the administrative record.
3. Each party shall file with its second amended motion proposed findings of fact and
conclusions of law addressing all claims in the amended complaint and the underlying issues.
Such claims and, set out beneath them, the underlying issues are:
a.
Plaintiffs’ claim that the Board failed to implement B.H.’s IEP’s for the 2010-11
school year.
i.
Whether B.H.’s educational placement from the beginning of the 2010-11
school year until 11 October 2010 constituted a failure to implement a material
portion of the 31 March 2010 IEP from Currituck County, as written.
See
Heffernan, 642 F.3d at 484 (4th Cir. 2011) (“[A] material failure to implement an
IEP, or, put another way, a failure to implement a material portion of an IEP,
violates the IDEA.”).
ii.
Whether 34 C.F.R. § 300.323(e), which permits a school to provide
“comparable” services to students transferring “within the same school year”
applies to this case and, if not, whether the Board complied with the IDEA
requirement that “[a]t the beginning of each school year, each public agency must
9
have in effect, for each child with a disability within its jurisdiction, an IEP.” 34
C.F.R. § 300.323(a); 20 U.S.C. § 1414(d)(2)(A).
iii.
Whether B.H.’s educational placement from 11 October 2010 until 29
March 2011 constituted a failure to implement any material element of the IEPs,
as written, dated 11 October 2010, 8 November 2010, or 15 March 2010. See
Heffernan, 642 F.3d at 484.
iv.
Whether 34 C.F.R. § 300.18(f), which relates to the qualifications of
special education teachers, applies to teaching assistants or other education
paraprofessionals. 10
v.
Whether the provision of services to B.H. during the 2010-11 school year
by Board staff who were not certified teachers constituted a failure to implement
B.H.’s various IEPs that were in effect.
vi.
b.
All other issues presented by this claim.
Plaintiffs’ claim that the Board failed to educate B.H. in the LRE throughout the
2010-11 school year.
i.
Whether B.H. was educated in the LRE at all times during the 2010-11
school year as required by 20 U.S.C. § 1412(a)(5)(A).
10
The court notes that regarding plaintiffs’ argument that the Board failed to provide a certified teacher to deliver
classroom instruction to B.H., the SRO did not address the merits, but rather concluded that plaintiffs were not
entitled to pursue this claim under the IDEA as follows:
30. Petitioners also claim that BH was denied services provided by a qualified teacher beginning
in December 2010, when teaching assistant Kim Cannada served as the autism classroom teacher
for approximately three school weeks. Such an allegation cannot form the basis of a due process
petition because there is no right of action on behalf of an individual student or a class of students
for the failure of a particular employee to be highly qualified. 34 C.F.R. § 300.18(f)
(SRO Dec. at 142 ¶ 30).
10
ii.
Whether any changes made to B.H.’s placement on the continuum of
alternative placements during the 2010-11 school year were made in accordance
with the IDEA’s procedural requirements. See 34 C.F.R. §§ 300.115, 116.
iii.
c.
All other issues presented by this claim.
Plaintiffs’ claim that the Board’s superintendent violated the procedural
requirement of the IDEA by unilaterally directing B.H.’s IEP team to change his
placement to homebound services.
i.
Whether the ruling by the hearing officers that B.H. was denied a FAPE
between 29 March 2011 and 10 June 2011 due to the Board’s stipulated
procedural violation that occurred when B.H.’s placement was changed to
homebound renders moot any challenges raised by plaintiffs to the substance of
the 29 March 2011 IEP or its implementation.
ii.
All other issues presented by this claim.
4. The proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law shall meet the following
requirements:
a.
Each proposed finding of fact shall include a citation to all evidence the party
proposing the finding contends supports it. All citations to the administrative record shall
include the docket entry number, the page number(s) assigned by the court’s CM/ECF
electronic filing system, and, where applicable, the paragraph number(s) and transcript
line number(s). The evidence cited by a party in support of a finding will be deemed the
only evidence that the party contends is supportive of the finding.
b.
Each proposed conclusion of law shall include a citation to all proposed findings
of fact the party contends supports it.
11
c.
If a party proposes a finding or conclusion previously made by the ALJ or SRO,
the party shall identify it as such by including with it the citation for the corresponding
finding or conclusion made by the ALJ or SRO. Any such proposed findings and
conclusions shall be subject to the foregoing subparagraphs 4.a and 4.b.
5. Each party shall also file with its second amended motion a supporting memorandum
of law, which shall not exceed 60 pages in length exclusive of the certificate of service and any
attachments.
Each party’s supporting memorandum shall be subject to the following
requirements:
a.
The memorandum shall set out the party’s arguments on each of plaintiffs’ claims
in the amended complaint and the underlying issues as set out in paragraph 3 above.
b.
The memorandum shall cite to all of the party’s own proposed findings of fact and
conclusions of law it contends support each argument it makes. The evidence cited by a
party in support of an argument, by citation to a proposed finding of fact or otherwise,
will be deemed the only evidence that the party contends is supportive of the argument.
c.
To the extent that the Board contends that a claim or issue raised in plaintiffs’
amended complaint was not first raised in the proceedings below, its memorandum shall
identify any such claim or issue as well as any evidence in the administrative record in
support of its contention.
d.
The Board’s memorandum shall identify and be accompanied by any document
containing policies and procedures that were followed by the Board in implementing the
IDEA at any time material to this case, excluding the IDEA itself, its implementing
regulations, and the North Carolina Policies for Governing Services for Children with
12
Disabilities. The policies and procedures the Board shall identify and submit include, but
are not limited to, those referenced in the administrative record as follows:
i.
Wilma Bisesi’s testimony that a school district has 20 days to provide
comparable services to a student who transfers to Johnston County from another
county in the state. (D.E. 47 at 110:16-22).
ii.
Kara Acree’s testimony that the Board’s practice is that it generally takes
30 school days to complete the “transition process” for a child transferring to
Johnston County from within the state and that comparable services are provided
during that time. (D.E. 48 at 125:12 to 126:3).
6. Each party shall file a memorandum in response to the opposing party’s motion
within 21 days after the motion is filed. The memorandum shall not exceed 20 pages in length.
7. To provide the parties with an opportunity to obtain answers to questions they may
have regarding compliance with this Order, the court will conduct a teleconference on 2 April
2015 at 2:30 p.m. Counsel for the Board is directed to call counsel for plaintiffs, and once
counsel for both parties are on the line, the Board’s counsel shall call Judge Gates’ chambers at
(919) 645-1790 to begin the telephone conference. The telephone conference will be recorded.
In the event both parties believe such a telephone conference is unnecessary, they shall file a
joint motion no later than 1 March 2015 seeking its cancellation.
IV.
Need for Consideration of Settlement Proceedings
Serious consideration should be given to attempting to resolve this case through a
mediation or court-hosted settlement conference. Among other reasons, the parties have already
devoted substantial resources to litigating this matter and substantial additional resources will be
required, not only at the district court level, but also for any appeal. The question is presented
13
whether such resources are disproportionate to the resources implicated by plaintiffs’ claims.
Moreover, without expressing any opinion on the merits of plaintiffs’ claims, the court notes
that, as the foregoing discussion indicates, there are fundamental deficiencies in the hearing
officer decisions.
To assist the court in determining whether to order the parties to participate in a
mediation or court-hosted settlement conference (or both, if necessary), the parties shall confer
about the matter and submit a memorandum to the court no later than 26 March 2015 setting out
their joint position with respect to the convening of a mediation and/or court-hosted settlement
conference or, in the event the parties cannot agree on a position, their separate positions. If the
memorandum proposes a mediation, it shall identify one or more mediators available to preside
over the mediation. The memorandum shall also include any proposal the parties may wish to
make regarding suspension of the deadline for filing second amended motions for judgment and
the related documents pending completion of any settlement proceedings ordered.
CONCLUSION
In summary, the court DENIES the Board’s request to strike; CONCLUDES that the
issue of the lawfulness of the SRO level of review is not before the court; DENIES WITHOUT
PREJUDICE the pending amended motions (D.E. 95, 97) pending submission of second
amended motions for judgment, proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law, and new briefs
fully addressing plaintiffs’ claims as required herein; DIRECTS the parties to participate in a
teleconference on 2 April 2015 at 2:30 p.m.; and DIRECTS the parties to file a memorandum on
convening a mediation and/or court-hosted settlement conference.
14
SO ORDERED, this the 19th day of March 2015.
_________________________
James E. Gates
United States Magistrate Judge
15
Disclaimer: Justia Dockets & Filings provides public litigation records from the federal appellate and district courts. These filings and docket sheets should not be considered findings of fact or liability, nor do they necessarily reflect the view of Justia.
Why Is My Information Online?