VALESKY et al v. THE ROMAN ARCHDIOCESE OF GREENSBURG, AND AQUINAS ACADEMY, INC. et al
Filing
82
OPINION and ORDER granting 68 Motion for Summary Judgment Signed by Judge Donetta W. Ambrose on 9/14/11. (laf)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA
WILLIAM AND LISA VALESKY,
On behalf of their minor child, and
LISA VALESKY, an individual,
Plaintiffs,
vs.
AQUINAS ACADEMY, THE ROMAN
ARCHDIOCESE OF GREENSBURG, and
NOURREDINE DESLAM, an individual,
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Civil Action No. 09-800
Defendants.
AMBROSE, Senior District Judge
OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiffs claim in this action that Jane Doe was sexually abused by defendant Nourredine
Deslam (“Deslam”), a maintenance employee at defendant Aquinas Academy (“Aquinas”), while
she attended kindergarten at the school. Plaintiffs have alleged that Aquinas and Defendant the
Diocese of Greensburg (the “Diocese”) violated Jane Doe‟s rights under Title IX by failing to
protect her from Deslam once they received notice of his misconduct. Plaintiff Lisa Valesky
further claims that Aquinas and the Diocese violated her rights under Title IX when they banned
her from Aquinas in retaliation for her allegations against Deslam. Defendants have moved for
summary judgment dismissing Plaintiffs‟ claims on the grounds that (1) the Diocese and Aquinas
are not subject to the requirement of Title IX because they are not recipients of federal financial
assistance; (2) the Diocese is a separate entity from Aquinas and has no liability as an employer
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under Title IX; (3) Plaintiffs have failed to submit sufficient evidence of sexual abuse or
harassment to support their Title IX claim; and (4) Defendants had a legitimate reason unrelated
to her complaints to deny Lisa Valesky the opportunity to volunteer in the cafeteria. For the
reasons set forth below, I grant Defendants‟ motion for summary judgment.
I. Legal Standard
In order to succeed on a motion for summary judgment, a moving party must demonstrate
that “the pleadings, the discovery and disclosure materials on file, and any affidavits show that
there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the movant is entitled to judgment as a
matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). “The dispute is genuine if the evidence is such that a
reasonable jury could return a verdict for the non-moving party. A fact is material when it might
affect the outcome of the suit under the governing law.” Scott v. Airtran Airways, Inc., No. 051123, 2006 WL 2711654, at *2 (W.D. Pa., 2006); see also, Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477
U.S. 242, 248 (1986). If the party moving for summary judgment will not bear the burden of
proof at trial, it may meet its initial burden by showing that the evidence on record would not be
sufficient for a reasonable jury to find in the non-movant‟s favor. Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477
U.S. 317, 322 (1986). “Once the party moving for summary judgment has carried the initial
burden . . . , the nonmoving party cannot rely upon conclusory allegations in its pleadings or in
memoranda and briefs to establish a genuine issue of material fact. Instead, it must „make a
showing sufficient to establish the existence of every element essential to its case . . . .‟” Pastore
v. Bell Tel. Co. of Pa., 24 F.3d 508, 511 (3d Cir. 1994) (quoting Harter v. GAF Corp., 967 F.2d
846, 852 (3d Cir. 1992)). “A nonmoving party must adduce more than a mere scintilla of
evidence in its favor, and cannot simply reassert factually unsupported allegations contained in
its pleadings.” Williams v. Borough of West Chester, Pa, 891 F.2d 458, 459 (3d Cir. 1989).
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“Thus an opponent may not prevail merely by discrediting the credibility of the movant's
evidence; it must produce some affirmative evidence.” Big Apple BMW, Inc. v. BMW of N.
America, Inc., 974 F.2d 1358, 1363 (3d Cir. 1992), cert. denied, 507 U.S. 912 (1993). Rule 56
requires the granting of a motion for summary judgment after adequate time for discovery
against the party who fails “to make a showing sufficient to establish the existence of an element
essential to that party‟s case, and on which that party will bear the burden of proof at trial.”
Scott, 2006 WL 2711654, at *1 (quoting Celotex, 477 U.S. at 322).
II. Statement of Relevant Facts1
Facts Relating to Whether Defendants Are Subject to Title IX
Aquinas is organized as a charitable trust and is one of fifteen private, Catholic
elementary schools that operate within the Diocese. Trent Bocan (“Bocan”) has been the
Superintendent of Catholic Schools and the Managing Director for the Office of Catholic
Schools for the Diocese since August 2006. He is an employee of the Diocese, was appointed by
the Bishop, and reports to the Bishop and the Vicar General of the Diocese. (Docket No. 76-2, at
8-9, 12-13.) The Office of Catholic Schools is a ministry of the Diocese, and Bocan acts as a
trust advisor to the elementary schools, advising on policy, operations, assisting with the
budgetary process and the hiring of personnel. (Id. at 16, 25.) As the managing director for the
Office of Catholic Schools, he acts on behalf of the Bishop relative to the direction of education
within the Catholic schools. (Id. at 13.) Since the schools were re-organized as charitable trusts
in 2008, Bocan has had more control over the schools because he is in a direct consulting
supervisory role relative to the school principals. (Id. at 22.) The Office of Catholic Schools
1
Unless otherwise indicated, all facts have been agreed to by the parties in connection
with this motion. [See Docket Nos. 73, 81.] To the extent that I have considered additional facts
contained in the record, I have included citations to the record.
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has a handbook of policies applicable to the elementary schools, similar to what a school district
would have, defining policies for such areas as employees, students, and field trips. (Id. at 40.)
The Bishop of the Diocese is the trustee of each of the schools. (Id. at 19.) Each of the
schools also has a Board of Trust Administrators composed of the pastors that are closest in
proximity to the school or have the largest sending history from their parishes to that school. (Id.
at 42.) The Diocese taxes the parishes within it, which includes an assessment that supports the
Catholic schools within the Diocese. (Id. at 19.) The Bishop approves the funding mechanism
of taxing the assessment of parishes for the dissemination of funds, the collection and
redistribution of funds through the Diocese offices to the schools, and the religious education
curriculum. (Id. at 49.) The Diocese provides payroll services to its schools. (Id. at 15.) The
elementary schools, including Aquinas, are connected with the Diocese via an intranet. (Id. at
37.) In the event an elementary school would seek to close, the Board of Trust Administrators
of the school would make such a recommendation, but the Bishop would have to approve the
recommendation.
The Diocese employs a Director of Information Technologies whose office supports the
Diocesan network infrastructure, telecommunication infrastructure, including those for the
schools of the Diocese. (76-4, at 5.) With respect to Aquinas, it provides the help desk,
purchases standard equipment for them, troubleshoots, and edits and submits their technology
plan objectives for the E-rate application. (Id. at 7.)
The E-Rate Program is a federal program that allows schools, consortiums and public
libraries to receive discounts on telecommunications and hardware and services that are for
telecommunications. (Id. at 14.) The Diocese participates in the E-Rate program, including
assisting the schools in applying for the program by acting as a lead education agency. (Id. at
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14.) Essentially, the Diocese walks the schools, including Aquinas, through the application
process and the Office for Catholic Schools handles the administrative portion of determining the
amount of the discount. (Id. at 15.) The Diocese also received a matching E-Rate grant to
establish the Central Regional Consortium. (Id. at 17.) The Diocese insures that its schools
comply with the Content Internet Protection Act, required by the Federal government as a
condition of receiving discounts on internet service. (Id. at 34-35.)
Certain of the schools within the Diocese participate in the National School Lunch
Program, including Geibel Middle and High School and several elementary schools. Aquinas
itself does not participate directly in the National School Lunch Program. In addition, the E-Rate
discount is based in part on the participation rate of Diocesan schools in the National School
Lunch Program. (Id. at 22.)
Facts Relating to Liability Under Title IX
Beginning in the fall of 2008, Jane Doe attended kindergarten at Aquinas. Her teacher
was Annette Ustazewski (“Ustazewski”). At the time, Jane Doe‟s two older siblings also
attended Aquinas. Deslam was the maintenance man at Aquinas. During the lunch periods, he
was responsible for emptying the trash containers and cleaning up the cafeteria. He was also
responsible for maintaining the restrooms during the day.
William and Lisa Valesky, Jane Doe‟s parents, frequently volunteered in the Aquinas
lunchroom during their children‟s lunch periods. Lisa Valesky testified that, in September 2008,
while volunteering in the lunchroom, she witnessed Deslam standing over the kindergarten
students, going through their lunch boxes and telling them to eat. (Docket No. 75-2, at 43.) That
Deslam engaged in such behavior was confirmed by Alice Galando, another kindergarten teacher
at Aquinas. (Docket No. 78-7, at 29) (Deslam would “gently tease children, reminding them to
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eat their fruits, sandwiches, et cetera and not to start with candy treats.”) Diane Dubosky
(“Dubosky”), a lunchroom monitor employed by Aquinas, testified that the kids love Deslam and
sometimes call him over to their tables. (Docket No. 78-2.) Lisa Valesky admitted that
Deslam‟s actions occurred in plain view of a half dozen adults and all the children, and that only
she, her husband and Jane Doe were bothered by his conduct. (Docket No. 75-2, at 56.)
According to Lisa Valesky, she commented to Dubosky about Deslam‟s actions. (Id. at
42.) Lisa Valesky testified that she told Deslam to stay away from her daughter because he was
scaring her, and that, in response, Deslam snickered in her face and walked away. (Id. at 44.)
She repeated her complaints to Cheryl Rullo (“Rullo”), the principal, and to Ustazewski.
William Valesky testified that he also witnessed Deslam‟s conduct and complained to Dubosky,
who replied that Deslam was “harmless.” (Docket No. 75-3, at 28-9.) Dubosky confirmed this
conversation. (Docket No. 78-2, at 27.) Both Rullo and Ustazewski deny that the Valeskys made
any complaints to them regarding Deslam during September or October 2008. (Docket No. 78-6
at 42; Docket No. 76-1, at 107.) While not specifying any date, Deslam testified that Lisa
Valesky complained to him that they do not tell kids to eat in their house, and that he did not
respond and just walked away. (Docket No. 78-1, at 108.) A day or two later, Rullo informed
him that she had received a complaint and directed him not to tell the children to eat anymore, to
which he agreed. (Id.)
Lisa Valesky submitted a “Bullying, Harassment or Intimidation Report Form (“BHI
Form”), dated September 26, 2008.2 The form states that during “the entire month of September.
2
Rullo testified that she never received this form. (Docket No. 76-1, at 55.) The form is
not signed by Rullo or any other school personnel. (Pl. Ex. 29.) Rullo further testified that, in
order to obtain one of these forms, they must specifically be requested from her, and that she
mailed a blank form to Lisa Valesky in June 2009 in response to her complaint that her older
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. .[Deslam] goes to [Jane Doe‟s] table every day at lunch. He touches her and goes through her
lunch box. He tells her that she has to eat all of her food. She is terrified of him. She starts to
cry as soon as he gets close to the table. My husband and I have both complained to Mrs.
Dubosky and she told us that he is harmless. I have also told Mrs. Ustazewski that he is
upsetting [Jane Doe] and she said that he is just being nice. I told [Deslam] stay away from her
because he is scaring her and he laughed at me. I think it is inappropriate for the janitor to be
touching and scaring my five year old daughter every day that she is in school.” (Pl. Ex. 29.)
William Valesky testified that he did not believe the BHI form identified any sexual misconduct
of any kind. (Docket No. 75-3, at 40, 93.)
According to Lisa Valesky, in October 2008, Jane Doe began expressing that she did not
want to go to school. (Docket No. 75-2, at 17.) She had not received a response from the school
regarding her BHI form. (Id. at 51.) On November 6, 2008, Lisa Valesky‟s mother, Betty
Iannuzzo (“Iannuzzo”) received a phone call from Dubosky, informing her that Jane Doe was in
the lunch room crying hysterically. (Docket No. 78-8.) Dubosky denies ever seeing Jane Doe
cry in the lunch room. (Docket No. 78-2, at 31.) When Lisa Valesky arrived at school, she
testified that she found Jane Doe sitting on another parent‟s lap, hyperventilating and pale.
(Docket No. 75-2, at 68.) Lisa Valesky stated that Jane Doe told her that “we are not safe.” (Id.
at 70.) According to Lisa Valesky, while she was holding Jane Doe and trying to figure out what
was happening, Rullo came over and started yelling at Jane Doe that “I told you that your parents
are the only ones you have to listen to” and about how people who lived during the Holocaust
believed you have to eat all your food. (Id. at 70.) At that time, Lisa Valesky believed that her
daughter was upset because of what Deslam had been doing in the cafeteria. (Id.) Lisa Valesky
daughter, A.V., was being harmed by a fifth grade teacher. (Id. at 40-41, 56.)
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took her daughter home, and then returned to the school. At that time, she testified that she
overheard Rullo telling Deslam that “this is nonsense.” (Id. at 71.) That day, November 6, 2008,
was the last day that Jane Doe attended Aquinas.
On November 8, 2008, according to the Valeskys, Jane Doe drew a picture of the girls‟
restroom at Aquinas with six of her classmates and a man in the picture. (Docket No. 75-3, at
48.) When William Valesky asked who the man in the bathroom was, he testified that Jane Doe
identified the man as Deslam. (Id.) When he and his wife questioned Jane Doe about Deslam‟s
presence in the bathroom, William Valesky testified that Jane Doe told them that he comes into
the bathroom “and he makes the toilets dirty and then cleans them.” (Id. at 49.) Lisa Valesky
testified that when she asked Jane Doe whether he touched her, Jane Doe replied that “he touches
all of us.” (Docket No. 75-2, at 22.) William Valesky further testified that Jane Doe told him
that she was beside the sink and Deslam was touching her, and that he touched her in her private
area. (Docket No. 75-3, at 49.) He stated that, until that evening, he had no knowledge or
understanding that anything sexual had occurred between Deslam and his daughter. (Id. at 52.)3
The following Monday, November 10, 2008, the Valeskeys called their primary care
physician and made an appointment for Jane Doe for the following day. On November 11, 2011,
Jane Doe and Lisa Valesky met with Amy Dillon (“Dillon”), a pediatric nurse practitioner.
(Docket No. 78-3, at 6.) According to Dillon‟s notes, Lisa Valesky had discussed “school
anxiety issues,” including “outbursts of crying at lunch,” fearfulness, and that Jane Doe had told
her mother that they had to “leave now they were in danger.” (Pl. Ex. 42.) Lisa Valesky told
Dillon that Jane Doe had drawn a picture showing the janitor in the bathroom while Jane Doe
3
This testimony is inconsistent with Lisa Valesky‟s testimony that, as of November 13,
2008, Jane Doe had still not provided them with any details of a sexual nature. (Docket No. 752, at 28.)
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was in the bathroom. Jane Doe was quiet but cooperative during the exam, and no bruising was
noted (Docket No. 78-3, at 18.) Dillon did not conduct a gynecological exam. (Id.) When
Dillon asked Jane Doe whether anyone had touched her under her pants, she denied it. (Pl. Ex.
42.) Jane Doe also told Dillon that the janitor “comes to the cafeteria and makes them eat all
their lunch.” (Id.) Dillon testified that “she was concerned that there was something going on in
school because [Jane Doe] was obviously making statements that a five year old would not just
think to make up,” and Dillon gave Lisa Valesky a referral to the Children‟s Advocacy Center at
Children‟s Hospital in Pittsburgh. (Docket No. 78-3, at 18.)
On November 11, 2008, William Valesky called Aquinas to set up a meeting with Rullo
regarding Jane Doe. The record contains conflicting evidence as to who informed Rullo that
Deslam had allegedly been in the restroom with Jane Doe. Rullo‟s notes indicate that she ran
into Lisa Valesky at lunch and that Lisa Valesky “made insinuation that [Jane Doe] was in
bathroom at same time that Mr. Deslam.” (Pl. Ex. 31.) Lisa Valesky testified that her husband
may have mentioned that when he called the school to set up the meeting. (Docket No. 75-2, at
83.) In any event, Rullo then requested that the Kindergarten teachers and Dubosky write notes
regarding their bathroom procedures and whether they had ever witnessed Deslam in or around
the restrooms. (See Pl. Exhs. 33, J, K and L.) All denied having seen Deslam in the restroom
with the children. (Id.)4
On November 13, 2008, Lisa and William Valesky met with Rullo and Vice Principal
Daniel Mahoney (“Mahoney”). The Valeskys told Rullo that Deslam had touched Jane Doe in
the restroom, although they did not indicate that it was sexual in nature. (Docket No. 75-2, at
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There is also conflicting evidence as to whether kindergarten children were permitted to
go into the restroom unaccompanied.
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28.) According to Lisa Valesky‟s testimony, at this time they were still trying to sort out what
had occurred and Jane Doe had not yet told them any further details. (Id.)5 During the meeting,
the Valeskys filled out another BHI form describing “inappropriate invasion of personal space”
and that Deslam “was allegedly in the girls‟ restroom while [Jane Doe] was there. He told her to
eat her food at lunch.” (Pl. Ex. 30.) This form was signed by Lisa Valesky, Rullo and Mahoney.
(Id.) As Jane Doe was not attending school at this time, Rullo agreed to meet Jane Doe at the
entrance to the school, beginning the following week. At the end of the meeting, Rullo informed
the Valeskeys that Deslam would not be in the cafeteria with their children, would not speak
directly to their children, and would avoid the kindergarten floor.
Rullo testified that she felt
that the Valeskys understood that her investigation regarding whether Deslam could have been in
the bathroom alone with Jane Doe had concluded that it had not occurred, and that they were
satisfied and planned to return Jane Doe to school on Monday. (Docket No. 76-1, at 159.)
Lisa Valesky testified that, at some point subsequent to this meeting, Jane Doe told her in
greater detail about Deslam‟s inappropriate sexual contact in the bathroom. (Docket No. 75-2, at
24, 26.) Jane Doe did not return to school that Monday, and Lisa Valesky testified that she saw
Rullo at the end of the day on Monday and told her that Jane Doe would not be coming back as
long as Deslam was at the school. (Id. at 38.) She called Bocan and arranged to meet with him
on November 24, 2008. (Docket No. 76-2, at 135.)
On November 24, 2008, Bocan met with Lisa and William Valesky and Lou Iannuzzo,
Lisa Valesky‟s father. During this meeting, Lisa Valesky indicated concerns over Deslam telling
students to eat during the lunch period and allegedly being in the bathroom with Jane Doe and
5
Lisa Valesky also testified that Jane Doe had told them that Rullo had seen Deslam in
the bathroom with her, but Lisa Valesky never shared that information with Rullo. (Docket No.
75-2, at 34.)
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other students. Bocan‟s notes from the meeting do not indicate that anything further was
discussed regarding the nature of Deslam‟s interaction with Jane Doe. (See Pl. Ex. 36.) At the
end of the meeting, Bocan had devised an investigative plan for Jane Doe‟s return to Aquinas,
which included: (1) obtaining records from alleged counseling sessions; (2) interviewing Jane
Doe with her parents present; (3) Jane Doe returning to school after Thanksgiving break; (4)
keeping Deslam out of Aquinas during the investigation; and (5) upon completion of the
investigation, plans for keeping Jane Doe within the supervision of a paid employee at all times
were Deslam to return to work. Bocan conveyed this plan to Rullo. (Pl. Ex. X.) Deslam was
placed on paid administrative leave on November 24, 2008. When Rullo informed Bocan that
Deslam had not been in the bathroom with Jane Doe, Bocan testified that he told her: “if
somebody‟s telling that somebody- a child is scared of an adult and we‟re putting that person on
administrative leave, we don‟t know exactly what has happened and that is why we are
investigating. So you don‟t want to make an absolute statement like that right off the bat because
you haven‟t investigated, so you know that.” Apart from placing Deslam on administrative
leave, there is no evidence in the record as to what, if anything, Defendants did in the week
immediately following that meeting to further investigate Plaintiffs‟ allegations.
On December 2, 2008, William and Lisa Valesky took Jane Doe to the Greensburg Police
Department to report their allegations. According to the Incident Investigation Report, the
Valeskys told Detective Jerry Vernail (“Vernail”) about the picture that Jane Doe had drawn the
first week of November, and reported that “when they questioned [Jane Doe] as to why he may
have been in the bathroom she did not reveal anything further other than to say he had been in
there more than once and there were other girls present from her coloring group as well.”
(Docket No. 71-7, at 23.) The report also stated that “the Valesky‟s feel that Deslam has been
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too close to other children which they witnessed and related to Principal Cheri Rullo. They also
stated that Deslam has been moved out of Aquinas after they contacted the Superintendent.”
(Id.) Vernail concluded that he would attempt to have Jane Doe scheduled for a forensic
interview after consulting the Children‟s Bureau and District Attorney‟s Office. (Id.)
On December 5, 2008, a message from an anonymous caller to Catholic Charities was
forwarded to Persico, the Vicar General of the Diocese. (See Pl. Ex. 37.) The message stated:
Mary, receptionist at Catholic Charities, received a call today from a
woman stating that she has left messages for Msgr. Persico regarding the fact that
her five year old daughter was sexually assaulted in the bathroom at Aquinas
Academy by a staff member. She did not give her name. . . .This woman said that
Aquinas Academy will not permit her in the building. This woman was on the
verge of tears stating that she does not want to go public with this information but
will if she does not hear from Msg. Persico. . . .”
After receiving this message, Persico called Bocan into his office. (Docket No. 76-3, at
19.) Based on their suspicion that the call was from the Valeskys, they placed a call to
the Valeskys‟ home. Persico testified that he was confused as to what exactly the
allegations were during the conversation, so after the call ended, he instructed Bocan to
contact the Westmoreland County Children‟s Bureau “to move it into an independent
investigation and let them sort it out.” (Docket No. 76-3, at 28.) According to the Report
of Suspected Child Abuse form, Bocan relayed the following information to the
Children‟s Bureau:
Mother reported these allegations to the school before Thanksgiving 2008.
Within the past month the janitor of the school was in the girls (sic) restroom
while this child and other children were present. Today the child disclosed to
mother that this man sexually assaulted her. The mother then recanted that she
said that. No other specifics of the assault were reported. The mother says that
the school is covering the incident up. The janitor has been suspended until
further notice. The M has removed the child from the school.
(Pl. Ex. 38).
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A forensic interview of Jane Doe was conducted by Cindy Byers from A Child‟s Place at
Mercy Hospital on December 8, 2008. On December 9th, Vernail contacted Rullo who provided
him with the names and contact information for the other children identified by Jane Doe.
(Docket No. 71-7, at 24.) Interviews of two of the children identified were conducted on
December 15 and December 17, 2008. Rullo also provided additional contact information when
requested by Vernail. (Docket No. 71-7, at 25.) Vernail questioned the parents of the remaining
children and was informed that there was no indication of any problems with respect to their
daughters. (Docket No. 71-7, at 26-27.) On January 7, 2009, Vernail interviewed Deslam, who
denied the allegations and agreed to take a voice stress test. (Id. at 27.) The test was performed
on January 12, 2009, and Deslam passed the test. (Docket No. 71-9, at 20.) On January 20,
2009, Vernail interviewed the kindergarten teachers at Aquinas. (Docket No. 71-7, at 28.)
On January 27, 2009, Vernail and an Assistant District Attorney met with the Valeskys
and their attorney to inform the Valeskys that the case would be closed without prosecution due
to the fact that no corroborating evidence was found. (Id. at 28.) Rullo was notified by the
Greensburg Police Department and the District Attorney‟s Office that after completing their
investigation, Plaintiffs‟ allegations against Deslam were unfounded, and that no charges were
going to be filed against him. Persico was aware that neither the Greensburg Police Department
nor the Westmoreland County District Attorney‟s Office could find any proof of sexual assault.
Persico and Bocan each testified that they relied on the investigation and conclusions of the
police department and District Attorney‟s office. (Docket No. 76-3, at 35-36; Docket N. 76-2, at
168-69.) On February 5, 2009, Bocan and Rullo sent a letter to Plaintiffs indicating that Deslam
would be returning to his position at Aquinas and inquiring as to whether Jane Doe would be
returning to school. Bocan explained: “[A]t that point we felt that we could no longer hold out
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an employee from a right to work if that employee had not been verified as having done anything
inappropriate. So we had to bring him back.” (Docket No. 76-2, at 171.)
Deslam returned to work at Aquinas in February 2009. Even after his return, Plaintiffs
continued to have their two older children attend Aquinas.
Facts Relating to Retaliation
During the beginning of the 2008-09 school year, Lisa Valesky frequently served as a
lunch volunteer at Aquinas. Dubosky was a lunch monitor at Aquinas at that time. The duties of
the lunch monitors are to keep the cafeteria running smoothly and to help any children that
required help. The role of the lunch volunteer is explained to parents by a chairperson of the
lunch monitor process. Volunteers are told that, if they have an issue, they should speak with
one of the monitors or Mahoney, who also served lunch duty. As a lunch monitor, Dubosky was
empowered to use her discretion in bringing lunchroom incidents to her direct supervisor, Rullo.
Dubosky would handle typical situations on a daily basis, without the need to report them to
Rullo.
In October 2008, J.H. was in the fifth grade at Aquinas. J.H testified that, on October 22,
2008, Jane Doe said the „F-word‟ at lunch after Lisa Valesky, who was working as a lunch
volunteer that day, walked away from the lunch table. Having heard Jane Doe use this word,
J.H. told one of her friends what had transpired. In turn, this unidentified friend told Lisa
Valesky‟s other daughter, who then told Lisa Valesky. Dubosky testified that she saw Lisa
Valesky pointing her finger close to J.H.‟s face and screaming at her. Dubosky was unaware of
what led up to this incident.
Rullo was approached by Dubosky who began to inform her of the incident that had
occurred in the cafeteria between J.H. and Lisa Valesky. This conversation was aborted when
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Lisa Valesky approached and proceeded to tell Rullo her version of the incident. Lisa Valesky
explained to Rullo what she had been told by her older daughter and that, in turn, she had spoken
with J.H. about not using such language and refraining from spreading rumors. Rullo indicated
to Lisa Valesky that it was not her responsibility as a volunteer to correct, punish or yell at a
student. Valesky indicated that she had not yelled at J.H. in any way. Based on Lisa Valesky‟s
reporting of the incident, Rullo did not feel there was a need to pursue the issue further at that
time.
Later that day, Lisa Valesky also initiated a conversation with Renee Howard
(“Howard”), J.H.‟s mother, at her place of business, indicating that there had been an incident
between the “girls” in the lunchroom. According to Lisa Valesky, J.H. accused Jane Doe of
saying the „F-word.‟ Howard testified that Lisa Valesky told her that she had spoken to J.H.
about the incident and had also informed Rullo.
When J.H. got off the school bus at the end of the day, she cried while relating the
incident to her mother. Howard testified that over the next few weeks, she did her own
investigation into what had actually happened, speaking with J.H. and her husband. Howard
testified that she wondered why her family had not heard anything from Rullo regarding the
incident. John Prorok (“Prorok”), J.H.‟s father, testified that he was under the impression that
the incident had been reported to Rullo by Lisa Valesky and that Rullo would “take care of it.”
According to Howard, over the next few weeks, Lisa Valesky stopped at Howard‟s place of
business on two occasions to discuss issues related to the Diocese. The parties dispute whether,
on the last visit in November 2008, Lisa Valesky began calling J.H. a liar and whether Howard
had to threaten police intervention to get Lisa Valesky out of the store.
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On November 18, 2008, Bocan received a complaint from Prorok alleging that Lisa
Valesky yelled at his daughter in the lunchroom and grabbed her by the shoulders and neck in
October 2008. In response, Bocan sent an email to Rullo instructing her to investigate Prorok‟s
allegations. This email directed that, if Prorok‟s allegations were substantiated, Lisa Valesky
should no longer be permitted to volunteer in the building. (Pl. Ex. 34.)
Rullo conducted an investigation by interviewing people who would have been present in
the lunchroom during the incident. She did not find any witness to support or substantiate that
Lisa Valesky ever laid her hands on J.H. (Docket No. 76-1, at 215.) However, every witness
indicated that Lisa Valesky's response to J.H. consisted of “yelling at her in her face, screaming
at her, was over the top.” (Id.) Rullo concluded that, since Lisa Valesky had not laid hands upon
J.H., but still behaved inappropriately, she should be banned from volunteering in the lunchroom,
but not completely banned from volunteering in any capacity in the building. (Id. at 218.) She
notified Lisa Valesky of this determination by phone. (Id. at 219.)
Subsequent to her notifying Lisa Valesky that she could no longer volunteer in the
lunchroom, Rullo had a conversation with Michelle Finoli (“Finoli”), the school librarian at
Aquinas. (Id. at 220.) Lisa Valesky had told Finoli that she (Lisa) was banned from the school
premises. (Docket No. 78-5, at 16.) In response, Rullo sent a letter to Lisa Valesky reiterating
that Lisa Valesky would no longer be permitted to act as a lunchroom monitor. (Pl. Ex. V.) She
clarified that “I, at no time, stated that you were not welcome or permitted in the school. It has
come to my attention that this is the impression you are under and it is important to clarify this
incorrect assumption.” (Id.) Lisa Valesky acknowledged that the alleged banishment may have
been her “misconception.”
16
III. Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment
A. Applicability of Title IX to Defendants Diocese and Aquinas
“Section 901(a) of Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, 20 U.S.C. §1681(a),
provides that „no person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from
participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education
program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance.” Nat‟l Collegiate Athletic Ass‟n v.
Smith, 525 U.S. 459, 465-66 (1999). There is no dispute that Plaintiffs‟ allegations, if proven,
would constitute a violation of Title IX. Rather, the Diocese and Aquinas argue that they cannot
be held liable under Title IX because they are separate legal entities, neither of which are
recipients of Federal financial assistance. Plaintiff responds that the Diocese and Aquinas should
be considered one educational system under Title IX, and that the system does receive Federal
financial assistance for purposes of Title IX.
In 2002, Congress enacted the Civil Rights Restoration Act, 20 U.S.C. §1687, in part, to
broaden the definition of “program or activity” under Title IX. Section 1687 provides, in the
context of non-public educational institutions, that “the term „program or activity‟ and „program‟
mean all of the operations of. .. “a[n] other school system.” 20 U.S.C. §1687(2)(B); 29 U.S.C.
§794(b)(2)(b). In other words, if any part of a covered school system receives Federal financial
assistance, then all the operations of that school system are subject to the provisions of Title IX.
NCAA, 525 U.S. at 466; see also, Russo v. Diocese of Greensburg, 2010 WL 3656579, at *4
(W.D. Pa. Sept. 15, 2010) (“the prohibition on discrimination applied to the entire institution and
all of its operations, programs, and activities whenever it received any federal funds at all”).6
6
I find it inexcusable that Defendants did not in any manner mention my colleague‟s
recent opinion in Russo, which also involved a Title IX action against the Diocese of
17
Consistent with this approach, federal regulations define a “recipient” of federal financial
assistance as
any public or private agency, institution or organization, or other entity, or any
person, to whom Federal financial assistance is extended directly or through
another recipient and which operates an educational program or activity which
receives or benefits from such assistance, including any subunit, successor,
assignee, or transferee thereof.
34 C.F.R. §106.2(h) (emphasis added). “Thus, an entity may receive federal financial assistance
indirectly and still be considered a recipient for purposes of Title IX.” Smith v. Nat‟l Collegiate
Athletic Ass‟n, 266 F.3d 152, 160 (3d Cir. 2001).
Neither party has cited any authority addressing whether a diocese and one of the
Catholic schools affiliated with that diocese constitute one school system for the purposes of
Title IX, nor have I found any such authority. Defendants rely entirely on the fact that the
Diocese and Aquinas, as well as the other Catholic schools affiliated with the Diocese, are each
organized as independent charitable trusts. (Def. Opp. Br. at 6.) However, as the Sixth Circuit
has explained, “Congress has made clear its intent to extend the scope of Title IX‟s equal
opportunity obligations to the furthest reaches of an institution‟s programs. We will not defeat
that purpose by recognizing artificial distinctions in the structure or operation of an institution.”
Horner v. Kentucky High School Athletic Ass‟n, 43 F.3d 265, 272 (6th Cir. 1994), cert. denied,
531 U.S. 824 (2000). I agree that the Diocese and Aquinas may not rely solely on their legal
status to shield them from their obligations under Title IX.
Greensburg, in which the Diocese was represented by the same counsel as herein, and which was
decided prior to the submission of summary judgment in this case. I will address Russo more
thoroughly in subsequent sections, but I note both this potential ethical violation on the part of
counsel for the Defendants, and their substantive error in failing to provide me a basis to
distinguish a case which otherwise appears quite on point and to their detriment.
18
In Russo, the plaintiffs asserted, inter alia, a Title IX claim against the Diocese and
Greensburg Central Catholic High School (“GCCHS”). It was undisputed by the parties that
Geibel, another high school in the Diocese, as well as several elementary schools, participated in
the National School Lunch program. The court explained that:
We must determine Geibel‟s legal status under state law in order to decide what
the operative „other school system‟ is for purposes of Title IX and the
Rehabilitation Act‟s definition of „program or activity.‟ If Geibel has the legal
status of being its own, independent „other school system,‟ then its participation in
the NSLP would have no effect on the Diocese or GCCHS. If it does not have
such legal status, then the Diocese must be the operative „other school system‟ for
purposes of Title IX and the Rehabilitation Act. In that case, Geibel‟s receipt of
Federal Financial Assistance is imputed up the organizational chart to the
Diocese, and across to the organizational chart to its fellow Diocesan high school,
GCCHS.
2010 WL 3656579, at *6. Because “the Diocese and GCCHS have consistently represented to
this court that neither of these Diocesan high schools are separate legal entities,” and “Geibel has
no legal status separate from the Diocese, the Diocese is the operative „other school system‟
under Title IX and the Rehabilitation Act. As such, Geibel‟s receipt of Federal Financial
Assistance, in the form of NSLP subsidies, is imputed to both the Diocese and GCCHS.” Id.
Defendants, by failing to discuss my colleague‟s opinion in Russo, gave me no factual basis to
distinguish the holding in Russo that the Diocese constitutes an „other school system‟ for
purposes of Title IX.
In Smith, the Third Circuit held that the NCAA could be subject to Title IX based on the
receipt of federal financial assistance by the National Youth Sports Program (“NYSP”) and the
National Youth Sports Program Fund (“Fund”). 266 F.3d at 160. The Court based its holding on
the allegations that: (1) the NYSP Committee was an NCAA committee responsible for the
administration of the NYSP; (2) the Council of the NCAA limited the powers of the Fund‟s
19
Board of Directors; (3) the Executive Director of the NCAA and the chairperson of the NYSP
Committee were ex officio members of the Fund‟s Board of Directors; (4) all of the members of
the Fund‟s Board were either employees of the NCAA or members of the NCAA‟s NYSP
Committee; (5) the Fund had to report to the Council of the NCAA on an annual basis; (6) upon
dissolution of the Fund, its assets will be distributed exclusively to the NCAA; and (7) the
NCAA‟s Executive Director remarked that the NYSP is „one of the NCAA‟s best kept secrets.‟
Id. at 161.
Analyzing the facts before me within this legal framework, it would be facially
implausible to consider Aquinas its own school system, independent of the Diocese, for purposes
of Title IX. As set forth in greater detail in Section II above, the elementary schools, including
Aquinas, are closely managed by the Diocese. The Superintendent of the schools is appointed by
the Bishop and is an employee of the Diocese. He serves as trust advisor for the elementary
schools, while the Bishop serves as a trustee. Each school has a Board of Trust Administrators
composed of pastors from within the Diocese, and presumably, answerable to the Bishop. Only
the Bishop can authorize a school to close. The Office of Catholic Schools, which is a ministry
of the Diocese, provides a handbook of policies applicable to the elementary schools defining
policies for such areas as employees, students and field trips. Bocan testified that one result of
the schools being re-organized as independent charitable trusts was that the Diocese could
exercise more control over them. From a financial perspective, the Diocese collects money from
each of its parishes which it bundles and divides among the Diocesan schools. It provides
further support in the form of payroll services, an intranet, telecommunications and purchases
standard information technologies equipment. Given the extensive involvement, both
administratively and financially, of the Diocese with the Diocesan schools, including Aquinas, I
20
find that the Diocese constitutes an “other school system” for purpose of Title IX. Cf. O‟Connor
v. Davis, 126 F.3d 112, 118 (2d Cir. 1997) (hospital not affiliated with university for purposes of
Title IX where “the two entities have no institutional affiliation; there is no written agreement
binding the two entities in any way; no staff are shared; [and] no funds are circulated between
them”), cert. denied, 522 U.S. 1114 (1998); Buckley v. Archdiocese of Rockville Ctr., 992 F.
Supp. 586 (E.D.N.Y. 1998) (Diocese and Catholic school, which did not receive federal
assistance, could not be liable under Title IX based on receipt of federal assistance by public
school district, where there was no formal institutional affiliation or agreements between the
district and Catholic school nor any evidence that they share funds). Accordingly, if any school
within the Diocese receives Federal financial assistance, then the Diocese and all the schools
within it are subject to the provisions of Title IX.
Having found that the Diocese and the Diocesan schools constitute an “other school
system” for the purposes of Title IX, I must next determine whether this other school system
receives Federal financial assistance. In Russo, the court considered whether the Diocese‟s
participation in the E-Rate program and Geibel Catholic Middle-High School‟s participation in
the National School Lunch Program rendered the Diocese and GCCHS, its other high school,
recipients of Federal financial assistance for purposes of Title IX. Examining the programs and
nature of the schools‟ participation, the court held that, since the Diocese and its high schools
constitute one school system, then Geibel‟s participation in the National School Lunch program
and the Diocese‟s participation in the E-Rate Program rendered the Diocese and GCCHS
recipients of Federal financial assistance. Russo, 2010 WL 365679, at *4, 6. While I am not
bound by the opinion of my district court colleague, I find his opinion on this issue well-
21
reasoned. Therefore, I will adopt his holding that participation in the National School Lunch
Program and Federal E-Rate program constitute the receipt of Federal financial assistance.
Since I have held that the Diocesan elementary schools make up a school system with the
Diocese for purposes of Title IX, then, under Russo, if any schools within the Diocese or the
Diocese itself participates in the National School Lunch Program or the E-Rate Program, then all
of the schools, including Aquinas, and the Diocese are considered recipients of Federal financial
assistance. Defendants admit that “[s]everal schools within the Diocese participate in the
National School Lunch Program” and that the Diocese, Aquinas and the other schools within the
Diocese participate in the federal E-Rate Program. (Docket No. 69, at 12, 15; Docket No. 81, at
2.) Accordingly, Defendants are recipients of Federal financial assistance and are subject to the
provisions of Title IX.
B. Defendants’ Liability Under Title IX
Defendants initially argue that Plaintiffs‟ Title IX claim must fail because there is no
evidence of conduct of a sexual nature. (Def. Br. at 4.) Defendants correctly state that, in order
to fall within the purview of a Title IX claim for sexual harassment, as alleged by Plaintiffs, the
conduct must be of a sexual nature. See Doe v. North Allegheny Sch. Dist., 2011 WL 3667279,
at *7-8 (W.D. Pa. Aug. 22, 2011) (discussing nature of conduct subject to Title IX). Jane Doe‟s
deposition testimony, as may well be expected of a seven year old child relating events that
occurred when she was five, is far from conclusive. However, I do not believe, and Defendants
have provided no authority to suggest, that the sole manner in which sexual conduct can be
proven is through the testimony of a minor child. The evidence submitted by Plaintiffs, through
Jane Doe‟s testimony, medical records, the testimony of Plaintiffs themselves and other family
members who interacted with Jane Doe during the period in question, raises a question of fact as
22
to whether sexual conduct may have occurred. In so finding, I make no judgment as to the
strength of such evidence.
As previously explained in connection with my opinion on the various motions to dismiss
(Docket No. 46), the Third Circuit, relying on Supreme Court precedent, has held that “damages
may not be recovered under Title IX for the sexual harassment of a student by one of the school
district‟s teachers unless an official of the school district who at a minimum has authority to
institute corrective measures on the district‟s behalf has actual notice of, and is deliberately
indifferent to, the teacher‟s misconduct.” Bostic v. Smyrna School Dist., 418 F.3d 355, 360 (3d
Cir. 2005) (quoting Gebser v. Lago Vista Indep. Sch. Dist., 524 U.S. 274 (1988)). “Actual
notice must amount to actual knowledge of discrimination in the recipient‟s programs.” Id.
“Further, the response must amount to deliberate indifference to discrimination” – in other
words, “an official decision by the recipient not to remedy the violation.” Id. The Third Circuit
has explained actual knowledge of discrimination to mean “knowledge of facts sufficiently
indicating substantial danger to a student such that the institution can reasonably be said to be
aware of the danger.” Bostic, 418 F.3d at 361. “Actual knowledge cannot be based on a mere
possibility.” Chancellor v. Pottsgrove Sch. Dist., 501 F. Supp.2d 695, 708 (E.D. Pa. 2007)
(quoting Bostic, 418 F.3d at 361). “[A] plaintiff in a Title IX damages suit. . .must prove actual
knowledge of misconduct, not just actual knowledge of the risk of misconduct, and must also
prove that the officials having that knowledge decided not to act on it.” Id. (quoting Delgado v.
Stegall, 367 F.3d 668, 671-72 (7th Cir. 2004)(J. Posner)).
Applying this standard, courts have granted summary judgment in Title IX cases where
the record established that the notice was insufficient to alert the defendants to the true nature of
the wrongdoing. In Gebser, the Supreme Court affirmed the lower courts‟ grant of summary
23
judgment dismissing a Title IX claim, holding that a complaint from parents of other students
charging only that the [teacher] had made inappropriate comments during class was “plainly
insufficient to alert the principal to the possibility that [the teacher] was involved in a sexual
relationship with a student.” 524 U.S. at 291. Moreover, “it is clear that actual notice requires
more than a simple report of inappropriate conduct by a teacher.” Bennett v. PA Hosp. Sch. Of
Nurse Anesthesia, 2002 WL 32341792, at *4 (E.D. Pa. 2002) (granting summary judgment
dismissing Title IX claim where the plaintiff admitted that she had not elaborated on the
inappropriate conduct and actions and comments).
Defendants argue that, based on the evidence presented, they did not receive actual notice
of sexual harassment sufficient as a matter of law to establish liability under Title IX. (Docket
No. 69, at 17.) I agree. Examining the voluminous record herein and taking the facts in the light
most favorable to Plaintiff, as I must on a motion for summary judgment, I find that Plaintiffs
have not submitted sufficient evidence to create an issue of fact as to whether Defendants had
actual knowledge of Deslam‟s alleged sexual harassment of Jane Doe, or then acted in deliberate
indifference to this knowledge.
The record demonstrates that the Valeskys first reported an issue with Deslam‟s conduct
to Rullo in September 2008, when they complained about Deslam instructing their daughter to
eat her food in the lunchroom. On September 26, 2008, Lisa Valesky submitted a BHI form
stating that every day Deslam goes to Jane Doe‟s table at lunch, “touches her and goes through
her lunch box,” “tells her that she has to eat all of her food,” and that Jane Doe is “terrified of
him.”7 William Valesky admitted that he did not believe that this BHI Form identified any
7
Whether this form was actually submitted to and received by Rullo is a question of fact.
For purposes of summary judgment, I will assume that it was submitted and received.
24
sexual misconduct of any kind. Lisa Valesky also testified that, through early November, she
believed that her daughter was upset because of what Deslam had been doing in the cafeteria. In
response, Rullo directed Deslam to stay away from Jane Doe in the cafeteria.
On or about November 11, 2008, the record reflects that, for the first time, the Valeskys
made Rullo aware of their allegation that Deslam had been in the school restroom with Jane Doe
and her classmates. During a November 13 meeting with Rullo and Mahoney, the Valeskys told
Rullo that Deslam had touched Jane Doe in the restroom, although they did not indicate that it
was sexual in nature. Lisa Valesky testified that at this time they were still trying to sort out
what had occurred and that Jane Doe had not told them any further details. The Valeskys filled
out another BHI Form describing “inappropriate invasion of personal space” and that Deslam
“was allegedly in the girls‟ restroom while [Jane Doe] was there. He told her to eat her food at
lunch.”
On November 24, 2008, the Valeskys met with Bocan and expressed their concerns over
Deslam telling students to eat their lunch and allegedly being in the bathroom with Jane Doe and
other students. In response to their allegations, Bocan had Deslam placed on administrative
leave and directed Rullo to conduct an investigation. On December 2, 2008, the Valeskys filed a
complaint with the Greensburg Police Department. On December 5, 2008, an anonymous person
called Catholic Charities and for the first time indicated that Jane Doe had been sexually
assaulted in the bathroom at Aquinas. Persico, the Vicar General of the Diocese, received the
message, spoke to the Valeskys, and then directed Bocan to immediately contact the
Westmoreland County Children‟s Bureau.
As set forth in greater detail in Section II above, the record further reflects that the
Greensburg Police Department, in conjunction with the Westmoreland County District
25
Attorney‟s Office, conducted an investigation of the allegations. There is no evidence that
Defendants failed to cooperate with the police investigation – indeed, the evidence demonstrates
that the Defendants provided all the information requested by the police. Deslam remained on
administrative leave. After the police and District Attorney‟s Office informed Rullo that
Plaintiffs‟ allegations against Deslam were unfounded and that no charges would be filed against
him, Rullo permitted Deslam to return to work at Aquinas. Notably, Jane Doe had not attended
school since November 6, 2008, well before the allegations of sexual abuse came to light.
However, at all relevant times, the Valeskys‟ two older children continued to attend Aquinas.
Even after Deslam‟s return, Plaintiffs continued to have their two older children attend Aquinas.
Thus, even considering the evidence in the light most favorable to Plaintiffs, Defendants
initially received notice only relating to Deslam‟s behavior in the cafeteria. Plaintiffs admit that
there was nothing suggesting sexual harassment in those allegations. The allegations were
subsequently expanded to include Deslam‟s presence in the school bathroom with Jane Doe and
several of her classmates. While this might serve as constructive notice of possible sexual
harassment, it is far from sufficient to constitute actual notice under Title IX. See Vaird v. Sch.
Dist. Of Philadelphia, 2000 WL 576441, at *3 (E.D. Pa. 2000) (holding that student‟s complaint
regarding „girls doing something „nasty‟ in the girls‟ restroom‟ was insufficient to give the
school district actual notice of alleged harasser‟s sexual propensity for assaulting her female
classmates). Indeed, the Valeskys testified that, at that point, they were still trying to sort out
themselves what may have occurred. Notwithstanding this lack of actual notice, the Diocese,
from an abundance of caution, placed Deslam on administrative leave pending an investigation.
The first notice that Defendants received actually suggesting that anything of a sexual nature had
occurred was through an anonymous call to Catholic Charities on December 5, 2005. At that
26
time, the Diocese reported the allegations to the Westmorland County Children‟s Bureau and
cooperated with the subsequent police investigation. Deslam remained on administrative leave
until cleared by the police and District Attorney‟s Office.
I find that Plaintiffs‟ interpretation of these facts, colored by Lisa Valesky‟s ex post facto
attempt to convey an understanding of the situation that she did not have at the time and which
she clearly did not express to Defendants, is not consistent with the record. Rather, the record
demonstrates that the Defendants responded appropriately to the allegations that they received,
even suspending Deslam before the exact nature of the allegations became clear, that they
cooperated in the police investigation and that they only permitted Deslam to return once the
police department and District Attorney‟s Office had cleared him of wrongdoing. Under these
circumstances, I find that Defendants did not have actual notice of sexual harassment at any time
when Jane Doe was a student at Aquinas. When they were provided actual notice, a month after
Jane Doe had been pulled from Aquinas by her parents, they acted appropriately in reporting the
allegations to the Children‟s Bureau and cooperating in the criminal investigation. Under these
circumstances, Plaintiffs have failed to raise an issue of fact with respect to Defendants‟ liability
for sexual harassment under Title IX.
C. Retaliation Under Title IX
In order to demonstrate a prima facie claim for retaliation under Title IX, a plaintiff must
prove that: (1) she engaged in protected activity; (2) the funding recipient subjected her to an
adverse action after or contemporaneously with the protected activity; and (3) a causal link exists
between the protected activity and the adverse action. See Dawn L. v. Greater Johnstown Sch.
Dist., 586 F. Supp.2d 332, 374 (W.D. Pa. 2008) (citing Weston v. Pennsylvania, 251 F.3d 420,
430 (3d Cir. 2001)). Defendants challenge all three prongs of the prima facie case.
27
The evidence submitted on summary judgment does not support a prima facie claim of
retaliation. Consistent with my determination that Defendants did not receive actual notice of
sexual harassment until the December 2008 anonymous call to Catholic Charities, I also find that
Lisa Valesky had not engaged in protected conduct as of November 19, 2008, when she
purportedly was banned from Aquinas. “A protected activity includes complaints of sexual
discrimination to school authorities. Not every complaint about unfair practices or perceived
slights qualifies as protected activity. The complaint „must at a minimum convey the speaker‟s
express or implicit protest of discriminatory practices that violate the federal antidiscrimination
statutes.‟” Cabrera-Diaz v. Penn Kidder Campus Jim Thorpe Area Sch. Dist., 2011 WL 613383,
at *4 (M.D. Pa. Feb. 11, 2011) (quoting Curay-Cramer v. Ursuline Academy of Wilmington, DE,
450 F.3d 130, 135 (3d Cir. 2006)). As of that date, the only complaints Lisa Valesky had made
involved Deslam telling her daughter to eat her lunch and her daughter‟s statement that Deslam
had been in the girls‟ restroom at the same time as she and her classmates were in the restroom.
These statements do not amount to a complaint of a Title IX violation. Accordingly, Lisa
Valesky has not established the first prong of her prima facie case of retaliation.
Moreover, it is not clear that Lisa Valesky suffered an adverse action for purposes of
Title IX. “A materially adverse action is one which well might have dissuaded a reasonable
person from making or supporting a charge of discrimination.” E.N. v. Susquehanna Twp. Sch.
Dist., 2011 WL 3608544, at *16 (M.D. Pa. July 5, 2011) (Title VII jurisprudence is applicable to
Title IX retaliation claim). Lisa Valesky admitted in her deposition that the purported
banishment from the school premises may have been her “misconception.” This interpretation is
borne out by the letter Rullo sent to Lisa Valesky clarifying that Rullo “at no time stated that you
were not welcome or permitted in the school.” The record reflects that Lisa Valesky was banned
28
solely from volunteering in the lunchroom, not from the school premises or any other volunteer
opportunities at the school. Given the limited scope of Defendants‟ response, I find that it does
not rise to the level of a materially adverse action. Compare Dawn L. v. Greater Johnstown Sch.
Dist., 586 F. Supp.2d 332, 377 (W.D. Pa. 2008) (“The Court finds that her loss of clearances and
subsequent denial of the ability to engage in volunteer activities within the District might well
have dissuaded a reasonable person in Dawn L.‟s position – the position of someone who
devoted more time to volunteering than would be required of a full-time paid employee – from
engaging in the protected activity; the District‟s actions were therefore materially adverse.”)
Even assuming that such a limitation on volunteer opportunities rises to the level of an
materially adverse action, Plaintiffs have submitted no evidence that it resulted from Lisa
Valesky‟s complaints relating to her daughter. Plaintiffs rely on the purported temporal
proximity between the BHI Form filed by Lisa Valesky on November 13, 2008, and the date
when Lisa Valesky was informed that she would no longer be permitted to volunteer in the
lunchroom, five days later on November 18, 2008. (Pl. Br. at 23-24.) While this proximity,
without more, was sufficient to survive a motion to dismiss, a closer scrutiny of the evidence
submitted on summary judgment demonstrates that Rullo‟s decision to deny Lisa Valesky the
right to volunteer in the lunchroom, and the timing thereof, was not caused by Lisa Valesky‟s
complaints. See Roy v. Continuing Care Rx, Inc., 2010 WL 5862864, at *10 n.4 (M.D. Pa. Oct.
7, 2010) (“In the case of claims for retaliation, the Third Circuit has found that although temporal
proximity between the protected activity and the alleged retaliatory action can be probative of
causation, where intervening acts occur that serve to support the employer‟s adverse employment
action, temporal proximity may be rendered insufficient to establish causation”)(citing Thomas
v. Town of Hammonton, 351 F.3d 108, 114 (3d Cir. 2003)).
29
There is no dispute that an altercation of some sort occurred on October 22, 2008
between Lisa Valesky and a student, J.H., while Lisa Valesky was volunteering in the
lunchroom. At the time, Rullo was informed of the incident by Lisa Valesky personally and
Rullo merely counseled her not to take student discipline into her own hands. Lisa Valesky also
informed J.H.‟s mother that she had relayed the incident to Rullo.
However, J.H.‟s parents heard a different version of the incident from their own daughter.
They testified that they waited a couple of weeks, all the while expecting to be contacted by the
school regarding the incident. When Rullo did not call them to address it, and in light of their
daughter‟s increasing distress, J.H.‟s father reached out through a work colleague to Bocan on
November 18, 2008. Bocan immediately presented J.H.‟s version of the October incident to
Rullo, directed her to investigate, and stated that, if substantiated, Lisa Valesky should no longer
be permitted to volunteer in the building. Per Bocan‟s directive, Rullo conducted an
investigation, interviewing the witnesses to the incident, and concluded that the incident,
although more serious than had been described to her by Lisa Valesky, was also not a dire as
Bocan had been told. As a result, she mitigated the consequences suggested by Bocan and
informed Lisa Valesky that she would no longer be permitted to volunteer in the lunchroom.
When Lisa Valesky misconstrued her direction, she immediately wrote a letter clarifying the
extent of the restriction. These undisputed facts demonstrate that the temporal proximity relied
upon by Plaintiffs arose from a call made by J.H.‟s father to Bocan, not from any decision on the
part of Defendants relating to Lisa Valesky‟s complaints.
Given that Lisa Valesky had not complained of a Title IX violation at the time of the
purported retaliation, that the temporal proximity between her complaint and the purported
retaliation is undermined by intervening events demonstrating causation, and that she has further
30
admitted that the nature of the purported adverse action was significantly more limited than had
been alleged, I do not find that Lisa Valesky has met her burden of establishing a prima facie
case of retaliation under Title IX.
D. Supplemental Jurisdiction
Plaintiffs‟ remaining claims for negligence per se, negligent failure to supervise,
intentional infliction of emotional distress, battery and assault, and breach of contract all arise
under state law. “[A]bsent extraordinary circumstances, where the federal causes of action are
dismissed the district court should. . .refrain from exercising [supplemental] jurisdiction.” Bright
v. Westmoreland County, 380 F.3d 729, 751 (3d Cir. 2004). Plaintiffs and Defendants have not
submitted evidence of any such extraordinary circumstances, nor are any apparent to me.
Accordingly, I dismiss Counts II through IX without prejudice to refiling in state court.
CONCLUSION
The Defendants‟ motion for summary judgment is granted dismissing Counts I and X
with prejudice. Counts II through IX are hereby dismissed without prejudice to refiling in state
court.
31
ORDER OF THE COURT
AND NOW, this 14th day of September, 2011, after careful consideration, and for the
reasons set forth in the accompanying Opinion, Defendants‟ motion for summary judgment
[Docket No 68] is granted. Counts I and X of the Fourth Amended Complaint are dismissed
with prejudice, and Counts II through IX of the Complaint are dismissed without prejudice to
refiling in state court.
BY THE COURT:
/s/Donetta W. Ambrose
Donetta W. Ambrose
Senior U.S. District Judge
32
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