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No. 10046175
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
J.B. v. Kyrene Elementary School District No. 28
No. 10046175 · Decided August 20, 2024
No. 10046175·Ninth Circuit · 2024·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Decided
August 20, 2024
Citation
No. 10046175
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
J.B., a student, by and through parent, No. 22-16816
L.B.; L.B., individually,
D.C. No. 2:17-cv-
Plaintiffs-Appellants, 03316-SMB
v.
KYRENE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL OPINION
DISTRICT NO. 28,
Defendant-Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the District of Arizona
Susan M. Brnovich, District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submission Deferred November 8, 2023
Submitted August 14, 2024
Phoenix, Arizona
Filed August 20, 2024
Before: Michael Daly Hawkins and Daniel P. Collins,
Circuit Judges, and Stephen Joseph Murphy III, * District
Judge.
*
The Honorable Stephen Joseph Murphy III, United States District Judge
for the Eastern District of Michigan, sitting by designation.
2 J.B. V. KYRENE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DIST.
Opinion by Judge Murphy;
Dissent by Judge Collins
SUMMARY **
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act
The panel affirmed the district court’s judgment
upholding a decision of an administrative law judge (ALJ),
who concluded that the Kyrene Elementary School District
No. 28 (the District) did not violate the Individuals with
Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) in a case in which J.B., a
student, by and through her parent, L.B., alleged that the
District failed to provide a free appropriate public education
(FAPE) to J.B.
The panel held that the district court did not clearly err
in finding that (1) L.B. refused to consent to the District’s
attempted evaluations of J.B., and (2) L.B. made her intent
clear she would not re-enroll J.B. in the District.
The panel held that the District did not deny a FAPE by
refusing to prepare a new individualized education program
(IEP) for J.B. L.B.’s refusal to consent to evaluations while
J.B. was enrolled at Brightmont Academy, L.B.’s chosen
private school, relieved the District of further IDEA
obligations. Further, under the IDEA, a student’s district of
residence is not obligated to continue offering FAPE if the
parent of a privately placed student makes it clear that he or
**
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
J.B. V. KYRENE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DIST. 3
she does not intend to enroll the student in the district, and
L.B. made it clear that she did not intend to re-enroll J.B. in
the District.
The panel held that the District procedurally erred by
stating in Prior Written Notices (PWNs) that it would have
no further IEP meetings because J.B. was not enrolled in the
District. However, the error was harmless because the
record indicates that it is unlikely that L.B. would have
considered another FAPE offer as an alternative to
Brightmont absent the District’s procedural error.
Dissenting, Judge Collins disagreed with the majority’s
holding that the District’s procedural error was harmless. By
failing to include in the PWNs the justifications it belatedly
relied on during the administrative process, and instead
shutting down the entire process on an invalid ground, the
District significantly impeded L.B.’s opportunity to
participate in the decisionmaking process regarding the
provision of a FAPE to her child. He would reverse the
district court’s judgment and remand with instructions to
remand to the administrative agency with instructions to
fashion an appropriate remedy for the District’s prejudicial
IDEA violation.
COUNSEL
Richard J. Murphy (argued), The Law Office of Richard J.
Murphy PLC, Phoenix, Arizona; for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
David R. Schwartz (argued) and Heather R. Pierson, Udall
Shumway PLC, Mesa, Arizona; for Defendant-Appellee.
4 J.B. V. KYRENE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DIST.
OPINION
S. MURPHY, III, District Judge:
Appellants J.B., the student, and L.B., J.B.’s parent,
appeal the district court’s judgment for Appellee Kyrene
Elementary School District No. 28 (the District). The
district court affirmed the findings of the Administrative
Law Judge (ALJ), who concluded that the District did not
violate the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act
(IDEA), 20 U.S.C. § 1400 et seq. For the following reasons,
we affirm the district court’s decision.
STATUTORY BACKGROUND AND LEGAL FRAMEWORK
Under the IDEA, states that receive federal funding for
public education must establish policies and procedures to
ensure that a “free appropriate public education [(FAPE)] is
available to all children with disabilities.” 20 U.S.C.
§ 1412(a)(1)(A). The hallmark of a FAPE for students with
disabilities is the individualized education program (IEP),
which is “a written statement for each child with a disability
that is developed, reviewed, and revised” at least annually.
Id. § 1401(9)(D); § 1414(d). The IDEA requires that an IEP
team composed of the child’s parents and teachers, a district
representative, and “other individuals who have knowledge
or special expertise regarding the child” meet at least
annually to review and revise the IEP. Id. After a student’s
initial evaluation and the formation of an IEP, the school or
the parent may request to reevaluate the student. Id.
§ 1414(a)(2). Parental consent is necessary for any
evaluation or reevaluation. 34 C.F.R. § 300.300(a), (c).
“In determining whether a student has received a FAPE
in compliance with the IDEA, the court conducts both a
J.B. V. KYRENE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DIST. 5
procedural and substantive inquiry.” L.J. v. Pittsburg
Unified Sch. Dist., 850 F.3d 996, 1003 (9th Cir. 2017).
Importantly, not all procedural violations amount to a denial
of FAPE. Id.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
During the 2013–14 school year, J.B. was enrolled in the
District and faced behavioral and learning challenges
because of complex disabilities including reactive
attachment disorder, fetal alcohol syndrome, intellectual
disability, Klinefelter’s syndrome, attention deficit
hyperactivity disorder, dyslexia, and dysgraphia. The
District, L.B., and other members of the IEP team last
updated J.B.’s IEP, including a new Behavior Support Plan
(BSP), on January 31, 2013.
In August 2013, the first month of the school year,
District staff physically restrained J.B. many times in
accordance with the BSP. L.B. stopped sending J.B. to
school in early September 2013 based on concerns about
how District staff physically restrained J.B. On September
19, 2013, the District held an IEP meeting to address L.B.’s
concerns. That same day, L.B. notified the District of her
intent to place J.B. in a private school.
Members of the IEP team met on October 2, 2013 to
discuss J.B.’s therapy assessments and options for future
placement. At the meeting, the District offered to pay for
J.B.’s education at Brightmont Academy, L.B.’s chosen
private school, and transportation to Brightmont for the rest
of the academic quarter (totaling nine weeks). Between
October and December, L.B. and the District continued
discussions to transition J.B. back to a District school
beginning in January 2014.
6 J.B. V. KYRENE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DIST.
On December 18, 2013, the District offered to pay for an
extra month at Brightmont, including transportation,
followed by a February 3, 2024 start date at an in-district
school. The proposed agreement required L.B. to consent to
additional testing and observations and provided that an IEP
meeting would take place no later than January 29, 2014.
The District attached the written proposal to an email to L.B.
that stated, “If you agree, please let me know and we will
sign and move forward.”
On December 19, 2013, L.B. and District representatives
met to discuss J.B.’s re-evaluation process. At the meeting,
the District advised that it needed to observe J.B. in his
education setting, conduct a language sample, conduct a
Comprehensive Assessment of Spoken Language (CASL),
and complete other assessments to develop a new IEP and
transition plan for J.B. L.B. suggested that the District
instead review video and audio recordings of J.B. at
Brightmont in lieu of conducting in-person observations or
assessments. The District voiced reservations about relying
on recordings to evaluate J.B. but agreed to try.
At the end of the meeting, L.B. presented a signed
“written agreement” that differed from the written offer
emailed by the District on December 18, 2023. L.B.’s
proposal stated, in part, that L.B. could not agree to allow
testing at this time because no testing had been
proposed. But, the agreement explained, L.B. would
consider any evaluations proposed by the IEP team and
notify the District if she would offer permission and consent
for testing within [five] business days. L.B. drafted the
agreement on December 18, 2013 but did not give it to the
District until the conclusion of the meeting—where
evaluations were proposed, negotiated, and even agreed
upon—on December 19, 2013.
J.B. V. KYRENE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DIST. 7
Early the next day, L.B. emailed the District and
requested an Independent Educational Evaluation (IEE) for
J.B. The District initially responded later that morning,
stating, “I will provide you a copy of the IEE
procedures . . . and contact Dr. Gentry” to move forward
with the evaluation. Later that day, however, the District
issued a Prior Written Notice (PWN) which stated, “The
District refuses to complete an IEE for an FBA for [J.B.]
since [J.B.] is not currently attending a school in the
District.”
On December 21, 2013, L.B. received via mail the
December 20, 2013 PWN and a PWN from December 19,
2013 that summarized the RED meeting. The District’s
PWN dated December 19 stated, “As [J.B.] is not currently
a student enrolled in Kyrene School District, no further
MET/IEP meetings will take place.” Indeed, no further
meetings occurred.
Six months later, L.B. filed a due process complaint with
the Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH) and alleged
that the District violated the IDEA by failing to provide a
FAPE to J.B. The Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) held a
nine-day evidentiary hearing, heard the testimony of
seventeen witnesses, and reviewed 180 exhibits. The ALJ
then issued a 130-page decision finding for the District on
all issues. L.B. appealed the decision to the U.S. District
Court for the District of Arizona, which affirmed in part and
reversed in part the ALJ’s decision and remanded four issues
to the OAH. The ALJ held another evidentiary hearing on
the remanded issues and again decided in favor of the
District. L.B. appealed to the district court, which affirmed
the ALJ’s decision. L.B. v. Kyrene Elementary Sch. Dist.,
8 J.B. V. KYRENE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DIST.
No. cv-17-03316, 2022 WL 14389900 (D. Ariz. Oct. 25,
2022). This appeal followed.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The Court will give “due weight” to the ALJ’s decision
if it is based on “thorough and careful” findings. Capistrano
Unified Sch. Dist. v. Wartenberg, 59 F.3d 884, 891 (9th Cir.
1995). This standard for IDEA cases is less deferential to
the State administrative proceedings than in other cases
reviewing administrative decisions. Id. The reviewing court
“shall receive the record of the [State] administrative
proceedings, shall hear additional evidence at the request of
a party, and, basing its decision on a preponderance of the
evidence, shall grant such relief as the court determines is
appropriate.” 20 U.S.C. § 1415(e)(2). Appellants bear the
burden of proving that the ALJ’s decision was incorrect.
Crofts v. Issaquah Sch. Dist. No. 411, 22 F.4th 1048, 1053
(9th Cir. 2022).
The Court will review the district court’s findings of fact
for clear error—even when they are based on the
administrative record—and legal conclusions de novo. L.J.,
850 F.3d at 1002; Crofts, 22 F.4th at 1053. “A finding is
clearly erroneous if it is illogical, implausible, or without
support in the record.” United States v. Sanmina Corp., 968
F.3d 1107, 1116 (9th Cir. 2020). “The clear error standard
is significantly deferential and is not met unless the
reviewing court is left with a definite and firm conviction
that a mistake has been committed.” Fisher v. Tucson
Unified Sch. Dist., 652 F.3d 1131, 1136 (9th Cir. 2011).
J.B. V. KYRENE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DIST. 9
DISCUSSION
I. Whether the district court clearly erred when it
held L.B. refused consent to evaluate J.B.
We evaluate the district court’s factual conclusion that
L.B. refused consent to evaluate J.B. for clear error. See L.J.,
850 F.3d at 1002. When reviewing this issue and issue II,
which are factual questions, we must not “change the
character of [our analysis] from one of review to a trial de
novo.” Ojai Unified Sch. Dist. v. Jackson, 4 F.3d 1467, 1473
(9th Cir. 1993). In other words, our job is to give “due
weight” to the ALJ’s findings of fact, on which the district
court based its decision. See Capistrano, 59 F.3d at 891. We
agree with the district court that “the ALJ was thorough and
careful in articulating detailed findings of fact,” and
therefore we also agree that “those findings are entitled to
significant weight.” L.B., 2022 WL 14389900 *1. The
district court affirmed the ALJ’s finding that L.B. “refused
to give consent, or set one-sided conditions, for testing,
evaluations, or observations.” L.B., 2022 WL 14389900 *2
(citing the ALJ’s opinion and concluding that “the ALJ’s
findings are supported by the record”). We evaluate de novo
the effects of L.B.’s refusal to consent in sections III and IV
below.
Here, the record supports the district court’s finding that
L.B. demanded a new IEP but refused consent for necessary
reevaluations. Appellants argue that the IDEA puts the
burden on the District to seek and obtain informed consent
from parents. See 20 U.S.C. § 1414(a)(1)(D)(i) (“shall
obtain informed consent from the parent”). But the District
cannot force consent. It need only make “reasonable efforts”
to obtain consent. 34 C.F.R. § 300.300(d)(5). The District
met that burden by making numerous proposals for
10 J.B. V. KYRENE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DIST.
evaluations and offering to make multiple concessions to
appease L.B.’s demands. During the December 19, 2013
meeting, the IEP team determined that it needed several
assessments to develop an updated program for J.B. to
reenter the District: additional academic testing, curriculum-
based assessments to determine academic performance,
speech-language evaluations including a standardized
assessment, a language sample, and observations in an
educational environment. The record supports that L.B. did
not agree to any of these assessments during the meeting.
For example, when the District’s psychologist stated that
she needed to observe J.B. in the learning environment to
observe J.B.’s progress at Brightmont, L.B.’s advocate
responded that L.B. would only allow video recordings for
the psychologist to watch. Despite reservations, the District
agreed to attempt to observe J.B. through video recordings.
Also during the meeting, the District’s speech
pathologist stated that she needed to collect a language
sample from J.B. with a spoken language assessment. This
type of assessment required an in-person evaluation, and the
pathologist explained that audio and visual recordings would
not suffice. Still, L.B. insisted that only audio and visual
recordings would be provided.
At the end of the meeting, L.B. presented the District
with a proposed written agreement that stated that she would
not allow testing “at this time” but that she “will consider
any proposed evaluations and notify the District if she will
offer permission and consent for testing within [five]
business days.” But L.B. never consented to any of the
District’s proposed evaluations. The proposed agreement
also provided that L.B. agreed only to allow the District to
“observe” J.B. via a two-hour video recording of J.B. at
J.B. V. KYRENE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DIST. 11
Brightmont, subject to Brightmont’s consent. The two-hour
recording limit was never proposed or negotiated during the
December 19 meeting. L.B.’s proposed agreement also
limited in-person observations of J.B. by requiring advance
approval from J.B.’s private, licensed therapist who would
determine “when and how direct observations” would
proceed. Considering the above, the record supports a
finding that L.B. refused to consent to the testing proposed
at the December 19, 2023 meeting.
Similarly, although L.B. testified at a hearing in front of
the ALJ that “most of [the evaluation assessments] had been
done [and] . . . if there was something they had more
questions on, then they could certainly ask the person that
did it,” L.B. limited the District’s ability to exchange outside
records with J.B.’s outside evaluators, who conducted those
assessments by editing the release of information consent
forms at the December 19, 2013 meeting.
Taken together, the record evidence supports the district
court’s summary that L.B., through J.B.’s private therapist,
was “to determine when and how in-person observations
occurred.” L.B., 2022 WL 14389900 *2. Because the record
supports the district court’s conclusion that L.B. did not
“consent to the District’s attempted evaluations,” there is no
clear error. Id.
II. Whether the district court clearly erred when it
held L.B. made her intent clear she would not re-
enroll J.B.
As with the prior issue, the Court will review the district
court’s determination that L.B. did not intend to re-enroll
J.B. in the District for clear error. See L.J., 850 F.3d at 1002.
12 J.B. V. KYRENE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DIST.
The ALJ’s decision was based, in part, on its assessment
that L.B. was not credible. For example, the ALJ stated that
Appellant’s “characterization of L.B.’s action of taking with
her the enrollment forms as being indicative of her intent to
enroll J.B. was not credible.” In other words, the ALJ found
that although L.B. retained the District’s enrollment forms
from December 2013, she intended to keep J.B. in private
school and litigate.
Both the ALJ’s credibility determination and its
determination that L.B. did not intend to enroll J.B. are
supported by the record. After L.B. unilaterally withdrew
J.B. from the District and enrolled him at Brightmont, L.B.
rejected the District’s plan to transition J.B. back to the
District. During the December 19, 2013 meeting, L.B.
indicated she would not enroll J.B. unless her reevaluation
and IEP demands were met. Two District representatives
who spoke to L.B. after the meeting testified that L.B. stated
that she did not plan to re-enroll J.B.
In sum, L.B. refused to allow the District to conduct the
very observations she demanded, which ensured that her
demands could not be met and thus that she could keep J.B.
at Brightmont. Indeed, L.B. never re-enrolled J.B. in the
District. The record supports the ALJ’s findings that L.B.’s
testimony was not credible and that she did not intend to
enroll J.B. in the District. The district court thus did not err
in determining that the ALJ’s findings were supported by the
record.
III. Whether the District denied a FAPE by refusing
to prepare a new IEP for J.B.
We review the issue of whether the District violated the
IDEA by refusing to prepare a new IEP or make a new offer
of FAPE after December 19, 2013 de novo. Crofts, 22 F.4th
J.B. V. KYRENE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DIST. 13
at 1053. Under the IDEA, the District must conduct
evaluations to formulate J.B.’s IEP. 34 C.F.R.
§ 300.304(b)(1); § 300.305(a). As part of the evaluation or
reevaluation process, the District must observe and evaluate
J.B. in the classroom. Id. § 300.305(a)(1)(ii–iii);
§ 300.310(a). The IDEA requires “parental consent for
reevaluations.” Id. § 300.300(c). If the parent of a child
“placed in a private school by the parents at their own
expense does not provide consent for the initial evaluation
or reevaluation . . . the [District] is not required to consider
the child as eligible for services.” § 300.300(d)(4). Notably,
the District “does not violate its obligation [to evaluate the
student and offer FAPE] if it declines to pursue the
evaluation or reevaluation” after the parent refuses to
consent. Id. § 300.300(c)(1)(iii). If a student has an IEP, the
school district is required to review the IEP at least annually.
20 U.S.C. § 1414(d)(4)(A)(i).
J.B.’s most recent IEP was created in January 2013 and
therefore needed to be reviewed, at the latest, before January
30, 2014. The IEP team met multiple times in the fall of
2013 to discuss J.B.’s IEP and review J.B.’s evaluations.
But L.B. continuously rejected the District’s proposals for
new evaluations necessary for a new IEP. L.B. also rejected
the District’s transition plans and FAPE offers, the last of
which was offered on December 19, 2013. As explained
above, the record supports the ALJ and district court’s
conclusion that L.B. refused consent for the District to re-
evaluate J.B. in the classroom at Brightmont. And L.B.’s
refusal to consent to evaluations while J.B. was enrolled in
Brightmont relieved the District of further IDEA
obligations. See 34 C.F.R. § 300.300(c)(1)(iii).
14 J.B. V. KYRENE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DIST.
Further, under the IDEA, a student’s district of residence
is not obligated to continue offering FAPE if the parent of a
privately placed student “makes clear his or her intent” to
keep the child enrolled in an out-of-district private school.
71 Fed. Reg. 46,540, 46,593 (2006). The U.S. Department
of Education Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative
Services clarified that when a parent places a student in
private school and then makes it clear that he or she does not
intend to re-enroll the student in the district, the district does
not have to continue to offer FAPE. Letter to Wayne, 73
IDELR 261 (OSEP 2019). And as the district court and ALJ
permissibly found, L.B. made it clear throughout the fall
semester 2013—and particularly on December 19, 2013—
that she did not intend to re-enroll J.B. in the District.
In sum, the district court properly found that L.B.’s
“rejection of [the final] FAPE offer, along with her non-
consent to the District’s attempts to reevaluate J.B., relieved
the District of any IDEA obligations.” L.B., 2022 WL
14389900 *3. The District was not obligated to prepare a
new IEP or make a new offer of FAPE after December 19,
2013 because (1) L.B. refused consent to evaluations,
(2) L.B. made her intent clear that she would not re-enroll
J.B. in the District, (3) L.B. rejected the District’s final
FAPE offer, and (4) L.B. did not request a new offer of
FAPE. The District did not violate the IDEA. See 34 C.F.R.
§ 300.300(c)(1)(iii).
J.B. V. KYRENE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DIST. 15
IV. Whether the District denied J.B. a FAPE when it
did not re-evaluate J.B. or make a new offer
FAPE after December 19, 2013 due to J.B.’s
enrollment status.
We review the question of whether the District denied a
FAPE when it issued its December 19 and December 20,
2013 PWNs de novo. See L.J., 850 F.3d at 1002.
Congress built procedural safeguards into the IDEA to
enforce a child’s guarantee of FAPE and to ensure that
parents have an opportunity to participate in its formulation
and administration. Id. at 1007. The record reflects a
procedural error that the District committed in its December
PWN. The district court did not address this procedural
error, and we write to clarify this Court’s position.
The District’s written reason for discontinuing IEP
meetings—because J.B. was not enrolled in the District—
was not a valid reason under the IDEA. But, as the district
court and ALJ found, the District had other lawful reasons
for ending negotiations with L.B., namely L.B.’s refusal to
consent to evaluations and L.B.’s clear intent to keep J.B.
enrolled outside the District. It is true that the District’s
failure to explain these reasons in its PWN was a procedural
error under the IDEA. 20 U.S.C. § 1415(b)(3). The error,
however, was harmless because it did not result in a
deprivation of an educational opportunity to J.B.
A. Procedural Error
The District procedurally erred by stating in the
December PWN that it would have no further IEP meetings
because J.B. was not enrolled in the District. Under the
“procedural safeguards” section of IDEA, the District must
provide “[w]ritten prior notice to the parents of the child”
16 J.B. V. KYRENE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DIST.
whenever the District “(A) proposes to initiate or change; or
(B) refuses to initiate or change the identification,
evaluation, or educational placement of the child, or the
provision of a free appropriate public education to the child.”
20 U.S.C. § 1415(b)(3). The notice must include “a
description of the action proposed or refused by the agency”
and “an explanation of why the agency proposes or refuses
to take the action.” § 1415(c)(1)(B). Thus, to discontinue
IEP meetings, the District needed to issue a written notice to
L.B. explaining the reasons for its decision.
The District did so by issuing two PWNs to L.B. in
December. In its December 19, 2013 PWN, the District
explained that it would not schedule any further IEP
meetings because J.B. was not enrolled in the District.
Similarly, in the December 20, 2013 PWN the District
declared that it refused to complete an IEE for J.B. because
he was not, at that time, attending a school in the District.
During the remand hearing, the District’s representative
confirmed that it was her understanding that the District did
not have responsibility to offer FAPE to J.B. because he was
not enrolled in the District.
J.B.’s enrollment status was the only reason the District
listed in its PWNs for halting IEP meetings. But that reason
is not legitimate under IDEA. A district must “have in effect,
for each child with a disability in the agency’s jurisdiction,
an individualized education program.” 34 C.F.R. § 300.131.
If a student enrolled in a private school “needs special
education and related services, the LEA [district] where the
child resides is responsible for making FAPE available to the
child.” 71 Fed. Reg. 46540, 46593 (Aug. 14, 2006)
(explaining 34 C.F.R. § 300.131); see Bellflower Unified
Sch. Dist. v. Lua, 832 Fed. Appx. 493, 495–96 (9th Cir.
2020) (finding that school district denied FAPE when it
J.B. V. KYRENE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DIST. 17
refused to hold IEP meeting unless the student was enrolled
in the district); Hack v. Deer Valley Unified Sch. Dist., CV-
15-02255-PHX-JJT, 2017 WL 2991970 *5–6 (D. Ariz. July
14, 2017) (same). As explained, the District had lawful
reasons for refusing evaluations and IEP meetings. But the
District failed to rely on those reasons in the PWNs, which
was a procedural error under IDEA. 20 U.S.C. § 1415(b)(3).
B. Harmless Error
The District’s procedural error did not amount to a denial
of FAPE because it was a harmless error. “Not every
procedural violation . . . is sufficient to support a finding that
the child in question was denied a FAPE.” N.B. v. Hellgate
Elem. Sch. Dist., 541 F.3d 1202, 1208 (9th Cir. 2008)
(citation omitted). A procedural violation constitutes a
denial of FAPE if the procedural inadequacy:
(I) impeded the child’s right to a free
appropriate public education;
(II) significantly impeded the parents’
opportunity to participate in the decision-
making process regarding the provision of a
free appropriate public education to the
parents’ child; or
(III) caused a deprivation of educational
benefits.
20 U.S.C. § 1415(f)(3)(E)(ii).
The dissent posits that if the District provided L.B. valid
justifications for terminating the IEP and evaluation process,
L.B. would have had the opportunity to question whether the
District changed its position after the December 19 meeting
or whether the parties could still reach an agreement
18 J.B. V. KYRENE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DIST.
regarding evaluations. Although this hypothetical
alternative is possible, the record does not support that it is
likely. Instead, the record shows that there was not a strong
likelihood here that L.B. would have considered another
FAPE offer as an alternative to Brightmont. As explained
above, L.B. continuously refused the District’s offers of
FAPE and requests to re-evaluate J.B. at Brightmont.
During the December 19 meeting, L.B. stated several
conditions that must be met before she would agree to such
evaluations. Although the District indicated it would
attempt to meet her conditions, the District also stated
reservations about being able to adequately evaluate J.B.
through audio and video recordings. Contrary to the
dissent’s characterization, the December 19 meeting did not
result in progress toward developing a new IEP for J.B.
Indeed, at the end of the meeting, when L.B. presented a
signed “written agreement” that stated she did not agree to
allow testing because no testing had been proposed, the
District reasonably understood this to mean that the parties
did not reach an agreement or make significant progress
during the meeting. And after receiving the PWNs, L.B. did
not request another IEP.
Even if the District’s PWN listed valid reasons for
denying FAPE—like L.B.’s refusal to consent to evaluations
and rejection of the District’s final FAPE offer without an
affirmative request for a new offer—the record indicates that
L.B. would have continued to insist on evaluations only
under her conditions. Because it is unlikely that L.B. would
have considered another FAPE offer as an alternative to
Brightmont absent the District’s procedural error, the error
did not create “a deprivation of educational opportunity.”
L.J., 850 F.3d at 1003. Thus, the District’s procedural
J.B. V. KYRENE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DIST. 19
violation was not an improper denial of FAPE—it was
harmless error.
V. Whether L.B. is entitled to any of her requested
remedies.
L.B. requested reimbursement for tuition and related
expenses that she paid. But L.B. is only entitled to
reimbursement “for the cost of providing an appropriate
education when a school district has failed to offer child a
FAPE.” W.G. v. Bd. of Trustees of Target Range Sch. Dist.
No. 23, 960 F.2d 1479, 1485 (9th Cir. 1992). Because the
District did not substantively violate the IDEA by denying
FAPE to J.B., L.B. is not entitled to reimbursement for
private school education. “[P]arents who unilaterally change
their child’s placement during the pendency of review
proceedings, without the consent of state or local officials,
do so at their own financial risk.” Sch. Comm. of Burlington
v. Dep’t of Educ. of Mass., 471 U.S. 359, 373–74 (1985).
When L.B. unilaterally removed J.B. from public school,
refused consent for evaluations by the District, rejected the
District’s offer of FAPE, and never requested a new offer of
FAPE, L.B. became responsible for financing J.B.’s
education.
Although the District procedurally erred, it did not
amount to a denial of FAPE under the IDEA. The ALJ and
district court were thus correct in concluding that “the
District did not violate the IDEA.” L.B., 2022 WL 14389900
*3. L.B. is not entitled to reimbursement for tuition and
related educational expenses.
CONCLUSION
We therefore AFFIRM the district court’s decision to
uphold the ALJ’s findings in favor of the District.
20 J.B. V. KYRENE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DIST.
COLLINS, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
I agree with the majority that Defendant Kyrene
Elementary School District No. 28 (“District”) committed a
procedural violation of the Individuals with Disabilities
Education Act (“IDEA”). See Opin. § IV(A). The District
issued two “prior written notices” (“PWNs”) informing
Plaintiff L.B. (“Parent”) that, solely because her son,
Plaintiff J.B. (“Student”), was not then “enrolled” as a
student in a District school, the District would not conduct
any further meetings with her to develop an Individualized
Education Program (“IEP”) and would not agree to complete
an “Independent Educational Evaluation” (“IEE”) for him.
As the majority explains, the fact that Student was not then
actually enrolled in a District school is not a “legitimate”
reason for terminating the IEP process or declining to
conduct an IEE. Indeed, in its answering brief in this court,
the District concedes that, “as the district of residence it had
a general obligation to make an offer of FAPE [‘Free
Appropriate Public Education’] to Student.”
The majority nonetheless upholds the judgment in the
District’s favor on the basis that, during the subsequent
administrative proceedings, the District came up with
substitute reasons that, even though they were not
contemporaneously provided to Parent, assertedly justify its
actions. Specifically, the majority concludes that the
District’s actions were justified by Parent’s asserted refusal
to “consent to evaluations” or to “re-enroll J.B. in the
District” and by Parent’s asserted rejection of the District’s
“final FAPE offer” and failure to “request a new offer of
FAPE.” See Opin. at 14. According to the majority, any
procedural error was therefore harmless. I disagree with the
majority’s harmless error holding.
J.B. V. KYRENE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DIST. 21
Under the IDEA, procedural violations—such as the
failure to provide a valid explanation for proposed agency
action in a PWN, see 20 U.S.C. § 1415(c)(1)(B)—
“constitute a denial of a [FAPE],” and therefore warrant a
remedy, only if they (1) “seriously impair the parents’
opportunity to participate in the IEP formulation process”;
(2) “result in the loss of educational opportunity for the
child”; or (3) “cause a deprivation of the child’s educational
benefits.” Timothy O. v. Paso Robles Unified Sch. Dist. 822
F.3d 1105, 1124 (9th Cir. 2016); see 20 U.S.C.
§ 1415(f)(3)(E)(ii). In my view, the District’s procedural
error was plainly harmful under the first of these three
alternatives.
The District’s first PWN (issued on December 19, 2013,
after the parties’ meeting earlier that day) itself makes clear
that the parties had made significant progress in attempting
to come to agreement over a plan to ensure that any
necessary additional evaluations of Student could be
conducted. The PWN also noted that the parties had rejected
each other’s respective FAPE offers. The PWN then
unilaterally declared that no further IEP meetings would take
place unless and until Parent enrolled Student in a District
school. If Parent chose to do so, then the District was willing
to implement its “IEP as written” while the parties
“proceeded with the evaluation process.” In its second
PWN, issued the next day, the District refused to conduct an
IEE for the same invalid reason that Student was not then
“enrolled” in a District school. If the District had not
violated the IDEA by terminating the IEP and evaluation
process for an invalid reason, and had the District instead
provided Parent the current justifications that it belatedly
hauled out during the administrative process, matters would
surely have played out very differently.
22 J.B. V. KYRENE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DIST.
Thus, if the PWN had told Parent on December 19, 2013
that it viewed her conditions as, constructively, a complete
refusal to consent to evaluations, Parent would then have had
the opportunity to follow up to ascertain (1) whether—
despite all the progress that had been made at the meeting
earlier that day in trying to work out mutually acceptable
evaluation conditions—the District had subsequently
decided to harden its position on evaluations; or (2) whether
she and the District might still be able to come to agreement
on evaluations. Likewise, had the PWN not invoked an
invalid reason for completely terminating the IEP process,
and had the PWN instead stated that the District thought
Parent’s position amounted to an effective termination of the
IEP process that required her to restart it with a new request,
she would then have had the opportunity to immediately
make that request. The District’s reliance on these belated
substitute justifications thus unambiguously confirms the
harmfulness of its error in relying on the invalid ground that
it did. By failing to include these grounds in the PWNs—as
it should have—and instead shutting down the entire process
on an invalid ground, the District “significantly impeded
[Parent’s] opportunity to participate in the decisionmaking
process regarding the provision of a free appropriate public
education to [her] child.” 20 U.S.C. § 1415(f)(3)(E)(ii)(II)
(emphasis added). 1
Parent did not want—and was not legally obligated—to
re-enroll Student in a public school before working out the
parties’ disagreements over an IEP for Student. It seems
1
This prejudicial deprivation of the “opportunity” to participate in the
IEP process suffices to reverse the judgment in the District’s favor. That
reversal would vitiate any ability to rely on the District’s alternative
grounds and would also vitiate the remaining factual findings made in
support of them.
J.B. V. KYRENE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DIST. 23
obviously prejudicial for the District to have discontinued
IEP meetings and evaluations until after Parent would agree
to the possible re-enrollment that those meetings and
evaluations were designed to facilitate. The IDEA’s
emphasis on “compliance with procedures giving parents . . .
a large measure of participation at every stage of the
administrative process” is meant, among other things, to
prevent such a Catch-22. See Board of Educ. of Hendrick
Hudson Cent. Sch. Dist., Westchester County v. Rowley, 458
U.S. 176, 205–06 (1982).
For these reasons, I would reverse the district court’s
judgment and remand the matter to that court with
instructions to remand to the administrative agency with
instructions to fashion an appropriate remedy for the
District’s prejudicial IDEA violation. To the extent that the
majority holds otherwise, I respectfully dissent.
Plain English Summary
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT J.B., a student, by and through parent, No.
Key Points
01FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT J.B., a student, by and through parent, No.
02Brnovich, District Judge, Presiding Argued and Submission Deferred November 8, 2023 Submitted August 14, 2024 Phoenix, Arizona Filed August 20, 2024 Before: Michael Daly Hawkins and Daniel P.
03Collins, Circuit Judges, and Stephen Joseph Murphy III, * District Judge.
04* The Honorable Stephen Joseph Murphy III, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Michigan, sitting by designation.
Frequently Asked Questions
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT J.B., a student, by and through parent, No.
FlawCheck shows no negative treatment for J.B. v. Kyrene Elementary School District No. 28 in the current circuit citation data.
This case was decided on August 20, 2024.
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