Perkins v. Londonderry Basketba

Case Date: 11/08/1999
Court: United States Court of Appeals
Docket No: 99-1385

United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit





No. 99-1385

STACEY PERKINS, p.p.a. TERRI PERKINS,

Plaintiff, Appellant,

v.

LONDONDERRY BASKETBALL CLUB,

Defendant, Appellee.



APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

[Hon. Paul J. Barbadoro, U.S. District Judge]



Before

Selya, Circuit Judge,

Campbell, Senior Circuit Judge,

and Boudin, Circuit Judge.



Linda S. Johnson, with whom Rachel A. Hampe, Ann Marie Dirsa,
and McLane, Graf, Raulerson & Middleton, P.A. were on brief, for
appellant.
Joseph L. Hamilton, with whom Hamilton Law Offices was on
brief, for appellee.




November 8, 1999





SELYA, Circuit Judge. Plaintiff-appellant Stacey
Perkins, suing by and through her mother and next friend, Terri
Perkins, alleges that defendant-appellee Londonderry Basketball
Club (LBC) violated the Fourteenth Amendment when it refused to
allow her to play in a youth basketball tournament because of her
gender. The United States District Court for the District of New
Hampshire, discerning no state action, resolved the constitutional
claim adversely to the appellant (albeit without reaching the
merits) and declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the
appellant's pendent state-law claims. We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
We marshal the facts in the light most hospitable to the
appellant's theory of the case, drawing all reasonable inferences
in her favor. See Coyne v. Taber Partners I, 53 F.3d 454, 456 (1st
Cir. 1996).
Stacey Perkins is a ten-year-old female with an affinity
for the sport of basketball. She resides in Seabrook, New
Hampshire, a community which has no competitive "all-girls"
basketball league for Stacey's age group. At the start of the
1997-1998 season, Stacey seized the only realistic opportunity for
a girl of her age to compete and joined the "Red Devils," a mixed-
gender team that plays in the Seabrook Recreational League (SRL).
In March 1998, Stacey was one of two girls selected to play on the
SRL's twelve-member All-Star team.
The scene now shifts from Seabrook to Londonderry, New
Hampshire (the Town), where basketball has proven to be a popular
pastime. In the 1980s, Arthur Psaledas, the Town's Recreation
Director, ran a youth basketball program on his own time. As
demand increased, however, Psaledas could not keep pace, and
several community groups banded together in 1990 to form LBC (a
voluntary, nonprofit organization that enjoys tax-exempt status
under 26 U.S.C.  501(c)(3)). In furtherance of its mission to
provide basketball opportunities for the Town's young people, LBC
manages single-sex boys' and girls' teams for third- through
eighth-graders. To cap the season, it sponsors a one-week annual
tournament (really two tournaments, because LBC splits it into
separate brackets for boys and girls).
LBC solicits donations to support its activities. The
annual tournament constitutes its most substantial fundraising
event: registration fees, ticket sales, and souvenir sales (e.g.,
T-shirts) all generate revenues. LBC and the Town's Recreation
Commission have a modest interlock two members of LBC's five-
member board of directors happen to serve as members of the
Recreation Commission and Commission members often assist as
volunteers at the tournament by keeping score, running the clock,
and the like.
LBC uses the Town's public school gymnasia for league and
tournament play. Gym time is allocated by Psaledas, who holds a
yearly meeting for that purpose with user representatives and Town
officials. Like other groups that use the Town's facilities, LBC
pays a mandatory security fee to a private service but pays no
rent.
Beginning in 1996, the Town adopted sanctioning
requirements in an effort to prioritize requests for extra-
curricular use of school gyms. We reprint the sanctioning
requirements in an appendix. Uncontroverted evidence makes clear
that the Town's goal in adopting these requirements was to bring
competing groups together and thus lessen the burden on municipal
facilities. LBC sought and gained the Town's imprimatur under the
sanctioning requirements.
As part of an allocation process, each group that aspires
to gym use is required to submit a request for dates to the Town's
School District. Because Psaledas has been handling these
submissions for many years, he knows the needs of the basketball,
soccer, volleyball, and other leagues and automatically furnishes
information to the School District on behalf of LBC and other
similarly situated private groups. Although non-sanctioned groups
may use the gyms, sanctioned groups receive priority. Moreover,
Psaledas occasionally has moved adult groups to different time
slots to accommodate LBC's tournament-related needs.
There are other points of contact between LBC and the
Town: LBC holds meetings in school buildings, distributes flyers
regarding tryout schedules through the schools, and relies on
Psaledas to inform it when the School District cancels its
programs. The most salient contact point is financial: LBC from
time to time contributes money to the Town's schools for
scholarships, travel, uniforms, basketball equipment, court
maintenance, and the like. Between 1991 and 1998, these donations
amounted to $22,000. In the event LBC were to dissolve, its
charter provides that all its assets would be distributed to the
Town.
II. THE DENOUEMENT
The SRL arranged for its All-Star team to play in LBC's
tenth annual "boys'" tournament. The schedule called for the team
to play its first game on March 24, 1998. But LBC opted to apply
its policy of "separate and equal" brackets, which contained no
provision for mixed-gender play, even where, as in this case, a
child's community offered no single-sex team on which she could
compete. In accordance with the policy (which LBC defends as an
attempt to maximize the participation of both sexes), LBC informed
Stacey's coach that girls would not be allowed to participate in
its boys' tournament.
Three days later, Stacey sued LBC. She alleged equal
protection violations under the Fourteenth Amendment and 42 U.S.C.
 1983 as well as a number of claims under state law. Her
complaint sought variegated relief, including an order enjoining
LBC from denying her the opportunity to play in the tournament and
an award of money damages. Any prospect of a temporary restraining
order evaporated when the SRL All-Star team withdrew from the
tournament. Stacey's suit nevertheless proceeded, principally on
her claim for damages.
Following a plenitude of pretrial discovery, LBC moved
for summary judgment. In a meticulously reasoned unpublished
opinion, the district court granted the motion as to the Fourteenth
Amendment and section 1983 claims, holding that LBC's conduct did
not constitute state action. The court simultaneously dismissed
the supplemental state-law claims without prejudice. See 28 U.S.C.
 1367(c). This appeal, in which we review the lower court's grant
of summary judgment de novo, see Coyne, 53 F.3d at 457, followed.
III. ANALYSIS
Despite criticism from the academy, the public/private
dichotomy remains embedded in our constitutional jurisprudence.
See National Collegiate Athletic Ass'n v. Tarkanian, 488 U.S. 179,
191 (1988). This dichotomy distinguishes between state action,
which must conform to the prescriptions of the Fourteenth
Amendment, and private conduct, which generally enjoys immunity
from Fourteenth Amendment strictures. See id.; Jackson v.
Metropolitan Edison Co., 419 U.S. 345, 349 (1974). The line of
demarcation between public and private action, though easily
proclaimed, has proven elusive in application. And the Justices,
mindful of the fact-sensitive nature of the inquiry, have staunchly
eschewed any attempt to construct a universally applicable litmus
test to distinguish state action from private conduct. Instead,
they have directed lower courts to take a case-by-case approach,
"sifting facts and weighing circumstances [so that] the nonobvious
involvement of the State in private conduct [can] be attributed its
true significance." Burton v. Wilmington Parking Auth., 365 U.S.
715, 722 (1961).
There is no direct "state action" here: the parties, who
agree on little else, concur that LBC is not structurally an arm of
municipal government. In cases that involve indirect state action,
courts conventionally have traveled a trio of analytic avenues,
deeming a private entity to have become a state actor if (1) it
assumes a traditional public function when it undertakes to perform
the challenged conduct, or (2) an elaborate financial or regulatory
nexus ties the challenged conduct to the State, or (3) a symbiotic
relationship exists between the private entity and the State. See
Barrios-Vel