In a recent case, the Fifth Circuit affirmed summary judgment in favor of a school district in a Title IX case against it, concluding other students calling the plaintiff “gay” and other names over the period of a few weeks was not severe enough to be actionable.
The plaintiff had been homeschooled prior to enrolling in fifth grade at a Mississippi public school. Most of his fifth-grade school year was held virtually. Although he was teased some in fifth grade, he did not really think he was bullied. For sixth grade, the plaintiff went to a new middle school. Other boys started teasing him more and calling him names. Some of the boys called him “gay.” He believed that meant “[e]ither a boy wants to love another boy or a transgender,” but he also believed the boys called him “gay” sometimes because they thought he could be a girl. He started “blowing kisses” at them, but said that made it worse.
The plaintiff said he repeatedly reported the name-calling to his teachers. His mother also addressed name-calling and bullying with the plaintiff’s teachers, but she was initially not aware the plaintiff was being called “gay.”