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Perez v. Sturgis Public Schools

No. 21-887 SCOTUS · Decided Decided SCOTUS
Cert Granted: Oct 3, 2022 Argued: Jan 18, 2023 Decided: Mar 21, 2023

Case Overview

The Supreme Court addressed a procedural question of significant consequence for special-education families: whether a student with disabilities who prevails in an Individuals with Disabilities Education Act administrative proceeding must exhaust further IDEA administrative procedures before bringing a disability discrimination claim in federal court under the Americans with Disabilities Act, or whether a successful IDEA outcome constitutes sufficient exhaustion for parallel ADA claims arising from the same facts.


The Facts

Miguel Perez, a deaf student, received a cochlear implant and speech therapy at the Sturgis Public Schools in Michigan. When his family discovered the district had assigned untrained paraprofessionals to assist him rather than qualified educators, they sought IDEA relief. After a successful IDEA settlement requiring the district to provide specialized education, Perez then sued in federal court under the ADA for compensatory damages a remedy not available under the IDEA. The Sixth Circuit dismissed, holding he had to exhaust IDEA procedures again for the ADA claim.

The Application

History

Applying the Fry standard, the Court found that Perez sought compensatory damages, a remedy categorically unavailable under the IDEA, making the exhaustion requirement inapplicable to his ADA claim. Because the relief he pursued could not have been obtained through IDEA administrative procedures, requiring him to exhaust those procedures a second time would be meaningless and contrary to the statute's protective purpose. The fact that Perez had already secured his IDEA remedy through settlement was irrelevant; the controlling inquiry was whether the specific remedy he now sought fell within IDEA's scope. The Court therefore held that successful IDEA resolution, when coupled with the plaintiff's pursuit of relief unavailable under the IDEA, permits direct federal court access without additional administrative exhaustion.

The Conclusion

Decided March 21, 2023. The Court held unanimously that because Perez sought compensatory damages, a remedy unavailable under the IDEA, the IDEA's exhaustion requirement did not bar his ADA claim. Having already resolved his IDEA dispute, he was not required to re-exhaust IDEA procedures before suing under the ADA. The ruling clarified that exhaustion is not required when the relief sought is beyond what the IDEA offers.

CourtSupreme Court of the United States
FiledDec 15, 2021
Judge -
CL Statusactive
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No circuit court data for this case.

Cert GrantedOct 3, 2022
Statusactive
Filed (CL)Dec 15, 2021
View on CourtListener →
SCOTUS TMR-9e66ef4a Jul 13, 2026
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