Music Teacher Sued for Teaching Music?! Judge’s Response 🎺

The institutional hum of the courtroom felt far removed from the exuberant, often discordant, brassy blaring of the Lincoln Middle School band room. Mr. Henderson sat at the defense table, his hands resting on his knees, still wearing his “Band Director” polo shirt. He was a man who lived for the moment a group of sixth graders finally hit a synchronized B-flat, but today he was being treated like a public nuisance.

Opposite him sat Mr. Sterling, a freelance consultant who had recently traded his downtown office for a sprawling home office in the quiet suburb of Oakwood. Unfortunately for Mr. Sterling, his “quiet” home office shared a property line with the middle school’s music wing. To him, the sound of progress was nothing more than a breach of his peace.


The Auditory Assault

The courtroom was quiet, a stark contrast to the evidence Mr. Sterling was about to present. He adjusted his glasses and stood with the air of a man who believed his right to a quiet Zoom call was a fundamental human liberty.

“Your Honor,” Mr. Sterling began, his voice tight with irritation. “I am a professional who works from home. For five days a week, between the hours of 1:30 and 3:00 PM, my productivity is effectively destroyed. The defendant conducts a ‘band practice’ that involves twenty trumpets, ten drums, and a dozen saxophones—all played by children who clearly haven’t mastered their instruments. I have measured the noise at 85 decibels from my backyard. It’s constant, it’s piercing, and it makes video conferences impossible. I have filed multiple complaints, but the school refuses to soundproof the room. This is a noise violation that interferes with my livelihood and the quiet enjoyment of my private property.”

Judge Aris, a woman who looked like she had very little patience for the inconveniences of modern remote work, peered over her spectacles. “Eighty-five decibels, you say? During the afternoon?”

“Yes, Your Honor. Every single Tuesday and Thursday is particularly egregious. It’s an unbearable nuisance.”


The Sound of Education

Judge Aris turned her gaze toward Mr. Henderson. “Mr. Henderson, what do you have to say for your ‘unbearable’ trumpets?”

Mr. Henderson stood, his voice calm and resonant, trained by years of speaking over percussion sections. “Your Honor, I don’t deny the noise. It’s a middle school band. We are learning. Those kids are developing coordination, discipline, and a love for the arts. We practice during standard school hours, in a building specifically zoned for education, on a campus that has existed since 1974. We aren’t a rock band practicing in a garage at midnight. We are a public school program fulfilling a state-mandated curriculum.”

He looked at Mr. Sterling with a touch of weary sympathy. “I’m sorry his conferences are disrupted, but we can’t stop the education of three hundred children because one neighbor decided to set up an office thirty feet from the percussion suite.”


The Verdict on Proximity

The judge leaned back, her chair creaking in the silent room. She didn’t look at the noise ordinances Mr. Sterling had helpfully printed out. She looked at the map of the neighborhood.

“Mr. Sterling,” the judge began, her voice dropping into a tone of dry, academic finality. “Let me be very clear. When you buy a house next to an airport, you don’t sue the planes for flying. When you buy a house next to a middle school, you are implicitly agreeing to the sounds of a middle school. That includes bells, shouting at recess, and, yes, the occasionally flat notes of a beginning band.”

She tapped her pen against the bench for emphasis. “It is 2:00 PM on a Tuesday. That is the heart of the school day. That is what schools sound like. You cannot move into the shadow of an educational institution and then demand the children be silent so you can take a phone call. Learning music is an essential part of a child’s development, not a nuisance to be mitigated by the courts.”

Judge Aris grabbed her gavel, her face set in a mask of common sense. “Case dismissed. Mr. Henderson, go back to your students and keep teaching them to play. Mr. Sterling, I suggest you invest in some high-quality noise-canceling headphones or move your desk to the other side of your house. We are adjourned.”

The crack of the gavel echoed like a snare drum hit. Mr. Henderson walked out of the courtroom, checking his watch. He had just enough time to get back for the final rehearsal of the “Star Wars” theme, and for the first time all day, he didn’t mind if the trumpets were a little loud.