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Court Allows Suit by Expelled Saint Josephâs Student to Proceed

Last July, former Saint Josephâs University (SJU) student Brian Harris in federal district court, alleging, among six other counts, that his expulsion for an alleged sexual assault without a fair hearing constituted a breach of contract and a Title IX violation. Last week, Judge L. Felipe Restrepo three of the charges and granted SJUâs motion to dismiss the other five, but left the door open for Harris to amend his complaint as to those charges.
Letâs first look at what survived SJUâs motions to dismiss. Harris argued that because SJU created the impression that students like Harris who are accused of sexual misconduct would receive a fair hearing by trained professionals, SJUâs failure to provide adequate notice and fair procedures in his case violated Pennsylvaniaâs Unfair Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Law. Harris also argued that SJU, a public safety officer at SJU, and his accuser Jane Doe defamed him by referring to him âas the perpetrator of a sexual assault on Doe, even though they knew the allegations were false, or with reckless indifference as to the truth or falsity of said allegations.â Judge Restrepo allowed both of these claims to proceed. Harrisâ claim against Jane Doe for intentional interference with a contract claim also survived, without much discussion.
With respect to the remaining counts, Restrepo ruled that Harris had not pled sufficient facts to support his claims. But the ruling doesnât preclude Harrisâ success on those claims altogetherâJudge Restrepo dismissed the five remaining claims without prejudice, which allows Harris to amend them within 20 days, and the judgeâs analysis contains some critical points in Harrisâ favor.
For example, Judge Restrepo dismissed Harrisâ breach of contract claim, which was based on Harrisâ contention that SJUâs student handbook constitutes a contract between Harris and SJU. Judge Restrepo pointed to the fact that Harris hadnât specified which provision of the handbook SJU failed to honor, but he also interpreted statements by SJU as a concession that the handbook constituted a contract that could be breached. The notion that a private institution of higher education is contractually bound by its own student handbook has been endorsed by many but not all jurisdictionsâincluding Pennsylvania, where (for example) the Superior Court has held that âthe relationship between a private educational institution and an enrolled student is contractual in nature; therefore, a student can bring a cause of action against said institution for breach of contract where the institution ignores or violates portions of the written contract.â , 734 A.2d 915, 919 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1999). As a result, Harris may be able to correct his breach claim to survive moving forward. Also working in Harrisâ favor is Restrepoâs careful assessment of SJUâs claim that its handbook precludes challenges to hearing results after the university presidentâs final decision on appeal. Although a student may not challenge the outcome of his misconduct hearing itself, the court can review allegations that the university âbreached the terms of [the Handbook] by failing to adhere to its provisions.â
FIRE became involved in the case because the defendantsâ motion to dismiss Harrisâ complaint included an argument that under âthe Supreme Courtâs seminal decision on when courts must defer to the interpretations of administrative agenciesâthe court should grant âsubstantial deferenceâ to the Office for Civil Rightsâ (OCRâs) statement in its that institutions must use the âpreponderance of the evidenceâ standard when adjudicating sexual misconduct cases. The motion says that this and other âspecific procedural issues about which Harris complains are mandatedâ by OCR and therefore cannot form the basis of a Title IX claim. FIREfiled an amicus brief arguing that the âDear Colleagueâ letter is not due Chevron deference and that the court should not rely on its mandate in ruling on Harrisâ claims. We were pleased to see that the âDear Colleagueâ letter was not relied upon in Restrepoâs ruling.
The judge also dismissed Harrisâ claim that he had been discriminated against based on his sex in violation of Title IX. Harrisâ allegations were âconclusory,â he wrote, and Harris must allege âparticular circumstances suggesting that gender bias was a motivating factorâ in either the process or the outcome of Harrisâ case. As with the breach of contract claim, Harris may correct this deficiency through an amendment of his complaint.
Harrisâ Title IX claim is particularly interesting in light of the on colleges and universities to better protect victims of sexual assault by bringing their policies and procedures in line with Title IX. Over a dozen lawsuits have been filed in the past year alleging due process violations or violations of Title IX relating to college sexual misconduct hearings, with several plaintiffs claiming that their institutions were motivated in part by this outside pressure.
For example, earlier this week, a male that his suspension following allegations of sexual assault was a result of âpandering to the political climate on campus and pressure from wom[e]nâs groupsâ and that John Doe was deprived of due process and discriminated against based on his sex. And if Harrisâ amended Title IX claim does ultimately withstand SJUâs motion to dismiss, it wouldnât be the first timeâformer Xavier University student and basketball star Dez Wells ultimately after his Title IX case involving similar circumstances survived a motion to dismiss in March.
Harrisâ complaint may be amended with respect to his other three claims, too, although Judge Restrepoâs discussion of these counts doesnât leave the door quite as open. On the count of negligence, the judge ruled that any duties SJU had to train staff and provide due process were contractual in nature, so those concerns were properly dealt with as a matter of contract law, not tort law. Harrisâ claim that all three defendants âmade public statements about Harris which placed him in a false lightâ failed because such statements must be disseminated widely in order for a âfalse lightâ claim to be successful. (The requirement that the statement in question become âpublic knowledgeâ is a much more substantial hurdle than defamationâs âpublicationâ requirement, which simply requires that a communication be made to a third party.) And finally, Harrisâ allegation of intentional infliction of emotional distress (IIED) against all three defendants failed because in Pennsylvania, a plaintiff alleging IIED âmust allege physical injury.â Restrepo further emphasized that IIED must involve âoutrageous conduct,â and wrote that Harrisâ claims were insufficient on both these grounds.
Harrisâ case is one of several of its kind in progress, and its outcome could have noteworthy implications for student due process rights in sexual misconduct cases. FIREwill watch closely for updates on this case and others here on The Torch.
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