ALI ALALWAN VS. RUTGERS SCHOOL OF DENTAL MEDICINE (L-4492-16, ESSEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2020 )


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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the
    internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-4983-18T1
    ALI ALALWAN,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    RUTGERS SCHOOL OF
    DENTAL MEDICINE,1
    DR. ROBERT J. FLINTON
    AND DR. LOUIS DIPEDE,
    Defendants-Respondents.
    Argued September 23, 2020 – Decided October 20, 2020
    Before Judges Fuentes, Whipple and Rose.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Essex County, Docket No. L-4492-16.
    Robert P. Merenich argued the cause for appellant
    (Gemmel Todd & Merenich, PA, attorneys; Robert P.
    Merenich, on the briefs).
    1
    Improperly pled as University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey,
    Rutgers Dental School.
    Sean R. Kelly argued the cause for respondents (Saiber
    LLC, attorneys; Sean R. Kelly of counsel and on the
    brief; Monvan Hu on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    Plaintiff Ali Alalwan appeals from a Law Division order granting
    defendants Rutgers School of Dental Medicine (RSDM), Dr. Robert J. Flinton,
    and Dr. Louis DiPede summary judgment and dismissing plaintiff's complaint
    with prejudice. A Saudi Arabian national and Shiite Muslim, plaintiff is a
    former student of RSDM's post-graduate prosthodontics program. In his two-
    count complaint, plaintiff alleged defendants created a hostile educational
    environment and dismissed him from the program based on his "ancestry, creed,
    and national origin," thereby violating the New Jersey Law Against
    Discrimination (LAD), N.J.S.A. 10:5-1 to -49. Plaintiff also asserted breach of
    contract claims against RSDM, including allegations that the school failed to:
    (1) properly educate plaintiff and deliberately impeded his progress; (2) adhere
    to its handbook's procedure for academic dismissals; and (3) provide plaintiff
    with his complete file in advance of his dismissal hearing. Because we conclude,
    as did the motion judge, that defendants must prevail as a matter of law, we
    affirm.
    A-4983-18T1
    2
    I.
    We review the trial court's grant of summary judgment de novo. Templo
    Fuente De Vida Corp. v. Nat'l Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh, 
    224 N.J. 189
    ,
    199 (2016). Employing the same standard the trial court uses, we review the
    record to determine whether there are material factual disputes and, if not,
    whether the undisputed facts viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff
    nonetheless entitle defendant to judgment as a matter of law. Ibid.; Brill v.
    Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am., 
    142 N.J. 520
    , 540 (1995); see also R. 4:46-2(c).
    We owe no deference to the trial court's legal analysis or interpretation of a
    statute. Palisades at Fort Lee Condo. Ass'n v. 100 Old Palisade, LLC, 
    230 N.J. 427
    , 442 (2017) (citation omitted).
    Viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff, the pertinent facts are as
    follows. Plaintiff began RSDM's three-year program in July 2013. The program
    included classroom learning and supervised clinical training. Plaintiff was one
    of five students enrolled in the program; four students were citiz ens of Saudi
    Arabia, whose government funded their tuition. Dr. DiPede served as the
    program's director; Dr. Flinton was a member of the faculty.
    Plaintiff's academic and clinical performance began proficiently, but
    rapidly declined. By the end of the first semester in January 2014, plaintiff
    A-4983-18T1
    3
    received several poor faculty evaluations for his clinical performance, including
    failing grades from one instructor and below-average grades from Dr. Flinton.
    One faculty member commented: "As we discussed, we all have major problems
    with [plaintiff]. He has little to no grasp of prosthodontics [and] has done almost
    no patient treatment.     He has presented to clinic with an unprofessional
    appearance." Dr. Flinton also remarked plaintiff had "accomplished virtually
    nothing" in terms of clinical practice.
    As the program's director, Dr. DiPede prepared plaintiff's summary
    evaluation in January 2014, which included seven "C" and two "B" grades.
    Initially noting plaintiff "is a very intelligent, personable young man and . . .
    very respectful[,]" Dr. DiPede then commented:
    [Plaintiff] has accomplished very little clinically. After
    review, many of his patients are awaiting consults or
    treatment in other departments. Even so, [plaintiff]
    needs to make his needs for clinical productivity known
    and not ignore the issue. Clinical accomplishments are
    a requirement of the program. I have assigned him
    "ready[-]to[-]go cases" [2] and will meet with him
    formally on a monthly basis until the year's end semi-
    annual evaluation. I believe he does have the capability
    and ability to turn things around and I certainly hope
    2
    In their responding brief, defendants described "ready[-]to[-]go" cases as
    "cases that would allow [plaintiff] to treat patients immediately so that he would
    have the best possible opportunity to improve the quality of his work in a short
    period of time."
    A-4983-18T1
    4
    that he does so. I would encourage [plaintiff] to do
    more independent study and be able to discuss relevant
    topics in prosthodontics based on that independent
    study.
    During the ensuing months, plaintiff and Dr. DiPede met several times. 3
    But, defendant made little clinical progress, failing a mock board examination
    and three courses during his second semester. Again, several faculty members
    submitted critical evaluations to Dr. DiPede. One instructor noted plaintiff:
    "Seems not to be getting any of the concepts. Doesn't listen to what he's being
    told to do. He is struggling in the program. Seems lost even after a year."
    Another member renewed his criticism of plaintiff's clinical performance:
    There is a continuing problem [with plaintiff]'s work
    habits. I have helped him [with] numerous treatment
    plans but then there seems to be little or no follow-up
    in implementing or starting actual treatment. He's often
    not in clinic. I think all faculty need to discuss his
    continuation in the [p]rogram.
    Referencing his previous evaluation, Dr. DiPede's July 2014 summary
    evaluation noted plaintiff "is on academic probation" and has been assigned
    "ready[-]to[-]go" cases, but plaintiff failed to undertake independent study.
    3
    When deposed and in his answers to defendants' material statement of facts in
    support of their summary judgment motion, plaintiff denied he and Dr. DiPede
    discussed plaintiff's academic performance, claiming they only spoke about
    "patient flow."
    A-4983-18T1
    5
    Citing plaintiff's "lack of understanding of basic prosthodontic principles and
    lack of confidence treating patients[,]" Dr. DiPede "c[ould] not fathom a reason
    for a resident entering their [sic] second year, to be so far below the level of
    didactic knowledge expected."
    In addition, two mock board examiners issued plaintiff failing grades; a
    third evaluator did not complete a written evaluation because plaintiff was
    unprepared. It is undisputed that plaintiff did not submit a completed clinical
    case to the examiners.
    Notwithstanding plaintiff's poor performance, RSDM permitted plaintiff
    to retake the mock board examination in August 2014. Plaintiff again failed to
    present a completed clinical case and, as such, the format was changed to a
    general oral examination. Drs. DiPede and Flinton administered the exam,
    which plaintiff failed in all evaluative categories. Dr. DiPede noted plaintiff's
    knowledge was "shockingly poor"; Dr. Flinton remarked plaintiff was a "danger
    to his patients" and should be dismissed from the program "ASAP." No other
    students had twice failed RSDM's mock board examination.
    During the same timeframe, plaintiff also made errors while treating two
    patients in the clinic, spilling hot wax on one patient's lip and improperly
    installing a dental apparatus on another. Given plaintiff's academic and clinical
    A-4983-18T1
    6
    failures and his errors in treating two patients, RSDM suspended plaintiff's
    clinical privileges on September 8, 2014, citing its "concern for patient safety."
    Three weeks later, RSDM's Postdoctoral Education Committee convened
    to consider plaintiff's dismissal from the program, affording plaintiff an
    opportunity to explain "any extenuating circumstances that may have
    contributed to [his] poor academic performance and answer any questions the
    committee may pose." Plaintiff addressed his three failing grades in his clinical
    prosthodontics course, literature review seminar, and implant core course.
    Plaintiff "admit[ted] that [his] performance in the clinic ha[d] declined."
    But he "attribute[d] this decline to the personal attacks made by Dr. Flinton, who
    [wa]s not [his] supervisor in the clinic." Plaintiff told the Committee "Dr.
    Flinton's behavior of criticizing [plaintiff's] performance in front of patients and
    residents accelerated after May [2014], to the point where [plaintiff] was having
    a hard time concentrating in the clinic for fear of [Dr. Flinton's] constant
    criticism." Plaintiff did not understand how Dr. DiPede twice complimented his
    work in the clinic, while Dr. Flinton said plaintiff's work was "terrible." Plaintiff
    claimed he attempted to "make peace with Dr. Flinton," but his attempts were
    rebuked. Dr. Flinton told plaintiff "I have lost faith in you. You don't deserve
    the position. I think you should just go home. I don't believe in you." Plaintiff
    A-4983-18T1
    7
    also claimed Dr. Flinton "hit [him] in the chest in front of other residents" and
    "pointed his middle finger at [plaintiff]." For the first time, plaintiff reported:
    "Dr. Flinton has told me, 'I hate Arabs.'" 4
    Plaintiff attributed his failing grades in the literature review seminar –
    which primarily consisted of the mock board examination – to the nervousness
    he felt around Dr. Flinton. Plaintiff claimed during his second mock board
    examination, Dr. Flinton "glared at [plaintiff], even before [he] opened [his]
    mouth." And, "Dr. Flinton's constant criticism" made plaintiff "so nervous" he
    could not concentrate on the implant core final examination. Plaintiff also told
    the Committee RSDM had failed to issue a "verbal or written warning that
    [plaintiff] was at risk of academic action[,]" thereby violating the protocols for
    corrective measures outlined in its student handbook.            The Committee
    recommended plaintiff's dismissal; plaintiff filed an administrative appeal.
    Thereafter, plaintiff met with RSDM's dean, who offered plaintiff
    reinstatement to the program, conditioned upon his completion of basic
    4
    The statement was allegedly made during a private conversation between Dr.
    Flinton and plaintiff in July or August of 2014. Plaintiff asserted in his answers
    to interrogatories and counterstatement of material facts, supporting defendant's
    motion that the statement was made in August 2014; plaintiff testified at his
    deposition it was uttered in July 2014.
    A-4983-18T1
    8
    competency examinations and repetition of his first academic year. Plaintiff
    refused the dean's offer and filed his complaint in the Law Division.
    Following the close of discovery, defendants moved for summary
    judgment. In a cogent written decision accompanying a June 3, 2019 order, the
    motion judge granted defendants' motion. This appeal followed.
    II.
    A. Plaintiff's LAD Claims
    Pertinent to this appeal, the motion judge determined plaintiff – having
    conceded RSDM did not treat him differently from non-Arabs – failed to
    demonstrate a prima facie violation of the LAD, and Dr. Flinton's remark was
    not severe enough to establish a hostile educational environment . The judge
    noted plaintiff's poor performance occurred months before Dr. Flinton made the
    alleged statement and, because Dr. Flinton was "only one of several evaluators,"
    he was not the decisionmaker who terminated plaintiff from the program.
    On appeal, plaintiff maintains he established "a prima facie direct
    evidence Price Waterhouse [5] discrimination case on the basis of his Saudi
    national origin" regarding his claims of wrongful dismissal and hostile
    5
    Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins, 
    490 U.S. 228
    (1989).
    A-4983-18T1
    9
    educational environment.       Because no New Jersey case has addressed a
    discriminatory discharge claim by a student against a public university under the
    LAD, we begin our analysis by recognizing the act's well-established principles.
    Initially, the LAD provides, in pertinent part:
    All persons shall have the opportunity to obtain . . . all
    the accommodations, advantages, facilities, and
    privileges of any place of public accommodation . . .
    without discrimination because of . . . national origin
    . . . subject only to conditions and limitations applicable
    alike to all persons. This opportunity is recognized as
    and declared to be a civil right.
    [N.J.S.A. 10:5-4.]
    Further, the LAD prohibits "any owner, . . . manager, . . . agent, or
    employee of any place of public accommodation directly or indirectly to refuse,
    withhold from or deny . . . any person any of the accommodations, advantages,
    facilities or privileges thereof, . . . on account of . . . [the person's] national
    origin . . . ." N.J.S.A. 10:5-12f(1).
    N.J.S.A. 10:5-12 explicitly proscribes discrimination in the employment
    context, but its protections have been extended to non-employment situations,
    including schools and educational settings. See L.W. v. Toms River Reg'l Schs.
    Bd. of Educ., 
    189 N.J. 381
    , 402 (2007) (applying LAD's prohibition against
    sexual harassment in a public school setting). As the Court recognized in L.W.,
    A-4983-18T1
    10
    "our courts counsel that 'the more broadly [the LAD] is applied the greater its
    antidiscriminatory impact.'"
    Id. at 400.
    (quoting Ptaszynski v. Uwaneme, 
    371 N.J. Super. 333
    , 345 (App. Div. 2004) (alteration in original)). Moreover, public
    universities and colleges are expressly included in the LAD's definition of "[a]
    place of public accommodation." N.J.S.A. 10:5-5(l); see also Frank v. Ivy Club,
    
    120 N.J. 73
    , 111 (1990) (divining the Legislature's intent "to eliminate
    discrimination in educational institutions" by its designation of colleges and
    universities among the definitions of N.J.S.A. 10:5-5(l)). Accordingly, we
    consider employment cases for guidance in addressing the issues raised on
    appeal.
    It is well settled that a plaintiff may establish a prima facie case of
    discrimination through direct or circumstantial evidence. Smith v. Millville
    Rescue Squad, 
    225 N.J. 373
    , 394 (2016); see also A.D.P. v. ExxonMobil Rsch.
    and Eng'g Co., 
    428 N.J. Super. 518
    , 531 (App. Div. 2012). Our Supreme Court
    has noted: "A case established through direct evidence is also referred to as
    either a 'Price Waterhouse case' or a 'mixed-motive case,' and a case established
    through circumstantial evidence may be referred to as a 'McDonnell Douglas
    case' or a 'pretext case.'" Millville Rescue 
    Squad, 225 N.J. at 394
    n.3.
    A-4983-18T1
    11
    To establish a claim by direct evidence, "[t]he evidence produced must, if
    true, demonstrate not only a hostility toward members of the [plaintiff]'s class,
    but also a direct causal connection between that hostility and the challenged
    employment decision." Bergen Commer. Bank v. Sisler, 
    157 N.J. 188
    , 208
    (1999) (citing Price 
    Waterhouse, 490 U.S. at 277
    (O'Connor, J., concurring)).
    That statement must be made by a decisionmaker; actually bear on the
    employment decision at issue; and communicate "proscribed animus."
    McDevitt v. Bill Good Builders, Inc., 
    175 N.J. 519
    , 528 (2003). A plaintiff must
    demonstrate its employer placed "substantial reliance on a proscribed
    discriminatory factor in making its decision to take the adverse employment
    action."
    Id. at 527.
    "Such proof is established by evidence 'of conduct or
    statements by persons involved in the decision[-]making process that may be
    viewed as directly reflecting the alleged discriminatory attitude.'" 
    A.D.P., 428 N.J. Super. at 534
    (quoting Fleming v. Corr. Healthcare Sols., Inc., 
    164 N.J. 90
    ,
    101 (2000)). If a plaintiff establishes discriminatory animus by direct evidence,
    the burden of persuasion shifts to the defendant to "produce evidence sufficient
    to show that it would have made the same decision if illegal bias had played no
    role in the employment decision." 
    Fleming, 164 N.J. at 100
    (internal quotation
    marks omitted) (citation omitted).
    A-4983-18T1
    12
    Proof of discrimination through direct evidence is unusual. See Bergen
    Commer. 
    Bank, 157 N.J. at 209-10
    . Accordingly, the United States Supreme
    Court has formulated the so-called McDonnell Douglas test, whereby a plaintiff
    may establish through circumstantial evidence, a prima facie case of
    discrimination, or a "presumption of discrimination."
    Id. at 210-11.
    Of course,
    if a plaintiff proves discrimination by direct evidence, "the McDonnell Douglas
    analysis does not apply." 
    A.D.P., 428 N.J. Super. at 533
    .
    Under the McDonnell Douglas test, a plaintiff must satisfy the four-
    pronged test that our courts have modified to suit certain forms of discrimination
    in particular settings. Victor v. State, 
    203 N.J. 383
    , 408-10 (2010). In an
    employment discriminatory discharge case, the aggrieved employee must
    demonstrate he or she: (1) "is in a protected class"; (2) "was otherwise qualified
    and performing the essential functions of the job"; (3) "was terminated"; and (4)
    "the employer thereafter sought similarly qualified individuals for that job."
    Id. at 409.
    If the plaintiff satisfies that four-pronged test, creating a presumption of
    discrimination, then "[t]he defendant . . . bears the burden of rebutting that
    presumption by articulating a legitimate and non-discriminatory reason for the
    termination." Zive v. Stanley Roberts, Inc., 
    182 N.J. 436
    , 458 (2005). The
    burden of persuasion, however, remains with the plaintiff. Once the defendant
    A-4983-18T1
    13
    rebuts the presumption of discrimination, the plaintiff must "not simply show
    that the employer's reason was false" or pretextual, "but must also demonstrate
    that the employer was motivated by discriminatory intent."
    Id. at 449.
    "The key difference between a direct-evidence case and a circumstantial-
    evidence case is 'the kind of proof the [plaintiff] produces on the issue of bias.'"
    Millville Rescue 
    Squad, 225 N.J. at 396
    (quoting Starceski v. Westinghouse
    Elec. Corp., 
    54 F.3d 1089
    , 1097 (3d Cir. 1995)). As we observed in A.D.P.,
    stray remarks unrelated to the decisional process, such
    as an employer's comment that "everyone over 35
    should be sacked" and references to older employees as
    "little old ladies" and "old cows," have been
    characterized as circumstantial evidence, while "a scrap
    of paper saying, 'Fire Rollins — she is too old'" was an
    example of direct evidence. . . . The emphasis is upon
    the quality of proofs, rather than their nature as direct
    or circumstantial evidence.
    [428 N.J. Super. at 534 (citations omitted).]
    Against that legal backdrop, we turn to plaintiff's LAD claims. As he did
    before the motion       judge, plaintiff contends       Dr.   Flinton's   allegedly
    discriminatory statement constituted "direct evidence" of defendants' unlawful
    discrimination under the LAD. Plaintiff principally argues the motion judge
    failed to consider "direct evidence of [Dr. Flinton]'s discriminatory animus" and
    that plaintiff "was improperly dismissed at the hands of persons who
    A-4983-18T1
    14
    manufactured a record" to support his dismissal. Plaintiff further argues his
    three failing grades were pretextual. Finally, plaintiff asserts the motion judge
    erroneously concluded Dr. Flinton was not a decisionmaker.
    Although the motion judge did not expressly address the distinction
    between direct- and circumstantial-evidence discrimination cases under the
    LAD, the judge rejected plaintiff's wrongful dismissal claim under the less-
    stringent McDonnell Douglas, circumstantial evidence framework. On appeal –
    as he did before the motion judge – plaintiff appears to conflate these evidentiary
    theories, arguing he proffered direct evidence of a prima facie showing of
    discrimination under the LAD although his claims are based largely on
    circumstantial evidence. Having considered the record, we find no merit to
    plaintiff's contentions under either theory. 6
    6
    We recognize an argument not raised on appeal is deemed waived, Zaman v.
    Felton, 
    219 N.J. 199
    , 226-27 (2014). Because the motion judge decided
    plaintiff's claims under circumstantial-evidence standards, and plaintiff relies on
    circumstantial evidence of discrimination in his merits brief, we consider
    plaintiff's arguments and affirm the order under review for reasons in addition
    to those articulated by the judge in his written opinion. Accord Brooks v. April,
    
    294 N.J. Super. 90
    , 92 (App. Div. 1996) (affirming the summary judgment
    orders for reasons other than those expressed by the trial court).
    A-4983-18T1
    15
    1. Discriminatory Dismissal Allegation
    We briefly address plaintiff's discriminatory dismissal claims under a
    direct-evidence theory. As a threshold matter, Dr. Flinton was not a member of
    the Committee or the RSDM's dean and, as such, he was not the primary
    decisionmaker, who ultimately dismissed plaintiff from the program. However,
    Dr. Flinton arguably had at least some input in the decision-making process, on
    whose evaluations the Committee and dean relied. See Grasso v. West New
    York Bd. Of Educ., 
    364 N.J. Super. 109
    , 118 (App. Div. 2003) (observing
    "discriminatory comments made by one with input into the decision-making
    process are not stray remarks"). Contrary to plaintiff's assertion, the motion
    judge did not conclude otherwise. 7
    Nonetheless, plaintiff failed to show a "direct" causal connection between
    Dr. Flinton's alleged statement and plaintiff's dismissal from the program. See
    Millville Rescue 
    Squad, 225 N.J. at 394
    . Dr. Flinton's statement was allegedly
    7
    In his evaluation of plaintiff's hostile environmental discrimination claim, the
    motion judge determined "Dr. Flinton was only one of several evaluators who
    graded [p]laintiff as performing poorly in the [p]rogram. Plaintiff's success in
    the [p]rogram was not solely dependent on Dr. Finton's evaluation, but rather
    [on] a multitude of factors." As stated above the motion judge did not evaluate
    plaintiff's claim pursuant to a direct evidence theory of discrimination.
    Accordingly, the judge did not expressly determine Dr. Flinton had no input in
    the decision-making process.
    A-4983-18T1
    16
    made during a private conversation with plaintiff, months before plaintiff was
    dismissed from the program, after plaintiff had received poor grades from
    several other faculty evaluators and failed his first mock board exam
    administered by other faculty members.
    Further, the Commission's dismissal recommendation was "based on
    [plaintiff's] academic performance of an 'F' grade in Clinical Prosthodontics, an
    'F' grade in Literature Review Seminar, and an 'F' grade in Implant Core course."
    Nor has plaintiff proffered any evidence that Dr. Flinton's statement "actually
    bore" on the dean's decision to offer plaintiff conditional reinstatement to the
    program. See Millville Rescue 
    Squad, 225 N.J. at 395
    . We therefore conclude
    plaintiff failed to establish a "direct" causal connection between Dr. Flinton's
    alleged discriminatory statement and plaintiff's discharge from the program. See
    
    A.D.P., 428 N.J. Super. at 534
    .
    And as the motion judge recognized, plaintiff conceded at oral argument
    he was not treated differently from non-Arab students. In fact, the majority of
    students in the program were Saudi Arabian, and no other student had failed the
    mock    board   examination    twice   as   did   plaintiff.   See   Mandel     v.
    UBS/PaineWebber, Inc., 
    373 N.J. Super. 55
    , 76 (App. Div. 2004) (upholding
    summary judgment dismissal of plaintiff's religious discrimination claim where
    A-4983-18T1
    17
    there was no evidence Jewish employees were treated less favorably than non-
    Jewish employees).
    Moreover, the statement, "I hate Arabs," allegedly made by Dr. Flinton
    months before the Committee voted to dismiss plaintiff from the program, is not
    inherently direct evidence of discrimination. See 
    A.D.P., 428 N.J. Super. at 534
    .
    Instead, the other remarks allegedly made by Dr. Flinton, which plaintiff claims
    support his contention that Dr. Flinton "mount[ed] a campaign to remove [him]
    from the program," constitute circumstantial evidence. Accordingly, as the
    motion judge implicitly found, the present case is more appropriately analyzed
    as one entailing indirect evidence of discrimination and, as such, is subje ct to
    the McDonnell Douglas burden-shifting construct.
    Applying the McDonnell Douglas factors to plaintiff's discrimination
    claims here – as the motion judge correctly observed – plaintiff was required to
    demonstrate: (1) he is a member of a protected class; (2) he was otherwise
    qualified for the academic position; (3) he suffered an adverse educational
    action; and (4) he was treated differently than similarly-situated students, who
    were not members of the protected class. See Millville Rescue 
    Squad, 225 N.J. at 395
    . Having considered those factors, we agree with the judge's determination
    A-4983-18T1
    18
    that plaintiff – through his own concession – failed to establish defendants
    treated him differently from non-Arabs.8
    We further observe plaintiff failed to demonstrate he was otherwise
    qualified for his academic position. Plaintiff failed to remediate the poor grades
    he received during his first semester or otherwise improve himself, despite Dr.
    DiPede's efforts to assign plaintiff "ready-to-go" cases and encouragement to
    avail himself of independent study. Rather, plaintiff's academic and clinical
    performances further deteriorated, resulting in three additional failing grades
    and the suspension of clinical privileges after he injured two patients.
    2. Hostile Educational Environment Allegation
    On appeal, plaintiff renews his argument that Dr. Flinton's comment – "I
    hate Arabs" – in conjunction with Dr. Flinton's criticism of plaintiff's academic
    and clinical performance created a hostile educational environment. Defendants
    counter that Dr. Flinton's "alleged conduct was neither 'severe' nor 'pervasive'
    enough to sustain" a hostile educational environment claim. Defendants contend
    8
    The motion judge also found plaintiff failed to demonstrate he was treated
    different from non-Muslims. Although we do not disagree with that
    determination, on appeal, plaintiff limits his claims to national-origin
    discrimination.
    A-4983-18T1
    19
    the alleged remark, even if considered with the other conduct plaintiff alleges,
    is "insufficient to give rise to a hostile environment claim." We agree.
    We derive the standard applicable to this case from the Supreme Court's
    analysis of discrimination in places of public accommodation in an action
    against a school district by a student who had alleged discrimination by fellow-
    students on the basis of perceived sexual orientation. L.W., 
    189 N.J. 381
    . In
    L.W., the Court held the appropriate standard was similar to the standard of
    liability for hostile work environment sexual harassment it had previously
    established in Lehmann v. Toys 'R' Us, 
    132 N.J. 587
    , 626 
    (1993). 189 N.J. at 405
    . In Lehmann, the Court determined an employee states a claim for hostile
    work environment when the employee alleges "severe or pervasive"
    discriminatory conduct that "create[s] an intimidating, hostile, or offensive
    working 
    environment." 132 N.J. at 592
    . In later cases, the Court recognized a
    single offensive comment can be enough to meet the Lehmann standard. See
    Taylor v. Metzger, 
    152 N.J. 490
    , 501-03 (1998) (holding the one-time usage of
    the racial slur, "jungle bunny," could create a hostile work environment).
    We determine the standard adopted by the Court in L.W. and Lehmann is
    equally applicable in the present context of a hostile educational environmen t
    A-4983-18T1
    20
    claim under the LAD. As correctly articulated by the motion judge, that standard
    requires the plaintiff to
    demonstrate that the defendant's "conduct (1) would not
    have occurred but for the [student's protected status];
    and [the conduct] was (2) severe or pervasive enough
    to make a (3) reasonable [member of the protected
    class] believe that (4) the conditions of [education] are
    altered and the [educational] environment is hostile or
    abusive."
    
    [Taylor, 152 N.J. at 498
    (second alteration in original)
    (citation omitted).]
    In addition to applying those factors here, the motion judge also heeded
    the Court's admonition that "a single utterance of an epithet can, under particular
    circumstances, create a hostile work environment" and "[t]he connotation of the
    epithet itself can materially contribute to the remark's severity."
    Id. at 501-02.
    Nonetheless, the judge concluded Dr. Flinton's remark was not "severe or
    pervasive enough to alter the conditions of [p]laintiff's education and render the
    educational environment hostile or abuse." Noting the remark allegedly was
    "made on a single occasion," the judge also determined its substance was
    "distinct from and not as severe as the racial epithets ordinarily found in hostile
    environment cases."
    In reaching his conclusion, the judge found the timing of the statement
    was "a crucial factor" where, as here, the alleged remark "occurred in July 2014,
    A-4983-18T1
    21
    near the conclusion of [p]laintiff's 2014 academic semester" while the record
    evidence "demonstrate[d] that [p]laintiff had been performing poorly in the
    [p]rogram months prior to" its utterance. We discern no reason to disturb the
    judge's decision.
    B. Plaintiff's Breach of Contract Claims
    The motion judge initially determined plaintiff's breach of contract and
    breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing claims were not preempted
    by the LAD – as RSDM had argued – because they were based on violations of
    RSDM's handbook. Citing our decision in Mittra v. University of Medicine and
    Dentistry of New Jersey, 316 N.J. Super 83, 92 (App. Div. 1998), the judge
    nonetheless found plaintiff failed to demonstrate RSDM "significantly deviated
    from its published rules and regulations." Instead, the judge concluded RSDM
    "took corrective measures in response to [p]laintiff's poor academic
    performance and substantively complied with its procedure for unsatisfactory
    academic performance." Because plaintiff failed to file a formal complaint prior
    to his dismissal hearing, the judge also determined plaintiff did not afford
    himself of the handbook's "several sources to contact in the event of bias and
    conflicts with faculty, staff or students."
    A-4983-18T1
    22
    On appeal, plaintiff argues he established a prima facie breach of contract
    claim, essentially renewing his contention that RSDM failed to offer plaintiff
    corrective measures, including a probationary period, pursuant to its handbook.
    Plaintiff also asserts he set forth a prima facie breach of the covenant of good
    faith and fair dealing claim, asserting RSDM fabricated his course failures and
    probationary status and concealed plaintiff's favorable evaluations. We are not
    persuaded by any of plaintiff's arguments.
    Preliminarily, to the extent plaintiff contends RSDM breached the implied
    covenant of good faith and fair dealing by manufacturing course failures and
    corrective measures, those pretextual claims are barred by preemption under the
    LAD. See Catalane v. Gilian Instrument Corp., 271 N.J. Super 476, 491-92
    (App. Div. 1994) (recognizing "supplementary common law cause[s] of action
    [are not permitted] when a statutory remedy under the LAD exists"). Indeed, a
    pretextual discriminatory discharge claim falls squarely within the interests
    vindicated by the LAD. See Millville Rescue 
    Squad, 225 N.J. at 396
    .
    Little need be said about plaintiff's remaining breach of contract claims.
    As the motion judge correctly observed, our courts have long recognized "[r]igid
    application of contract principles to controversies concerning student academic
    performance would tend to intrude upon academic freedom and to generate
    A-4983-18T1
    23
    precisely the kind of disputes that the courts should be hesitant to resolve."
    
    Mittra, 316 N.J. Super. at 91
    . Instead, courts will evaluate whether a student
    was terminated following a "fair procedure." Hernandez v. Overlook Hosp., 
    149 N.J. 68
    , 81 (1997). "Such 'fair procedure' includes the right to adequate notice
    of deficiencies, an opportunity to examine the evidence of those deficiencies
    used by the [institution] to make its academic decision, and the right to present
    a case to the decision-making authority."
    Ibid. If an institution
    has in place
    such procedures, the court "may intervene where the institution violates in some
    substantial way its rules and regulations pertaining to student dismissals."
    
    Mittra, 316 N.J. Super. at 92
    .
    Among other things, RSDM's handbook sets forth the procedure where,
    as here "a student achieves documented unsatisfactory academic performance."
    Pertinent to this appeal, that procedure requires the program's director to: (1)
    "counsel the student"; (2) "outline corrective measures and . . . establish criteria
    and time frames for the correction of the deficiencies"; (3) "document all
    interactions with the student in writing"; and (4) "[a]t the end of the stated time
    frame, . . . reevaluate the student's compliance with corrective actions." If the
    student's "deficiencies continue to exist beyond the time frames established for
    effecting corrective measures[,]" the director is required to assess the student's
    A-4983-18T1
    24
    performance and make recommendations "for further academic action,"
    including dismissal from the program.
    Plaintiff's argument that RSDM failed to "provide any probationary
    period, corrective measures or a time period to correct measures in writing" is
    belied by the record. In his January 2014 summary evaluation, Dr. DiPede
    clearly provided a corrective plan to help plaintiff "turn things around." That
    plan included formal monthly meetings "until the year's end semi-annual
    evaluation"; "independent study"; and "ready to go cases." Accordingl y, we
    discern no error in the motion judge's decision concluding RSDM complied with
    the corrective-measure procedures outlined in its handbook. See Mittra, 316
    N.J. Super at 92.
    To the extent not addressed, defendant's remaining arguments lack
    sufficient merit to warrant discussion in our written opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).
    Affirmed.
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    25