Lipp v. Univ. of Cincinnati , 2023 Ohio 1224 ( 2023 )


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  •          [Cite as Lipp v. Univ. of Cincinnati, 
    2023-Ohio-1224
    .]
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO
    HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO
    BENJAMIN LIPP,                                     :             APPEAL NO. C-220312
    TRIAL NO. A-2104238
    DANIELLE SEYMORE,                                  :
    O P I N I O N.
    KATELYN VERBARG,                                   :
    and                                              :
    NICHOLAI LEKSON,                                   :
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,                        :
    vs.                                              :
    THE UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI,                      :
    and                                              :
    RONALD           BROWN,        THOMAS              :
    MISCHELL, KIM HEIMAN, PHIL
    COLLINS,         MICHELLE        GILLIS,           :
    MONICA           TURNER,        PHILLIP
    HOLLOMAN,                     GREGORY              :
    HARTMANN, JILL MCGRUDER, in
    their official capacity as members of the          :
    Board of Trustees of the University of
    Cincinnati,                                        :
    Defendants-Appellees.                         :
    Civil Appeal From: Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas
    Judgment Appealed From Is: Affirmed
    Date of Judgment Entry on Appeal: April 14, 2023
    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    Mendenhall Law Group, Thomas W. Connors, Warner Mendenhall and Kyle
    Wenning, for Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    Frost Brown Todd LLC, Ali Razzaghi, Ryan W. Goellner and Nathaniel L. Truitt, for
    Defendants-Appellees.
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    KINSLEY, Judge.
    {¶1}    To avoid making decisions about policy that are best determined by the
    democratic process, courts reject cases that do not present a live controversy between
    the parties. This appeal presents such a circumstance. Four University of Cincinnati
    students asked the trial court to declare the University’s COVID-19 pandemic policies
    invalid and to enjoin the University from enforcing them. But because they failed to
    establish an injury traceable to the challenged policies, the students lack standing to
    raise claims for declaratory and injunctive relief. In the absence of an active legal
    dispute between the students and the University, we uphold the trial court’s dismissal
    of this case and decline the invitation to adjudicate matters of public policy.
    1. Factual and Procedural Background
    {¶2}     Plaintiffs-appellants Benjamin Lipp, Danielle Seymore, Katelyn
    Verbarg, and Nicholai Lekson filed a complaint for declaratory judgment and
    injunctive relief against the University of Cincinnati and its Board of Trustees
    (collectively “the University”) on December 10, 2021, and then an amended complaint
    on February 24, 2022. The amended complaint challenged four separate policies that
    the University issued in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
    {¶3}   The first challenged policy required that all students, faculty, and staff
    who were not granted a vaccination exemption be vaccinated by the end of the
    University’s spring 2022 term. In addition to requiring vaccination, this policy stated,
    “[s]tudents who have not been vaccinated or received an approved exemption by the
    end of the spring 2022 semester or those who do not comply with the weekly testing
    requirement will be reported to the Office of Student Conduct and Community
    Standards for disciplinary action, which can lead to separation from the university.”
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    {¶4}   The second challenged policy required all individuals to wear a facial
    covering indoors and required unvaccinated individuals to wear a facial covering when
    outdoors and unable to maintain social distancing. This policy instructed that “[i]f a
    student repeatedly forgets to wear a facial covering to class and doesn’t have a medical
    exemption as outlined in the above section, [employees should] contact the
    appropriate college dean or unit vice president * * * for possible discipline related to
    noncompliance.”
    {¶5}   The third challenged policy required unvaccinated students, faculty,
    and staff to be tested weekly for COVID-19. And the fourth challenged policy provided
    that persons who were exposed to COVID-19 and were either nonvaccinated or
    vaccinated and eligible for a booster but not yet boosted should quarantine for five full
    days from the date of exposure.
    {¶6}   The amended complaint alleged that Lipp, Seymore, Verbarg, and
    Lekson (collectively “the students”) were students at the University and that Lipp,
    Seymore, and Verbarg had been granted vaccination exemptions. It further alleged
    that Lekson met the University’s vaccination requirement, but that he objected to the
    coercion involved in the mandatory vaccination policy and to the possibility of being
    required to receive a booster shot to maintain enrollment. The amended complaint
    set forth no other facts regarding the students, including whether they attended in-
    person or remote classes at the University, whether they had personally been subjected
    to the University’s COVID-19 testing and masking protocols, whether they had ever
    knowingly been exposed to COVID-19, or whether they had ever quarantined as a
    result of COVID-19 exposure.
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    {¶7}   The students sought a declaratory judgment that the challenged policies
    were void because they were in violation of both Ohio statutory and constitutional law
    on several different grounds. The amended complaint first alleged that the University
    lacked authority to order public health and preventive health measures, including
    vaccination, masking, and testing for persons not diagnosed with a disease or who
    have not come into direct contact with someone diagnosed with a disease. In support
    of this claim, the students alleged that the University’s actions exceeded the limits set
    forth in R.C. 3709.212, a statute establishing to whom orders or regulations issued for
    the public health or for the prevention or restriction of disease may be applied.
    {¶8}   The amended complaint next alleged that the challenged policies
    violated the students’ right to refuse medical treatment under Article 1, Section 1 of
    the Ohio Constitution. The students specifically alleged that the University’s masking
    and vaccine requirements were both forms of medical treatment they had the right to
    refuse.
    {¶9}   Third, the amended complaint alleged that the University’s policies
    violated R.C. 2905.12, a criminal statute concerning coercion. The students contended
    that the challenged policies involve the taking or withholding of official action to
    coerce the students on matters for which they have a legal freedom of choice.
    {¶10} Last, the amended complaint alleged that the challenged policies
    violated R.C. 3792.04, a statute that sets forth prohibitions on mandatory vaccinations
    and discrimination against unvaccinated persons at state institutions of higher
    education. The students specifically contended that the policies were in violation of
    this statute because they require students, faculty, and staff to receive vaccinations
    that have not been fully approved by the Food and Drug Administration (“FDA”) and
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    because they require unvaccinated persons to engage in or refrain from engaging in
    activities or precautions that differ from the activities or precautions of persons who
    have received vaccinations not fully approved by the FDA.
    {¶11} The University filed a motion to dismiss the amended complaint,
    arguing that the students lacked standing to challenge the University’s policies
    because they suffered no injury. In support, the University argued that Lipp, Seymore,
    and Verbarg suffered no injury because they were granted vaccination exemptions,
    and the complaint did not contain any allegations that they were required to
    quarantine or undergo weekly COVID-19 testing. As to Lekson, the University argued
    that he suffered no injury because he was vaccinated and had not sought an exemption,
    and it also contended that his objection to the possibility of having to receive a booster
    shot in the future was not sufficient to confer standing.
    {¶12} The University further argued that dismissal of the amended complaint
    was appropriate because the students’ claims had been rendered moot by the
    University’s revocation of the challenged policies.          The University provided
    documentation along with both the motion to dismiss and the reply in support of the
    motion to dismiss establishing that mandatory weekly COVID-19 testing for
    unvaccinated students, faculty, and staff ceased effective February 28, 2022; that all
    masking restrictions were eliminated, including in classrooms and labs, effective
    March 12, 2022; and that COVID-19 vaccination was no longer required beginning
    with the summer 2022 term.
    {¶13} Additionally, the University sought dismissal of the complaint on the
    grounds that the students had failed to state a claim upon which relief could be
    granted.
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    {¶14} After considering the motion to dismiss, the students’ brief in
    opposition, and the University’s reply in support of the motion, the trial court issued
    an entry granting the motion to dismiss. The entry stated:
    [T]he Court finds the motion well-taken; as such, the motion is
    GRANTED, for the reasons expressed in the defendants’ motion itself,
    and considering the fact that the University has amended its COVID-19
    policy. It is this Court’s holding that with the amended policy, the
    plaintiffs’ claims are rendered moot.
    Accordingly, because none of these plaintiffs are being forced to receive
    a COVID-19 vaccine, they lack standing. Further, even if they had
    standing, because the University no longer mandates that students [are]
    to receive a vaccine, the plaintiffs’ claims are moot.
    {¶15} The students have appealed from the trial court’s entry dismissing their
    amended complaint. In two assignments of error, they challenge the trial court’s
    dismissal on the grounds of standing and mootness.
    2. Standard of Review
    {¶16} We review a trial court’s ruling on a Civ.R. 12(B)(6) motion to dismiss
    de novo. Plush v. Cincinnati, 
    2020-Ohio-6713
    , 
    164 N.E.3d 1056
    , ¶ 12 (1st Dist.). A
    Civ.R. 12(B)(6) motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be
    granted tests the sufficiency of the complaint. Thomas v. Othman, 
    2017-Ohio-8449
    ,
    
    99 N.E.3d 1189
    , ¶ 18 (1st Dist.). When ruling on such a motion, the trial court is
    confined to the allegations in the complaint, must accept all the allegations as true,
    and must draw all reasonable inferences in favor of the nonmoving party. Plush at ¶
    12. A Civ.R. 12(B)(6) motion to dismiss should only be granted if it “appear[s] beyond
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    a doubt from the complaint that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts entitling him to
    recovery.” 
    Id.,
     quoting O’Brien v. Univ. Community Tenants Union, Inc., 
    42 Ohio St.2d 242
    , 
    327 N.E.2d 753
     (1975), syllabus.
    3. Standing
    {¶17} In their first assignment of error, the students argue that the trial court
    erred in dismissing the amended complaint on the grounds that they failed to state
    facts establishing standing. Whether standing has been established is a question of
    law that we review de novo. Ohioans for Concealed Carry, Inc. v. City of Columbus,
    
    164 Ohio St.3d 291
    , 
    2020-Ohio-6724
    , 
    172 N.E.3d 935
    , ¶ 12.
    4. General Standing Principles
    {¶18} Before a court will consider the merits of a legal claim, plaintiffs must
    establish that they have standing to sue. 
    Id.
     Standing may be established under the
    common law or conferred by statute. 
    Id.
     Here, the students contend that they have
    standing under both the common law and under R.C. 2721.03, the Declaratory
    Judgment Act. Because standing is jurisdictional, it is determined at the time that a
    suit is commenced. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. v. Braunskill, 1st Dist. Hamilton No. C-
    140014, 
    2015-Ohio-273
    , ¶ 17.
    a. Common-Law Standing
    {¶19} Common-law standing requires a plaintiff to demonstrate, at a
    minimum, that “he or she has suffered (1) an injury (2) that is fairly traceable to the
    defendant’s allegedly unlawful conduct and (3) is likely to be redressed by the
    requested relief.” Ohioans for Concealed Carry at ¶ 12. Standing depends not on the
    merits of the plaintiffs’ claims, “but rather on ‘whether the plaintiffs have alleged such
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    a personal stake in the outcome of the controversy that they are entitled to have a court
    hear their case.’ ” 
    Id.,
     quoting ProgressOhio.org, Inc. v. JobsOhio, 
    139 Ohio St.3d 520
    ,
    
    2014-Ohio-2382
    , 
    13 N.E.3d 1101
    , ¶ 7.
    b.       Statutory Standing Under the Declaratory Judgment Act
    {¶20} As to standing under the Declaratory Judgment Act, R.C. 2721.03
    applies to those “whose rights, status, or other legal relations are affected by a
    constitutional provision [or] statute.”     ProgressOhio.org at ¶ 19.        The statute
    specifically provides that:
    Subject to division (B) of section 2721.02 of the Revised Code, any
    person interested under a deed, will, written contract, or other writing
    constituting a contract or any person whose rights, status, or other legal
    relations are affected by a constitutional provision, statute, rule as
    defined in section 119.01 of the Revised Code, municipal ordinance,
    township resolution, contract, or franchise may have determined any
    question of construction or validity arising under the instrument,
    constitutional provision, statute, rule, ordinance, resolution, contract,
    or franchise and obtain a declaration of rights, status, or other legal
    relations under it.
    R.C. 2721.03.
    {¶21} The following are the necessary prerequisites to obtaining declaratory
    relief under the statute: “(1) a real controversy between the parties, (2) justiciability,
    and (3) the necessity of speedy relief to preserve the parties’ rights.” ProgressOhio.org
    at ¶ 19. Declaratory judgment actions are typically brought before the plaintiff has
    suffered an injury-in-fact. Ohioans for Concealed Carry, 
    164 Ohio St.3d 291
    , 2020-
    9
    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    Ohio-6724, 
    172 N.E.3d 935
    , at ¶ 32. Regardless, a plaintiff must still show “actual
    present harm or a significant possibility of future harm to justify pre-enforcement
    relief.” 
    Id.,
     quoting Peoples Rights Org., Inc. v. Columbus, 
    152 F.3d 522
    , 527 (6th
    Cir.1998). While a plaintiff need not wait for an injury to in fact occur, the fact of a
    certain, impending injury must be established. 
    Id.
     As a general principle, an idealistic
    opposition to a challenged law is insufficient to confer standing under the Declaratory
    Judgement Act. Id. at ¶ 36.
    {¶22} Standing “is not dispensed in gross” and must be established for each
    claim asserted. Id. at ¶ 13, quoting Preterm-Cleveland, Inc. v. Kasich, 
    153 Ohio St.3d 157
    , 
    2018-Ohio-441
    , 
    102 N.E.3d 461
    , ¶ 30.            We therefore consider whether the
    students have alleged facts in the amended complaint to establish standing for each
    asserted claim under both the common law and the Declaratory Judgment Act.
    5. Lack-of-Authority Claim
    {¶23} With respect to this claim, the amended complaint alleged that the
    University “lack[ed] authority to order public health or preventative health measures,
    such as vaccination, masking, or testing for persons not diagnosed with a disease or
    who have not come into direct contact with someone diagnosed with a disease.” The
    amended complaint further contended that R.C. 3709.212 limits the application of
    health orders and regulations to those who have been medically diagnosed with a
    disease or in direct contact with such persons and that the University’s policies
    exceeded the limits set forth in this statute. It specifically asserted that the challenged
    masking and testing policies “exceed[ed] Defendants’ general authority to administer
    the University.”
    {¶24} R.C. 3709.212, which serves as the basis for this claim, provides that:
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    Any order or regulation for the public health or for the prevention or
    restriction of disease issued by a board of health of a city or general
    health district under section 3709.20 or 3709.21 of the Revised Code
    may apply to only the following persons:
    (A) Those who have been medically diagnosed with the disease that is
    the subject of the order or regulation;
    (B) Those who have come in direct contact with someone who has been
    medically diagnosed with the disease that is the subject of the order or
    regulation;
    (C) Those that have had a documented incident in the building of the
    disease that is the subject of the order or regulation.
    {¶25} Before turning to an analysis of whether the students have standing to
    assert this claim, we find instructive a recent opinion issued by the Twelfth District
    which involved standing arguments nearly identical to those raised in the case at bar.
    {¶26} In Siliko v. Miami Univ., 12th Dist. Butler No. CA2021-12-162, 2022-
    Ohio-4133, the court considered a lawsuit challenging a COVID-19 policy enacted by
    Miami University (“Miami”). The plaintiffs in Siliko were three employees of Miami
    who filed a complaint for declaratory judgment and injunctive relief challenging
    Miami’s requirement that all employees and students, unless granted an exemption,
    had to be vaccinated by November 21, 2021. At the time the complaint was filed, two
    of the plaintiffs had received vaccine exemptions. The third plaintiff had not sought
    an exemption at that time, but later sought and was granted an exemption while the
    lawsuit was pending. Id. at ¶ 7. The plaintiffs alleged that Miami’s vaccination policy
    violated Article 1, Section 1 of the Ohio Constitution, R.C. 2905.12, and R.C. 3792.04.
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    Relying on R.C. 3709.212, they additionally alleged that Miami lacked statutory
    authority to implement the policy because that statute limited a health board’s
    authority to issue orders and regulations for the prevention or restriction of disease to
    persons diagnosed with a disease or in direct contact with a diagnosed person. Id. at
    ¶ 4. The claims asserted in Siliko were thus identical to the claims raised in the case
    before us.
    {¶27} In Siliko, the trial court granted Miami’s motion to dismiss the
    complaint after finding that the plaintiffs failed to establish an injury and lacked
    standing. Id. at ¶ 10. The Twelfth District affirmed in part and reversed in part,
    ultimately holding that the plaintiffs lacked standing on all claims except for the claim
    asserting a violation of R.C. 3792.04(B)(2). We discuss the Siliko court’s finding on
    standing with respect to each of the claims asserted by the plaintiffs in the
    corresponding section of this opinion.
    {¶28} With respect to the claim under R.C. 3709.212 that Miami exceeded its
    statutory authority by implementing the vaccination policy, the Siliko court first
    explained that, by its owns terms, R.C. 3709.212 only applied to orders or regulations
    that were issued by a board of health or a general health district and that the statute
    had nothing to do with the authority of Miami’s Board of Trustees to administer the
    university, as the board was not a local health department. Id. at ¶ 42. The court
    further held that the plaintiffs’ complaint failed to identify any injury or justiciable
    controversy that resulted under R.C. 3709.212 from the implementation of Miami’s
    vaccination policy. Id. at ¶ 44.
    {¶29} With regard to standing in this case, the students’ lack-of-authority
    claim, as plead in the amended complaint, pertains specifically to the University’s
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    vaccination, masking, and testing policies, and not the quarantine policy, as it states
    that the University “lack[ed] authority to order public health or preventative health
    measures, such as vaccination, masking, or testing for persons not diagnosed with a
    disease or who have not come into direct contact with someone diagnosed with a
    disease.” The amended complaint, however, lacks any allegations that the students
    were injured in any articulable, particularized way by the University’s vaccination,
    masking, and testing policies. The amended complaint contains no allegations, for
    example, that the students were denied a vaccination exemption or forced to vaccinate.
    (In fact, all of the students either obtained an exemption from the vaccination
    requirement or were vaccinated.) Nor does it contain any allegations that the students
    were forced to submit to COVID-19 testing. It also does not allege that the students
    were on-campus students subject to these policies and masking in particular, rather
    than students engaged in remote learning to whom the policies would not apply. Quite
    simply, the amended complaint does not contain facts establishing that the students
    suffered either an injury-in-fact or the significant possibility of future harm to
    establish standing under the common law or the Declaratory Judgment Act. See
    Ohioans for Concealed Carry, Inc., 
    164 Ohio St.3d 291
    , 
    2020-Ohio-6724
    , 
    172 N.E.3d 935
    , at ¶ 12 and 32.
    {¶30} Furthermore, we reach the same conclusion as the Twelfth District in
    Siliko with respect to the inapplicability of R.C. 3909.212. Siliko, 12th Dist. Butler No.
    CA2021-12-162, 
    2022-Ohio-4133
    , at ¶ 42. Like Miami, the University is not a board
    of health or general health district or department and thus does not fall within the
    purview of R.C. 3909.212. By definition, the students cannot suffer injury under a
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    statute aimed at controlling the conduct of an agency other than the defendant in the
    case.
    {¶31} In the absence of any facts alleged in the complaint to explain how the
    students were individually injured by the University’s masking, testing, or vaccination
    policies, and given the inapplicability of R.C. 3909.212 to the University, we
    accordingly hold that the trial court did not err in finding that the students lacked
    standing to assert a claim for lack of authority.
    6. Violation of the Right to Refuse Medical Treatment
    {¶32} In support of this claim, the amended complaint alleged that the
    students have a fundamental right under Article 1, Section 1 of the Ohio Constitution
    to refuse medical treatment and that the University’s policies requiring them to wear
    masks and to receive COVID-19 vaccinations were forms of medical treatment that
    they have a constitutional right to refuse.
    {¶33} In considering whether the plaintiffs had standing to assert this claim,
    the Siliko court held that the plaintiffs failed to establish standing under both the
    common law and the Declaratory Judgment Act because each plaintiff, either before
    or during the litigation, had sought and been granted a vaccination exemption. Siliko,
    12th Dist. Butler No. CA2021-12-162, 
    2022-Ohio-4133
    , at ¶ 27. It reasoned that the
    plaintiffs, having been granted exemptions, suffered no injury, and that the granting
    of the exemptions resulted in the lack of a justiciable controversy between the parties.
    Id. at ¶ 31-32.
    {¶34} In the case at bar, the students’ claim for a violation of the right to refuse
    medical treatment under the Ohio Constitution specifically concerns the University’s
    vaccination and masking policies. As to the vaccination policy, Lipp, Seymore, and
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    Verbarg were granted vaccination exemptions. They therefore were not denied the
    right to refuse medical treatment in the form of a vaccine and, as a result, suffered no
    injury.
    {¶35} Lekson, however, met the University’s vaccination requirement, but
    objected to the mandatory vaccination policy because of the possibility that he could
    be required to receive a booster shot to maintain enrollment. The amended complaint
    contains no allegation that Lekson was forced to receive the COVID-19 vaccination
    against his will or that he is or will be, in fact, required to receive a booster shot. Nor
    does it allege that Lekson was an on-campus student who would have been subject to
    the vaccination requirement. We therefore find that he failed to establish an injury in
    fact or that he faced a significant possibility of future harm from the vaccination policy.
    {¶36} To the extent that this claim concerns the University’s masking policy,
    we reach the same conclusion. The amended complaint contains no allegation that
    any of the students attend classes on-campus and are therefore subject to the masking
    policy or that they were otherwise forced by the University to mask against their will.
    {¶37} Because the students pleaded no facts from which we can discern an
    injury as to the vaccination and masking requirements, the trial court did not err in
    finding that the students lacked standing under both the common law and the
    Declaratory Judgment Act to assert a claim for a violation of their right to refuse
    medical treatment.
    7. Violation of R.C. 2905.12
    {¶38} The amended complaint further alleged that the University violated
    R.C. 2905.12, which provides in relevant part that “No person, with purpose to coerce
    another into taking or refraining from action concerning which the other person has a
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    legal freedom of choice, shall * * * [t]ake, withhold, or threaten to take or withhold
    official action, or cause or threaten to cause official action to be taken or withheld.”
    R.C. 2905.12(A)(5).
    {¶39} In support of the claim, the students alleged that the challenged policies
    involved taking or withholding official action to coerce them on matters for which they
    have a legal freedom of choice, including “(1) the [policies’] health orders to the extent
    Plaintiffs are not diagnosed with a disease or in direct contact with someone so
    diagnosed, (2) the taking of vaccines or masking under Article 1, Section 1 of the Ohio
    Constitution, which provides the right to refuse medical treatment, and (3) taking
    Covid-19 vaccines not fully approved by the FDA.” More succinctly, the students
    contend that the University has threatened suspension and expulsion for
    noncompliance with the policies.
    {¶40} The Siliko court held that the plaintiffs in that case lacked standing to
    challenge Miami’s vaccination policy on the grounds that the policy violated R.C.
    2905.12. Siliko, 12th Dist. Butler No. CA2021-12-162, 
    2022-Ohio-4133
    , at ¶ 36.
    Because the plaintiffs had been granted exemptions and had not been coerced into
    taking the COVID-19 vaccination, they were unable to show any injury. 
    Id.
    {¶41} The amended complaint in this case seemingly alleges that all four
    challenged policies violate R.C. 2905.12. With respect to the mandatory-vaccination
    policy, we follow Siliko and hold that the students have failed to show any injury
    resulting from this policy. None of the students were coerced into taking the COVID-
    19 vaccination. Lipp, Seymore, and Verbarg were granted exemptions, and Lekson
    voluntarily received the vaccination without seeking an exemption.
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    {¶42} As to the masking and testing policies, we again note that the amended
    complaint contains no allegations that the students were, in fact, coerced into
    submitting to COVID-19 testing, that they were ever required to submit to COVID-19
    testing, that they were subjected to masking, or that the students were on-campus
    students to whom these policies would apply at the outset.
    {¶43} Turning to the quarantine policy, the amended complaint contains no
    allegation that any of the students were ever knowingly exposed to COVID-19, much
    less that they were required to quarantine or coerced into quarantining against their
    will as a result.   What is more, the University’s quarantine policy contains no
    enforcement mechanism and is therefore merely a guideline. The policy states, “for
    spring 2022, quarantine may be required for students exposed to COVID-19. Isolation
    will    be     required      for     those     who       have     viral     symptoms
    (https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/symptoms-testing/symptoms.html)
    associated with COVID-19 and for those who test positive with COVID-19.” (Emphasis
    added.) The policy further states that nonvaccinated persons and those who are not
    up to date on their COVID vaccination should quarantine away from others for five full
    days after the last exposure. Per the plain language of the policy, those who disregard
    the suggested quarantine recommendation are not subject to discipline or any form of
    sanction. Adherence to the University’s quarantine guideline is therefore purely
    voluntary.
    {¶44} As any injury related to the University’s quarantine policy is simply
    speculative at best, the students lack standing to challenge the quarantine policy on
    the grounds that it violates R.C. 2905.12 under both the common law and the
    17
    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    Declaratory Judgment Act, and the trial court did not err in reaching the same
    conclusion.
    8. Violation of R.C. 3792.04
    {¶45} The fourth claim in the amended complaint alleged that the University’s
    policies violated R.C. 3792.04. Subsection (B) of this statute provides in relevant part
    that:
    Notwithstanding any conflicting provision of the Revised Code, a public
    school or state institution of higher education shall not do either of the
    following:
    (1) Require an individual to receive a vaccine for which the United States
    food and drug administration has not granted full approval;
    (2) Discriminate against an individual who has not received a vaccine
    described in division (B)(1) of this section, including by requiring the
    individual to engage in or refrain from engaging in activities or
    precautions that differ from the activities or precautions of an individual
    who has received such a vaccine.
    R.C. 3792.04(B).
    {¶46} The amended complaint alleged that the University’s vaccination policy
    violated this statute because the only COVID-19 vaccines currently available were
    authorized for emergency use only and had not been fully approved by the FDA. It
    also alleged that the testing policy violated this statute because that policy required
    unvaccinated persons to submit to weekly COVID-19 testing but did not require
    persons vaccinated with non-FDA approved vaccines to submit to such testing. And it
    additionally alleged that the quarantine policy violated R.C. 3792.04 by requiring
    18
    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    someone who is unvaccinated to quarantine and treating them differently than
    someone who received a non-FDA approved vaccine.
    {¶47} In analyzing the plaintiffs’ standing to bring this same claim, the Siliko
    court held that the plaintiffs lacked standing to bring a claim that Miami’s vaccination
    policy violated R.C. 3792.04(B)(1) due to a lack of injury and lack of a real justiciable
    controversy. Siliko, 12th Dist. Butler No. CA2021-12-162, 
    2022-Ohio-4133
    , at ¶ 48. It
    explained that not only did the policy did not force persons to be vaccinated, but that
    all three plaintiffs had been granted vaccination exemptions. 
    Id.
    {¶48} The Siliko court reached a different holding with respect to the
    plaintiffs’ standing to bring a discrimination claim under R.C. 3792.04(B)(2). It cited
    to the detailed allegations in the complaint that Miami’s vaccination program required
    unvaccinated employees to comply with different preventative measures than
    vaccinated coworkers, including testing and masking, and that unvaccinated
    employees were not able to participate in a bonus program available to vaccinated
    employees. Id. at ¶ 52. Further supporting the plaintiffs’ standing in Siliko was the
    requirement that those seeking a vaccine exemption release Miami from certain
    liabilities. Id. The court held that these allegations, coupled with the language in the
    complaint seeking preliminary and permanent injunctive relief, established injury,
    causation, and redressability. Id.
    {¶49} We first consider the students’ claim in this case that the University’s
    vaccination policy violated R.C. 3792.04 because it required them to receive a
    vaccination that had not been fully approved by the FDA. Following Siliko, we hold
    that the students have failed to establish either an actual injury or the significant
    possibility of future harm. Like Miami’s policy, the University’s policy did not require
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    students, faculty, or staff to receive a vaccination. Further, Lipp, Seymore, and
    Verbarg were granted vaccination exemptions, while Lekson voluntarily received a
    vaccine without seeking an exemption. The students therefore pleaded facts that
    affirmatively established the absence of an injury under R.C. 3792.04(B)(1).
    {¶50} With regard to the students’ claim of discrimination under R.C.
    3792.04(B)(2), we note that Miami’s vaccination policy differed from the vaccination
    policy at issue in this case in multiple significant ways. For one thing, the University’s
    policy did not hinge participation in a bonus program on vaccination status, thereby
    rewarding the vaccinated while excluding the unvaccinated.             For another, the
    University’s policy did not require students seeking a vaccine exemption to sign a
    liability waiver, while preserving liability claims for the vaccinated. The allegations of
    injury under R.C. 3792.04(B)(2) that are present in Siliko are thus absent in the
    students’ amended complaint.
    {¶51} We next consider the students’ claim that the testing and quarantine
    policies violated R.C. 3792.04(B)(2) by discriminating against unvaccinated persons
    and requiring them to submit to weekly COVID-19 testing and quarantine
    requirements, while vaccinated persons were not subject to the same interventions.
    And we again conclude that the amended complaint fails to contain sufficient
    allegations to establish standing. As to the testing policy, the amended complaint
    contains no allegations that the students were actually forced to undergo testing or
    that they, in fact, were not willing to submit to the testing.
    {¶52} The amended complaint likewise fails to establish any actual injury or
    the significant possibility of future harm arising from the quarantine policy. The
    amended complaint contains no allegations that the students were ever knowingly
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    exposed to COVID-19, thus requiring them to quarantine. And, significantly, the
    quarantine policy contains no enforcement mechanism.                 Persons who fail to
    quarantine are not subject to any discipline for failing to do so.
    {¶53} We consequently hold that the trial court did not err in finding that the
    students lacked standing to bring a claim for a violation of R.C. 3792.04.
    9. Standing Conclusion
    {¶54} Because the students failed to establish an actual injury or the
    significant possibility of future harm traceable to any of the challenged policies, they
    lacked standing under both the common law and the Declaratory Judgment Act to
    bring the claims in the amended complaint. We therefore hold that the trial court did
    not err in dismissing the amended complaint on the ground that the students lacked
    standing. The first assignment of error is overruled.
    10. Mootness
    {¶55} In their second assignment of error, the students argue that the trial
    court erred in dismissing the amended complaint on mootness grounds, contending
    that the University did not meet its burden of showing that the allegedly wrongful
    behavior could not reasonably be expected to recur. Our resolution of the first
    assignment of error has rendered this assignment of error moot, and we decline to
    address it.
    11. Conclusion
    {¶56} Because the students lacked standing to challenge all four policies
    issued by the University in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the trial court did not
    21
    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    err in granting the motion to dismiss the amended complaint. The judgment of the
    trial court is, accordingly, affirmed.
    Judgment affirmed.
    ZAYAS, P.J., and BOCK, J., concur.
    Please note:
    The court has recorded its own entry on the date of the release of this opinion.
    22