Kamilah Todd v. Southern Methodist University and Greta A. Davis, an Individual ( 2022 )


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  • REVERSE and REMAND in part and RENDER; Opinion Filed November
    14, 2022
    S  In The
    Court of Appeals
    Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
    No. 05-21-00702-CV
    KAMILAH TODD, Appellant
    V.
    SOUTHERN METHODIST UNIVERSITY AND GRETA A. DAVIS, AN
    INDIVIDUAL, Appellees
    On Appeal from the 160th Judicial District Court
    Dallas County, Texas
    Trial Court Cause No. DC-20-11705
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Before Justices Schenck, Reichek, and Goldstein
    Opinion by Justice Schenck
    Kamilah Todd appeals the trial court’s order granting appellees Southern
    Methodist University (“SMU”) and Greta A. Davis’s plea to the jurisdiction. In two
    issues, Todd argues the trial court erred by granting the plea and by denying her
    motion for new trial. We reverse the trial court’s order to dismiss and remand this
    case to the trial court for proceedings consistent with this opinion. Because the
    dispositive issues in this case are settled in law, we issue this memorandum opinion.
    See TEX. R. APP. P. 47.4.
    BACKGROUND
    After receiving an undergraduate degree at SMU in 2015, Todd applied and
    was accepted into SMU’s Dispute Resolution and Counseling Program (“Program”).
    Todd successfully completed several courses in the Program, but in the spring term
    of 2019, Todd was notified that she had failed the course titled Advanced Clinical
    Methods (“ACM”).1 Todd successfully pursued an appeal of the ACM course grade
    through multiple internal levels of review.
    At or about the same time she pursued an appeal of her course grade, Todd
    pursued a separate appeal of a remediation plan; the course syllabus required a
    remediation plan whenever a student’s performance in the Clinical Progress
    Assessment (“CPA”) component of the ACM course was assessed as deficient, as
    Todd’s performance was in the opinion of her instructor.                             Todd pursued her
    remediation appeal to a hearing before an appeal committee, who, on January 15,
    2020, communicated their ruling that “the plan should not stand.” On its face, the
    ruling did not specify what, if any, actions would be necessary or appropriate by way
    of further instruction or remediation in order for Todd to advance academically.
    While her remediation plan appeal was pending, Todd was not permitted to enroll in
    the program’s Practicum course, which involved “meeting with real clients in the
    1
    The course description in the syllabus attached to Todd’s petition describes the ACM course as having
    “an emphasis on practicing counseling skills” and that “[e]valuation will be based on several factors,
    including strengths and deficits in intrapersonal and interpersonal counseling skills as demonstrated in role-
    play and/or written assignments.”
    –2–
    training clinic,” as opposed to the ACM course, which utilized students as the clients
    in classroom exercises and projects.
    On August 21, 2020, Todd filed suit against SMU and Davis, who was the
    Chair of SMU’s Department of Dispute and Counseling at all times relevant to
    Todd’s suit. In her petition, Todd asserted claims for, inter alia, declaratory relief
    and breach of contract. In addition to compensatory and punitive damages for the
    financial loss and physical and emotional distress appellees’ actions allegedly caused
    her, Todd requested the trial court make several declarations, including that Todd be
    permitted to enroll in the remaining courses to complete her degree in the Program.
    After filing a joint answer, in November of 2020, SMU and Davis jointly filed
    a plea to the jurisdiction, in which they argued Todd’s claims were not ripe for
    judicial review because she still has the opportunity to complete the Program upon
    successful completion of a remediation plan. The plea also argued the trial court
    should dismiss Todd’s claims because:
    [A]djudicating Todd’s claims would require this Court to evaluate and
    override the Counseling Department’s decision that Todd lacks the
    clinical competency to proceed to Practicum and counsel real clients.
    Like an individual professor’s decision as to the proper grade for a
    student, whether Todd possesses the skills necessary for Practicum
    requires the expert evaluation of her professors—not the courts.
    Todd filed a response to the plea and objections to Davis’s declaration that was
    attached to the plea.
    In February of 2021, the trial court conducted a hearing on the plea and Todd’s
    objections to Davis’s declaration. The trial court later signed an order granting the
    –3–
    plea to the jurisdiction and dismissing with prejudice Todd’s claims. Todd filed a
    motion seeking a new trial on the basis of newly discovered evidence or alternatively
    modification of the order to dismissal without prejudice.
    SMU and Davis responded to Todd’s motion and objected to the affidavit
    supporting the motion. In May of 2021, the trial court conducted a hearing on Todd’s
    motion and later signed an order modifying the order granting the plea to the
    jurisdiction such that Todd’s claims were “dismissed without prejudice for lack of
    subject matter jurisdiction.” Todd filed a motion for rehearing of her motion for new
    trial. SMU and Davis responded, and the trial court conducted a hearing and later
    signed an order denying Todd’s motion for rehearing. Todd filed a notice of appeal
    from the trial court’s order granting the plea to the jurisdiction as modified in May.
    DISCUSSION
    Generally, a plea to the jurisdiction may challenge the sufficiency of the
    claimant’s pleadings or the existence of necessary jurisdictional facts. State ex rel
    City of Dallas v. Dallas Pets Alive, 
    566 S.W.3d 914
    , 917 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2018,
    pet. denied). When the plea challenges the claimant’s pleadings, we determine
    whether the claimant has pleaded facts that affirmatively demonstrate the trial
    court’s jurisdiction, construing the pleadings liberally and in favor of the claimant.
    
    Id.
       When the plea appropriately challenges jurisdictional facts, we consider
    evidence submitted by the parties. 
    Id.
     In performing our review, we do not look to
    the merits of the claimant’s case, but consider only the pleadings and the evidence
    –4–
    pertinent to the jurisdictional inquiry. 
    Id.
     If the jurisdictional evidence creates a fact
    question, then the trial court cannot grant the plea to the jurisdiction, and the issue
    must be resolved by the fact finder. 
    Id.
     This standard mirrors our review of
    summary judgments. 
    Id.
    As previously noted, here, the plea to the jurisdiction relied on two different
    grounds in order to seek dismissal: (1) ripeness, or Todd’s failure to exhaust all of
    the remedies available under SMU’s internal procedures; and (2) deference to the
    appellees’ exercise of professional judgment in evaluating Todd’s academic
    performance.2 Likewise, Todd’s arguments before us raise both process contentions
    and a challenge to the substantive result urged by SMU and Davis in their answer
    and plea to the jurisdiction. We will address the former first.
    2
    The trial court signed an order granting the plea without specifying which grounds it relied on.
    The trial court later signed an amended order granting the plea but dismissing the case without prejudice,
    instead of with prejudice. Todd urges that the trial court’s decision to modify the order “shows that the trial
    court rejected [the academic deference ground] and is ruling on the ripeness [ground].” SMU and Davis
    respond that the trial court “would have been correct in granting either of the grounds supporting the
    dismissal,” but they do not allege what implied holding, if any, we may infer from the trial court’s decision
    to modify the order from “with prejudice” to “without prejudice.”
    Both grounds asserted for dismissal of Todd’s claims implicate the trial court’s subject matter
    jurisdiction. See Williams v. Smith, No. 05-19-01251-CV, 
    2020 WL 7332674
    , at *2 (Tex. App.—Dallas
    Dec. 14, 2020, pet. denied) (mem. op.) (“judicial non-intervention doctrine provides that—with limited
    exceptions—a trial court lacks subject matter jurisdiction over claims regarding the internal management
    of a voluntary association”); Holmes v. S. Methodist Univ., No. 05-15-01001-CV, 
    2016 WL 3085718
    , at *3
    (Tex. App.—Dallas May 31, 2016, no pet.) (mem. op.) (“Ripeness ‘is a threshold issue that implicates
    subject matter jurisdiction’”). And, we must review our own jurisdiction regardless of whether the parties
    raise the issue. See Bank of New York Mellon v. Guzman, 
    390 S.W.3d 593
    , 596 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2012,
    no pet.) (“We are required to review sua sponte issues affecting jurisdiction.”). Accordingly, irrespective
    of whether the trial court granted the plea on either or both grounds, we may review both.
    –5–
    I.    Ripeness and the Right to Process
    Ripeness is a threshold issue that implicates subject matter jurisdiction. See
    Robinson v. Parker, 
    353 S.W.3d 753
    , 755 (Tex. 2011). In evaluating ripeness, we
    consider whether the facts are sufficiently developed so that an injury has occurred
    or is likely to occur, rather than being contingent or remote. See 
    id.
     Thus, the
    ripeness analysis focuses on whether the case involves uncertain or contingent future
    events that may or may not occur as anticipated or may not occur at all. See
    Patterson v. Planned Parenthood of Houston & Se. Tex., 
    971 S.W.2d 439
    , 442 (Tex.
    1998). In a previous opinion involving SMU and a graduate student who sued the
    university after she had twice failed a required master’s program comprehensive
    exam, this Court affirmed an order of dismissal on ripeness, concluding that, because
    SMU presented evidence, and the plaintiff conceded, that she had refused an offer
    to retake the exam and that SMU had not dismissed her from the program or made
    any final decision on the award of a degree, “she cannot show her claim is ripe.” See
    Holmes v. S. Methodist Univ., No. 05-15-01001-CV, 
    2016 WL 3085718
    , at *3 (Tex.
    App.—Dallas May 31, 2016, no pet.) (mem. op.).
    Under the ripeness doctrine, we consider whether, at the time a lawsuit
    is filed, the facts are sufficiently developed so that an injury has occurred or is likely
    to occur, rather than being contingent or remote. See Waco Indep. Sch. Dist. v.
    Gibson, 
    22 S.W.3d 849
    , 851–52 (Tex. 2000) (emphasis in original). Prior to Todd’s
    filing suit, the emailed deliberation result of the appeal committee was that the
    –6–
    remediation plan appealed by Todd “should not stand” and that the committee felt
    its only two choices were “to approve or reject the plan.” Todd’s suit alleged that
    she had “successfully demonstrated [to appeal committee] that remediation was
    wholly unwarranted” and that SMU and Davis had acted in bad faith and in breach
    of the contract with Todd to prevent her from completing the Program. In their
    answer to Todd’s claims, SMU and Davis urged her claims were not ripe for
    adjudication and that she could not recover for breach of contract because she had
    not performed all of her obligations under her contract with SMU. Their plea to the
    jurisdiction further elaborated that Todd’s claims are not yet ripe and that she had
    failed to exhaust her available remedies because she “can still enroll in Practicum
    once she completes the required remediation.”         Their plea attached Davis’s
    declaration and several exhibits thereto, including a letter from the Provost, “the
    ultimate arbiter of Todd’s grade appeal,” in which he emphasized that her failing
    grade on the CPA component of her course required a remediation plan. This ground
    thus challenged the jurisdictional facts. See Dallas Pets Alive, 566 S.W.3d at 917.
    Todd argues the record contains, at a minimum, some ambiguity as to whether
    the appeal committee determined she should not complete the specific remediation
    plan she appealed or that she need not complete any remediation plan. She included
    as an exhibit SMU’s academic policies that set forth the process by which Todd
    appealed the remediation plan requirement. The procedures provide that when a
    student’s performance is identified as requiring remediation, a student may choose
    –7–
    to follow a remediation action, exit from the program, or “appeal in writing to the
    Program Director” who then mediates a decision between the instructor and student
    regarding the evaluation and “remedial report specifications.” “If no resolution
    results, a committee . . . will either waive the remediation stipulations or enforce the
    remediation stipulations.” In her second issue, Todd urges that the trial court erred
    in denying her motion for new trial, to which Todd attached evidence she alleged to
    be newly discovered after the trial court signed its order granting the plea to the
    jurisdiction. That evidence was an affidavit from an individual named Dr. Collen R.
    Logan, who stated she was a former member of SMU’s faculty and had been one of
    the members of the remediation appeal committee. According to that affidavit,
    Logan understood the appeal committee’s “unanimous decision” to “overturn[] the
    decision to “force [Todd] to remediate” and that “Todd should be allowed to proceed
    in the program without the proposed remediation.”
    Process rights are important and, whether they are assured potentially by
    contract or otherwise, should be respected and enforced. See, e.g., Interstate
    Contracting Corp. v. City of Dallas, Tex., 
    407 F.3d 708
    , 728 (5th Cir. 2005)
    (applying Texas law). Although SMU and Davis point us to our previous opinion
    in Holmes, in that case, there was no dispute about Holmes’s rights under SMU’s
    process. See Holmes, 
    2016 WL 3085718
    , at *3. We conclude the record in this case
    –8–
    as it stood at the time suit was filed3 presents a fact question over whether the
    appellees have failed to comply with SMU’s own internal procedures and thus the
    trial court erred if it found it lacked jurisdiction over Todd’s claims due to ripeness.
    However, our analysis does not end there and instead we next address the
    plea’s second ground of academic deference as it relates to the further relief Todd
    requests.
    II.       Academic Deference and the Jurisdiction of Courts to Review
    Substantive Academic Judgments
    As noted, the parties’ respective positions go beyond Todd’s claims of the
    right to be heard in accordance with SMU’s written process. As part of her first
    issue challenging the trial court’s order granting the plea to the jurisdiction, Todd
    argues the trial court had no obligation to defer to SMU and Davis. She urges that
    SMU and Davis ignored the ruling of the appeal committee and thus failed to
    exercise sound professional judgment. Todd’s reasoning is that SMU and Davis
    have both failed to follow SMU’s internal rules and procedures and, as a result, their
    professional judgment warrants no deference. Meanwhile, in their answer and plea
    to the jurisdiction, SMU and Davis contend that SMU has finally determined that
    Todd required further remediation. And, before us, SMU and Davis urge that Todd
    has misinterpreted the appeal committee’s decision, that instead of concluding she
    3
    As noted, SMU and Davis urged in their answer that the University may make a final determination
    of Todd’s need for further remediation. That assertion may be correct, but it does not find conclusive
    support in the record of its review process prior to suit.
    –9–
    need not be required to complete any remediation plan, the committee instead
    concluded only that the particular remediation plan Todd appealed from “should not
    stand,” and therefore, deference to their final professional judgment is required,
    separate and apart from her asserted right to the promised internal review. Because
    the plea’s ground asserting academic deference challenges the pleadings, we must
    determine whether Todd has pleaded facts that affirmatively demonstrate the trial
    court’s jurisdiction, construing the pleadings liberally and in favor of her. See Dallas
    Pets Alive, 566 S.W.3d at 917.
    Judges and juries are not generally equipped to second-guess academic
    judgment.    Accordingly, when courts are asked to review the substance of a
    genuinely academic decision, they should show great respect for the faculty’s
    professional judgment. See Regents of Univ. of Mich. v. Ewing, 
    474 U.S. 214
    , 225
    (1985). They generally may not override that judgment unless it is such a substantial
    departure from accepted academic norms as to demonstrate that the person or
    committee responsible did not actually exercise professional judgment. See 
    id.
     This
    doctrine of deference to academic decisions reflects the courts’ responsibility to
    safeguard the academic freedom of state and local educational institutions, “a special
    concern of the First Amendment,” and assure those who teach may do so free of the
    chilling effect of an ever-present risk of being sued. See 
    id.
     (quoting Keyishian v.
    Bd. of Regents, 
    385 U.S. 589
    , 603 (1967)). “Academic freedom thrives not only on
    the independent and uninhibited exchange of ideas among teachers and students, but
    –10–
    also, and somewhat inconsistently, on autonomous decisionmaking by the academy
    itself.” See 
    id.
     at 603 n.12 (citations omitted).
    Indeed, the related judicial nonintervention doctrine has been applied in other
    instances where courts have been asked to adjudicate what amount to disagreements
    regarding the internal management decisions of private associations. See, e.g.,
    Williams, 
    2020 WL 7332674
    , at *1 (non-profit corporation with voluntary
    membership permitting member right to graze cattle on land on which corporation
    owns cattle-grazing lease); Collins v. Kappa Sigma Fraternity, No. 02-14-00294-
    CV, 
    2017 WL 218286
    , at *1 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Jan. 19, 2017, pet. denied)
    (mem. op.) (fraternity); Haedge v. Cent. Tex. Cattlemen’s Assoc., No. 07-15-00368-
    CV, 
    2016 WL 5929596
    , at *4 (Tex. App.—Amarillo Oct. 11, 2016, pet. denied)
    (mem. op.) (non-profit corporation with voluntary membership permitting member
    right to graze cattle on land on which corporation owns cattle-grazing lease); Dallas
    Cty. Med. Soc. v. Brache, 
    68 S.W.3d 31
    , 42 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2001, pet. denied)
    (private, nonprofit organization of physicians); Tex. Adjutant Gen.’s Dept. v. Amos,
    
    54 S.W.3d 74
    , 77 (Tex. App.—Austin 2001, pet. denied) (“rely[ing] on the well-
    established principle that claims brought by military personnel for injuries arising
    from or in the course of activity incident to military service are nonjusticiable” to
    dismiss plaintiff’s action regarding proceedings resulting in plaintiff’s discharge
    from Texas Air National Guard).
    –11–
    When previously applying the judicial nonintervention doctrine, we have
    noted general exceptions to this doctrine: “fraud, illegality, or a threat to the
    plaintiff’s valuable property rights or civil rights.” See Williams, 
    2020 WL 7332674
    ,
    at *2. But, as noted previously, in the context of a substantive decision of academic
    achievement or preparedness, Texas courts have never overridden such a
    determination. Neither, in view of First Amendment concerns, might they, unless
    the academic action amounts to such a substantial departure from accepted academic
    norms as to demonstrate that the person or committee responsible did not actually
    exercise professional judgment. See Ewing, 
    474 U.S. at 225
    .
    After reviewing the pleadings, we conclude the relief she seeks goes beyond
    process concerns and into academic decisions that Todd asks the trial court and this
    Court on appeal to engage in. In her petition, Todd sought to obtain several
    declarations from the trial court.4 We take particular note of the declarations (2)
    4
    The complete list of requested declarations is quoted from Todd’s petition below:
    1. The required procedures for requiring remediation were not followed under the 2015/2016
    guidelines;
    2. Under the procedures in effect in 2015/2016 the department chair Defendant Davis did not
    have the authority to require remediation where the student has been successful on the
    remediation plan appeal;
    3. As of April 2019, Plaintiff’s successful remediation plan appeal resulted in the remediation
    stipulations being “waived” and no compulsory remediation was thereafter or is now
    necessary, nor can one be required at this time;
    4. The procedure Defendants have followed by changing the remediation rules retroactively
    and after the fact violates Plaintiff’s contractual rights and is therefore, impermissible;
    –12–
    defining what authority Davis has within SMU’s structure, (3) defining what effect
    SMU’s appeal committee decision has on whether SMU may require Davis to
    complete a remediation plan, (5) that Todd “has by definition demonstrated her
    competency” to proceed to the next academic course, and (7 and 8) that SMU permit
    Todd to take additional courses to complete her degree. This requested relief makes
    clear what Todd seeks from the trial court—and by her appeal to this Court—is a
    determination that she has achieved competence in her area of study sufficient to
    proceed with the completion of her degree. And, as the supreme court has recently
    advised, “courts are ill equipped to evaluate the academic judgment of professors
    and universities.” See Villarreal, 620 S.W.3d at 907.
    To be sure, claims that agents of a university have acted in contravention of a
    student’s rights protected by the constitution or statute would obviously be subject
    5. By passing Advanced Clinical Methods, Plaintiff has by definition demonstrated her
    competency to proceed to Pre-Practicum;
    6. The enrollment hold preventing Plaintiff from enrolling in Pre-Practicum and Practicum is
    to be immediately lifted;
    7. Plaintiff is to be allowed to immediately enroll in Pre-Practicum;
    8. Plaintiff be allowed to finish her degree requirements;
    9. Depending on how long it takes to resolve this matter, Plaintiff be allowed additional time
    to complete her degree, with no penalties, administratively, academically or otherwise in
    any form or fashion;
    10. Defendants will be immediately and permanently enjoined from taking any punitive actions
    against Plaintiff, whether administratively, academically or otherwise in any form or
    fashion because of, in relation to or in any way arising from, whether directly or indirectly,
    the filing of this petition or pursuing her right to appeal.
    –13–
    to the trial court’s and this Court’s jurisdiction. See, e.g., Tex. S. Univ. v. Villarreal,
    
    620 S.W.3d 899
    , 910 (Tex. 2021) (declining to recognize substantive protections for
    educational rights under Texas Constitution’s due course of law clause); Ho v. Univ.
    of Tex. at Arlington, 
    984 S.W.2d 672
    , 685 (Tex. App.—Amarillo 1998, pet. denied)
    (considering student’s claims of equal protection violations); cf. Senu-Oke v.
    Jackson State Univ., 
    521 F.Supp.2d 551
    , 559 (S.D. Miss. 2007) (citing Bd. of
    Curators of Univ. of Mo. v. Horowitz, 
    435 U.S. 78
    , 85–86 (1978); Shaboon v.
    Duncan, 
    252 F.3d 722
    , 731 (5th Cir. 2001)) (“In this regard, the Supreme Court and
    Fifth Circuit have made it clear that the process which must attend student
    dismissals, whether for academic or disciplinary reasons, is minimal.”). But, Todd’s
    petition does not assert any claims that Davis or any other agent of SMU has done
    so. We will not create mischief by inserting our judicial review into what is an
    academic decision and thus impose the sword of Damocles over every professor’s
    head.
    We conclude the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over Todd’s
    substantive claims. Further, we conclude the record evidence conclusively negated
    the existence of jurisdiction such that dismissal of her substantive claims with
    prejudice is appropriate. See Rines v. City of Carrollton, No. 05-15-01321-CV, 
    2018 WL 833367
    , at *11 (Tex. App.—Dallas Feb. 13, 2018, pet. denied) (mem. op.)
    (holding City conclusively negated jurisdiction as to all of appellant’s claims such
    –14–
    that trial court did not err by granting City’s plea to the jurisdiction and dismissing
    his claims with prejudice).
    Accordingly, we sustain in part Todd’s first issue to the extent the trial court
    dismissed her claims as not ripe and overrule her first issue to the extent the trial
    court dismissed her claims seeking review of appellee’s academic decisions. In light
    of our conclusions and reversal of the trial court’s order, we need not further address
    Todd’s second issue as to whether the trial court erred by denying her motion for
    new trial. See TEX. R. APP. P. 47.1.
    CONCLUSION
    We reverse the trial court’s order to dismiss without prejudice, render
    judgment denying the plea to the jurisdiction with respect to Todd’s claims that the
    appellees have failed to comply with SMU’s own internal procedures, render
    judgment modifying the order to deny with prejudice Todd’s claims seeking review
    of appellees’ academic decisions, and remand this case to the trial court for
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    /David J. Schenck/
    DAVID J. SCHENCK
    JUSTICE
    210702F.P05
    –15–
    S
    Court of Appeals
    Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
    JUDGMENT
    KAMILAH TODD, Appellant                      On Appeal from the 160th Judicial
    District Court, Dallas County, Texas
    No. 05-21-00702-CV         V.                Trial Court Cause No. DC-20-11705.
    Opinion delivered by Justice
    SOUTHERN METHODIST                           Schenck. Justices Reichek and
    UNIVERSITY AND GRETA A.                      Goldstein participating.
    DAVIS, AN INDIVIDUAL,
    Appellee
    In accordance with this Court’s opinion of this date, we REVERSE the trial
    court’s order to dismiss without prejudice, RENDER judgment denying the plea to
    the jurisdiction with respect to Todd’s claims that the appellees have failed to
    comply with SMU’s own internal procedures, RENDER judgment modifying the
    order to deny with prejudice Todd’s claims seeking review of appellees’ academic
    decisions, and REMAND this case to the trial court for proceedings consistent
    with this opinion.
    It is ORDERED that appellant KAMILAH TODD recover her costs of this
    appeal from appellee SOUTHERN METHODIST UNIVERSITY AND GRETA
    A. DAVIS, AN INDIVIDUAL.
    Judgment entered this 14th day of November 2022.
    –16–