Ahmed Salau v. Brady J Deaton

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 3, 2014
DocketWD76305
StatusPublished

This text of Ahmed Salau v. Brady J Deaton (Ahmed Salau v. Brady J Deaton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ahmed Salau v. Brady J Deaton, (Mo. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Western District

AHMED SALAU, ) Appellant, ) v. ) WD76305 ) FILED: June 3, 2014 BRADY J. DEATON, et al., ) Respondents. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF BOONE COUNTY THE HONORABLE KEVIN CRANE, JUDGE

BEFORE DIVISION FOUR - JAMES E. WELSH, CHIEF JUDGE, PRESIDING, LISA WHITE HARDWICK, JUDGE AND KEVIN HARRELL, SPECIAL JUDGE Ahmed Salau appeals the circuit court's order denying his motion for a

preliminary injunction against Brady J. Deaton, Chancellor of the University of Missouri;

Catherine J. Scroggs, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Missouri; and Donnell Young,

Senior Coordinator, Office of Student Conduct, University of Missouri (collectively,

"Respondents"). Salau sought to preliminarily enjoin Respondents and "any other

persons who are acting or have acted in concert with any of them" from: (1) holding a

formal hearing on allegations of misconduct against him and (2) making any decision

adverse to his status as a student and research assistant at the University.

On appeal, Salau contends he was entitled to a preliminary injunction because

the University's notice of the hearing was deficient, the hearing violated his Fifth

Amendment right against self-incrimination, and the University did not have an attorney present to advise the Student Conduct Committee during the hearing. Salau further

argues that the court erred in consolidating the preliminary injunction with a hearing on

the merits pursuant to Rule 92.02(c)(3). Because the circuit court's denial of Salau's

request for a preliminary injunction was not a final judgment and, therefore, was not

appealable, we dismiss the appeal.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In September 2012, Young notified Salau of possible violations of the University's

student conduct rules and regulations. Specifically, Young informed Salau that he was

alleged to have provided alcohol to an underage University student, including at a time

when she was already drunk, and then to have engaged in nonconsensual sex with her.

Pursuant to the University's policies and procedures, Salau had an informal meeting

with Young to discuss the allegations.

During the informal meeting, Salau admitted that he had provided the underage

student with alcohol and that he had had sex with her, but he claimed that the sex was

consensual. Salau told Young that he would provide him with additional information in a

few days. When Salau failed to provide the additional information, Young notified him in

a letter dated October 3, 2012, that he was expelled from the University. The letter also

informed Salau that, if he chose not to accept Young's informal disposition decision to

expel him, he would have a formal hearing before the Student Conduct Committee.

Salau chose not to accept the decision, so his formal hearing before the Student

Conduct Committee was set for November 12, 2012.

In the weeks leading up to the formal hearing, Salau and his counsel met with

Young in person and exchanged emails with him regarding the original allegations of

2 conduct violations and several additional allegations of conduct violations that had been

brought to Young's attention. When Salau and his counsel asked that the formal

hearing be continued to allow them time to contact witnesses, the Student Conduct

Committee Chair agreed to continue the hearing to November 28, 2012.

On November 12, 2012, Young sent Salau notices of all of the student conduct

violations alleged against him. At the request of Salau's counsel, Young prepared a

detailed account of each alleged incident and made it available for Salau or his counsel

to pick up by 5:00 p.m. on November 15, 2012. When neither Salau nor his counsel

picked up the information, Young mailed it to them, and they received it on November

19, 2012. Two days before the formal hearing, Salau requested another continuance to

allow him "additional preparation time." The Student Conduct Committee Chair denied

his request. The day before the hearing, Salau renewed his request for a continuance,

and the Student Conduct Committee Chair again denied it.

Approximately three hours before the formal hearing, Salau's counsel requested

a continuance, which was denied. At some point that day, Salau filed a pro se motion

for a preliminary injunction against Respondents in the Boone County Circuit Court. In

his motion, he asked that the court forbid, bar, and enjoin Respondents and "any any

other persons who are acting or have acted in concert with any of them" from holding

the formal hearing and from "making any decision adversarial against [his] status as a

student and research assistant" at the University until further order of the court. Salau

also requested "such further orders and relief as the court deems just and proper."

The Student Conduct Committee proceeded with Salau's formal hearing on the

afternoon of November 28, 2012. Salau's counsel arrived seven minutes into the

3 hearing, while Salau arrived fifteen minutes into the hearing. When Salau arrived, he

asked for a recess to speak to his counsel. After their conversation, Salau's counsel

informed the Student Conduct Committee that Salau had terminated his representation.

Salau's counsel then left. After his counsel left, Salau asked for a continuance because

he did not have counsel to represent him and he believed his Fifth Amendment rights

were being violated. The Student Committee voted to deny the continuance request.

Salau walked out of the hearing. The Student Conduct Committee proceeded with the

formal hearing by questioning witnesses, receiving evidence, and voting on findings and

sanctions.

On November 30, 2012, the Student Conduct Committee sent a letter to Salau

notifying him that the Committee found that he had violated the University's student

conduct rules and regulations in five separate cases. In one of the five cases, the

Committee determined that an official warning, disciplinary probation, and counseling

were appropriate sanctions, but for the remaining four cases, the Committee expelled

him from the University.

On December 7, 2012, the circuit court held a hearing on Salau's motion for a

preliminary injunction. At the beginning of the preliminary injunction hearing, the court

noted that the Student Conduct Committee hearing had already taken place and asked

Salau what he was seeking to enjoin. Salau responded that he was seeking to enjoin

Respondents "from making any decision that's adversary [sic] to my status as a student

and research assistant." When the court asked him if a decision was reached after the

Student Conduct Committee hearing, Salau acknowledged that he had been expelled

from the University.

4 Respondents then asked that the court consolidate Salau's request for a

preliminary injunction with a hearing on the merits for a permanent injunction. The court

advised Salau that a preliminary injunction was not a final decision and asked him why

he did not want the court, at that time, to make a decision on the merits as to whether

Respondents should be "enjoined from maintaining their decision that [he is]

disconnected from the University." Salau explained that, because Chancellor Deaton

could reverse the Student Conduct Committee's decision in his administrative appeal,

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Ahmed Salau v. Brady J Deaton, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ahmed-salau-v-brady-j-deaton-moctapp-2014.