Al-Dabagh v. Case Western Reserve University

23 F. Supp. 3d 865, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 74693, 2014 WL 2457425
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedJune 2, 2014
DocketCase No. 1:14-CV-01046
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 23 F. Supp. 3d 865 (Al-Dabagh v. Case Western Reserve University) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Al-Dabagh v. Case Western Reserve University, 23 F. Supp. 3d 865, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 74693, 2014 WL 2457425 (N.D. Ohio 2014).

Opinion

OPINION & ORDER [Resolving Docs. 2, 12, U, 15, & 16 ]

JAMES S. GWIN, District Judge:

Against an unusual background, Plaintiff Amir Al-Dabagh claims Defendant Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine broke a contract with him when it refused to award him a diploma. Similar issue have been presented in other cases but seldom with the same factual background.

Courts have reviewed claims that private universities wrongfully expelled students or wrongfully refused to grant a diploma. But most of those cases came after the university decided that the student was not cutting the academic mustard.

In contrast here, Case agrees that Plaintiff A-Dabagh more than met all academic requirements. Reflecting this, in the days before it began expulsion efforts, Case wrote A-Dabagh that he had qualified for special recognition at graduation for the research he performed while in medical school.

Athough A-Dabagh successfully completed all the medical school curriculum; passed all national tests; successfully completed his thesis; and paid all his fees, Case intends to deny A-Dabagh a diploma because A-Dabagh failed to notify Case that he had been arrested in 2012 in North Carolina for driving while impaired by alcohol. And Case would deny the diploma though Case’s own student handbook only required students to report convictions and did not require students to report arrests.

Athough A-Dabagh met all other University requirements, Case says it requires students to demonstrate professionalism and A-Dabagh was unprofessional when A-Dabagh did not report the arrest. A-Dabagh had received earlier warnings regarding other conduct and Case says A-Dabagh should have appreciated that he needed to report the arrest in light of the earlier warnings, even though none of the earlier warnings said anything about such a duty to report.

In earlier periods of his training, Case warned A-Dabagh after 1) he was late for three first year classes and he asked the class instructor not to mark him as late for at least one class; 2) he drank too much alcohol before going to a dance scheduled early in his training, then harassed two women students in an effort to dance with them, and finally leaped out of a moving taxi; 3) a not-identified student reported that A-Dabagh had led group discussions on patients without having personally examined the patients; and 4) a patient’s family asked that A-Dabagh not treat their relative although the family earlier asked that other physicians also be removed from treating their relative.

Athough A-Dabagh disputed some part of each of these incidents, Case says they give context to its decision to refuse a diploma for A-Dabagh after he did not report the North Carolina arrest for driving while impaired by alcohol.

Two incidents involved A-Dabagh becoming drunk. Neither of those incidents involved patient care or educational work. And Case does not argue that it seeks to expel A-Dabagh for alcohol problems. Case says it “didn’t believe he had an [868]*868alcohol problem.” And Case says its decision “is not about alcohol per se.”

So, this Court needs decide whether Case breached its contract when it refused a diploma. Case otherwise agrees that Al-Dabagh met all its graduation requirements except it says he did not show “professionalism.”

The Court recognizes that educational institutions receive extreme latitude when deciding whether students meet educational standards. But here, the Court considers what discretion courts should give educational institutions when the educational institution judges character, not academic competence. So, this opinion first looks at how much discretion Case should receive when it’s professionalism judgment really examines Al-Dabagh’s character. The Court then considers whether Case abused that discretion when it refused Al-Dabagh the diploma he had otherwise earned.

' For Al-Dabagh, the stakes are high. Al-Dabagh completed (and paid for) five years of medical school. He has successfully published more than a dozen articles or book chapters on dermatology, including an article published in one of the leading dermatology journals. And the physician who supervised his dermatology research described Al-Dabagh as “quite the team player, ... willing to lend a helping hand even without being asked to do so. He is well read, punctual and prepared for his clinics. His caring demeanor is apparent when he interacts with patients. He exhibited a can do, help others spirit that has been a huge benefit to research projects, helping other students and faculty on collaborative review articles and original research.” If denied injunctive relief, Al-Dabagh’s medical career will be lost or significantly diminished.

So the Court examines whether Case acted arbitrarily when Case found Al-Da-bagh’s failure to report the North Carolina arrest sufficiently shows a lack of professionalism that justified expelling Al-Da-bagh only weeks before his graduation and only two months before he was scheduled to start his residency.

Plaintiff Amir Al-Dabagh attended Defendant Case Western Reserve University’s School of Medicine for five years. His elective course work focused on dermatology. In April 2014, Case told Al-Dabagh that he would receive an honors designation for his research. Riverside Hospital, Columbus, Ohio accepted Al-Dabagh to its dermatology residency program.

Within days of telling Al-Dabagh that he would receive an honors citation at his graduation, Case Western told Al-Dabagh that it deny the diploma and would expel him unless he withdrew.

Al-Dabagh brings this lawsuit saying Case Western’s Medical School breached its contract with him and violated its obligation of good faith and fair dealing in carrying out that contract.

Case responds that it denies a diploma because Al-Dabagh did not show “professionalism.” Case relies upon four examples. First, in his first year, Al-Dabagh was five to ten minutes late for a class and Al-Dabagh may have asked his instructor not to mark him late. Second, Al-Dabagh went drunk to a school dance, harassed two women to dance with him, and may have grabbed another woman’s behind and arguqjd with that woman’s date. Later that night and while drunk, Al-Dabagh then tried to stiff a cab driver by rolling out of a moving cab to avoid paying his bill. Third, an unidentified student said Al-Dabagh presented on a patient he had not personally examined. Fourth, a patient’s- family asked that Al-Dabagh not treat their relative when Al-Dabagh was [869]*869doing an internal medicine internship, likely for personality reasons.

Finally, Case decided to deny a diploma and expel Al-Dabagh after learning that Al-Dabagh had been involved in a February 2013 single car automobile accident and had been charged with driving under the influence of alcohol. Case did not choose to expel Al-Dabagh for abusing alcohol but because he failed to report his arrest and the pending misdemeanor charges. Case says Al-Dabagh’s failure to report his arrest and the failure to report the pending misdemeanor case undermined his professionalism.

Al-Dabagh sues Case and se.eks a permanent injunction compelling the School of Medicine to give him a diploma. Case opposes the injunction.

For the reasons that follow, the Court GRANTS the request for a permanent injunction.

I. Background

A. Factual Background

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Bluebook (online)
23 F. Supp. 3d 865, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 74693, 2014 WL 2457425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/al-dabagh-v-case-western-reserve-university-ohnd-2014.