Bikkina v. Mahadevan

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedFebruary 21, 2025
Docket21-03054
StatusUnknown

This text of Bikkina v. Mahadevan (Bikkina v. Mahadevan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bikkina v. Mahadevan, (Tex. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT February 21, 2025 FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS Nathan Ochsner, Clerk HOUSTON DIVISION

IN RE: § § CASE NO: 21-30545 JAGANNATHAN MAHADEVAN, § § CHAPTER 7 Debtor. § § PREM BIKKINA, § § Plaintiff, § § VS. § ADVERSARY NO. 21-3054 § JAGANNATHAN MAHADEVAN, § § Defendant. §

MEMORANDUM OPINION This adversary action stems from a bitter hostility between Prem Bikkina (“Bikkina”) and his former professor, Jagannathan Mahadevan (“Mahadevan”) leading to Bikkina obtaining a judgement against Mahadevan in California state court for $776,0000.1 Bikkina now seeks a judgment from this Court declaring that Mahadevan’s debt, arising from the California state-court judgment entered on August 1, 2018, in the Alameda Superior Court, is non-dischargeable pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(6).2 Upon reversing a summary judgement entered in favor of Bikkina, the district court remanded this case to this Court with instructions to determine whether Mahadevan was willful and malicious in defaming Bikkina and inflicting emotional distress on Bikkina under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(6).3 The Court held a trial starting on April 1, 2024, and concluding on August 22, 2024.4

1 ECF No. 1. 2 ECF No. 1. 3 ECF No. 51. 4 See April 1, 2024 Min. Entry; Aug. 22, 2024 Min Entry. For all the reasons discussed infra, Mahadevan was willful and malicious in inflicting emotional distress on Bikkina and was also willful and malicious in defaming Bikkina. Accordingly, Mahadevan’s judgement debt owed to Bikkina as set forth in the California state- court judgment entered on August 1, 2018,5 totaling $776,000, is excepted from discharge as a debt for a willful and malicious injury to another entity or to the property of another entity pursuant

to 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(6).6 I. FINDINGS OF FACT A. Background Mahadevan was a professor, and Bikkina a graduate student, at the University of Tulsa (“Tulsa”).7 Mahadevan became Bikkina’s dissertation advisor in 2007.8 In 2010 Bikkina filed a request with Tulsa to be assigned a new dissertation advisor, which was granted.9 Bikkina alleges he requested to change dissertation advisors because Mahadevan was delaying Bikkina’s progress toward his PhD by changing his research topic multiple times, and had disagreements with Bikkina over technical concepts, which lead to harassment by Mahadevan.10 Bikkina testified that Mahadevan harassed him, for example, by saying “Prem, I am going to screw you” after a disagreement with Bikkina over a technical research procedure.11 Mahadevan denies making such comments and asserts that Bikkina left his research group because Bikkina refused to adhere to Mahadevan’s instructions to correct research data that was contaminated by Bikkina’s faulty

research procedure.12

5 ECF No. 141-2. 6 ECF No. 141-2 at 5–8. 7 ECF No. 221 at 10, 14. 8 ECF No. 221 at 10, 14. 9 ECF No. 221 at 15, 17, 20. 10 ECF No. 221 at 16–20. 11 ECF No. 221 at 98. 12 ECF Nos. 169-50; 141-7; 169-46. On January 23, 2010, Mahadevan analyzed the results from scientific tests that he ordered Bikkina to complete under his supervision and wrote a technical article on his analysis and emailed the article to Bikkina.13 Mahadevan further condensed the article into an “abstract” in the body of the email, and sent it to Bikkina on January 25, 2010.14 Mahadevan claims that the technical article and the abstract that he emailed to Bikkina are original work and that Mahadevan registered

copyright for the contents arising from such original works (the “Copyrighted Works”).15 While a student at Tulsa, Bikkina wrote “Contact Angle Measurements of CO2-water- quartz/calcite systems in the perspective of carbon sequestration.” (“Paper #1”), which was published in International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control (“IJGGC”) in July of 2011.16 Mahadevan claims that Bikkina committed plagiarism and data falsification by using Mahadevan’s Copyrighted Work and contaminated data to write and publish Paper #1 without notice or consent of Mahadevan.17 To express his concern of scientific misconduct, in April 24, 2011, while Paper #1 was still being considered for publication, Mahadevan sent an email to Stefan Bachu, an associate editor of

the IJGGC, stating that the experimental data used in Paper # 1 was likely invalid due to contamination.18 On April 28, 2011, Stefan Bachu informed Bikkina of the allegations leveled by Mahadevan that Paper #1 may contain false or contaminated data.19 Publication of Paper #1 was paused, and Bikkina was asked by IJGGC to respond to Mahadevan’s allegations.20

13 ECF Nos. 169-9; 169-10; 169-11. 14 ECF No. 169-12. 15 ECF Nos. 11 at 5; 169-1; 169-2. 16 ECF Nos. 169-3; 221 at 23. 17 ECF Nos. 11 at 5-6; 238 at ¶23. 18 ECF No. 141-7. 19 ECF No. 141-8. 20 ECF No. 141-8. Bikkina admits that while collecting data for Paper #1, he observed marks on one of the samples which was determined to contain Fluorine, but Bikkina did not consider such mark to be significant nor affected other samples and did not believe Paper #1 contained false or contaminated data.21 Nonetheless, Bikkina allowed Mahadevan to write a paragraph in Paper #1 in which he called out the presence of Fluorine in one of the samples.22 Bikkina also testified that before

leaving Mahadevan’s research group, Bikkina offered to credit Mahadevan as a co-author of Paper #1 but Mahadevan declined the offer.23 On May 20, 2011, Mahadevan sent an email to a Tulsa administrator stating that he would no longer pursue any allegations of misconduct regarding Paper #1 and that Bikkina was free to publish it as the sole author.24 However, on June 3, 2011, Mahadevan sent an email to Tulsa administrators claiming he had a right to be a co-author of Paper #1.25 On June 6, 2011, Roger Blais, the Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs at Tulsa, sent a letter to Stefan Bachu stating that Tulsa supported the publication of Paper #1 with Bikkina as the sole author.26 Paper #1 was resubmitted and published by the IJGGC in July of 2011 with Bikkina as the sole author.27 The published version of the paper included an additional paragraph, written by

Mahadevan, noting the presence of Fluorine in one of the data samples.28 On July 22, 2011, Mahadevan filed a complaint against Bikkina under Tulsa’s Harassment Policy and Research Misconduct Policy, claiming that Bikkina committed scientific research misconduct through data falsification in Paper #1 and harassed Mahadevan by making false claims

21 ECF No. 221 at 39-40, 204. 22 ECF Nos. 221 at 33-35, 36, 40; 169-3 at 12. 23 ECF No. 221 at 26. 24 ECF No. 141-11. 25 ECF No. 141-13 at 1, 2. 26 ECF No. 141-15. 27 ECF Nos. 169-3; 221 at 91, 120. 28 ECF Nos. 169-3 at 12; 221 at 35-36. about him.29 In response, Bikkina filed his own complaint with Tulsa in July 27, 2011 in which he alleged that Mahadevan wrongly caused him to change dissertation advisors and interfered with the publication of Paper #1.30 While still a PhD student at Tulsa, Bikkina authored a second article entitled “Equilibrated Interfacial Tension Data of the CO2-Water System at High Pressures and Moderate Temperatures”

(“Paper #2”), which was published in the Journal of Chemical & Engineering Data (“JCED”) in September, 2011.31 The authors of Paper #2 also included Bikkina’s new dissertation advisor, Ovadia Shoham, and Dr. Ramagopal Uppaluri.32 Bikkina testified that Mahadevan was never offered co-authorship of Paper #2 because Mahadevan told Bikkina not to acknowledge him in any of his publications.33 On November 15, 2011, Bikkina received an email from Dr.

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