CARROLL v. MILLERSVILLE UNIVERSITY OF PA

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 27, 2021
Docket5:16-cv-01406
StatusUnknown

This text of CARROLL v. MILLERSVILLE UNIVERSITY OF PA (CARROLL v. MILLERSVILLE UNIVERSITY OF PA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
CARROLL v. MILLERSVILLE UNIVERSITY OF PA, (E.D. Pa. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

ARTIS C. CARROLL, JR. : CIVIL ACTION : v. : NO. 16-1406 : MILLERSVILLE UNIVERSITY OF PA, : et al. :

MEMORANDUM

KEARNEY, J. January 27, 2021

Artis C. Carroll, Jr. began pro se suing Millersville University and its officials almost five years ago relating to his Fall 2014 grades. He has not progressed beyond the pleadings due to his delay. After addressing motions to dismiss from all other defendants, we are aware of one last unserved Defendant Elaine Chrissos. Ms. Chrissos now moves to dismiss for insufficiency of process, among other reasons. It appears Mr. Carroll, proceeding pro se, provided the United States Marshal with a business address at Millersville University which he knows is not Ms. Chrissos’s address. Mr. Carroll admittedly knows her correct address as he identified it in his second amended Complaint. We cannot proceed against Ms. Chrissos without proper service. Mr. Carroll offers no good cause whatsoever to explain why he has not given the United States Marshal the correct address for service nor has he responded to the Motion to dismiss after we provided him several weeks to do so. We must grant Defendant Chrissos’s Motion to dismiss for insufficiency of process without prejudice to Mr. Carroll possibly moving to amend to add her and appropriately serve her at the correct address on a claim not already dismissed in this case and which could relate back to his timely filed claims. It is time for Mr. Carroll to now begin discovery on his remaining claims against the two remaining Defendants affiliated with Millersville University. I. Background A. Alleged pro se facts Millersville University accepted African American Artis C. Carroll, Jr. as a student in July 2011.1 Mr. Carroll changed his major in Fall 2012 from Biology to Allied Health Respiratory Therapy where he maintained at least a 2.0 grade point average.2 His new major included

participating in the Millersville University Respiratory Therapy Program which provided the clinical aspect of the academic program.3 Elaine Chrissos served as the Program’s Director.4 During the Fall 2014 semester, Mr. Carroll enrolled in six clinical classes.5 In late September 2014, shortly after the Fall 2014 semester began, Program Director Chrissos and Assistant Director Jarrod Harleman made racist jokes towards Mr. Carroll and gave him the middle finger.6 Mr. Carroll reported this behavior to University Professor Dr. John Hoover and Dean of the Math and Science Department Dr. Robert Smith.7 Mr. Carroll then filed two formal complaints to the University’s Executive Director of Human Resources in mid-October 2014. The first complaint addressed alleged discrimination from Director Chrissos and Assistant Director Harleman.8 The second complaint alleged Dr. Chrissos failed to follow the Program grading scale

and denied Mr. Carroll access to his student records.9 Director Chrissos and Assistant Director Harleman told Mr. Carroll in December 2014 “he will be subjected to [d]ismissal before final grades are posted with the University Registrar.”10 Mr. Carroll appealed this dismissal to a panel. He argued Director Chrissos failed to follow the Program’s grading scale and prematurely dismissed him from the Program by not placing him on probation.11 The panel affirmed Mr. Carroll’s dismissal.12 The University released Fall 2014 grades later in December 2014. Mr. Carroll received a D-minus in Respiratory Assessment, and a D-minus in Therapeutic Care and Clinical Practice 1.13 Mr. Carroll alleges he should have received a C in at least one of the courses. He argues his lower grade resulted from Director Chrissos’s failure to follow the Student Handbook’s grading scale.14 Mr. Carroll argues Director Chrissos intentionally lowered his grade to dismiss him from the Program and altered his letter grade from a D to a D-minus to mask her dismissal of Mr. Carroll from the program without first placing him on probation.15 Mr. Carroll “notic[ed]” the grade

changes when the University’s Registrar posted semester grades.16 Mr. Carroll contested the D-minus grade to Dean Smith. Dean Smith replied to Mr. Carroll by attaching the three-step grade appeal procedure.17 Mr. Carroll claims he met the first step of the procedure by speaking with Director Chrissos and Assistant Director Harleman at the clinic and asking to see his student records.18 He alleges Director Chrissos refused to speak to him and security escorted him out of the facility.19 Mr. Carroll claims to have met the second step by visiting with Professor Hoover, Chairman of the Biology Department, who assured Mr. Carroll as to the correct grades.20 Mr. Carroll claims to have met the third step by filing a written appeal with Dean Smith.21 Dean Smith denied Mr. Carroll’s appeal and assured him the “Fall 2014 final grades are fair and correct.”22 The University dismissed Mr. Carroll from the Program, but he remained

a student on track to graduate with a degree in Liberal Arts in December 2015.23 Mr. Carroll sued Lancaster County and Millersville University in March 2016.24 Mr. Carroll alleged racial discrimination; his instructors denied him access to his student records; the University suspended him without a hearing; and University officers unlawfully arrested him.25 Mr. Carroll alleged violations of the First, Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendments, The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA), fraud, false imprisonment, defamation, and discrimination.26 Judge Stengel dismissed Carroll’s claims against Lancaster County under 28 U.S.C. § 1915(e) and ordered service on the University.27 The University waived service in February 2017.28 The University moved to dismiss in April 2017.29 Judge Stengel allowed Mr. Carroll the opportunity to file a second amended complaint.30 Judge Stengel informed Mr. Carroll this second amended complaint would be the last amended complaint.31 Chief Judge Sanchez reassigned the

case to us.32 We gave Mr. Carroll another extension to file his second amended complaint.33 Mr. Carroll failed to file the second amended complaint by our deadline and the University moved to dismiss.34 We denied the University’s motion to dismiss and gave Mr. Carroll one “last chance” to file a second amended complaint.35 We placed the case on suspense while Mr. Carroll appealed a separate issue relating to counsel representation.36 Our Court of Appeals dismissed Mr. Carroll’s appeal.37 After we gave Mr. Carroll his fourth “last chance,” he filed his second amended complaint in May 2019.38 Mr. Carroll sued the same thirteen Defendants from the first amended complaint and adds twelve new Defendants. He sued Director Chrissos for depriving him of due process and breach

of contract (being the Student or Program Handbook). But he needed to serve process on Director Chrissos to begin proceeding against her. We dismissed almost all claims against served parties in a series of Orders supported by detailed opinions.39 We specifically found Mr. Carroll failed to state a claim for breach of contract because the Program’s Student Handbook is not a contract.40 We also found Mr. Carroll could proceed on a due process claim against Director Austin and Vice President Richardson. Mr. Carroll adequately plead a due process claim against Director Austin and Vice President Richardson because these two school officials did not satisfy the minimum level of due process as defined in Goss v. Lopez41 and Matthews v. Eldridge.42 Director Austin and Vice President Richardson did not properly recite the standard for qualified immunity against Mr. Carroll’s due process claim.43 And we determined Heck v. Humphrey would not bar Mr.

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CARROLL v. MILLERSVILLE UNIVERSITY OF PA, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carroll-v-millersville-university-of-pa-paed-2021.