Daniel Gruenstein, Relator v. Regents of the University of Minnesota

CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedJune 13, 2016
DocketA15-1567
StatusUnpublished

This text of Daniel Gruenstein, Relator v. Regents of the University of Minnesota (Daniel Gruenstein, Relator v. Regents of the University of Minnesota) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daniel Gruenstein, Relator v. Regents of the University of Minnesota, (Mich. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

This opinion will be unpublished and may not be cited except as provided by Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2014).

STATE OF MINNESOTA IN COURT OF APPEALS A15-1567

Daniel Gruenstein, Relator,

vs.

Regents of the University of Minnesota, Respondent.

Filed June 13, 2016 Affirmed Hooten, Judge

University of Minnesota

Darren M. Sharp, Schaefer Halleen, LLC, Minneapolis, Minnesota (for relator)

William P. Donohue, General Counsel, Brent P. Benrud, Senior Associate General Counsel, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota (for respondent)

Considered and decided by Hooten, Presiding Judge; Larkin, Judge; and Rodenberg,

Judge.

UNPUBLISHED OPINION

HOOTEN, Judge

Relator seeks review by writ of certiorari of respondent university’s nonrenewal of

his appointment as a clinical scholar faculty member, arguing that his nonrenewal violated

four university policies. We affirm. FACTS

In July 2006, relator Dr. Daniel Gruenstein was appointed as a non-tenured clinical

scholar faculty member at respondent University of Minnesota (university). Dr.

Gruenstein’s appointment was governed by an annually renewable contract. He initially

worked as an assistant professor in the cardiology division of the pediatrics department,

but was appointed as an associate professor on May 13, 2013. Like many other members

of the medical school faculty, Dr. Gruenstein had a separate employment-at-will

relationship with University of Minnesota Physicians (UMP), a private practice group

comprised primarily of members of the medical school faculty.

In March 2014, the head of the pediatrics department (department head), who was

also the manager of the pediatrics clinical service unit at UMP, met with Dr. Gruenstein

and advised him that his employment with UMP was being terminated and that his

appointment at the university was not being renewed. In explaining the reasons for the

termination and the nonrenewal, the department head told Dr. Gruenstein that these actions

were not being taken because of any performance concerns, but because UMP and the

university “were moving in a different direction.” Following the meeting, UMP sent Dr.

Gruenstein a letter, dated March 13, 2014, stating that his employment with UMP was

being terminated. Dr. Gruenstein received a separate letter from the university, dated

March 13, 2014, stating that his appointment with the university was not being renewed.

Dr. Gruenstein requested that the department head provide him with a letter that stated that

the university’s decision not to renew his appointment was not taken for performance

reasons, which the department head provided on March 27, 2014.

2 On July 8, 2014, Dr. Gruenstein challenged the university’s nonrenewal decision by

filing a grievance petition with the university’s conflict resolution office. In his petition,

Dr. Gruenstein alleged that the nonrenewal decision violated the following four university

policies: (1) Board of Regents Policy—Employee Performance Evaluation and

Development; (2) Administrative Policy—Reporting and Addressing Concerns of

Misconduct; (3) Board of Regents Policy—Employee Recruitment and Retention; and

(4) Board of Regents Policy—Equity, Diversity, Equal Opportunity, and Affirmative

Action. Dr. Gruenstein also claimed that the director of the pediatric department’s

cardiology division (director), who was also employed by UMP, tortiously interfered with

his employment contract and his academic promotion at the university. A hearing was

scheduled before a panel consisting of three members of the university faculty appointed

under provisions of the university’s conflict resolution policies. Prior to the hearing, it was

determined that the panel had no jurisdiction to address any claims Dr. Gruenstein had

against UMP and that the only issue to be addressed by the panel was whether there were

violations of the university’s policies with regard to the nonrenewal of the university’s

contract with Dr. Gruenstein.

At the hearing, Dr. Gruenstein testified that he began to experience conflict with the

director in 2011 or 2012 after expressing interest in pursuing a leadership role within the

pediatrics department at the university. Dr. Gruenstein alleged that the director began

actively interfering with his employment at both UMP and the university at this time by

diverting patients away from him, removing him from his position as the doctor in charge

of the catherization lab, withdrawing support at the last minute for his application for a

3 promotion at the university, and failing to objectively evaluate his performance in March

2013. Dr. Gruenstein stated that he complained to the department head about the director’s

sudden withdrawal of support for his promotion and reported to the department head his

concerns about the director’s failure to objectively evaluate him to the department head.

Dr. Gruenstein testified that when he was informed by the department head that his

employment with UMP and his appointment with the university were ending, there was no

distinction made between UMP and the university.

The department head testified that, as the supervisor of the director and Dr.

Gruenstein both at UMP and the university, he was the one who decided to terminate Dr.

Gruenstein from UMP and not renew his appointment with the university. The department

head testified that he did not consult with the director when making the nonrenewal

decision. The department head explained that, in anticipation of the impending retirement

of the director and his assessment that Dr. Gruenstein was not seen as a prospective leader

of the pediatric cardiology program going forward, it was not economically feasible to

continue Dr. Gruenstein’s employment with UMP or his association with the university.

The department head also explained that the nonrenewal of Dr. Gruenstein’s appointment

with the university would naturally follow his termination from UMP because as a clinical

scholar, he was hired predominately to do clinical work, which would occur at UMP. The

department head stated that because a sizable part of a clinical scholar’s salary is earned

through his practice of medicine at a clinic, it would not be practical for the university to

continue to associate with a clinical scholar who had been terminated from UMP. The

department head admitted, however, that there are physicians employed at UMP who are

4 not associated with the university and that there are physicians associated with the

university who are not employed by UMP.

At the hearing, the university submitted little to no evidence contradicting Dr.

Gruenstein’s allegations of misconduct by the director. Instead, the university argued that

any misconduct by the director was not connected with the nonrenewal of Dr. Gruenstein’s

university appointment.

On May 15, 2015, the panel issued its report. The panel determined that the

university did not violate the Employee Recruitment and Retention policy or the Equity,

Diversity, Equal Opportunity, and Affirmative Action policy, but concluded that the

university violated the Employee Performance Evaluation and Development policy and the

Reporting and Addressing Concerns of Misconduct policy. The panel also determined that

the director had tortiously interfered with Dr. Gruenstein’s appointment.

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