District of Columbia v. American University

2 A.3d 175, 2010 D.C. App. LEXIS 491, 2010 WL 3166435
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 12, 2010
Docket08-CV-1625, 08-CV-1626
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2 A.3d 175 (District of Columbia v. American University) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
District of Columbia v. American University, 2 A.3d 175, 2010 D.C. App. LEXIS 491, 2010 WL 3166435 (D.C. 2010).

Opinions

PER CURIAM:

This litigation represents the continuation of an effort by appellee American University (“AU”) to stop appellant American University in Dubai (“AUD”) from holding a license from the District of Columbia Educational Licensure Commission (“the Commission”) while AUD continues to have the word “American” in its name. The underpinning for the litigation is D.C.Code § 29-618 (Supp.2009), which generally prohibits an educational institution that is organized under District of Columbia law or that “shall undertake to do business in the District of Columbia or to confer degrees or certificates therein” from using “as its title, in whole or in part the words United States, federal, American, national, or civil service, or any other words which might reasonably imply an official connection with the government of the United States.... f1 For reasons that [178]*178we shall explain, we conclude that AU’s challenge to AUD’s (former) District licen-sure is moot. We affirm, however, the trial court’s order insofar as it directs the Commission to revoke the license of AUD’s agent. Judge Thompson dissents from the latter conclusion.

I. Legal and Factual Background

The District of Columbia laws governing the licensure of post-secondary educational institutions are found in Title 29, Chapter 6 and Title 38, Chapter 13 of the D.C.Code. See D.C.Code §§ 29-615 to -619 (2001 & Supp.2009) and 38-1301 to -1313 (2001 & Supp.2009). They provide that no person or entity may undertake to confer any degree or operate a post-secondary educational institution in the District of Columbia without first obtaining a license from the Commission.2 See D.C.Code §§ 29-615, 38-1309(a) (Supp.2009). Commission licensure of an educational institution “shall be contingent upon said educational institution’s compliance with all rules, regulations and criteria promulgated by the Commission, as well as compliance with all other applicable D.C. laws and regulations.” D.C.Code § 38-1302(12) (Supp.2009).3 One such applicable law is D.C.Code § 29-618, enacted by Congress in 1929 as part of legislation known as the Diploma Mill Act.4

D.C.Code § 38-1310(a) describes several “exclu[sions] from the coverage of this chapter [ie., D.C.Code §§ 38-1301 to - 1313],” including an exclusion for any “educational institution that is organized or chartered outside of the District of Columbia and does not operate in the District....” D.C.Code § 38-1310(a)(6) (2001). Thus, an educational institution that is not organized under District law and that does not operate in the District is exempt from licensure by the Commission, “except that any agent of an institution who operates in the District shall not be exempt, and the Commission may apply the standards of this chapter to the institution in determining whether to license an agent.” Id. D.C.Code § 38-1302(1) defines “agent” as “any person owning any interest in, employed by, or representing for remuneration, an educational institution, whether such institution is located within or outside the District, and who solicits or offers to enroll in the District students or enrollees for such institution, or who holds himself or herself out to [179]*179residents of the District ... as representing an educational institution for any such purpose.” D.C.Code § 38-1302(1).

Appellee AUD is a private, for-profit, accredited degree-granting institution with its campus in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. AUD has no facilities and provides no educational instruction in the District, but does provide information about its programs in Dubai and enrolls students for its Dubai campus through an agent, Michael Goldstein, who, for remuneration, acts on AUD’s behalf from an office on New Hampshire Avenue, N.W.5 In past years, the Commission licensed AUD directly. However, by early 2008, the Commission began to apply an interpretation that an educational institution without a physical presence in the District could not be licensed by the Commission. In addition, in August 2008, the Council of the District of Columbia enacted the Education Licensure Commission Amendment Act of 2008 (“the 2008 Amendment Act”),6 legislation that made revisions to Chapter 13 of Title 38 that affect whether an educational institution may “operate” — and thus whether it is eligible for licensure — in the District. As modified by the 2008 Amendment Act, D.C.Code § 38-1309 provides that an educational institution may not “operate” in the District — and thus, it may not obtain a Commission license, which constitutes “approval to operate,” see D.C.Code § 38-1302(12) — unless it maintains in the District a “facility” from or through which “education is offered or given, or educational credentials are offered or granted.” D.C.Code §§ 38-1309, -1302(11). The 2008 Amendment Act also added to section 38-1302 a definition of the term “facility” that specifies that the term means “a physical structure located in the District, including suitable housing, classrooms, laboratories, and library resources, as required by the nature of the program or the student body.” D.C.Code § 38-1302(14).

AUD does not maintain a “facility” in the District within the meaning of section 38-1302(14). Since February 28, 2008, Mr. Goldstein has been licensed as AUD’s agent,7 and, effective the same date, AUD withdrew its application for renewal of its Commission license.

II. Procedural Background

This appeal follows our decision in American Univ. in Dubai, a case that arose out of a 2003 suit in which AU complained that the Commission had renewed AUD’s degree-granting license despite what AU alleged was AUD’s violation of the prohibition set out in D.C.Code § 29-618, by having “American” in its name. AU sought a judgment “prohibiting AUD from using ‘American’ in its ti[180]

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2 A.3d 175, 2010 D.C. App. LEXIS 491, 2010 WL 3166435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/district-of-columbia-v-american-university-dc-2010.