DOE v. THE BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 30, 2019
Docket1:18-cv-00726
StatusUnknown

This text of DOE v. THE BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA (DOE v. THE BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DOE v. THE BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA, (M.D.N.C. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF NORTH CAROLINA PROFESSOR DOE, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) 1:18CV726 ) THE BOARD OF GOVERNORS ) OF THE UNIVERSITY OF ) NORTH CAROLINA, et al, ) ) ) Defendants. ) ORDER, MEMORANDUM OPINION, AND RECCOMENDATION This matter comes before the Court on a Motion to Dismiss [Doc. #24] filed by Defendants The Board of Governots of the University of North Carolina, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Carol Folt in her official capacity as Chancellor, Ann Lemon in her official capacity as Assistant Provost for Academic Personnel, and Kenneth T. Andrews in his official capacity as Chair of the Department of Sociology. Plaintiff's Amended Complaint [Doc. #15] raises claims for gender discrimination in violation of Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 (First Claim), procedural due process (Second Claim), constructive discharge and free speech (Third Claim), breach of contract (Fourth Claim), defamation and bteach of confidentiality (Fifth Claim), and negligence and negligence per se (Sixth Claim), and also includes motions for injunctive and declaratory relief, all related to a disciplinary proceeding involving Plaintiff in his position as an assistant professor at UNC. For the teasons that follow, the Court recommends that the Motion to Dismiss be granted as to Plaintiff's federal claims and that the state law claims be temanded to state court.

I. FACTS, CLAIMS, AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY Plaintiff filed a 108-page Amended Complaint. Because this matter is presented on a motion to dismiss, the Coutt sets out the contentions as alleged by Plaintiff. Plaintiff was an assistant professor at UNC in the Department of Sociology until he left in June 2018. (Amended Complaint §] 10.1) The claims asserted arise out of his interactions with a gtaduate student, identified as Jane Roe, and her complaints to UNC about Plaintiff's conduct that she believed constituted sexual hatassment. Plaintiff contends that the claims made against him were contrived due to Ms. Roe’s poor academic performance (id. 31-37), that he had spoken with her about her ongoing poor performance in his classes, including during the spting 2015 semester (id. {{{] 35-36), and that as of February 2015, she was failing the spring course (id. | 37), Around that same timeframe, in Match 2015, Plaintiffs supetvisor, Kenneth Andtews, spoke with him about a student complaint that his office was “too tightly arranged” and that “it was sometimes uncomfortable and awkward for students to meet” with him because of the configuration, but Plaintiff contends that no other matter

was discussed at that time. (Id. ff] 39, 41.) Plaintiff re-arranged his office in response. (Id. 143.) As alleged in the Complaint, Ms. Roe’s performance did not improve. According to the Complaint, if she received a grade of “low pass,” her third while in the University’s etaduate program, she would not be eligible to continue in the program. (id. {ff 45-48.) Plaintiff alleges that he assigned a grade of “low pass,” and that after Ms. Roe received

notification of her grade, she called him and e-mailed him repeatedly, she showed up in person and pled with him to have her grade changed, she put her arms around Plaintiffs torso in

teats, she followed him to the patking gatage, Plaintiff drove her back to the Sociology Department, and she initially refused to get out of his cat until Plaintiff raised his voice to make het leave. (Id. § 51.) On the following business day, Plaintiff alleges that Ms. Roe met with an EOC Deputy Title [X Coordinator to report that Plaintiff had sexually hatassed het. (Id. 953.) Plaintiff farther contends that on May 14, Ms. Roe requested a formal investigation of Plaintiff for the time period “fall of 2014 to March 19, 2015,” based upon allegations that he had closed door meetings (one-on-one) in which he would have her sit next to him, that

on at least ten occasions he placed his hand on her inner thigh for ten seconds, that he would place his hands on her shoulders for several seconds, that he grabbed her hands and looked into her eyes, and that he would write on het assignments to meet him in his office or that he

was happy to meet with her. (Id. 57.) Plaintiff contends he had no “meaningful” notice to prepare for his interview with the Administrative Reviewer because he lacked any dates or times for the alleged offenses. (Id. §] 59.) With respect to the investigation, Plaintiff alleges that the Administrative Reviewer improperly accepted testimony from other witnesses whom Ms. Roe believed could offer similar information about theit experiences with Plaintiff but would not accept character evidence about Plaintiff. Plaintiff also alleges that the University’s EOC failed to follow its

own tules by not attempting to reach an informal resolution of the dispute. (id. {[] 64-67.)

Accotding to the Complaint, Plaintiff was interviewed by the University’s Administrative Reviewer on June 9 and 19, further met with the Reviewer several times between June 19 and June 30, and was permitted to review but not copy the Reviewet’s notes. (Id. {[81.) According to Plaintiff, the KOC Reviewer was biased because of her tone, because she told Plaintiff, “It’s OK, you can tell me,” and because of a comment she made that, “She was pretty sute that she understood this case.” (Id. J 82, 84.) The Complaint alleges that thereafter, on August 20, his supervisor, Kenneth Andtews, sent an email confirming the meeting that occurred on Match 24 regarding the arrangement of Plaintiffs office, and mentioned in the email, for the first time; Plaintiffs “too-famuliar’” □

touching of students. (id. { 87.) In his Complaint, Plaintiff admits that he has “had chummy and innocuous ‘physical contact’ with many students and colleagues in forms such as: high fives, handshakes, and atm around the shoulder, holding of a hand in an emotional crisis, or a friendly punch in the atm, ot (the act at issue in this case) a closed, outer fist’s tap to the outer knee of someone seated next to him.” (id. [ 23.) Plaintiff also concedes that “[a] □□□ students found Professor Doe’s office quarters cramped and his familiar, ‘non-sexual’ contact nevertheless awkward at times.” (Id. at 7 101.tv.) Accotding to Plaintiff, his contacts with students were originally interpreted as nonsexual, non-aggressive, and non-predatory, but that one witness “recast” her perceptions of the touching based upon her own sepatate experiences and her friendship with Ms. Roe, and therefore her creditability should have been “unquestionably degraded” by the trier of

fact. (id. {[[ 95-98.) This witness is referred to in the Complaint as “Jane’s Friend,” but is also later identified by Plaintiff as one of Plaintiffs former teaching assistants. As to this witness, Plaintiff alleges that that Jane’s Friend told the Administrative Reviewer that she did not originally think that Professor Doe’s interactions with het were inappropriate at the time they occutted. dd. §/97.xii.) However, she reached back out to the Administrative Reviewer to explain that she nevertheless thought “this counts as sexual harassment.” (d.) Plaintiff alleges that this witness was willing to: “statt a wat’ on “gender issues” if necessaty to get them “taken seriously” .. . not because Professor Doe actually sexually harassed her (as het own testimony would indeed later be that Professor Doe “never touched [her] thigh” and that she “never ditectly said that [she] felt uncomfortable” with his familiar chummy, non-sexual contact) but tather because she had previously been seriously sexually assaulted multiple times . . . . [and] was actively suffering from and being treated for PT'SD. (id. § 97.iii, tv.) An EOC Report was published on August 24, with redactions made appearing to -

protect the identity of individuals who were interviewed. (1d.

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DOE v. THE BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doe-v-the-board-of-governors-of-the-university-of-north-carolina-ncmd-2019.