Dr. Karah Stokes v. Kentucky State University

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 1, 2024
Docket2023-CA-0714
StatusUnpublished

This text of Dr. Karah Stokes v. Kentucky State University (Dr. Karah Stokes v. Kentucky State University) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dr. Karah Stokes v. Kentucky State University, (Ky. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

RENDERED: NOVEMBER 1, 2024; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals NO. 2023-CA-0687-MR AND NO. 2023-CA-0714-MR

KENTUCKY STATE UNIVERSITY APPELLANT/CROSS-APPELLEE

APPEAL AND CROSS-APPEAL FROM v. FRANKLIN CIRCUIT COURT HONORABLE PHILLIP J. SHEPHERD, JUDGE ACTION NO. 16-CI-01086

KARAH STOKES APPELLEE/CROSS-APPELLANT

OPINION AFFIRMING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: THOMPSON, CHIEF JUDGE; COMBS AND LAMBERT, JUDGES.

LAMBERT, JUDGE: These matters relate to the termination, for cause, of Dr.

Karah Stokes’s employment as a tenured professor at Kentucky State University

(KSU). KSU seeks review of the Franklin Circuit Court’s decision that Stokes had

been denied due process when she was suspended and removed from the payroll

without being afforded a pre-termination hearing and that she was entitled to back pay and benefits. Stokes cross-appeals from the circuit court’s decision that her

termination was supported by substantial evidence. Having carefully considered

the record and the parties’ arguments, we affirm.

Stokes worked for KSU as a fulltime faculty member in the Division

of Literature, Language, and Philosophy from 1997 until the Spring semester of

2016. She was tenured in 2002 or 2003, and KSU promoted her to a fulltime

professor in 2008. During the course of the 2015-2016 school year, several

incidents involving Stokes took place, which included her response to a student

who requested accommodation in one of her classes, her response to allegations of

plagiarism and threats in another of her classes, and her treatment of other faculty

members. This culminated in a meeting on March 2, 2016, when Gordon A.

Rowe, Jr., from KSU’s Office of General Counsel, presented Stokes with an

unsigned charging document seeking her termination and removal as a tenured

faculty member pursuant to Kentucky Revised Statutes (KRS) 164.360(3). Stokes

left the room shortly thereafter. A letter dated March 4, 2016, to Stokes from

KSU’s Vice President for Academic Affairs, Lynda Brown-Wright, advised that

Stokes had ten days to voluntarily resign or KSU would begin the termination

proceedings. After a series of correspondence between Stokes’s attorney and

Rowe, Raymond M. Burse, who was at that time the President of KSU, issued the

signed charge on April 22, 2016. The specific charges were as follows:

-2- 1) Dr. Stokes refused to offer an accommodation for a student with a disability, even though that disability could have been reasonably accommodated. Section 2.9.2(j) of the Faculty Handbook prohibits faculty members from discriminating against any person on the basis of disability. Dr. Stokes’s denial of the requested accommodation for this student’s disability was discriminatory and constituted neglect or refusal to perform her duty to offer instruction without respect to a student’s disability, which is cause for termination under KRS 164.630(3);

2) Dr. Stokes removed students from her class and excluded students from her class without due process. Dr. Stokes accused four students of academic violations during Fall Semester 2015 and then prevented them from attending her class. However, those students had the right to attend class while the accusations were being reviewed upon appeal [See KSU Student Handbook, Section on Standards Governing Student Conduct]. Dr. Stokes’s failure to abide by this policy constitutes a neglect or refusal to perform her duties, which is cause for termination under KRS 164.360(3);

3) Dr. Stokes improperly prevented Dr. Erin Wheeler[1] and Dr. Lorna Shaw[2] from observing her class, even though Dr. Wheeler and Dr. Shaw are faculty members and part of the Academic Affairs executive leadership. Section 2.9.2(a) of the Faculty Handbook requires faculty members to “respect the rights of all campus members to pursue their academic and administrative activities.” Dr. Stokes allowed Dr. Wheeler and Dr. Shaw to enter her class on one occasion but subsequently informed them that they were not to return. Dr. Stokes’s actions hindered Dr.

1 The Assistant Vice President for Academic Support Services. 2 The KSU Dean.

-3- Wheeler and Dr. Shaw’s efforts to assess how they could further provide needed and appropriate academic assistance to students in Dr. Stokes’s classes, consequently inhibiting them from fulfilling their academic and administrative duties. The actions of Dr. Stokes in this regard constitute a neglect or refusal to perform her duties, which is cause for termination under KRS 164.630(3); and

4) On October 20, 2015, academic counselor Travis Haskins reported to the Vice President of Academic Affairs, Dr. Lynda Brown-Wright, that Dr. Stokes spoke to him in an offensive manner regarding an incident that occurred the previous day in relation to one of her classes and threatened to have him removed by police if he returned to her class again. Section 2.9.2(b) of the Faculty Handbook requires faculty members to “act with propriety in all dealings with members of the University community.” The actions of Dr. Stokes in this incident constitute a neglect or refusal to perform her duty to act with propriety in dealing with Mr. Haskins, which is cause for termination under KRS 164.360(3).

In addition to constituting a neglect or refusal to perform her duties, President

Burse stated that Dr. Stokes’s actions “were detrimental to KSU’s students and

faculty, violated [her] obligations to students and fellow faculty members, and

have done harm to the goodwill and reputation of KSU[.]” He therefore

recommended that the Board remove Dr. Stokes from the faculty. By letter dated

April 29, 2016, Stokes denied the allegations and requested a meeting with the

Board.

-4- KSU continued to pay Stokes until September 2016, when the Board

suspended Stokes without pay and removed her from the faculty roster. In

response, Stokes filed a complaint in Franklin Circuit Court the following month

alleging due process violations, including that she had been suspended without a

pre-termination hearing, during which she could have refuted the reason for her

unpaid suspension. Stokes sought injunctive relief, including reinstatement to her

tenured position until KSU had complied with the due process procedures, a

finding that KSU had violated policy and law in violation of Section II of the

Kentucky Constitution, compensatory damages and damages for embarrassment

and humiliation, and costs. In its answer, KSU disputed Stokes’s allegations and

raised several affirmative defenses, including immunity and her failure to exhaust

her administrative remedies. In March 2017, Stokes moved to hold this action in

abeyance pending a hearing before the Board, which the circuit court granted.

Returning to the administrative action, in October 2017, KSU issued a

notice of administrative appeal related to the charges, and the parties agreed that

the proceedings would be conducted pursuant to KRS Chapter 13B. The Office of

the Attorney General (OAG) assigned a hearing officer, who conducted an

evidentiary hearing on January 11 and 12, 2018, to determine what

recommendation to make to the Board.

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Dr. Karah Stokes v. Kentucky State University, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dr-karah-stokes-v-kentucky-state-university-kyctapp-2024.