In Re: Petition of Marla Matrice Murphy

CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedNovember 9, 2023
Docket77, 2023
StatusPublished

This text of In Re: Petition of Marla Matrice Murphy (In Re: Petition of Marla Matrice Murphy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re: Petition of Marla Matrice Murphy, (Del. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

IN RE PETITION OF MARLA § MATRICE MURPHY § No. 77, 2023 §

Submitted: October 11, 2023 Decided: November 9, 2023

Before VALIHURA, TRAYNOR, and LEGROW, Justices.

ORDER

(1) This is Marla Matrice Murphy’s second appeal of a decision of the Board

of Bar Examiners (the “Board”). In the first appeal, we affirmed the Board’s

determination that it could not waive Delaware’s requirement that applicants pass

the Bar Exam before being admitted to practice. We remanded, however, to allow

the Board to conduct a hearing to determine what, if any, of Murphy’s testing

accomodations had been denied during the Bar Exam administration.

(2) After conducting a hearing, the Board Panel (the “Panel”) determined

that Murphy had been denied one of her previously granted accommodations: the

use of scratch paper. But the Panel determined that she was not denied her private-

room or double-time accomodations. The Panel held that the appropriate remedy

for Murphy’s denial of her approved accommodation was to take the Bar Exam again, free of any infirmities. The Panel also recommended that the Board waive its

application fee if she chose to register for the Bar Exam again.

(3) Murphy now appeals the Panel’s decision, arguing that her private-room

and double-time accomodations were denied. She also argues that in denying

multiple accomodations, the Board demonstrated deliberate indifference toward her,

entitling her to an award of compensatory damages and attorneys’ fees.

(4) Because the Panel’s findings are supported by substantial evidence and

its legal determinations are free from error, we AFFIRM.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

(5) In July 2021, Murphy sat for the Delaware Bar Exam after requesting and

receiving a number of accommodations from the Board.1 Because the 2021 Bar

Exam occurred during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, it was administered

remotely, using ExamSoft software.2 Before the Exam, Murphy applied for the

following accommodations: 100% extra time for the entire exam (“double-time”);

authorization to use pencils, highlighters, and scratch paper; permission to read the

questions out loud; stop-the-clock breaks; and use of a private room to take the

Exam.3 The Board approved all accommodations except the stop-the-clock breaks.4

1 The following facts are adopted, in part, from In Re Petition of Marla Matrice Murphy, 283 A.3d 1167, 1170–71 (Del. 2022) [Hereinafter, Murphy I]. 2 Id. at 1170. 3 Id. at 1171. 4 Id. The Board also did not address Murphy’s request to use highlighters, instead stating she had “permission to have scratch paper and a pencil.” Id. 2 As a result of the double-time accommodation, Murphy’s testing took place over

five days.5

(6) The electronic, remote administration of the Exam resulted in

unexpected technical problems for some exam takers.6 Many exam takers, Murphy

included, experienced ExamSoft outages and other difficulties.7 During the Exam,

Murphy’s ExamSoft software crashed three times.8

(7) During the Panel hearing, Murphy testified that the first software outage

occurred on the first day of the exam, while she was writing an essay.9 She testified

that she experienced stress when the software crashed and that it took her “a minute”

to relax after the software turned back on.10 Murphy also testified that a portion of

her essay was deleted when the software crashed, requiring her to retype her previous

few minutes of work.11 According to Murphy, it took her “a minimum of five

minutes” to realize that some of her work was missing.12 The second and third

software outages occurred on the second day of the exam.13 Murphy testified that

5 Id. at 1172. 6 Id. 7 Id. These technical problems plagued bar takers nationwide who used ExamSoft. 8 App. to Opening Br. at A154–70. 9 Id. at A154. 10 Id. at A157. 11 Id. at A156. 12 Id. at A158. Murphy also testified it took her “a minute” to realize her work had been deleted. Id. at A159. 13 Id. at A166. 3 she experienced less stress during these two outages as compared to the first.14 She

also testified that it took less time to “reorient” herself after the software was

restored, although she still experienced stress and some of her work was deleted.15

Ultimately, Murphy testified that she felt she was deprived of her double-time

accommodation because she lost time rebooting her computer and recreating lost

work after each outage.16

(8) Murphy was distracted by her exam proctors’ actions, including

coughing, texting, and typing sounds. Murphy testified that she was distracted by

the first proctor’s phone because it was “ringing,” but she later testified that the

sound that most distracted her was the “clicking” sound produced when he typed on

a laptop keyboard.17 She testified that the second proctor had several coughing fits

during the fourth day of the exam,18 though she reassured Murphy that they were the

product of allergies, not COVID-19.19 Additionally, Murphy testified that the

second proctor caused distractions by moving around the room during the fifth day

of the exam.20 Murphy also was distracted by the second proctor’s texting, but

14 Id. at A166–67. 15 Id. 16 Id. at A168–69. 17 Id. at A160–61. Murphy testified that the proctor’s phone sound was on but could not quantify the number of times he received a notification. Id. at A161. On cross-examination, Murphy then testified that the proctor’s phone rang once. Id. at A189; A199. 18 Id. at A163. Murphy could not say how many coughing fits the proctor had. Id. at A191 19 Despite this reassurance, Murphy became preoccupied with her concerns over contracting COVID-19. 20 App. to Opening Br. at A179. 4 because the phone’s sound was off, she was distracted by the sight of the proctor

looking at her phone.21 Neither proctor recalled causing the alleged distractions and

both testified that they did not behave with any intent to frustrate Murphy’s efforts

on the Bar Exam.22

(9) Murphy also testified, and the Board concedes, that she was not given scratch

paper during the MPT and MBE portions of the exam, despite the Board having

approved her use of scratch paper for the entire exam.23 Ultimately, Murphy testified

that she could not point to one distraction that affected her the most, but noted that

not having a paper copy of the exam, which she did not request but assumed she

would receive, created a “snowball effect” on the first day where each distraction

and software crash made the experience “worse and worse.”24

(10) Before the Board released the Bar Exam results in 2021, it told applicants

that, due to the widespread exam outages, the Board intended to adjust exam scores

to reflect the effect of the ExamSoft crashes.25 Because Murphy experienced exam

21 Id. at A180–81; A200. Murphy testified that she could not remember if she was provided with earplugs. Id. at A191. 22 Id. at A223 –24; A228; A230. The first proctor did remember one instance when his phone vibrated because of an incoming call and thereafter kept it in his pocket to muffle the sound. Id. at A228. 23 Opening Br. Ex. A at 6; App. to Opening Br. at A170. 24 App. to Opening Br. at A184–85. 25 Murphy I, at 1172.

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