Kendrix M. Easley v. University of Michigan Board of Regents Terry Sandalow, Individually and as Dean of Law School

853 F.2d 1351, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 11074, 1988 WL 82560
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 11, 1988
Docket86-1483
StatusPublished
Cited by72 cases

This text of 853 F.2d 1351 (Kendrix M. Easley v. University of Michigan Board of Regents Terry Sandalow, Individually and as Dean of Law School) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Kendrix M. Easley v. University of Michigan Board of Regents Terry Sandalow, Individually and as Dean of Law School, 853 F.2d 1351, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 11074, 1988 WL 82560 (6th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

RYAN, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff-appellant Kendrix M. Easley appeals from several adverse rulings by United States District Court Judge John Feik-ens in this action brought under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981, 1982, and 1983 against various officials of the University of Michigan Law School. Although the appellant has raised a host of assignments of error, the only issue having arguable merit is whether Judge Feikens abused his discretion in denying Easley’s motion to disqualify the Judge under 28 U.S.C. §§ 144 and 455 based upon Judge Feikens’ affiliations with the Law School during times material to Easley’s lawsuit, 632 F.Supp. 1539.

Easley properly raised the issue of Judge Feikens’ impartiality during proceedings before the district court. Easley sought Judge Feikens’ recusal based upon his associations with the Law School and its faculty and “his well-publicized Negrophobia.” In addition, Easley filed an “Emergency Motion” before this court alleging that Judge Feikens has additional affiliations with the University of Michigan which Eas-ley previously failed to assert. We find some of these asserted grounds for disqualification to be patently meritless. Others require explication.

Accordingly, in order to afford Judge Feikens an opportunity to address any potentially troublesome affiliations raised by Easley below and on appeal, and, if such affiliations are established, to determine whether, as a consequence thereof, Judge Feikens’ impartiality in this case might reasonably be questioned, 28 U.S.C. § 455(a) and (b)(1), we retain jurisdiction and remand the case for an evidentiary hearing. The limited purposes of the hearing will be: (1) to enlarge the record regarding the nature of Judge Feikens’ associations with the Law School, its faculty, and its administrators; (2) to determine whether Judge Feikens acquired actual or constructive extra-judicial knowledge of matters material to this controversy through such associations; and (3) to determine whether any associations Judge Feikens may have had with the Law School are such that the Judge’s “impartiality might reasonably be questioned.”

I.

Easley, a former student at the University of Michigan Law School, brought suit against several University officials seeking equitable and legal relief. Easley, who was enrolled at the Law School from 1979 until he was suspended for plagiarism in August of 1983, claimed that Law School officials wrongfully deprived him of a J.D. degree. Easley sought damages and an injunction ordering the University to award him a J.D. degree.

The spiral of events culminating in this action began during the 1979 fall academic term during which Easley was enrolled in Professor Martin’s introductory civil procedure course. Professor Martin’s one semester section was worth five credit hours. The University also offered civil procedure sections worth six credit hours, but the six credit sections met for two consecutive semesters, each worth three credit hours. Easley did not take the final examination in Professor Martin’s class as scheduled in December of 1979. He received permission from Associate Dean Eklund to take the *1353 examination in January 1980, but again delayed taking the test.

In 1981, toward the end of the fall term, Easley was informed by Dean Eklund and Kris Munroe, the Law School’s recorder, that his civil procedure course work was incomplete. The examination was again rescheduled and again postponed at Eas-ley’s request. Easley eventually took the examination in March of 1982 and received a passing score. He now claims that shortly thereafter, in April of 1982, Munroe notified him of his passing score, and that both Munroe and Dean Eklund told him that he had earned six credit hours.

In accordance with standard Law School procedure, Munroe did not enter Easley’s grade into the Law School’s computer, which generates student transcripts, until June 22, the end of the semester. Mun-roe’s entries, however, erroneously indicated that Easley had enrolled in a six credit civil procedure section rather than Professor Martin’s five credit section. While conducting a routine degree audit, Dean Eklund and Munroe discovered the error and corrected Easley’s record to reflect the fact that he had earned only five civil procedure credits. On July 16, 1982, Eklund informed Easley that he had erroneously been awarded an extra credit hour and that he had actually earned only 80 credits, one credit shy of the number required for graduates entering in Easley’s class. Although Dean Eklund had limited discretion to determine the number of credit hours a student could receive for an independent study course, she had no authority to alter the number of credit hours given for established courses like civil procedure.

On June 18, 1982, prior to receiving Dean Eklund’s notice, Easley approached Professor St. Antoine in an effort to improve his final exam grade of “D” in Professor St. Antoine’s course in employment discrimination. Professor St. Antoine reread Eas-ley’s examination and raised the grade to a “D + .” Easley again asked Professor St. Antoine to raise his grade and, after a heated exchange, Professor St. Antoine asked Easley to leave his office. While returning Easley’s exam to the file, Professor St. Antoine observed markings on the examination blue book cover that led him to conclude that “[pjlainly there had been a substitution of blue books.” Thereafter, on July 15, 1982, St. Antoine charged Eas-ley with cheating. On November 23, 1982, Easley was found innocent of the charges in proceedings before a Law School tribunal chaired by Professor Donald H. Regan.

Before his November hearing on the cheating charge, Easley purportedly presented a paper to Professor Westen as a pretext in order to talk with a faculty member about the cheating accusation. Professor Westen thought he recognized much of the paper’s text from an uncited law review article. Professor Westen thereafter charged Easley with plagiarism. Easley was found guilty in August of 1983 after an April 22, 1983, trial before another Law School tribunal, chaired by the late Professor Wade McCree, a former judge of this court. Easley was thereafter suspended for one year from completing the work necessary to earn the one credit needed for his degree.

Easley now claims that University officials asked him to leave an April 11, 1983 hearing at the Law School on the plagiarism charge. In addition, according to Eas-ley, these officials removed exculpatory personal papers and documents from his briefcase in his absence. The only named defendant who was present at the conference is Professor Pooley, Chairman of the Law School’s Committee on Professional Responsibility. Easley, however, has not accused Professor Pooley of conducting the alleged search and has been unwilling to state which, if any, documents were taken from his briefcase.

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853 F.2d 1351, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 11074, 1988 WL 82560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kendrix-m-easley-v-university-of-michigan-board-of-regents-terry-ca6-1988.