Kyung He Yano v. El-Maazawi

651 F. App'x 543
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 1, 2016
DocketNo. 15-3374
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 651 F. App'x 543 (Kyung He Yano v. El-Maazawi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kyung He Yano v. El-Maazawi, 651 F. App'x 543 (7th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

ORDER

What started with a disputed grade spiraled into this litigation brought by a student and her mother against two professors and a dean at Harry S. Truman College in Chicago. Sayuri Yano, who was 11 when she was enrolled at Truman, claimed that the defendant professors had singled her out for arbitrary harassment, thus denying her equal protection and also committing the Illinois tort of intentional infliction of emotional distress. Both Sayuri and her mother, Kyung Hye Yano, also claimed that they suffered retaliation for complaining about the professors, in violation of the First Amendment. The district court granted summary judgment for the defendants on the First Amendment and equal-protection claims, and a jury found for them on the state-law claim. On appeal the plaintiffs challenge [545]*545the adverse decision at summary judgment, as well as several evidentiary rulings made during the trial of Sayuri’s tort claim. We affirm the judgment, though our reasoning differs from that of the district court.

We draw the following background facts from the evidence and permissible inferences, noting disputes when significant. Kyung enrolled her daughter in a Truman biology course in the summer of 2007. The following spring Sayuri also took chemistry at the college. The defendant professors, Dr. Priscilla Lancki and Dr. Mohamed El-Maazawi, taught these courses.

Biology started smoothly, with Sayuri doing well on her first quiz. But she received a failing grade on the second quiz, prompting her and her mother to request a meeting with Professor Lancki. When the professor gave Sayuri’s test booklet and “Scantron” answer sheet to mother and daughter for inspection, Sayuri insisted that she did not recognize the penciled notes and doodles in the margins of these documents. When Professor Lancki pointed out Sayuri’s name, student number, and signature on the answer sheet, Sayuri insisted that her answers had been erased and changed. Professor Lancki eventually granted the possibility of a “mix-up,” and after this meeting Kyung sent an e-mail to her and Dr. Elizabeth Roeger, the Dean of Instruction, asserting that the likely explanation for the failing grade was that someone, perhaps even Professor Lancki, wanted her daughter to fail and had tampered with her quiz. When Professor Lancki did not reply to this accusation, Kyung cornered her after class. Professor Lancki became upset and, according to Kyung, threatened to talk to Dean Roeger, who is also a defendant, about removing Sayuri from biology. After this confrontation Professor Lancki commented in class that “this is not grade school where parents can come and yell at the teachers.”

Sayuri and her mother brought their concerns about grading to Dean Roeger and other administrators. In response the college created for Sayuri a special grading procedure involving a designated mentor and grader and still more staff serving as proctors. Professor Lancki also permitted Sayuri to retake the second quiz, even though Dean Roeger had assured Kyung that she trusted Professor Lancki’s grading of the original quiz. The college’s internal investigation did not find any eviden-tiary basis for Sayuri and her mother’s tampering allegations (though the original answer sheet was lost after being turned over to the chair of the biology department).

Dean Roeger was proetoririg Sayuri’s third quiz when she, too, encountered Kyung outside the classroom. Kyung had been watching from the hallway through a window, and Dean Roeger and two other staff members approached and told her to stop. Kyung left the building, saying later that she had felt threatened. In the weeks that followed, if Sayuri is believed, Professor Lancki cast hostile- looks and, during almost every class, commented about how a “little girl” had “cheated” and “slandered” to get a better grade. Professor Lancki acknowledges once calling Sayuri a “little girl” but, by the professor’s account, the term was used descriptively rather than in a derogatory manner.

According to Sayuri, during one particular class Professor Lancki had lamented that she did nothing wrong and yet was under stress from being “slandered constantly.” Explaining that she might be forced to stop teaching, the professor asked the class to support her with letters to the administration. Instead the students decided to go immediately to Truman’s president and voice support for Professor [546]*546Lancki, leaving only Sayuri behind. Sayuri then joined her mother in the hall, where two students accused them of creating problems for Professor Lancki. Another professor intervened and separated the two sides. Because of the tension, a substitute professor replaced Professor Lancki for the final week of the summer term. Sayuri received an “A” for the course, and the college later suspended Professor Lancki for one day with the explanation that her comment about a “little girl” had been inappropriate.

Then came Professor El-Maazawi’s chemistry class in the Spring 2008 term. Sayuri and her mother complained to administrators that Professor El-Maazawi ate and drank in the lab, donned headphones and worked at his personal computer while students conducted experiments, and allowed students to handle corrosive acid without safety equipment. Mother and daughter also complained that one of Sayuri’s quizzes had gone missing after she received a failing grade. Although Sayuri was allowed to retake that quiz, she complained that, unlike the first time, the retake was not open-book.

Beyond this, according to Sayuri, she was treated poorly throughout the term. Professor El-Maazawi was gruff, he glared at her and yelled at least once, and sometimes he ignored her when she approached him with questions after class. Even by Sayuri’s telling, however, the defendant sometimes ridiculed the entire class as lacking knowledge of basic subjects and compared the students unfavorably to those at other schools where he had taught.

Sayuri dropped chemistry before the term ended, and when she notified Professor El-Maazawi by e-mail, she accused him of grading everyone but her on a curve. During discovery, however, Sayuri was pressed to explain the basis for this accusation, and she had to concede that her information about a curve originated with past students of the professor, not with anyone in her chemistry class. Sayuri also implied during discovery that Professor El-Maazawi had been following her, though no direct complaint about this had been made to Truman administrators. One time while she was standing in a hallway, Sayuri explained, Professor El-Maazawi had rounded a corner three times and then quickly retreated after making eye contact. On another occasion, Sayuri said, she was in a different professor’s class when she saw Professor El-Maazawi look into the classroom through a window in the door. Then one day, Sayuri continued, she and her mother were tailgated by another car whose driver cast threatening looks in their direction. They gave police the license plate number and afterward learned that the-driver was a professor who shared an office with Professor El-Maazawi, so they assumed that the defendant must have been behind the incident.

Sayuri withdrew from Truman before finishing her associate’s degree. She and Kyung then brought this lawsuit raising a long list of claims against many defendants, but this appeal concerns only the equal-protection, First Amendment, and tort claims against Professor Lancki, Professor El-Maazawi, and Dean Roeger.

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651 F. App'x 543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kyung-he-yano-v-el-maazawi-ca7-2016.