Lamec, Inc. v. Lamar Alexander

963 F.2d 366, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 20665, 1992 WL 122282
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJune 8, 1992
Docket92-1140
StatusUnpublished

This text of 963 F.2d 366 (Lamec, Inc. v. Lamar Alexander) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lamec, Inc. v. Lamar Alexander, 963 F.2d 366, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 20665, 1992 WL 122282 (1st Cir. 1992).

Opinion

963 F.2d 366

NOTICE: First Circuit Local Rule 36.2(b)6 states unpublished opinions may be cited only in related cases.
LAMEC, INC., Plaintiff, Appellant,
v.
Lamar ALEXANDER, et al., Defendants, Appellees.

No. 92-1140.

United States Court of Appeals,
First Circuit.

June 8, 1992

A. J. Amadeo Murga with whom Antonio J. Amadeo Semidey was on brief for appellant.

Maria Hortensia Rios Gandara, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom Daniel Lopez Romo, United States Attorney, and Stephen M. Kraut, Counsel, Office of Student Financial Assistance, U.S. Department of Education, were on brief for appellees.

Before Breyer, Chief Judge, Aldrich and Coffin, Senior Circuit Judges.

COFFIN, Senior Circuit Judge.

This appeal concerns the efforts of appellant Lamec, Inc. (Lamec) to participate in the Pell Grant Program of Title IV of the Higher Education Act of 1965, 20 U.S.C. §§ 1070-1099, which provides financial assistance for students at qualified schools. The district court denied a request for injunctive relief to protect Lamec's participation in the program at several campuses of a trade school that it recently acquired in Mayaguez, Puerto Rico.

Lamec challenges adverse rulings on two causes of action. In the first, Lamec seeks a preliminary injunction enjoining the United States Department of Education ("the Secretary") from terminating its eligibility to participate in Title IV programs because of allegedly improper uses of Pell Grant funds and from levying a $450,000 fine resulting from such uses. In the second cause of action, Lamec seeks a mandatory injunction requiring the Secretary to certify two branch campuses as eligible to participate in Title IV programs.

After due consideration and perusal of the record, we affirm, with a single exception, the court's judgments on both causes of action. With respect to the court's sub silentio ruling that appellant did not fulfill the requirements for preliminary injunctive relief against the imposition of the $450,000 civil penalty, we simply have no basis for decision on this record and remand to the district court for hearing and an articulated determination.

We begin with appellant's first cause of action. The district court noted this claim in its opinion. But after observing that most of the evidence presented at the preliminary injunction hearing had concerned the second cause of action, the court went on to discuss only the second claim. The decision concluded with a blanket denial of the request for relief.

In the absence of findings from the court, we confine our review to determining from the record whether it permits any result but affirmance. See In re Rare Coin Galleries of America, Inc., 862 F.2d 896, 900 (1st Cir. 1988). More specifically, the question is whether the court, on this record, could have found that Lamec had demonstrated a likelihood of success in establishing that the Secretary improperly terminated its eligibility. We have no difficulty in concluding that such a finding would lack support.

The skeletal facts are the following. After a year of negotiations, Puerto Rico Technology and Beauty College (PR Tech) sold its Mayaguez campus to Lamec on June 30, 1987. Under the accreditation policy of the National Association of Trade and Technical Schools (NATTS), a private accreditation commission, a branch campus that is sold as an independent school must be re-accredited as a "free standing" institution. Lacking such accreditation at the time of sale, Lamec's campus was not eligible for Title IV funding programs. Lamec, however, had assumed that its students would pay their tuition and fees with Title IV funds.

Perhaps in anticipation of this problem, a clause was inserted into the sales contract requiring PR Tech to permit Lamec "to use its federal permits and licenses to collect all the federal grants of the enrolled students" pending Lamec's receipt of new permits and licenses. From August 1987 through July 1988, PR Tech used its own Pell Grant eligibility to obtain $403,875 in Title IV funds, which Lamec used to pay itself for the tuition and fees owed by its students.

Although Lamec eventually was declared eligible, the Secretary in July 1990 sought to terminate its eligibility and to impose fines on both PR Tech and Lamec. A hearing on the proposed termination was held before an Administrative Law Judge.

The relevant legal standards are set forth in two regulations. The first, 34 C.F.R. § 668.82(c), states:

An institution's failure to administer the Title IV, HEA programs, or to account for the funds it receives under those programs, in accordance with the highest standard of care and diligence required of a fiduciary, constitutes grounds for a fine, or the suspension, limitation or termination of the eligibility of the institution to participate in those programs.

The second, 34 C.F.R. § 600.31, formerly § 668.18 (1987), provides:

(a) An eligible institution, or a previously eligible institution that participated in any HEA program, that changes ownership resulting in a change of control is not considered by the Secretary to be the same institution....

* * *

(c) For the purposes of this part, a change in ownership of an institution that results in a change of control means any action by which a person or corporation obtains new authority to control the actions of that institution. That action may include, but is not limited to--

(1) The sale of the institution;

The ALJ found the following:

The terms of the contract [of sale] appear to be fulfilled in that the money passed from buyer to seller. The parties acknowledged to the Puerto Rico Department of Education a change of ownership. While it is true PR Tech continued to double check to see if all federal funds were being managed properly, the day to day operation seems to have been transferred to Lamec. The testimony is clear; the parties believed the employees of Mayaguez to be the employees of Lamec.

These findings would seem to have dictated a conclusion that, within the meaning of § 668.18(c), there had been a change of ownership. But the ALJ then considered the effect of a Puerto Rico regulation which, in the absence of a new owner's signing of certain guarantees, provided that "the previous owners will continue guaranteeing jointly the commitments made as if no transfer of ownership had taken place." The ALJ, ignoring the "as if" clause, interpreted this reservation of responsibility under Puerto Rican law into a negation of transfer of ownership under federal law. This is a clear lapse in logic, a non-sequitur. The Secretary correctly held, reversing the ALJ's decision, "Clearly, Lamec obtained authority to control the actions of the Mayaguez school."

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963 F.2d 366, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 20665, 1992 WL 122282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lamec-inc-v-lamar-alexander-ca1-1992.